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Lieutenant General (united States)




In the United States Army , Marine Corps and Air Force , a Lieutenant General may be referred to as a '''three-star general''', named for the three stars worn on the Uniform . The Naval equivalent is Vice Admiral . A Lieutenant General normally ranks immediately above a Major General and below a General .

For most of the first half of the 19th Century this rank, like that of full General , existed only on paper. Until the American Civil War , only one officer was ever promoted to this rank, Winfield Scott , an honorary, or Brevet , promotion in 1855 . George Washington was listed as a Lieutenant General on the Continental Army rolls after his death since he wore three stars, but his actual military title was General and Commander In Chief. The first full promotion to Lieutenant General did not take place until Ulysses S. Grant was promoted to that rank and elevated to Commanding General Of The United States Army in 1864 .Note that the Confederate States Army had already been using the rank of "lieutenant general" for its corps commanders prior to the U.S. Army's adoption of the term. The two ranks were not synonymous. Dozens of men held the rank in the Confederate army, while eight men were full generals.

An Army or Marine Corps Lieutenant General typically commands a Corps -sized unit (20,000 to 45,000 soldiers), while an Air Force Lieutenant General commands a large Numbered Air Force consisting of several wings. Additionally, Lieutenant Generals of all services serve as high-level staff officers at various major command headquarters and The Pentagon , often as the heads of their departments.


FAMOUS AMERICAN LIEUTENANT GENERALS



Historic usage


Listed in order of receiving the rank:



Modern usage



World War II



1950s through 1980s; Korean War , Vietnam War , Cold War




Post Cold War



NOTES