fbpx
Wikipedia

3rd Infantry Division (United States)

The 3rd Infantry Division (3ID) (nicknamed Rock of the Marne)[1][4] is a combined arms division of the United States Army based at Fort Stewart, Georgia. It is a direct subordinate unit of the XVIII Airborne Corps and U.S. Army Forces Command. Its current organization includes a division headquarters and headquarters battalion, two armored brigade combat teams, one National Guard infantry brigade combat team, one task force battalion, one aviation brigade, a division artillery, a sustainment brigade and a combat sustainment support battalion along with a maneuver enhancement brigade. The division has a distinguished history, having seen active service in World War I, World War II, the Korean War, and the Global War on Terror. The Medal of Honor has been awarded to 61 members of the 3rd Infantry Division, making the division the most honored in the Army.[5]

3rd Division
3rd Infantry Division
Insignia of the 3rd Infantry Division
Founded1917; 106 years ago (1917)
Country United States
Branch United States Army
TypeCombined arms
Light infantry
SizeDivision (Next 4th Infantry Division)
Part ofXVIII Airborne Corps
Garrison/HQFort Stewart, Georgia
Nickname(s)"Rock of the Marne"[1]
Motto(s)Nous Resterons Là (We Shall Remain There) [1]
Mascot(s)Rocky the Bulldog
EngagementsWorld War I

World War II

Korean War

Persian Gulf War

Global War on Terrorism

Commanders
Current
commander
MG Charles D. Costanza[2]
Notable
commanders
MG Tony Cucolo
MG Joseph T. Dickman
MG John P. Lucas
MG Lucian Truscott
LTG John W. O'Daniel
LTG George M. Seignious
GEN Robert B. Abrams
GEN John M. Murray
Insignia
Distinctive unit insignia of the division's headquarters battalion
Division Flag[3]
Combat service identification badge
Shoulder sleeve insignia (subdued)

The division fought in France in World War I. In World War II, it landed with General Patton's task force in a contested amphibious landing on the coast of Morocco, North Africa, overwhelming Vichy French defenders in November 1942. In 1943, the division invaded Sicily in July, and invaded Italy at Salerno in September, before fighting in France and finally Germany. Medal of Honor recipient Audie Murphy, featured in the Hollywood movie, "To Hell and Back," was a member. The division also served in the Korean War. From 1957 until 1996, the division was a major part of the United States Army's presence in the NATO alliance in West Germany.

History

World War I

 
38th Infantry Regiment repelled the German attack near Mézy, France, across the Marne River in July 1918. This defense checked the Germans' assault and made an Allied offensive possible, thus earning 38th Infantry Regiment's nickname "Rock of the Marne".
 
1918 Traffic To Mont-St. Pere by George Matthews Harding AEF unit is the 3rd US Infantry Division.

The 3rd Division was activated 21 November 1917, seven months after the American entry into World War I, at Camp Greene, North Carolina. Eight months later, it saw combat for the first time in France on the Western Front.

Order of battle

  • Headquarters, 3rd Division
  • 5th Infantry Brigade

3rd Ranger BN 3rd SFG

At midnight on 14 July 1918, the division earned lasting distinction. Engaged in the Aisne-Marne Offensive as a member of the American Expeditionary Force (AEF) to Europe, the division was protecting the French capital of Paris with a position on the banks of the Marne River. The 8th Machine Gun Battalion of the 3rd Division rushed to Château-Thierry amid retreating French troops[citation needed] and held the Germans back at the Marne River. While surrounding units retreated, the 3rd Division, including the 4th, 30th and 38th Infantry Regiments, remained steadfast throughout the Second Battle of the Marne, and Colonel Ulysses G. McAlexander's dogged defense earned the 38th Infantry Regiment its nickname as the "Rock of the Marne".[6] During the massive attack, the 3rd Infantry Division's commanding officer, Major General Joseph T. Dickman, famously cried out "Nous Resterons La" (We Shall Remain Here). Their Blue and White insignia also earned them the nickname The Blue and White Devils."[7] The rest of the division was absorbed under French command until brought back together under the command of Major General Joseph T. Dickman and by 15 July 1918 they took the brunt of what was to be the last German offensive of the war. General John Joseph "Black Jack" Pershing, Commander-in-chief of the AEF on the Western Front, called this stand "one of the most brilliant pages in the annals of military history".[8] During the war two members of the division were awarded the Medal of Honor.

Casualties during the war were 3,177 killed in action with 12,940 wounded.

Commanders
  1. MG Joseph T. Dickman (28 November 1917)
  2. BG James A. Irons (11 February 1918)
  3. MG Joseph T. Dickman (13 February 1918)
  4. BG James A. Irons (27 February 1918)
  5. BG Charles Crawford (8 March 1918)
  6. BG James A. Irons (10 March 1918)
  7. BG Charles Crawford (19 March 1918)
  8. MG Joseph T. Dickman (12 April 1918)
  9. BG Fred W. Sladen (18 August 1918)
  10. MG Beaumont B. Buck (27 August 1918)
  11. BG Preston Brown (18 October 1918)
  12. MG Robert Lee Howze (19 November 1918)

Interwar years

In August 1919 the Third Infantry Division returned from France and was stationed at Camp Pike in Arkansas. The division remained at Camp Pike until 1921, when it was relocated to Camp Lewis in Washington state.

The History of the 3rd Infantry Division
Commanders:[9]
BG William Mackey Cruikshank (Aug 1919)
BG Ora Elmer Hunt (Aug 1919–Oct 1919)
MG William M. Wright (Oct 1919–Jan 1920)
BG Edward Mann Lewis (Jan 1920–Aug 1921)
MG Charles Henry Muir (Aug 1921–Nov 1922)
BG Ulysses G. McAlexander (Nov 1922–Nov 1923)
MG Edwin B. Babbitt (Nov 1923–May 1924)
BG Joseph E. Kuhn (May 1924–Dec 1924
MG William H. Johnston (Dec 1924–Oct 1925)
MG Robert Alexander (Oct 1925–Aug 1927)
MG Joseph D. Leitch (Sep 1927–Mar 1928)
BG Michael J. Lenihan (Mar 1928–Mar 1929)
BG Joseph Compton Castner (Apr 1929–Nov 1932)
BG Halstead Dorey (1932–1933)
BG Henry W. Butner (1933–Feb 1934)
BG Otho B. Rosenbaum (Feb 1934–Aug 1935)
MG Casper H. Conrad Jr. (Aug 1935–Aug 1936)
MG David L. Stone (Sep 1936–Mar 1937)
BG Alfred T. Smith (Jul 1937–Jan 1938)
MG Walter C. Sweeney Sr. (1939–1940)

World War II

Order of battle

  • Headquarters, 3rd Infantry Division
  • 7th Infantry Regiment
  • 15th Infantry Regiment
  • 30th Infantry Regiment
  • Headquarters and Headquarters Battery, 3rd Infantry Division Artillery
    • 9th Field Artillery Battalion (155 mm)
    • 10th Field Artillery Battalion (105 mm)
    • 39th Field Artillery Battalion (105 mm)
    • 41st Field Artillery Battalion (105 mm)
  • 10th Engineer Combat Battalion
  • 3rd Medical Battalion
  • 3rd Cavalry Reconnaissance Troop, Mechanized
  • Headquarters, Special Troops, 3rd Infantry Division
    • Headquarters Company, 3rd Infantry Division
    • 703rd Ordnance Light Maintenance Company
    • 3rd Quartermaster Company
    • 3rd Signal Company
    • Military Police Platoon
    • Band
  • 3rd Counterintelligence Corps Detachment

Combat chronicle

 

The 3rd Division is the only division of the U.S. Army during World War II that fought the Axis on all European fronts,[10] and was among the first American combat units to engage in offensive ground combat operations. Audie Murphy, the most highly decorated American soldier of the war, served with the 3rd Division.[11] The 3rd Infantry Division also had a German Shepherd-Collie-Huskey mix war dog named Chips from Pleasantville, New York given to them by the Dogs for Defence program. The 3rd Infantry Division saw combat in North Africa, Sicily, Italy, France, Germany and Austria for 531 consecutive days.[12] During the war the 3rd Infantry Division consisted of the 7th, 15th and 30th Infantry Regiments, together with supporting units.

The 3rd Division, under the command of Major General Jonathan W. Anderson, after spending many months training in the United States after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, first saw action during the war as a part of the Western Task Force in Operation Torch, the Allied invasion of North Africa, landing at Fedala on 8 November 1942, and captured half of French Morocco. The division remained there for the next few months and therefore took no part in the Tunisian Campaign, which came to an end in May 1943 with the surrender of almost 250,000 Axis soldiers who subsequently became prisoners of war (POWs). While there a battalion of the 30th Infantry Regiment acted as security guards during the Casablanca Conference in mid-January 1943 with Chips as one of the guard dogs. Some soldiers say that Chips sniffed out a time bomb set up by enemy saboteurs before the conference took place and saved lives. In late February Major General Anderson left the division and was replaced by Major General Lucian K. Truscott, Jr., who instituted a tough training regime and ensured that all ranks in the division could march five miles in one hour, and four miles an hour thereafter. The troops called it "the Truscott Trot". The division began intensive training in amphibious landing operations.

On 10 July 1943, the division made another amphibious assault landing on the Italian island of Sicily (codenamed Operation Husky), landing at Licata town on the beach, to west, called Torre di Gaffi and Mollarella and on the beach, to east, called Falconara. During the invasion a platoon of soldiers from the 30th Infantry Regiment, accompanied with Chips, moved inland into the Sicilian countryside when they got ambushed by Italian mortar and machine gun fire. Cut off from the rest of the regiment by Italian skirmishes and the field telephone line cut from the bombardment, the platoon fought hard until Chips, ordered by his handler Pvt. John P. Rowell, ran back HQ with a phone line to restore communication while dodging enemy fire. Chips ran through enemy fire again back to his handler and the platoon received word that the reinforcements were on their way. Another Italian machine gun team made their way around the rear of the platoon and opened fire. The platoon leader sent a lone American soldier to take out the MG nest but when he was pinned down, Chips broke free from his handler and ran toward the MG nest, jumped in and attacked the Italian soldiers manning the gun. Pvt. Rowell and the other soldier ran to help Chips and the gunners were forced to surrender. Chips only sustained a scalp wound and gunpowder burns from the explosions. The division, serving under the command of Lieutenant General George S. Patton's U.S. Seventh Army, fought its way into Palermo before elements of the 2nd Armored Division could get there, in the process marching 90 miles in three days, and raced on to capture Messina on 17 August, thus ending the brief Sicilian campaign, where the division had a short rest to absorb replacements. During the campaign the 3rd Division gained a reputation as one of the best divisions in the Seventh Army.

