Major General
Elbert L. Ford

Major General Elbert L. FordElbert Louis Ford was born in Milford, Connecticut, on 2 December 1892, one of nine children. He briefly went in to farming, but was later admitted to West Point and stood 39th in a class of 139 men who were graduated several months ahead of schedule in April 1917. Joseph Lawton Collins, who would later be Chief of Staff of the Army during Ford's tour as Chief of Ordnance, ranked five places ahead of his classmate. Other classmates included Matthew Bunker Ridgway and Mark Clark. Assigned to the Coast Artillery, Ford spent his first year as an officer watching Boston Harbor for possible German submarines.

By August 1917, Ford was a temporary captain. A very brief tour as regimental instructor with the 65th Engineers at Camp Upton, New York was followed by attendance at the Heavy Artillery and Anti aircraft Schools at Fort Monroe, Virginia, for several months. In June 1918, he returned to Massachusetts for several months' duty with the Coast Artillery. In October 1918, as a major, Ford was put in command of the 15th Antiaircraft Sector at Camp Upton, Virginia, and helped prepare some of the troops for service overseas.

When the Armistice intervened, Ford commanded the coast defenses of San Juan, Puerto Rico, for five months, then spent three months in France assisting with the shipment of war material to the United States. By October 1919, he had returned to the States and to duty with the Proof Department at Aberdeen Proving Ground, where he reverted to his permanent grade of captain. On 1 July 1920, Ford was transferred from the Coast Artillery to Ordnance.

In September 1921, Major Ford was named Professor of Military Science and Tactics at Yale University, a post he filled for more than three years until transferred to Camp Lewis, Washington, as camp ordnance and chemical warfare officer. Following eighteen months there, Ford reported to Watertown Arsenal, where he completed Course I at the Ordnance School in June 1927, and Course II in March 1928. He was then enrolled in Ordnance Specialists' School at Raritan Arsenal, and completed the course there in June 1928. In September of that year, he was placed in charge of the Metal Components Section, Ammunition Department, at the Office, Chief of Ordnance. Two years later, he entered the Army Industrial College, graduating in June 1932.

Major Ford completed the two year Command and General Staff course at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, in June 1934. During his second summer at Leavenworth, the School was closed, and all students were given temporary assignments with the newly created Civilian Conservations Corps. Ford worked with 250 young men in several national forests in Oregon, opening up trails so that firefighters could more readily gain access to forest fires.

In July 1934, Ford began a three year tour as assistant commandant of the Ordnance School at Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland. The instructional staff at that time numbered but four or five officers, and the student body consisted of about a dozen officers. The Post Commandant also held down the assignment as school commandant. Most instruction was carried on in the second floor (rear) of the present Post Headquarters building. In July 1937, Ford became assistant to the works manager at Springfield Armory, rising to the post of works manager in December 1940. Here he was concerned with development of new weapons, concentrating on the Garand Rifle. The staff at Springfield was very small in the late 1930s, numbering fewer than 200 employees, but this had risen to 11,000 by the time Ford left Springfield for his next assignment. While at Springfield, Ford was twice promoted.

In June 1942, Colonel Ford was assigned to the Ordnance Section, Headquarters Services of Supply, in the European Theatre of Operations, with primary concern for maintenance matters. In September of that same year, he became Chief Ordnance Officer at Allied Force Headquarters. Still operating in this capacity, he transferred his operations to North Africa in November 1942. In February 1943, he was designated Chief of Staff at Headquarters, North American Theatre of Operations, under General Everett Hughes, later to be his predecessor as Chief of Ordnance.

While in North Africa, he was promoted to brigadier general, and in May 1944, he returned to Washington as Chief of the Stock Control Branch. Field Services Division Office, Chief of Ordnance. The followin month he became Chief of the Reclamation and Maintenance Branch within the Field Services Division. Here he had responsibility for rebuilding and reconditioning materiel for use by combat forces overseas. In July 1946, General Ford was sent to Europe as Chief of Ordnance to the American forces in the European Theatre, where he again had charge of the rebuilding and reconditioning operations, this time in West Germany. Two years later, in June 1948, he returned to Aberdeen Proving Ground as its commanding general, and in August 1949, was promoted to major general and Chief of Ordnance.

During his four-year tour, General Ford labored to organize and direct wartime production for the Korean conflict under peacetime restrictions. A number of plant facilities had to be put back into production to manufacture ammunition and other materiel. Production facilities were also set up in Japan to rebuild weapons and vehicles for use in Korea. Planning and production were complicated by official assumptions that the war would be over within a short period of time. The Army adopted the 28Omm atomic cannon in 1952. Other items introduced under Ford's aegis were the 75mm radar controlled Skysweeper anti aircraft gun, the Nike anti aircraft guided missile, and a new series of battle tanks. At the newly created Redstone Arsenal, a spectacular array of new rockets and guided missiles were under development, opening up a new era in the history of warfare. The Ordnance Department also contributed to the nation's space effort through its reseach, engineering, and scientific developments. General Ford retired from the Army on 30 October 1953. and died in Washington D.C on 25 February 1990. at the age of 97.