Texas Military Forces
Hall of Honor
Albert S.
Johnson
Albert
Sidney Johnson, a namesake of the famous Confederate general Albert
Sidney Johnston, enlisted in the U.S. Army in 1917 and was commissioned
as second lieutenant through the first Officer's Training Camp at Leon
Springs, Texas. He served honorably with the 90th Infantry Division
during World War I, receiving wounds at the battles of St. Mihiel and
Meuse-Argonne.
He joined the 112th Cavalry, Texas National Guard, as a captain in 1921
and served with that unit until it entered active federal service in
1940. During World War II he served with the 6th Armored Division, the
War Department's Inspector General's Office, and as the
China-Burma-India theater inspector general until demobilization in
1946.
General Johnson was selected to organize and command the nation's first
National Guard armored division, the 49th of Texas, in 1947 and
developed it into one of the six Ready Reserve Strategic Army Forces
division. Johnson retired as a brevet lieutenant general in 1958 after
41 years of honorable service during which time he contributed
immeasurably to the Texas National Guard.
As a civilian his contributions included service as a member of the
Texas Legislature, a general corporate law attorney, president of the
Southern Union Utility System, and Chairman of the Texas Public Safety
Commission. He is credited with developing the State of Texas' police
system into the outstanding and efficient organization it is today.
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