 
Infantrymen of 2nd Battalion, 30th Infantry Regiment depicted near Bult, France. 11 November 1944.
 
Men of the U.S. 3rd Infantry Division in Nuremberg, Germany on 20 April 1945

Eight days after the Allied invasion of mainland Italy, on 18 September 1943, the 3rd Division came ashore at Salerno, where they came under the command of VI Corps, under Major General Ernest J. Dawley who was replaced two days later by Major General John P. Lucas (who had commanded the division from September 1941 to March 1942). The corps was part of Lieutenant General Mark W. Clark's U.S. Fifth Army. The 3rd Division was destined to see some of the fiercest and toughest fighting of the war thus far, serving on the Italian Front. Seeing intensive action along the way, the division drove to and across the Volturno River by October 1943, and then to Monte Cassino, where the Battle of Monte Cassino would later be fought, before, with the rest of the 15th Army Group, being held up at the Winter Line (also known as the Gustav Line). In mid-November the division, after spearheading the Fifth Army's advance and suffering heavy casualties during the past few weeks, was relieved by the 36th Infantry Division and pulled out of the line to rest and absorb replacements, coming under the command of Major General Geoffrey Keyes' II Corps. The division remained out of action until late December.

After a brief rest, the division was part of the amphibious landing at Anzio, codenamed Operation Shingle, on 22 January 1944, still as part of VI Corps, and serving alongside the British 1st Infantry Division and other units. It would remain there for just over four months in a toe-hold against numerous furious German counterattacks, and enduring trench warfare similar to that suffered on the Western Front during World War I. On 29 February 1944, the 3rd Division fought off an attack by three German divisions, who fell back with heavy losses two days later. In a single day of combat at Anzio, the 3rd Infantry Division suffered more than 900 casualties, the most of any American division on one day in World War II.[12] The division's former commander, Major General Lucas, was replaced as commander of VI Corps by the 3rd Division's commander, Major General Truscott. He was replaced in command of the 3rd Division by Brigadier General John W. "Iron Mike" O'Daniel, previously the assistant division commander (ADC) and a distinguished World War I veteran.

In late May, VI Corps broke out of the Anzio beachhead in Operation Diadem with the 3rd Division in the main thrust. Instead of defeating the Germans, Lieutenant General Clark, the Fifth Army commander, disobeying orders from General Sir Harold Alexander, Commander-in-Chief (C-in-C) of the Allied Armies in Italy (formerly the 15th Army Group), sent the division on to the Italian capital of Rome. This allowed the majority of the German 10th Army, which would otherwise have been trapped, to escape, thus prolonging the campaign in Italy. The division was then removed from the front line and went into training for the Operation Dragoon, the Allied invasion of Southern France.

On 15 August 1944, D-Day for Dragoon, the division, still under VI Corps command but now under the U.S. Seventh Army, landed at St. Tropez, advanced up the Rhone Valley, through the Vosges Mountains, and reached the Rhine at Strasbourg, 26–27 November 1944. After maintaining defensive positions it took part in clearing the Colmar Pocket on 23 January, and on 15 March struck against Siegfried Line positions south of Zweibrücken. The division advanced through the defenses and crossed the Rhine, 26 March 1945; then drove on to take Nuremberg in a fierce battle, capturing the city in block-by-block fighting, 17–20 April. The 3rd pushed on to take Augsburg where it liberated thousands of forced laborers from the Augsburg concentration camp, a force labor subcamp of Dauchau, and Munich, 27–30 April, and was in the vicinity of Salzburg when the war in Europe ended.[13] Elements of the 7th Infantry Regiment serving under the 3rd Infantry Division captured Hitler's retreat near Berchtesgaden.[14]

Casualties

  • Total battle casualties: 25,977[15]
  • Killed in action: 4,922[15]
  • Wounded in action: 18,766[15]
  • Missing in action: 554[15]
  • Prisoner of war: 1,735[15]
Commanders
  1. MG Charles F. Thompson (July 1940 – August 1941)
  2. BG Charles P. Hall (August 1941 – September 1941)
  3. MG John P. Lucas (September 1941 – March 1942)
  4. MG Jonathan W. Anderson (March 1942 – March 1943)
  5. MG Lucian K. Truscott Jr. (March 1943 – February 1944)
  6. MG John W. O'Daniel (February 1944 – December 1945)
  7. MG William R. Schmidt (July 1945 – August 1946)

Korean War

Commanders:

  1. MG Robert H. Soule (August 1950 – October 1951)
  2. MG Thomas J. Cross (October 1951 – May 1952)
  3. MG Robert L. Dulaney (May 1952 – October 1952)
  4. MG George W. Smythe (October 1952 – May 1953)
  5. MG Eugene W. Ridings (May 1953 – October 1953)
 
3rd Ranger Company troops getting ready to patrol the Imjin River, 1951

During the Korean War, the division was known as the "Fire Brigade" for its rapid response to crisis. 3rd Infantry Division had been headquartered at Fort Benning along with its 15th Infantry Regiment. The 7th Infantry Regiment was located at Fort Devens. 3rd Infantry Division initially arrived in Japan where, as the Far East Command Reserve,[16] it planned post conflict occupation missions in northern Korea.[17] In Japan their strength was increased by augmentation by South Korean soldiers. The division was assigned to X Corps and landed at Wonsan on the east coast of Korea on 5 November and received the 65th Infantry Regiment as their third maneuver element before moving north to Hungnam and Majon-dong. At Majon-dong they established a defensive position with the 65th Infantry. 1st and 2nd Battalions of the 7th Infantry were on the left flank. The 15th Infantry was between the 7th and 65th Regiments. 3rd Battalion, 7th Infantry was set as the nucleus for Task Force Dog which was commanded by Brigadier General Armistead D. Mead, assistant 3rd Division commander and sent north to conduct a relief in place with 1st Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment at Chinhung-ni; the south end of the 1st Marine Division and support the withdrawal of 1st Marine Division and Regimental Combat Team 31 from the fighting at the Chosin Reservoir. 3rd Infantry Division's Task Force Dog was the rearguard keeping the pressure off of the Marine column. The division along with the 7th Infantry Division established a collapsing perimeter around the port of Hungnam until the last of X Corps was evacuated. The division was the last unit to leave Hungnam and was shipped to Pusan where it completed unloading on 30 December and moved north to Kyongju and on 31 December it was placed in Eighth Army reserve for reorganization and reequipping following which it was to move into the Pyongtaek-Ansong area. The division was then transferred to US I Corps.

In January 1953 the division was transferred from I Corps. The division served in Korea until 1953 when it was withdrawn. Notably, the division fought at the Chorwon-Kumwha area, Jackson Heights and Arrowhead outposts and blocked a push in the Kumsong Area in July 1953.

3rd Infantry Division received ten Battle Stars. Eleven more members of the unit received Medals of Honor during the Korean War. Eight were from the 7th Infantry Regiment: Jerry K. Crump (6 and 7 September 1951), John Essebagger, Jr. (25 April 1951), Charles L. Gilliland (25 April 1951), Clair Goodblood (24 and 25 April 1951), Noah O. Knight (23 and 24 November 1951), Darwin K. Kyle (16 February 1951), Leroy A. Mendonca (4 July 1951), and Hiroshi H. Miyamura, whose award was classified Top Secret until his repatriation (24 and 25 April 1951). Three more recipients were with the 15th Infantry Regiment: Emory L. Bennett (24 June 1951), Ola L. Mize (10 and 11 June 1953) and Charles F. Pendleton (16 and 17 July 1953).

During the Korean War, the division had 2,160 killed in action and 7,939 wounded.

After the armistice, the division remained in Korea until 1954, when it was reduced to near zero strength, the colors were transferred to Fort Benning, Georgia and, in December 1954, the 47th Infantry Division was reflagged as the Third.

 
As a Pentomic Division
 
Standard organization chart for a ROAD division

On 1 July 1957, the division was reorganized as a Pentomic Division. The division's three infantry regiments (the 7th, 15th and 30th) were inactivated, with their elements reorganized into five infantry battle groups (the 1-7 IN, 1-15 IN, 1-30 IN, 2-38 IN and the 2-4 IN). In April 1958, the division deployed to Germany as part of an Operation Gyroscope rotation (soldiers and families, no equipment), switching places with the 10th Infantry Division (which was reflagged as the 2nd Infantry Division upon its arrival at Fort Benning). In 1963, the division was reorganized as a Reorganization Objective Army Division (ROAD). Three Brigade Headquarters were activated and Infantry units were reorganized into battalions.

Cold War to the Millennium (1953 through 2000)

 
3rd Infantry Division structure 1989 (click to enlarge)

The division was stationed with the V Corps (1958–63, 1992-1996) and VII Corps (1963–92) in West Germany from near the Czech border westward throughout various towns including Würzburg (Div. Hq. & Support Command), Schweinfurt (1st Brigade), Kitzingen (2nd Brigade), and Aschaffenburg (3rd Brigade). In August 1961, a few days after the Berlin Wall was erected, a reinforced company from the 7th Infantry Regiment (a unit of the 3rd Infantry Division) in full battle gear, was ordered to travel along the Autobahn (a major highway) from Aschaffenburg in Bavaria to West Berlin. This was to assert the right of US forces to travel unhindered from West Germany across the western part of East Germany to West Berlin. After the Berlin Wall was built, it was not known if the East German forces would attempt to impede or restrict the movement of US troops when crossing East Germany while trying to reach West Berlin. The unit arrived in West Berlin without incident confirming the right of free passage.[citation needed]

In November 1990, following Iraq's invasion of Kuwait, more than 6,000 3rd Infantry Division men and women deployed with the 1st Armored Division on Operation Desert Storm as part of the Allied Coalition. They participated in the Battle of Medina Ridge which was the second largest tank battle of the conflict.[18] The 3rd Brigade was credited with the destruction of 82 tanks, 31 Armored Personnel Carriers, 11 artillery pieces, 48 trucks, 3 AAA guns and captured 72 EPW's with the loss of 2 Bradley Cavalry vehicles, 30 WIA's and 1 KIA. Later nearly 1,000 soldiers(one unit-I co. 3rd Aviation Support, 3rd ID) deployed to southeastern Turkey and northern Iraq in Operation Provide Comfort to help Kurdish refugees. In late Spring of 1991, the division supplied senior ranking officers and non-commissioned officers, along with a military police company to Task Force Victory (Forward). Stationed in Kuwait the Task Force was to provide division level support to the 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment (which shared the same duty station). Those elements of V Corps attached to the task force (including those of division) returned to their home units in early September 1991.[citation needed]

As part of the Army's reduction to a ten-division force, the 24th Infantry Division was inactivated on 15 February 1996, and reflagged to become the 3rd Infantry Division.

