Glen Edgerton | |
Birth Date: | April 17, 1887 |
Birth Place: | Parkerville, Kansas |
Death Place: | Bethesda Naval Hospital |
Placeofburial: | Arlington National Cemetery |
Education: | Kansas State College United States Military Academy |
Order: | 8th |
Term Start: | 1940 |
Term End: | 1944 |
Successor: | Joseph Cowles Mehaffey |
Branch: | United States Army |
Serviceyears: | 1908–1949 |
Rank: | Major General |
Unit: | Corps of Engineers |
Glen Edgar Edgerton (April 17, 1887 - April 9, 1976) was a United States Army officer, who served as governor of the Panama Canal Zone from 1940 to 1944.[1]
Edgerton was born on April 17, 1887, to Alice and John Edgar Edgerton. He graduated from Kansas State College in 1904 and from the United States Military Academy at West Point in 1908, where he was first in his class.[2] While there he often tutored other students, including George S. Patton.[3] He plotted the route of the Panama Canal through the jungle and chased Pancho Villa in Mexico.[4] He was chief engineer of the Alaska Road Commission from 1910 to 1915 and the Edgerton Highway in Alaska is named after him. After World War I he directed war relief in China.[5] He also went to the military Engineering Academy.[1]
He served as Panama Canal maintenance engineer from 1936 to 1940. He was governor of the Panama Canal Zone from 1940 to 1944.[6] He retired from the army in 1949 and in that year became project manager for the White House interior reconstruction project, leaving a project to divert the Euphrates River in Iraq to do so.[7] He died on April 9, 1976, at Bethesda Naval Hospital.[8]