Patton graduated from
North Atlanta High School, then known as North Fulton High School, on
D-Day, June 6, 1944. Thereafter he studied for a few weeks at the
Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta but interrupted his education to enter the
United States Navy. On his discharge in 1946, he returned to Georgia Tech and completed his formal education in 1949 in the field of industrial management. At Tech, he was a member and officer of
Sigma Chi fraternity. During the
Korean War, Patton accepted a commission in the newly organized
United States Air Force. He flew one hundred combat missions in Korea before he was discharged in 1951 and returned to the United States. Patton made his living in banking, real estate and hotel development. His Patton and Associates engaged in the sale of waste systems and equipment. He also started the Cobb Bank and Trust Company and the Marriott at Sawgrass in
Ponte Vedra in northeastern Florida. In later years, he managed properties in Atlanta,
Augusta, and
Albany, Georgia. In 1956, he joined with others on the Northside to create the Cherokee Town and Country Club, of which he served as the president in 1970. Patton was also active in the
Young Men's Christian Association and worked to build a "Y" facility on the Northside of Atlanta. Patton was chairman of the
Cobb County Chamber of Commerce and helped to establish the
Georgia International Convention Center. He served on committees with the
1996 Olympic Games and
Paralympics as well as
Super Bowl XXVIII. For a time, he was the chairman of the Atlanta Convention and Visitors' Center Bureau. ==Republican politics==