In 1996 the division was redeployed to Fort Stewart, Fort Benning, and Hunter Army Airfield, Georgia. The division repeatedly demonstrated its deployability since then by maintaining a battalion, and later a brigade task force presence in Kuwait. It has also moved sizable forces to Egypt, Bosnia and Kosovo in partnership training and peacekeeping missions.

In 1996–97, the 3rd Infantry Division Detachment, Rear Tactical Operations Center (RTOC), which is a unit manned by the Georgia Army National Guard was mobilized and served in Operation Joint Endeavor. During this time, the 3rd ID RTOC served under the 1st Infantry Division and later the 1st Armored Division. Respectively serving in Bosnia, at Camps Dallas and Angela, near Tuzla under the 1ID, and then in Croatia at Slavonski Brod, under the 1AD, serving the Assistant Division Commander for Support, then BG George Casey.

Commanders

Global War on Terrorism

Commanders

OIF I (Baghdad Spearhead)

Early in 2003 the entire division deployed in weeks to Kuwait. It was called on subsequently to spearhead Coalition forces in Operation Iraqi Freedom, fighting its way to Baghdad in early April, leading to the end of the Saddam Hussein government. The First Brigade captured the Baghdad International Airport and cleared and secured the airport, which also resulted in the division's first Medal of Honor since the Korean War, awarded to SFC Paul Ray Smith. Second Brigade, Third Infantry division made the much-publicized "Thunder Run" into downtown Baghdad. The Second Brigade was redeployed to Fallujah, Iraq during the summer of 2003. The division returned to the United States in September 2003.[citation needed]

Order of Battle during 2003 invasion:

1st Brigade
2nd Battalion, 7th Infantry Regiment (Mech)
3rd Battalion, 7th Infantry Regiment (Mech)
3rd Battalion, 69th Armor Regiment
1st Battalion, 41st Field Artillery Regiment (155SP)
2nd Brigade
3rd Battalion, 15th Infantry Regiment (Mech)
1st Battalion, 64th Armor Regiment
4th Battalion, 64th Armor Regiment (Tuskers)
1st Battalion, 9th Field Artillery Regiment (155SP)
3rd Brigade
203rd FSB 3rd Brigade Combat Team (Mech)
1st Battalion, 15th Infantry Regiment (Mech)
1st Battalion, 30th Infantry Regiment (Mech)
2nd Battalion, 69th Armor Regiment
1st Battalion, 10th Field Artillery Regiment (155SP)
1st Battalion, 39th Field Artillery Regiment, 3rd ID DIVARTY, MLRS - Inactivated May, 2006[21]
3rd Squadron, 7th Cavalry Regiment

Beginning in 2004, the 3rd began re-organizing. The division shifted from three maneuver brigades to four "units of action", which are essentially smaller brigade formations, with one infantry, one armor, one cavalry, and one artillery battalion in each. The former Engineer Brigade became the 4th Brigade at Fort Stewart. Each of these units of action engaged in several mock battles at the National Training Center and Joint Readiness Training Center, and preparation for a second deployment to Iraq.[citation needed]

OIF III

 
An M2A2 Bradley crew, from the 3rd Infantry Division, drive back to Forward Operating Base Warhorse after a mission near Baqubah, Iraq, May 2005

In January 2005, the Third Infantry Division became the first Army division to serve a second tour in Iraq.[citation needed] The division headquarters took control of the Multi-National Division Baghdad, MND-B, headquartered at Camp Liberty and with responsibility for the greater Baghdad area. First and Third Brigades of the Third Infantry Division were placed under control of the 42nd Infantry Division, and later under the 101st Airborne Division, in MND-North. In preparation of this deployment a Fourth Brigade was organized and became the first cohesive brigade combat team sent into a combat zone by the US Army, cohesive in that it fulfilled the table of organization requirement of such a unit. The California Army National Guard's 1st Battalion 184th Infantry Regiment served as one of the brigade's two infantry battalions, as well as the detachment from the Hawaii Army National Guard's 29th Brigade Combat Team, the 2/299th Infantry, also the 48th Brigade Combat Team from the Georgia Army National Guard, 2/130 Infantry Battalion of the Illinois National Guard, and Charlie Company, 1st Battalion, 295th Infantry Battalion from the Puerto Rico Army National Guard served in this Operation.[citation needed]

2/69 Armor was assigned to Camp War Horse in Iraq. By Mid 2005 Primary elements of 2/69 Armor 3rd Brigade 3rd Infantry Division was re-deployed to Ramadi Iraq, replacing elements of the 2nd ID. They ran joint missions with 2nd Mar Div. and elements of the Pennsylvania National Guard and the 2/130th Infantry of the Illinois National Guard who was redeployed as to Al Taquattum as the infantry battalion.

OIF V

The division redeployed to Fort Stewart and Fort Benning in January 2006. On 17 November 2006, the Army announced that the Third Infantry Division is scheduled to return to Iraq in 2007 and thus become the first Army division to serve three tours in Iraq. The division headquarters became the leadership organization of MND-C (Multi-National Division Central), a new command established south of Baghdad as part of the Iraq War troop surge of 2007.[citation needed]

In support of operations in Baghdad, the unit 3rd Squadron, 7th Cavalry was detached from 3ID and assigned by General Petraeus to 3rd BCT, 82nd Airborne who was under the command of the 1st Cavalry Division. In 2008, 82nd Airborne and 1st CAV redeployed home, and 3–7 CAV was handed over to 3rd BCT, 4th Infantry Division under the command of the 25th Infantry Division. They would remain under this command until 3–7 CAV's redeployment back to Fort Stewart, being reattached to the 3rd Infantry Division.[citation needed] Similarly, 1st Battalion, 64th Armor was detached from 3ID and attached to 2nd BCT, 1st Infantry Division under 1st Cavalry Division, and later under 2nd BCT, 101st Infantry Division under command of 4th Infantry Division.[22]

 
3rd Infantry Division Soldiers in an M1A1 Abrams conduct a counter improvised explosive device (IED) mission in Baghdad, Iraq, December 22, 2007.

Reassignment of 1st Brigade

In the fall of 2008, the 3rd Infantry Division's 1st Brigade was assigned to serve as the on-call federal response force under the control of NORTHCOM, the combatant command assigned responsibility for the continental United States. The brigade remained at its home station of Fort Stewart, Georgia, and "is training to deploy domestically in response to terrorist attacks or other national emergencies."[23] The brigade will be trained in responding to WMD attacks, crowd control, and dealing with civil unrest.[24]

The force was renamed "Chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear, or high-yield explosive Consequence Management Response Force". Its acronym, CCMRF, is pronounced "see-smurf",[25] and the unit is now under the daily control of United States Northern Command's Army North, whose mission is to "protect the United States homeland and support local, state, and federal authorities."[24] The unit is a multi-branch force with servicemembers from the four branches of the United States Department of Defense.

Reorganization of 4th Brigade

In March 2009, 4th Brigade reorganized from a mechanized or heavy brigade to a light infantry brigade. As part of this reorganization, 4th Battalion, 64th Armor was reflagged as 3rd Battalion, 15th Infantry Regiment.[26]

OIF VII

The 3rd Infantry Division assumed command of the Multi-National Division-North, now United States Division-North, in October 2009. This milestone marked the division's fourth tour in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom (I, III, V, and VII). The division has elements operating in every area of Iraq as the mission changes from Operation Iraqi Freedom to Operation New Dawn on 1 September 2010. With the advent of Operation New Dawn, the focus will shift from combat operations to stability and advise and assist operations throughout all Iraq's provinces.

In the course of Operation Iraqi Freedom up until 24 September 2010, 436 members of the division were killed in action[27]

Operation Enduring Freedom

 
An Infantryman with Bravo Company, 3rd Battalion, 15th Infantry Regiment, 4th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, carries an M240L machine gun while on a foot patrol in Wardak province, Afghanistan, 2013

The Combat Aviation Brigade, 3rd Infantry Division deployed to Afghanistan for a 13-month tour. The brigade was the first unit from 3ID to deploy to Afghanistan. During that tour 3rd CAB soldiers flew about 26,000 missions, including 800 air assaults, and were responsible for about 2,500 enemy casualties.

 
Soldiers of Task Force Brawler conduct a Commander's Emergency Response Program mission, 3rd Combat Aviation Brigade (CAB) Air-Ground Mission, Regional Command – East, 2010.

3rd CAB is slated to deploy to Afghanistan again in January 2013. The 2500 soldiers will deploy with 3rd Special Troops Battalion for a 9-month tour. The Marne Air will be operating out of Kandahar Airfield in the RC-South area-of-operations, relieving the 25th CAB.

Both the 3rd CAB and 3rd STB will fall under their parent division when the 3ID Headquarters and Headquarters Battalion deploys in August and takes over command of RC-South from 82nd Airborne Division HQ.[28]

The 2nd Heavy BCT's two combined-arms battalions also deployed individually to Afghanistan. 1st Battalion, 64th Armor Regiment deployed in March 2012. They are attached to the 3rd Stryker Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division (United States) from Joint Base Lewis-McChord, WA, to help train Afghanistan National Security Forces to take over in their country's security operations.[29] 1st Battalion, 30th Infantry Regiment deployed a month earlier. They are tasked with providing security to units conducting contingency operations. Both battalions will serve nine-month tour.[30]

In December 2012, the 3rd Sustainment Brigade deployed for its fifth deployment over the last decade and first to Afghanistan, for nine months in support of Operation Enduring Freedom 12–13, let by COL Ron Novack and CSM Daniels. Deployed to Kandahar with 276 soldiers the brigade provided sustainment and retrograde support to the 3rd and 4th Infantry Divisions, 1st and 2nd Marine Expeditionary Forces, and International Security Assistance Forces operating in Regional Commands South, Southwest, and National Support Element-West. The brigade assisted in the closure and transfer of over 61 Forward Operating Bases while simultaneously providing sustainment to the force. Additionally, the 3rd Sustainment Brigade provided direct support to the 1st and 2nd Brigade Combat Teams and the Combat Aviation Brigade of the 3rd Infantry Division.

