Patton reported to the Mounted Service School in Fort Riley, Kansas, where he became the school's first Master of the Sword. He designed and taught a course in swordsmanship while he was a student at the school. Patton's first real exposure to battle took place when he served as a member of General John J. Pershing's staff during the expedition to Mexico. Patton was sent to Fort Bliss in 1915 along the Mexican border where he led routine cavalry patrols. A year later, he accompanied Pershing as an aide on his expedition against Francisco "Pancho" Villa into Mexico. Patton gained recognition from the press for his attacks on several of Villa's …show more content…
During World War I in 1914, Patton became the first member of the newly established United States Tank Corps. He served the Corps until 1920, when it was abolished. Along with the British tankers, he and his men achieved victory at Cambrai, France, during the world's first major tank battle in 1917. Using his first-hand knowledge of tanks, Patton organized the American tank school in Bourg, France and trained the first 500 American tankers. He earned the Distinguished Service Cross for Heroism during the Meuse-Argonne Operation in September 1918, one of the many medals he would earn in his lifetime. After WWI, Patton held a variety of staff jobs in Hawaii and Washington D.C. He graduated from the Command and General Staff School in 1924, and completed his military schooling as a distinguished graduate of the Army War College in 1932. After the German Blitzkrieg began, the Armored Force was formed in 1940, he was transferred to the Second Armored Division at Fort Benning, Georgia and named Commanding General on April 11, 1941. Patton appeared on the cover of Life magazine two months