Assigned to the 386th Infantry Regiment, 97th Infantry Division, Turnage served as a platoon leader in Europe in 1945. After the end of the war in the Pacific, he served as a company commander in Japan and Korea until 1946. Released from active duty in November 1946, Turnage remained in the Army Reserve until joining the California Army National Guard in May 1949.[1][5]
Turnage next served as a company commander in the 223rd Infantry Regiment, 40th Infantry Division. He deployed overseas again when the division was activated for service during the Korean War. Returning to California in 1952, Turnage served as an infantry battalion commander and then in positions of increasing responsibility within the Army National Guard.[1][2] He helped supervise the military response to the 1965 Watts neighborhood riots in Los Angeles.[4]
Turnage was promoted to brigadier general on December 10, 1968.[1] He earned the nickname "Terrible Tom" while working to establish efficient operations at California Army National Guard headquarters.[4] Turnage was promoted to major general on June 25, 1974 prior to assuming command of the 40th Infantry Division in August.[1][2] His final military assignment was as special assistant to the Deputy Assistant Secretary in the Office for Reserve Affairs at the Pentagon.[3][6]
Later career
President Ronald Reagan nominated Turnage to be the Director of Selective Service on July 31, 1981. Turnage appeared for a hearing before the Senate Committee on Armed Services on September 24, 1981 and was confirmed by unanimous consent of the full Senate the following day.[6][7] He retired from military service prior to taking the oath of office on October 30, 1981.[8]
President Reagan nominated Turnage to be the Administrator of Veterans Affairs on March 10, 1986. His confirmation hearing before the Senate Committee on Veterans Affairs was held on March 18, 1986. He was confirmed by voice vote of the full Senate three days later.[3][9] As administrator, Turnage was instrumental in shaping the October 1988 legislation that created the cabinet-level Department of Veterans Affairs.[4]
Personal life
Turnage married Betty Jane "B.J." (Bierce) Smith in 1945. Her first husband, a 1938 U.S. Naval Academy graduate, was missing in action after the 1942 sinking of the USS Wasp and had been declared dead a year later. Turnage was on leave between his return from the war in Europe and his fourteen-month postwar redeployment to the Western Pacific. The couple had a son, daughter and four grandchildren.[4][5][10][11]
^ abcd"Major General Thomas K. Turnage". General Officers of the Army and Air National Guard. Office of Public Affairs, National Guard Bureau. July 1978. Retrieved May 1, 2022.