In February 2013, the 4th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division (later reflagged as the 2nd Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division), deployed to Logar Province and Wardak Province, Afghanistan in support of Operation Enduring Freedom. 6th Squadron, 8th Cavalry Regiment was tasked with securing Logar Province, and disrupting the almost daily rocket attacks on Forward Operation Base Shank.[31] 3rd Battalion, 15th Infantry Regiment was tasked with securing Wardak Province's highly volatile Highway 1. The soldiers of 4th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division returned home in late November 2013 after serving a 9-month tour.

Operation Freedom's Sentinel

In April 2017, Military.com reported that about 200 soldiers from the 3rd Infantry Division Headquarters will deploy to Afghanistan to replace the 1st Cavalry Division Headquarters at Bagram Airfield taking over command of the U.S. Forces-Afghanistan's National Support Element, as part of Operation Freedom's Sentinel.[32]

Starting in December 2018 troops of the Georgia Army National Guard's 48th IBCT of the 3rd Infantry Division were deployed in support of NATO operations in Afghanistan. These missions included train, advise, assist missions for the Afghanistan military as well as attached infantry units from 3rd Battalion, 121st Infantry Regiment to Army Special Forces ODAs and other Special Operations forces.

Operation Atlantic Resolve

In February 2015, ArmyTimes reported that More than 3,000 soldiers from the 1st Heavy Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Combat Aviation Brigade, 3rd ID's Artillery and other units of the 3rd Infantry Division began an accumulative of 12 months deployment to Europe in March 2015 in support of Operation Atlantic Resolve. Soldiers from 3rd ID deployed to various European countries including Germany, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Romania and Bulgaria with the 1st Brigade acting as the European Rotational Force and NATO Response Force, which works and trains with NATO allies to remain prepared for contingency operations within the European Command's area of responsibility.[33]

Current structure

 
Structure of 3rd Infantry Division 2021
 
Soldiers from the 3rd Squadron, 1st Cavalry Regiment, 3rd Heavy Brigade Combat Team of the 3rd Infantry training at Fort Irwin

3rd Infantry Division consists of a division headquarters battalion, two armored brigade combat teams, an associated brigade combat team, a task force unit with the 1st Battalion, 28th Infantry Regiment, a division artillery, a sustainment brigade, and a combat aviation brigade along with a maneuver enhancement brigade. All BCTs are headquartered at Fort Stewart except for the 48th IBCT which is headquartered in Macon, Georgia and Task Force 1-28th Infantry, which is located at Fort Benning. All field artillery battalions remain connected to their brigade combat teams.

The 2nd Brigade Combat Team inactivated on 15 January 2015 as part of the Army's modular brigade reorganization. Special Troops Battalion; 3rd Squadron, 7th Cavalry Regiment; 1st Battalion, 9th Field Artillery Regiment; and 26th Brigade Support Battalion were inactivated concurrently, with some of their companies joining other brigades' battalions. The maneuver battalions of 2nd Brigade Combat Team moved to other brigades in the division: 1st Battalion, 64th Armor Regiment moved to 1st Brigade Combat Team and 1st Battalion, 30th Infantry Regiment moved to 4th Brigade Combat Team. With the inactivation of 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 4th Brigade Combat Team was reflagged as the 2nd Brigade Combat Team. After the reorganization, the division had three BCTs, each with three maneuver battalions.

The 42nd Fires Brigade was activated at Fort Stewart on 17 October 2013 and later reflagged as 3rd Infantry Division Artillery. Division Artillery has training oversight of the division's artillery battalions, although the battalions remain organic to their respective BCTs.

As part of budget driven downsizing, the Army announced that it would inactivate the 3rd Brigade Combat Team by the end of 2015 and replace it with a Battalion Task Force centered around the 1st Battalion, 28th Infantry. The 3rd Brigade Combat Team inactivated on 15 December 2015.

Lineage and honors

Division

  • Constituted 12 November 1917 in the Regular Army as Headquarters, 3d Division
  • Organized 21 November 1917 at Camp Greene, North Carolina
  • Redesignated 1 August 1942 as Headquarters, 3d Infantry Division
  • Reorganized and redesignated 1 April 1960 as Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 3d Infantry Division
  • Reorganized and redesignated 16 May 2004 as Headquarters and Tactical Command Posts, 3d Infantry Division
  • Reorganized and redesignated 16 November 2010 as Headquarters and Headquarters Battalion, 3d Infantry Division[47]

Campaign participation credit

World War I
World War II
Korean War
  • CCF Intervention
  • First UN Counteroffensive
  • CCF Spring Offensive
  • UN Summer-Fall Offensive
  • Second Korean Winter
  • Korea, Summer-Fall 1952
  • Third Korean Winter
  • Korea, Summer 1953
1st Gulf War
  • Operation Desert Shield
  • Operation Desert Storm
War on Terrorism

Decorations

Ribbon Award Year Notes
  Presidential Unit Citation (Army) 1945 Streamer embroidered COLMAR
  Presidential Unit Citation (Army) 2003 Streamer embroidered IRAQ 2003
  Meritorious Unit Commendation 2007–2008 Streamer embroidered IRAQ 2007-2008
  Meritorious Unit Commendation 2009–2010 Streamer embroidered IRAQ 2009-2010
  Meritorious Unit Commendation 2012–2013 Streamer embroidered AFGHANISTAN 2012-2013
  French Croix de guerre with Palm 1945 Streamer embroidered COLMAR
  French Fourragère in the colors of the Croix de guerre 1945 Fourragère
  Presidential Unit Citation (Korea) 1951 Streamer embroidered UIJONGBU CORRIDOR
  Presidential Unit Citation (Korea) 1953 Streamer embroidered IRON TRIANGLE
  Chryssoun Aristion Andrias
(Bravery Gold Medal of Greece)
1950–1953 Streamer embroidered KOREA

Division Artillery

  • Constituted 12 November 1917 in the Regular Army as Headquarters, 3rd Field Artillery Brigade, and assigned to the 3rd Division
  • Organized 26 November 1917 at Camp Stanley, Texas
  • Disbanded 16 October 1939 at Fort Lewis, Washington
  • Reconstituted 1 October 1940 in the Regular Army as Headquarters and Headquarters Battery, 3rd Division Artillery, and activated at Fort Lewis, Washington
  • Redesignated 1 July 1957 as Headquarters and Headquarters Battery, 3rd Infantry Division Artillery[48]

Campaign participation credit

World War I
World War II
Korean War
  • Chinese Communist Forces Intervention
  • First United Nations Counteroffensive
  • Chinese Communist Forces Spring Offensive
  • United Nations Summer-Fall Offensive
  • Second Korean Winter
  • Korea, Summer-Fall 1952
  • Third Korean Winter
  • Korea, Summer 1953

Decorations

[48]

Ribbon Award Year Notes
  Presidential Unit Citation (Army) 1945 Streamer embroidered COLMAR
  Meritorious Unit Commendation 2007–2008 Streamer embroidered IRAQ 2007-2008
  French Croix de guerre with Palm 1945 Streamer embroidered COLMAR
  French Fourragère in the colors of the Croix de guerre 1945 Fourragère
  Presidential Unit Citation (Korea) 1951 Streamer embroidered UIJONGBU CORRIDOR
  Presidential Unit Citation (Korea) 1953 Streamer embroidered IRON TRIANGLE
  Chryssoun Aristion Andrias
(Bravery Gold Medal of Greece)
1950–1953 Streamer embroidered KOREA

Combat Aviation Brigade

Constituted 16 March 1985 in the Regular Army as Headquarters and Headquarters Company, Aviation Brigade, 3rd Infantry Division, and activated in Germany.[49]

Deployed to Afghanistan in November 2009 and returned home in November 2010.

Division Band

  • Constituted 20 August 1943 in the Regular Army as the Band, 3rd Infantry Division
  • Redesignated 1 December 1943 as the 3d Infantry Division Band and activated in North Africa
  • Consolidated 20 March 1963 with Headquarters and Headquarters Detachment, 3rd Infantry Division Trains, and consolidated unit reorganized and redesignated as Headquarters, Headquarters and Band, 3rd Infantry Division Support Command.
  • Reorganized and redesignated 15 March 1968 as Headquarters, Headquarters Company and Band, 3rd Infantry Division Support Command.
  • Band element withdrawn 21 May 1972 from Headquarters, Headquarters Company and Band, 3rd Infantry Division Support Command, and absorbed by the 3d Adjutant General Company
  • Band element withdrawn 1 October 1984 from the 3d Adjutant General Company and redesignated as the 3rd Infantry Division Band.[50]

Campaign participation credit

World War I
World War II – EAME
Korean War
  • Chinese Communist Forces Intervention
  • First United Nations Counteroffensive
  • Chinese Communist Forces Spring Offensive
  • United Nations Summer-Fall Offensive
  • Second Korean Winter
  • Korea, Summer-Fall 1952
  • Third Korean Winter
  • Korea, Summer 1953
War on Terror

Decorations

Ribbon Award Year Notes
  Presidential Unit Citation (Army) 1945 Streamer embroidered COLMAR
  Presidential Unit Citation (Army) 2003 Streamer embroidered IRAQ 2003
  Meritorious Unit Commendation 1951–1952 Streamer embroidered KOREA 1951–1952
  French Croix de guerre with Palm 1945 Streamer embroidered COLMAR
  French Fourragère in the colors of the Croix de guerre 1945 Fourragère
  Republic of Korea Presidential Unit Citation 1951 Streamer embroidered UIJONGBU CORRIDOR
  Republic of Korea Presidential Unit Citation 1953 Streamer embroidered IRON TRIANGLE
  Chryssoun Aristion Andrias
(Bravery Gold Medal of Greece)
1950–1953 Streamer embroidered KOREA

Notable members

[51]

