Peter C. Hains III
Peter Conover Hains III was an American Army cavalry officer and [Major General (United States)|General (United States)|major general] who competed in the 1928 Olympic games in the modern pentathlon. Hains graduated from West Point in 1924, where he ranked 162nd out of 405 in his class. Hains' family had a long legacy of military service, with his great-grandfather, grandfather, and uncle all serving as high-ranking military officers. Hains' father Peter Hains was involved in an infamous murder scandal in New York City in 1909.
General Hains served as commander of the First Armored Regiment in North Africa during the war, later become an armor officer within General Courtney Hodges' [First United States Army|Army (United States)|First Army] and commanding officer of the Combat Command B, 13th Armored Division between 1944–1945. He was also armored adviser for the European invasion and then was assigned to the Pacific to help plan an invasion of Japan.
After the war, he was assigned to Washington as deputy director of the office of the secretary of defense. General Hains was later deputy commanding general of the Second Army, chief of the military assistance advisory group in Yugoslavia, chief of staff of the Fourth Army and chief of the military advisory group in Thailand.
His honors included the Distinguished Service Medal, Silver Star, three Legions of Merit, two Bronze Star Medals, a Purple Heart, Army Commendation Medal, Luxembourg Order of the Oak Crown, French Legion of Honor, French Croix de Guerre with Palm and the Order of Suvorov Second Class from the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.
He died at Fort Belvoir, Virginia on July 3, 1998, and was buried at Arlington National Cemetery.