Matthew
A. Zimmerman
Chaplain
(Major General)
US Army, Retired
(Rev.
4/2005)
Chaplain
Zimmerman is a native of South Carolina, where he received an
undergraduate degree (pre-med) from Benedict College in
Columbia, South Carolina (1962). In 1965, Chaplain Zimmerman
became the first African-American to earn a Master of Science
degree in Guidance and Counseling from Long Island University,
Brooklyn, New York (1975).
Chaplain
Zimmerman served as a campus pastor at Idaho State University,
Pocatello, Idaho. He then returned to his home state to
continue his ministry as campus pastor/instructor at Morris
College, Sumter, South Carolina.
Chaplain
Zimmerman entered military service in 1967, and served in a
number of positions both in the United States and abroad. In
August 1990, he became the first African-American to serve as
Chief of Chaplains of any military service. In this position
he carried the rank of Major General, U.S. Army. Also, as
Chief of Chaplains, he was responsible for the management,
training and assignments of more than 6,400 chaplains and
chaplain's assistants of both active and reserve components.
While in the military, Chaplain Zimmerman earned a number of
awards and decorations, including the Distinguished Service
Medal, the Defense Superior Service Medal, Legion of Merit,
Bronze Star, three Meritorious Service Medals, the Army
Commendation Medal, and the Vietnam Honor Medal, 1st class. He
is a graduate of the U.S. Army Command and General Staff
College and the U.S. Army War College.
Chaplain
Zimmerman was a 1990 recipient of the NAACP's Roy Wilkins
Meritorious Service Award, and in 1992, he was selected to the
South Carolina Black Hall of Fame. From 1994 to 1998, he served
as the first African-American Director of the Department of
Veterans Affairs National Chaplain Center, located at the
Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Hampton, Virginia. In this
capacity, Chaplain Zimmerman directed Department of Veterans
Affairs Headquarters level chaplain activities, including the
Chaplain Education Center, and provided leadership to the
Department's National Chaplain Service, which is responsible for
all chaplains of all denominations in 171 Medical Centers.
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