Lloyd Austin General 3d Division Iraq General officer
David G. Perkins General 3d Division Iraq General officer
Robert B. Abrams General 3d Division Iraq Son of General Creighton Abrams
Lucian Adams Staff Sergeant 30th Infantry World War II Medal of Honor
Sylvester Antolak Sergeant 15th Infantry World War II Medal of Honor
James Arness Private 7th Infantry World War II Actor
John L. Barkley Private First Class 4th Infantry World War I Medal of Honor
Stanley Bender Staff Sergeant 7th Infantry World War II Medal of Honor
Emory L. Bennett Private First Class 15th Infantry Korea Medal of Honor
Maurice L. Britt Captain 3d Division World War II Medal of Honor
Edward H. Brooks Lieutenant General 76th Field Artillery World War I Distinguished Service Cross
Preston Brown Brigadier General 3d Division World War I Distinguished Service Medal
Frank Burke Major 15th Infantry World War II Medal of Honor
Agustín Ramos Calero Sergeant First Class 65th Infantry World War II Most decorated Hispanic soldier of WW II
Herbert F. Christian Private 15th Infantry World War II Medal of Honor
Garlin Murl Conner First Lieutenant 7th Infantry World War II Distinguished Service Cross
James P. Connor Sergeant 7th Infantry World War II Medal of Honor
Robert Craig Second Lieutenant 15th Infantry World War II Medal of Honor
Jerry K. Crump Master Sergeant 7th Infantry Korea Medal of Honor
Michael J. Daly Captain 15th Infantry World War II Medal of Honor
Rudolph B. Davila First Lieutenant 7th Infantry World War II Medal of Honor
Joseph T. Dickman Major General 3d Division World War I First commander of the 3d Division
Russell E. Dunham Technical Sergeant 30th Infantry World War II Medal of Honor
John W. Dutko First Sergeant 30th Infantry World War II Medal of Honor
Dwight D. Eisenhower General of the Army 15th Infantry World War I President of the United States
John Essebagger, Jr. Corporal 7th Infantry Korea Medal of Honor
Eric G. Gibson Technician Fifth Grade 3d Division World War II Medal of Honor
Charles L. Gilliland Corporal 7th Infantry Korea Medal of Honor
Clair Goodblood Corporal 7th Infantry Korea Medal of Honor
John R. Guthrie General 3d Division Korea General officer
Charles P. Hall Lieutenant General 3d Division World War II Principal commander during
the Battle of Bataan
Lloyd C. Hawks Sergeant First Class 30th Infantry World War II Medal of Honor
George Price Hays Lieutenant General 10th Field Artillery World War I Medal of Honor
Robert Lee Howze Major General 3d Division World War I Medal of Honor (while in 6th U.S. Cavalry)
Elden H. Johnson Private 15th Infantry World War II Medal of Honor
Harold Keith Johnson General 7th Infantry Korea Army Chief of Staff
Victor L. Kandle First Lieutenant 15th Infantry World War II Medal of Honor
Gus Kefurt Staff Sergeant 15th Infantry World War II Medal of Honor
Patrick L. Kessler Private First Class 30th Infantry World War II Medal of Honor
Richard D. Kisling Chief Master Sergeant of the Air Force 3d Division World War II Third Chief Master Sergeant of the Air Force
Alton W. Knappenberger Private First Class 3d Division World War II Medal of Honor
Noah O. Knight Private First Class 7th Infantry Korea Medal of Honor
Darwin K. Kyle Second Lieutenant 7th Infantry Korea Medal of Honor
Floyd K. Lindstrom Private First Class 7th Infantry World War II Medal of Honor
John P. Lucas Major General 3d Division World War II Distinguished Service Medal
Robert D. Maxwell Technician Fifth Grade 7th Infantry World War II Medal of Honor
Leroy A. Mendonca Sergeant 7th Infantry World War II Medal of Honor
Joseph F. Merrell Private 15th Infantry World War II Medal of Honor
Harold O. Messerschmidt Sergeant 30th Infantry World War II Medal of Honor
James H. Mills Corporal 15th Infantry World War II Medal of Honor
Hiroshi H. Miyamura Staff Sergeant, Honorary Sergeant Major 7th Infantry Korea Medal of Honor
Ola L. Mize Colonel 15th Infantry Korea Medal of Honor
Audie L. Murphy Major 15th Infantry World War II Medal of Honor, actor
Charles P. Murray, Jr. Colonel 30th Infantry World War II Medal of Honor
John W. O'Daniel Lieutenant General 3d Division World War II Distinguished Service Cross
Arlo L. Olson Captain 15th Infantry World War II Medal of Honor
Truman O. Olson Sergeant 7th Infantry World War II Medal of Honor
Forrest E. Peden Technician Fifth Grade 10th Field Artillery World War II Medal of Honor
Charles F. Pendleton Corporal 15th Infantry Korea Medal of Honor
Wilburn K. Ross Master Sergeant 350th Infantry World War II Medal of Honor
Henry Schauer Technical Sergeant 3d Division World War II Medal of Honor
William R. Schmidt Major General 3d Division World War II 3d ID commander
George J. Schultz Private First Class 30th Infantry World War II Distinguished Service Cross
Donald K. Schwab First Lieutenant 3rd Division World War II Medal of Honor
Paul Ray Smith Sergeant First Class 11th Engineer GWOT-Iraq Medal of Honor
John C. Squires Sergeant 30th Infantry World War II Medal of Honor
John J. Tominac Colonel 15th Infantry World War II Medal of Honor
Lucian Truscott General 3d Division World War II General officer
Jose F. Valdez Private First Class 7th Infantry World War II Medal of Honor
Keith L. Ware Major General 15th Infantry World War II Medal of Honor
David C. Waybur First Lieutenant 3d Division World War II Medal of Honor
Frederick C. Weyand General 7th Infantry Korea Army Chief of Staff
Eli Whiteley Captain 15th Infantry World War II Medal of Honor
John A. Wickham, Jr. General 1st Brigade Korea Army Chief of Staff
Stanley Brach Staff Sergeant 15th Infantry World War II Silver Star
Alwyn Cashe Sergeant First Class 15th Infantry GWOT-Iraq Medal of Honor

Division Song

Dogface Soldier[52]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c "World War II Divisional Combat Chronicles". history.army.mil. Retrieved 8 October 2021.
  2. ^ Tomko, Angel (21 June 2021). "3rd Infantry Division welcomes new commander". U.S. Army.
  3. ^ "3RD INFANTRY DIVISION (UEx)". tmg110.tripod.com.
  4. ^ . United States Army Center of Military History. 21 April 2010. Archived from the original on 9 June 2010. Retrieved 23 June 2010.
  5. ^ "3rd Infantry Division Medal of Honor Recipients". US Army. Retrieved 25 May 2020.
  6. ^ Dalessandro, Robert J. (25 June 2014). "Lineages and Honors Information". U.S. Army Center of Military History. from the original on 6 September 2015. Retrieved 12 October 2021.
  7. ^ "Blue and White Devils". United States Army.
  8. ^ Hemenway, Frederic Vinton (1919). History of the Third Division, United States Army, in the World War. M. Dumont Schauberg. p. 155.
  9. ^ "Commanding Generals of the Third Infantry Division, United States Army". Units, Battle Credits and Commanding Generals of the 3rd Infantry Division. Warfoto.com. 15 February 2019. Retrieved 13 February 2021.
  10. ^ "3rd Infantry Division". US Army Center of Military History. Retrieved 25 May 2020.
  11. ^ "Lone Sentry: Blue and White Devils: The Story of the 3rd Infantry Division -- WWII G.I. Stories Booklet". lonesentry.com.
  12. ^ a b . United States Army. Archived from the original on 20 July 2013.
  13. ^ Stanton, Shelby, World War II Order of Battle: An Encyclopedic Reference to U.S. Army Ground Forces from Battalion through Division, 1939-1946 (Revised Edition, 2006), p. 80
  14. ^ "World War II: Race to Seize Berchtesgaden". Historynet.com. 12 June 2006. Retrieved 14 August 2012.
  15. ^ a b c d e Army Battle Casualties and Nonbattle Deaths (Statistical and Accounting Branch, Office of the Adjutant General), 1 June 1953
  16. ^ Rottman, Gordon L., Korean War order of battle, Greenwood Publishing Group, Incorporated, December 2002 ISBN 978-0-275-97835-8
  17. ^ Cowart, Glenn C. (1992). Miracle in Korea: The Evacuation of X Corps from the Hungnam Beachhead. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press. ISBN 0-87249-829-8.
  18. ^ "These were the 6 most massive tank battles in US history". 24 March 2016.
  19. ^ Major General Tony Cucolo assumed command of the 3rd Infantry Division and Fort Stewart/Hunter Army Airfield, Georgia on 14 July 2008. . www.stewart.army.mil. Archived from the original on 17 July 2009.
  20. ^ Whitten, Jeff (8 May 2017). . Coastal Courier. Archived from the original on 20 May 2017. Retrieved 11 May 2017.
  21. ^ . stewart.army.mil. Archived from the original on 21 August 2017. Retrieved 23 June 2017.
  22. ^ Rayburn, Joel D.; Sobchak, Frank K. (January 2019). "THE U.S. ARMY IN THE IRAQ WAR: VOLUME 2 SURGE AND WITHDRAWAL 2007-2011" (PDF). U.S. Army War College Press. p. 206. (PDF) from the original on 26 October 2019. Retrieved 22 March 2021.
  23. ^ Balko, Radley. Constitutional Refuseniks, Reason (May 2011)
  24. ^ a b Cavallaro, Gina (30 September 2008). "Brigade homeland tours start 1 October". Army Times. Retrieved 14 August 2012.
  25. ^ Democracy Now! Staff (2 October 2008). "Invasion of the Sea-Smurfs". Democracy Now! the War and Peace Report. from the original on 14 October 2008. Retrieved 15 October 2008.
  26. ^ "3d Battalion, 15th Infantry Regiment". History.army.mil. Retrieved 14 August 2012.
  27. ^ . Stewart.army.mil. Archived from the original on 25 August 2012. Retrieved 14 August 2012.
  28. ^ Dickstein, Corey (8 June 2012). "3rd ID's Combat Aviation Brigade, others to deploy to Afghanistan this year". savannahnow.com. Retrieved 14 August 2012.
  29. ^ Dickstein, Corey (22 March 2012). "3rd ID Battalion Heads to Afghanistan". Savannah Morning News. Retrieved 13 June 2013.
  30. ^ Dickstein, Corey (4 January 2012). "3rd Infantry Division soldiers tapped for Afghanistan deployment". Savannah Morning News.
  31. ^ "Vanguard's Mustang Squadron fights until end of mission | Article | The United States Army". Army.mil. Retrieved 13 October 2015.
  32. ^ "Army to Deploy Nearly 6,000 Soldiers to Europe, Afghanistan". Military.coom. 27 April 2017.
  33. ^ "3rd ID soldiers to deploy to Europe". armytimes. 17 February 2015.
  34. ^ "Headquarters and Headquarters Battalion, 3d Infantry Division | Lineage and Honors | U.S. Army Center of Military History". history.army.mil.
  35. ^ Regionally allocated force accessdate=2016-05-14
  36. ^ "Headquarters, 1st Brigade Combat Team, 3d Infantry Division". history.army.mil.
  37. ^ "Spartan Brigade to become Army's newest armored brigade". www.army.mil.
  38. ^ "Headquarters, 2d Brigade Combat Team, 3d Infantry Division | Lineage and Honors | U.S. Army Center of Military History (CMH)".
  39. ^ a b Coleman, Dash. "3rd Infantry Division's 2nd Brigade goes back to armored status". Savannah Morning News.
  40. ^ "The Dragon" (PDF). 15th Infantry Regiment Association. Retrieved 8 June 2022.
  41. ^ Army to pair National Guard, Reserve units with active-duty units, Stars and Stripes, by Corey Dickstein, dated 22 March 2016, last accessed 27 November 2016
  42. ^ Georgia National Guard's 48th Infantry Brigade Combat Team selected for Army pilot program, Army.mil, by Desiree Bamba, dated 24 March 2016, last accessed 27 November 2016
  43. ^ "3rd Infantry Division Artillery". Facebook.com. Retrieved 13 October 2015.
  44. ^ . Archived from the original on 26 December 2014. Retrieved 16 January 2015.
  45. ^ "Headquarters and Headquarters Company (HHC) Aviation Brigade 3rd Infantry Division". History.army.mil. Retrieved 14 August 2012.
  46. ^ "2015 Georgia Department of Defense Annual Report by Georgia National Guard - Issuu". issuu.com.
  47. ^ (CMH), U.S. Army Center of Military History. "Headquarters and Headquarters Battalion, 3d Infantry Division - Lineage and Honors - U.S. Army Center of Military History (CMH)". history.army.mil.
  48. ^ a b "Headquarters and Headquarters Battery 3d Infantry Division Artillery". history.army.mil.
  49. ^ "Headquarters and Headquarters Company Aviation Brigade 3d Infantry Division". history.army.mil.
  50. ^ "3rd ID Band Lineage and Honors". history.army.mil.
  51. ^ . stewart.army.mil. Archived from the original on 27 September 2011. Retrieved 20 June 2011.
  52. ^

