

He would later credit his organizational skills to the time he spent coordinating supplies for three armies at that time.Īt the time of his discharge in 1946, Shaw had reached the rank of major and received decorations from three nations. According to Shaw, his unit was responsible for stockpiling supplies for the Normandy invasion. He was soon promoted to be Thrasher's Deputy Chief, and continued on with Thrasher when the general took command of forces in northern France and Belgium. He trained at the Medical Administration Officers' Candidate School in Abilene, Kansas, received his commission as a second lieutenant, and was shipped off to England.Īfter a stint as Administrative Officer with the 127th General Hospital Unit, he was transferred to the Supply Corps and made aide de camp to General Charles Thrasher, Commanding Officer of the United States Forces in the southern half of England. With the onset of World War II, Shaw enlisted in the US Army and was assigned to the Medical Corps as a private. He left Western Union to pursue a career as a freelance public relations and advertising writer, and subsequently accepted a position with the prestigious Lee-Keedick Lecture Bureau. In 1935, Shaw was transferred by Western Union to New York City, where he took courses at Columbia University, and became district manager of Western Union's mid-city area, overseeing approximately forty branch offices. His career goal was to be a writer, but in order to make a living, he went to work as manager for the local office of Western Union. He attended public schools, including Warren Easton High School, from which he graduated in 1928.

An only child, Shaw moved with his parents to New Orleans when he was five. In Oliver Stone's JFK, Clay Shaw is a slimy, two-faced villain leading a Jekyll-and-Hyde existence: pillar of the community by day, pursuer of sexual perversions and murderer of presidents by night.Ĭlay Lavergne Shaw was born on March 17, 1913, in Kentwood, Louisiana, a small town near the Mississippi border, to Glaris and Alice Shaw. Tommy Lee Jones as New Orleans businessman Clay Shaw Who Was Clay Shaw? Oliver Stone's JFK: The JFK 100: JFK assassination investigation: Jim Garrison New Orleans investigation of the John F.
