|
Jerry
Ralph Curry
Major
General, US Army, Retired
Jerry Ralph Curry is author of the recently published book:
From Private to General:
An African-American Rises Through The Ranks. It can be ordered
through Amazon.com or major book stores. Jerry has had several careers.
The first began when he graduated from high school and went to work as a
welder in a steel foundry. He later enlisted in the US Army as a Private
to fight in the Korean War. This led to a 34 year military career during
which he worked his way up through the ranks of the infantry and retired
a Major General. Next came a career in the private sector which included
standing as a candidate for the U.S. Congress (1988) in south east
Virginia. This was followed by three years as the Administrator of the
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA).
General Curry is a decorated combat veteran, Army Aviator, Paratrooper
and Ranger who has served his country both in the military and as a
Presidential political appointee for nearly forty years. He has many
honors and decorations and has a strong background in federal regulatory
matters, foreign affairs, national defense concerns, corporate planning
and product liability litigation concerning the safety of motor
vehicles. He is known for his forceful leadership skills and his
demonstrated ability to perform multiple tasks concurrently well under
crisis conditions. Most of Jerry’s time in the military was spent in
troop assignments in the United States, Germany, and Korea.
He served as Military Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense in the
Carter Administration, as Acting Press Secretary to the Secretary of Defense in
the Reagan Administration, and as Administrator of NHTSA in the first
Bush Administration. Along the way, by going to night school, he earned
a bachelors degree from the University of Nebraska/Omaha, an M.A. in
International Relations from Boston University, and a Doctorate from
Luther Rice University.
During his second tour in Viet Nam he spent a year in the jungle as an
Advisor embedded with a South Vietnamese Infantry Regiment. During his
first tour, he flew reconnaissance planes, helicopters and worked in
intelligence. General Curry also commanded the U.S. Army Test and
Evaluation Command (TECOM) headquartered at Aberdeen Proving Ground in
Maryland. TECOM was responsible for performing Engineer Development
Testing
-- to determine
whether Army equipment is safe to operate, free from defects and is in
compliance with all of the Army’s technical specifications – on all Army
equipment – including Jeeps, trucks of all types, self-propelled
artillery, tanks, electronics, airplanes, helicopters and missiles of
all types.
Following his retirement he became President and Publisher of a public
policy “think tank”, and was later a corporate Vice President for
Program Development of a computer systems integration company. Dr. Curry
has served on the Board of Directors of the Greater Washington DC Board
of Trade, the USO, the American Red Cross, was a Trustee of the Federal
City Council, and an ex-officio member of the National Research
Counsel’s Executive Committee, Transportation Research Board. In 1982 he
was named Washingtonian of the Year.
He is a member of the Association for the Advancement of Automotive
Medicine; the society of Automotive Engineers; Delta Phi Alpha, the
National Honorary German Society; Phi Alpha Theta, the International
Honor Society in History; the National Eagle Scout Association; was
decorated by Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands with the Order of
Orange-Nassau; is a recipient of the United States Secret Service Honor
Award; and is a Fellow in the Oxford Society of Scholars.
Before the Korean War came along and changed everything, Jerry, a
dramatic operatic baritone, seriously considered pursuing a singing
career. Over the years he has sung with myriad choral groups and in
concert in Europe, the United States, the Far East and Brazil. His
operatic CD Generally Singing,
available through Amazon.com, has been well received.
Jerry Curry
and his wife, Charlene, have four children, seven grandchildren, and
three great-grandchildren. Their mixed racial and cultural ancestry
represents a rich cross section of many backgrounds – as colorful as
America itself – having descended from African American slaves and
freemen, Native Americans, French, Irish and Scottish.
|