Bibliography

  • American Battle Monuments Commission. American Armies and Battlefields in Europe. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1938. Reprint. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1992.
  • American Battle Monuments Commission. 3d Division Summary of Operations in the World War. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1944.
  • Appleman, Roy E. South to the Naktong, North to the Yalu, June–November 1950. United States Army in the Korean War. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1961, 1986.
  • "Blue and White Devils: The Story of the 3rd Infantry Division". 1945. Retrieved 10 September 2012.
  • Blumenson, Martin. Salerno to Cassino. United States Army in World War II. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1969, 1988.
  • Cairns, Bogardus S. "The Breakout at Anzio: A Lesson in Tank-Infantry Cooperation." Military Review 28 (January 1949):23–32.
  • Clarke, Jeffrey J., and Smith, Robert Ross. Riviera to the Rhine. United States Army in World War II. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1993.
  • Crawford, Charles. Six Months with the 6th Brigade. Kansas City: E. B. Barnett, 1928.
  • Dickman, Joseph T. The Great Crusade: A Narrative of the World War. New York: D. Appleton and Co., 1927.
  • Dolcater, Max W., ed. 3rd Infantry Division in Korea. Tokyo: Toppan Printing Co., 1953.
  • "A Fiftieth for the Marne Division." Army Digest 22 (November 1967):22.
  • Fisher, Ernest F., Jr. Cassino to the Alps. United States Army in World War II. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1977, 1989.
  • Garland, Albert N., and Smyth, Howard McGaw. Sicily and the Surrender of Italy. United States Army in World War II. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1965. 1991.
  • Gaul, Jeffrey. History of the Third Infantry Division: Rock of the Marne. Paducah, Kentucky: Turner Publishing, 1988.
  • Golden, Joe E. "Third U.S. Infantry Division in Italy." Military Review 24 (June 1944):5–10.
  • Hemenway, Frederick Vinton, ed. and comp. History of the Third Division, United States Army in the World War, For the period 1 December 1917 to 1 January 1919. Cologne, Germany: M. DuMont Schauberg, 1919.
  • Hermes, Walter G. Truce Tent and Fighting Front. United States Army in the Korean War. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1966, 1988.
  • Historical Division, Department of the Army. Anzio Beachhead (22 January-25 May 1944). American Forces in Action. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1948, 1990.
  • Historical Section, Army War College. Order of Battle of the United States Land Forces in the World War: American Expeditionary Forces: Divisions. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1931. Reprint. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1988.
  • History of the Third Division, United States Army in the World War for the Period 1 December 1917 to 1 January 1919. Cologne, Germany: M. DuSchaubery, 1919.
  • Holmes, Howard W. "100 Miles to Nijmegen." Army Digest 22 (January 1967):29–30.
  • Howe, George F. Northwest Africa: Seizing the Initiative in the West. United States Army in World War II. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1957, 1991.
  • Jacobs, Bruce. Soldiers: The Fighting Divisions of the Regular Army. New York: W. W. Norton and Co., 1958.
  • Kahn, E. J., Jr., and McLemore, H. Fighting Divisions. Washington: Infantry Journal Press, 1945. Reprint. Washington: Zenger Publishing Co., 1980.
  • Kittler, Glenn D. "From Chateau-Thierry to Anzio to Wonson; The Fighting Third." SAGA: True Adventures for Men 8 (September 1954):10-13ff.
  • Lacey, Jim. The Third Infantry Division's Twenty-One Day Assault on Baghdad. US Naval Institute Press: 2007.
  • Lamb, David S. Till We Meet Again. Cleveland: Stevens Publishing Co., 1944.
  • Le Mon, Warren. "The Marne Division." Army Information Digest 20 (October 1965):37–43.
  • MacDonald, Charles B. The Last Offensive. United States Army in World War II. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1973, 1990.
  • Military Intelligence Division, War Department. From the Volturno to the Winter Line (6 October-15 November 1943). American Forces in Action. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1945, 1990.
  • Military Intelligence Division, War Department. Salerno: American Operations from the Beaches to the Volturno (9 September-6 October 1943). Washington: Government Printing Office, 1944, 1990.
  • Mohr, G. William. Third Infantry Division, WWII, The Victory Path Thru France and Germany. Kokomo, Ind. O & M, 1985.
  • Murphy, Audie. To Hell and Back. New York: Henry Holt and Co., 1949.
  • "Pass in Review." Army Information Digest 20 (October 1965):32–36.
  • Pass in Review, The Pictorial History of the Third Division, United States Army, Operations, Training, Maneuvers, Camp Ord, California, 1940. Baton Rouge: Army and Navy Publishing Co., 1940.
  • Personnel Service Division, Adjutant General Section. 3d Infantry Division. Administrative Service Branch, Adjutant General Section, 1971.
  • Rescigno, Richard J., and Wiltamuth, Richard L. "Alert!--That's the Watchword of the Marne Division Today." Army Digest 25 (August 1970):38–43.
  • Road to Rome. n.p., 1945.
  • Rosson, William B. "Operational Highlights of the 3d Infantry Division." Military Review 25 (December 1945):42–45.
  • Rosson, William B. "3d Infantry Division Crosses the Meurthe." Military Review 26 (February 1947):24–35.
  • Scott, Hugh A. The Blue and White Devils. A Personal Memoir and History of the 3rd Infantry Division in World War II. Nashville, Tenn., Battery Press, 1984.
  • Stitt, Edgar A. 100 Days, 100-Hours: "Phantom" Brigade in the Gulf War. Hong Kong: Concord Publications, 1991.
  • Small, Collie. "The Third: Tops in Honors." Saturday Evening Post 218 (11 August 1945):28-29ff.
  • Stanton, Shelby, World War II Order of Battle: An Encyclopedic Reference to U.S. Army Ground Forces from Battalion through Division, 1939-1946 (Revised Edition, 2006), Stackpole Books ISBN 0-8117-0157-3
  • Taggart, Donald G., ed. History of the Third Infantry Division in World War II. Washington: Infantry Journal Press, 1947. Reprint. Nashville, Tenn., Battery Press, 1987.
  • Taylor, Horace G.; Milam, Michael M.; and Ericksen, Scott R. "3d Infantry Division." Infantry 68 (January–February 1978):18–22.
  • The Third Division at Chateau Thierry. U.S. Army Chemical Corps Historical Studies, Gas Warfare in World War I, Study No. 14. Washington: U.S. Army Chemical Corps Historical Office, 1959.
  • Third Division Citations. Andernach on the Rhine, Germany: Carl Reinartz, 1919.
  • "3rd Infantry Division Gyroscoping: Enlistments Open." Recruiting Journal 10 (May 1957):8–9.
  • 3rd Infantry Division in Korea. Society of the Third Infantry Division, 1987.
  • 3rd Infantry Division, Information Office. 3d Infantry Division, 1917-Forty Year Odyssey-1958. Würzburg, Germany: Konrad Triltsch, 1958.
  • "Valor: 3d Division in Sicily." Infantry Journal 54 (March 1944):16–18; (June 1944): 44.
  • Westover, John G. Combat Support in Korea. Washington: Combat Forces Press, 1955. Reprint. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1990.

External links

  Media related to 3rd Infantry Division (United States) at Wikimedia Commons

  • 3rd Infantry Division Home Page – official site.
  • Society of the 3d Infantry Division
  • Sgt. William Heller's World War II Memoirs-3rd Infantry Division
  • GlobalSecurity.org: 3d Infantry Division

