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Blanding, Albert Hazan, 1876-1970(From: Blanding, Albert Hazan, Papers, 1917-1958, Correspondence (incoming) - 1919-1958, Collection M87-46, Box 1)Page 1 | Page 2 | Page 3 | Page 4 | Full Text Letter from Lieutenant Colonel Mark
Lance to Major General Albert Blanding, 1944. Born in North Carolina in 1898, Lance served in the U.S. Naval Reserve in World War I, and then joined the Florida National Guard in 1927 as a captain. He was mobilized in 1940 and served with the Thirty-First Division in the Pacific. Appointed Adjutant General of the Florida National Guard in 1947, he retired in 1962 as a major general. Lance died in 1966. Albert Hazen Blanding was one of Florida's most prominent soldiers. Born in Iowa in 1876, Blanding moved to Florida with his family at the age of two. He joined the Florida State Troops in 1895 and within four years was commissioned captain. As colonel, he commanded the Second Florida Regiment on the Mexican Border, and in 1917, soon after the outbreak of World War I, he was promoted brigadier general. Blanding was sent to France, where he commanded a brigade in the Twenty-Seventh Infantry Division. After the war he served as commander of the National Guard's Thirty-First Division, and in 1936 President Franklin Roosevelt appointed Blanding chief of the National Guard Bureau. The general retired in 1940, but during World War II he served as military advisor to Governor Spessard Holland and as head of the State Defense Council. Blanding died in 1970. A text version of
Lieutenant Colonel Mark Lance's letter is included below the graphic image.
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