(Commander, Depot of Supplies, Philadelphia) to the rank of Brigadier general, November 1944. Rea was ordered to
Washington, D.C., where he was appointed assistant to the officer in charge of the supply division of the Quartermaster Department under General
Seth Williams at
Headquarters Marine Corps. He was appointed officer in charge of the supply division in April 1942. He was later transferred to the staff of
I Marine Amphibious Corps under the command of Major General
Charles D. Barrett and appointed commanding officer of Corps Supply Services. He was one of the last people who saw Barrett alive, and, after participating in the
Bougainville Campaign, he was transferred back to the United States. While serving in the Pacific theater of operations, he was decorated with the
Dutch Order of Orange-Nassau with Swords, Commander by the Government of the
Netherlands for his service in connection with Dutch troops. On his return to the United States, Rea was assigned back to the Headquarters Marine Corps in Washington, D.C. and appointed executive officer at the Quartermaster Department. During his service in this capacity, he was promoted to the rank of
brigadier general on 30 April 1944. Rea served in this capacity until August 1946, when he was appointed depot quartermaster in
Philadelphia. For his distinguished World War II service, Rea received the
Legion of Merit. His last service assignment came in October 1950, when he was appointed chief of the supply branch at Headquarters Marine Corps. Rea was relieved of all active duties and subsequently retired from the Marine Corps in November 1953. He was advanced to the rank of
major general for having been specially commended in combat. ==Decorations==