infantry, division, united, states, infantry, division, nicknamed, rock, marne, combined, arms, division, united, states, army, based, fort, stewart, georgia, direct, subordinate, unit, xviii, airborne, corps, army, forces, command, current, organization, incl. The 3rd Infantry Division 3ID nicknamed Rock of the Marne 1 4 is a combined arms division of the United States Army based at Fort Stewart Georgia It is a direct subordinate unit of the XVIII Airborne Corps and U S Army Forces Command Its current organization includes a division headquarters and headquarters battalion two armored brigade combat teams one National Guard infantry brigade combat team one task force battalion one aviation brigade a division artillery a sustainment brigade and a combat sustainment support battalion along with a maneuver enhancement brigade The division has a distinguished history having seen active service in World War I World War II the Korean War and the Global War on Terror The Medal of Honor has been awarded to 61 members of the 3rd Infantry Division making the division the most honored in the Army 5 3rd Division3rd Infantry DivisionInsignia of the 3rd Infantry DivisionFounded1917 106 years ago 1917 Country United StatesBranch United States ArmyTypeCombined arms Light infantrySizeDivision Next 4th Infantry Division Part ofXVIII Airborne CorpsGarrison HQFort Stewart GeorgiaNickname s Rock of the Marne 1 Motto s Nous Resterons La We Shall Remain There 1 Mascot s Rocky the BulldogEngagementsWorld War I Champagne Marne Aisne Marne Saint Mihiel Meuse ArgonneWorld War II Algeria French Morocco Tunisia Sicily Naples Foggia Anzio Rome Arno Southern France Rhineland Ardennes Alsace Central EuropeKorean War Invasion of North Korea Battle of Chosin ReservoirPersian Gulf War Battle of Medina RidgeGlobal War on Terrorism Iraq Invasion of Iraq Battle of Ramadi AfghanistanCommandersCurrentcommanderMG Charles D Costanza 2 NotablecommandersMG Tony CucoloMG Joseph T DickmanMG John P LucasMG Lucian TruscottLTG John W O DanielLTG George M SeigniousGEN Robert B AbramsGEN John M MurrayInsigniaDistinctive unit insignia of the division s headquarters battalionDivision Flag 3 Combat service identification badgeShoulder sleeve insignia subdued The division fought in France in World War I In World War II it landed with General Patton s task force in a contested amphibious landing on the coast of Morocco North Africa overwhelming Vichy French defenders in November 1942 In 1943 the division invaded Sicily in July and invaded Italy at Salerno in September before fighting in France and finally Germany Medal of Honor recipient Audie Murphy featured in the Hollywood movie To Hell and Back was a member The division also served in the Korean War From 1957 until 1996 the division was a major part of the United States Army s presence in the NATO alliance in West Germany Contents 1 History 1 1 World War I 1 1 1 Order of battle 1 2 Interwar years 1 3 World War II 1 3 1 Order of battle 1 3 2 Combat chronicle 1 3 3 Casualties 1 4 Korean War 1 5 Cold War to the Millennium 1953 through 2000 1 5 1 Commanders 1 6 Global War on Terrorism 1 6 1 OIF I Baghdad Spearhead 1 6 2 OIF III 1 6 3 OIF V 1 6 4 Reassignment of 1st Brigade 1 6 5 Reorganization of 4th Brigade 1 6 6 OIF VII 1 6 7 Operation Enduring Freedom 1 6 8 Operation Freedom s Sentinel 1 7 Operation Atlantic Resolve 2 Current structure 3 Lineage and honors 3 1 Division 3 1 1 Campaign participation credit 3 1 2 Decorations 3 2 Division Artillery 3 2 1 Campaign participation credit 3 2 2 Decorations 3 3 Combat Aviation Brigade 3 4 Division Band 3 4 1 Campaign participation credit 3 4 2 Decorations 4 Notable members 5 Division Song 6 See also 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksHistory EditWorld War I Edit 38th Infantry Regiment repelled the German attack near Mezy France across the Marne River in July 1918 This defense checked the Germans assault and made an Allied offensive possible thus earning 38th Infantry Regiment s nickname Rock of the Marne 1918 Traffic To Mont St Pere by George Matthews Harding AEF unit is the 3rd US Infantry Division The 3rd Division was activated 21 November 1917 seven months after the American entry into World War I at Camp Greene North Carolina Eight months later it saw combat for the first time in France on the Western Front Order of battle Edit Headquarters 3rd Division 5th Infantry Brigade3rd Ranger BN 3rd SFG 4th Infantry Regiment 7th Infantry Regiment 8th Machine Gun Battalion 6th Infantry Brigade 30th Infantry Regiment 38th Infantry Regiment 9th Machine Gun Battalion 3rd Field Artillery Brigade 10th Field Artillery Regiment 75 mm 18th Field Artillery Regiment 155 mm 76th Field Artillery Regiment 75 mm 3rd Trench Mortar Battery 6th Engineer Regiment 5th Field Signal Battalion Headquarters Troop 3rd Division 3rd Train Headquarters and Military Police 3rd Ammunition Train 3rd Supply Train 3rd Engineer Train 3rd Sanitary Train 5th 7th 26th and 27th Ambulance Companies and Field HospitalsAt midnight on 14 July 1918 the division earned lasting distinction Engaged in the Aisne Marne Offensive as a member of the American Expeditionary Force AEF to Europe the division was protecting the French capital of Paris with a position on the banks of the Marne River The 8th Machine Gun Battalion of the 3rd Division rushed to Chateau Thierry amid retreating French troops citation needed and held the Germans back at the Marne River While surrounding units retreated the 3rd Division including the 4th 30th and 38th Infantry Regiments remained steadfast throughout the Second Battle of the Marne and Colonel Ulysses G McAlexander s dogged defense earned the 38th Infantry Regiment its nickname as the Rock of the Marne 6 During the massive attack the 3rd Infantry Division s commanding officer Major General Joseph T Dickman famously cried out Nous Resterons La We Shall Remain Here Their Blue and White insignia also earned them the nickname The Blue and White Devils 7 The rest of the division was absorbed under French command until brought back together under the command of Major General Joseph T Dickman and by 15 July 1918 they took the brunt of what was to be the last German offensive of the war General John Joseph Black Jack Pershing Commander in chief of the AEF on the Western Front called this stand one of the most brilliant pages in the annals of military history 8 During the war two members of the division were awarded the Medal of Honor Casualties during the war were 3 177 killed in action with 12 940 wounded CommandersMG Joseph T Dickman 28 November 1917 BG James A Irons 11 February 1918 MG Joseph T Dickman 13 February 1918 BG James A Irons 27 February 1918 BG Charles Crawford 8 March 1918 BG James A Irons 10 March 1918 BG Charles Crawford 19 March 1918 MG Joseph T Dickman 12 April 1918 BG Fred W Sladen 18 August 1918 MG Beaumont B Buck 27 August 1918 BG Preston Brown 18 October 1918 MG Robert Lee Howze 19 November 1918 Interwar years Edit In August 1919 the Third Infantry Division returned from France and was stationed at Camp Pike in Arkansas The division remained at Camp Pike until 1921 when it was relocated to Camp Lewis in Washington state source source source source source source source source source source source source source source The History of the 3rd Infantry Division Commanders 9 BG William Mackey Cruikshank Aug 1919 BG Ora Elmer Hunt Aug 1919 Oct 1919 MG William M Wright Oct 1919 Jan 1920 BG Edward Mann Lewis Jan 1920 Aug 1921 MG Charles Henry Muir Aug 1921 Nov 1922 BG Ulysses G McAlexander Nov 1922 Nov 1923 MG Edwin B Babbitt Nov 1923 May 1924 BG Joseph E Kuhn May 1924 Dec 1924 MG William H Johnston Dec 1924 Oct 1925 MG Robert Alexander Oct 1925 Aug 1927 MG Joseph D Leitch Sep 1927 Mar 1928 BG Michael J Lenihan Mar 1928 Mar 1929 BG Joseph Compton Castner Apr 1929 Nov 1932 BG Halstead Dorey 1932 1933 BG Henry W Butner 1933 Feb 1934 BG Otho B Rosenbaum Feb 1934 Aug 1935 MG Casper H Conrad Jr Aug 1935 Aug 1936 MG David L Stone Sep 1936 Mar 1937 BG Alfred T Smith Jul 1937 Jan 1938 MG Walter C Sweeney Sr 1939 1940 World War II Edit Order of battle Edit Headquarters 3rd Infantry Division 7th Infantry Regiment 15th Infantry Regiment 30th Infantry Regiment Headquarters and Headquarters Battery 3rd Infantry Division Artillery 9th Field Artillery Battalion 155 mm 10th Field Artillery Battalion 105 mm 39th Field Artillery Battalion 105 mm 41st Field Artillery Battalion 105 mm 10th Engineer Combat Battalion 3rd Medical Battalion 3rd Cavalry Reconnaissance Troop Mechanized Headquarters Special Troops 3rd Infantry Division Headquarters Company 3rd Infantry Division 703rd Ordnance Light Maintenance Company 3rd Quartermaster Company 3rd Signal Company Military Police Platoon Band 3rd Counterintelligence Corps DetachmentCombat chronicle Edit The 3rd Division is the only division of the U S Army during World War II that fought the Axis on all European fronts 10 and was among the first American combat units to engage in offensive ground combat operations Audie Murphy the most highly decorated American soldier of the war served with the 3rd Division 11 The 3rd Infantry Division also had a German Shepherd Collie Huskey mix war dog named Chips from Pleasantville New York given to them by the Dogs for Defence program The 3rd Infantry Division saw combat in North Africa Sicily Italy France Germany and Austria for 531 consecutive days 12 During the war the 3rd Infantry Division consisted of the 7th 15th and 30th Infantry Regiments together with supporting units The 3rd Division under the command of Major General Jonathan W Anderson after spending many months training in the United States after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor first saw action during the war as a part of the Western Task Force in Operation Torch the Allied invasion of North Africa landing at Fedala on 8 November 1942 and captured half of French Morocco The division remained there for the next few months and therefore took no part in the Tunisian Campaign which came to an end in May 1943 with the surrender of almost 250 000 Axis soldiers who subsequently became prisoners of war POWs While there a battalion of the 30th Infantry Regiment acted as security guards during the Casablanca Conference in mid January 1943 with Chips as one of the guard dogs Some soldiers say that Chips sniffed out a time bomb set up by enemy saboteurs before the conference took place and saved lives In late February Major General Anderson left the division and was replaced by Major General Lucian K Truscott Jr who instituted a tough training regime and ensured that all ranks in the division could march five miles in one hour and four miles an hour thereafter The troops called it the Truscott Trot The division began intensive training in amphibious landing operations On 10 July 1943 the division made another amphibious assault landing on the Italian island of Sicily codenamed Operation Husky landing at Licata town on the beach to west called Torre di Gaffi and Mollarella and on the beach to east called Falconara During the invasion a platoon of soldiers from the 30th Infantry Regiment accompanied with Chips moved inland into the Sicilian countryside when they got ambushed by Italian mortar and machine gun fire Cut off from the rest of the regiment by Italian skirmishes and the field telephone line cut from the bombardment the platoon fought hard until Chips ordered by his handler Pvt John P Rowell ran back HQ with a phone line to restore communication while dodging enemy fire Chips ran through enemy fire again back to his handler and the platoon received word that the reinforcements were on their way Another Italian machine gun team made their way around the rear of the platoon and opened fire The platoon leader sent a lone American soldier to take out the MG nest but when he was pinned down Chips broke free from his handler and ran toward the MG nest jumped in and attacked the Italian soldiers manning the gun Pvt Rowell and the other soldier ran to help Chips and the gunners were forced to surrender Chips only sustained a scalp wound and gunpowder burns from the explosions The division serving under the command of Lieutenant General George S Patton