Back in last month, I was writing about Army General William J. Snow, the father of Lt. Col. William A. Snow, who engineered Snow's Cut in North Carolina near Wlmington. Always, reaching the Snow's Cut Bridge on US Highway 421, meant you were entering Carolina Beach, my favorite all-time beach.
Major General Snow was a major figure in the U.S. Army's artrillery in the first part of the 20th century. Much like Anne-Louis Toussard was for the Continental Army and early 1800s U.S. Army (I've been writing about him in my Cooter's History Thing blog last month.
AFTER WORLD WAR I
After World War I, Wiliam Snow continued to serve as Chief of U.S. Artillery. This position was codified by law in 1920. He served until retiring in 1927.
During this time, he oversaw the artillery branch's postwar reorganization, including the beginning of testing and experimentation to determine how to transition from horse drawn equipment to mechanized and modernized processes for directing and controlling indirect fire to improve speed and accuracy.
--Cooter
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