s U S Seventh Army fought its way into Palermo before elements of the 2nd Armored Division could get there in the process marching 90 miles in three days and raced on to capture Messina on 17 August thus ending the brief Sicilian campaign where the division had a short rest to absorb replacements During the campaign the 3rd Division gained a reputation as one of the best divisions in the Seventh Army Infantrymen of 2nd Battalion 30th Infantry Regiment depicted near Bult France 11 November 1944 Men of the U S 3rd Infantry Division in Nuremberg Germany on 20 April 1945 Eight days after the Allied invasion of mainland Italy on 18 September 1943 the 3rd Division came ashore at Salerno where they came under the command of VI Corps under Major General Ernest J Dawley who was replaced two days later by Major General John P Lucas who had commanded the division from September 1941 to March 1942 The corps was part of Lieutenant General Mark W Clark s U S Fifth Army The 3rd Division was destined to see some of the fiercest and toughest fighting of the war thus far serving on the Italian Front Seeing intensive action along the way the division drove to and across the Volturno River by October 1943 and then to Monte Cassino where the Battle of Monte Cassino would later be fought before with the rest of the 15th Army Group being held up at the Winter Line also known as the Gustav Line In mid November the division after spearheading the Fifth Army s advance and suffering heavy casualties during the past few weeks was relieved by the 36th Infantry Division and pulled out of the line to rest and absorb replacements coming under the command of Major General Geoffrey Keyes II Corps The division remained out of action until late December After a brief rest the division was part of the amphibious landing at Anzio codenamed Operation Shingle on 22 January 1944 still as part of VI Corps and serving alongside the British 1st Infantry Division and other units It would remain there for just over four months in a toe hold against numerous furious German counterattacks and enduring trench warfare similar to that suffered on the Western Front during World War I On 29 February 1944 the 3rd Division fought off an attack by three German divisions who fell back with heavy losses two days later In a single day of combat at Anzio the 3rd Infantry Division suffered more than 900 casualties the most of any American division on one day in World War II 12 The division s former commander Major General Lucas was replaced as commander of VI Corps by the 3rd Division s commander Major General Truscott He was replaced in command of the 3rd Division by Brigadier General John W Iron Mike O Daniel previously the assistant division commander ADC and a distinguished World War I veteran In late May VI Corps broke out of the Anzio beachhead in Operation Diadem with the 3rd Division in the main thrust Instead of defeating the Germans Lieutenant General Clark the Fifth Army commander disobeying orders from General Sir Harold Alexander Commander in Chief C in C of the Allied Armies in Italy formerly the 15th Army Group sent the division on to the Italian capital of Rome This allowed the majority of the German 10th Army which would otherwise have been trapped to escape thus prolonging the campaign in Italy The division was then removed from the front line and went into training for the Operation Dragoon the Allied invasion of Southern France On 15 August 1944 D Day for Dragoon the division still under VI Corps command but now under the U S Seventh Army landed at St Tropez advanced up the Rhone Valley through the Vosges Mountains and reached the Rhine at Strasbourg 26 27 November 1944 After maintaining defensive positions it took part in clearing the Colmar Pocket on 23 January and on 15 March struck against Siegfried Line positions south of Zweibrucken The division advanced through the defenses and crossed the Rhine 26 March 1945 then drove on to take Nuremberg in a fierce battle capturing the city in block by block fighting 17 20 April The 3rd pushed on to take Augsburg where it liberated thousands of forced laborers from the Augsburg concentration camp a force labor subcamp of Dauchau and Munich 27 30 April and was in the vicinity of Salzburg when the war in Europe ended 13 Elements of the 7th Infantry Regiment serving under the 3rd Infantry Division captured Hitler s retreat near Berchtesgaden 14 Casualties Edit Total battle casualties 25 977 15 Killed in action 4 922 15 Wounded in action 18 766 15 Missing in action 554 15 Prisoner of war 1 735 15 CommandersMG Charles F Thompson July 1940 August 1941 BG Charles P Hall August 1941 September 1941 MG John P Lucas September 1941 March 1942 MG Jonathan W Anderson March 1942 March 1943 MG Lucian K Truscott Jr March 1943 February 1944 MG John W O Daniel February 1944 December 1945 MG William R Schmidt July 1945 August 1946 Korean War Edit Commanders MG Robert H Soule August 1950 October 1951 MG Thomas J Cross October 1951 May 1952 MG Robert L Dulaney May 1952 October 1952 MG George W Smythe October 1952 May 1953 MG Eugene W Ridings May 1953 October 1953 3rd Ranger Company troops getting ready to patrol the Imjin River 1951 During the Korean War the division was known as the Fire Brigade for its rapid response to crisis 3rd Infantry Division had been headquartered at Fort Benning along with its 15th Infantry Regiment The 7th Infantry Regiment was located at Fort Devens 3rd Infantry Division initially arrived in Japan where as the Far East Command Reserve 16 it planned post conflict occupation missions in northern Korea 17 In Japan their strength was increased by augmentation by South Korean soldiers The division was assigned to X Corps and landed at Wonsan on the east coast of Korea on 5 November and received the 65th Infantry Regiment as their third maneuver element before moving north to Hungnam and Majon dong At Majon dong they established a defensive position with the 65th Infantry 1st and 2nd Battalions of the 7th Infantry were on the left flank The 15th Infantry was between the 7th and 65th Regiments 3rd Battalion 7th Infantry was set as the nucleus for Task Force Dog which was commanded by Brigadier General Armistead D Mead assistant 3rd Division commander and sent north to conduct a relief in place with 1st Battalion 1st Marine Regiment at Chinhung ni the south end of the 1st Marine Division and support the withdrawal of 1st Marine Division and Regimental Combat Team 31 from the fighting at the Chosin Reservoir 3rd Infantry Division s Task Force Dog was the rearguard keeping the pressure off of the Marine column The division along with the 7th Infantry Division established a collapsing perimeter around the port of Hungnam until the last of X Corps was evacuated The division was the last unit to leave Hungnam and was shipped to Pusan where it completed unloading on 30 December and moved north to Kyongju and on 31 December it was placed in Eighth Army reserve for reorganization and reequipping following which it was to move into the Pyongtaek Ansong area The division was then transferred to US I Corps In January 1953 the division was transferred from I Corps The division served in Korea until 1953 when it was withdrawn Notably the division fought at the Chorwon Kumwha area Jackson Heights and Arrowhead outposts and blocked a push in the Kumsong Area in July 1953 3rd Infantry Division received ten Battle Stars Eleven more members of the unit received Medals of Honor during the Korean War Eight were from the 7th Infantry Regiment Jerry K Crump 6 and 7 September 1951 John Essebagger Jr 25 April 1951 Charles L Gilliland 25 April 1951 Clair Goodblood 24 and 25 April 1951 Noah O Knight 23 and 24 November 1951 Darwin K Kyle 16 February 1951 Leroy A Mendonca 4 July 1951 and Hiroshi H Miyamura whose award was classified Top Secret until his repatriation 24 and 25 April 1951 Three more recipients were with the 15th Infantry Regiment Emory L Bennett 24 June 1951 Ola L Mize 10 and 11 June 1953 and Charles F Pendleton 16 and 17 July 1953 During the Korean War the division had 2 160 killed in action and 7 939 wounded After the armistice the division remained in Korea until 1954 when it was reduced to near zero strength the colors were transferred to Fort Benning Georgia and in December 1954 the 47th Infantry Division was reflagged as the Third As a Pentomic Division Standard organization chart for a ROAD division On 1 July 1957 the division was reorganized as a Pentomic Division The division s three infantry regiments the 7th 15th and 30th were inactivated with their elements reorganized into five infantry battle groups the 1 7 IN 1 15 IN 1 30 IN 2 38 IN and the 2 4 IN In April 1958 the division deployed to Germany as part of an Operation Gyroscope rotation soldiers and families no equipment switching places with the 10th Infantry Division which was reflagged as the 2nd Infantry Division upon its arrival at Fort Benning In 1963 the division was reorganized as a Reorganization Objective Army Division ROAD Three Brigade Headquarters were activated and Infantry units were reorganized into battalions Cold War to the Millennium 1953 through 2000 Edit See also CENTAG wartime structure in 1989 3rd Infantry Division Mechanized 3rd Infantry Division structure 1989 click to enlarge The division was stationed with the V Corps 1958 63 1992 1996 and VII Corps 1963 92 in West Germany from near the Czech border westward throughout various towns including Wurzburg Div Hq amp Support Command Schweinfurt 1st Brigade Kitzingen 2nd Brigade and Aschaffenburg 3rd Brigade In August 1961 a few days after the Berlin Wall was erected a reinforced company from the 7th Infantry Regiment a unit of the 3rd Infantry Division in full battle gear was ordered to travel along the Autobahn a major highway from Aschaffenburg in Bavaria to West Berlin This was to assert the right of US forces to travel unhindered from West Germany across the western part of East Germany to West Berlin After the Berlin Wall was built it was not known if the East German forces would attempt to impede or restrict the movement of US troops when crossing East Germany while trying to reach West Berlin The unit arrived in West Berlin without incident confirming the right of free passage citation needed In November 1990 following Iraq s invasion of Kuwait more than 6 000 3rd Infantry Division men and women deployed with the 1st Armored Division on Operation Desert Storm as part of the Allied Coalition They participated in the Battle of Medina Ridge which was the second largest tank battle of the conflict 18 The 3rd Brigade was credited with the destruction of 82 tanks 31 Armored Personnel Carriers 11 artillery pieces 48 trucks 3 AAA guns and captured 72 EPW s with the loss of 2 Bradley Cavalry vehicles 30 WIA s and 1 KIA Later nearly 1 000 soldiers one unit I co 3rd Aviation Support 3rd ID deployed to southeastern Turkey and northern Iraq in Operation Provide Comfort to help Kurdish refugees In late Spring of 1991 the division supplied senior ranking officers and non commissioned officers along with a military police company to Task Force Victory Forward Stationed in Kuwait the Task Force was to provide division level support to the 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment which shared the same duty station Those elements of V Corps attached to the task force including those of division returned to their home units in early September 1991 citation needed As part of the Army s reduction to a ten division force the 24th Infantry Division was inactivated on 15 February 1996 and reflagged to become the 3rd Infantry Division In 1996 the division was redeployed to Fort Stewart Fort Benning and Hunter Army Airfield Georgia The division repeatedly demonstrated its deployability since then by maintaining a battalion and later a brigade task force presence in Kuwait It has also moved sizable forces to Egypt Bosnia and Kosovo in partnership training and peacekeeping missions In 1996 97 the 3rd Infantry Division Detachment Rear Tactical Operations Center RTOC which is a unit manned by the Georgia Army National Guard was mobilized and served in Operation Joint Endeavor During this time the 3rd ID RTOC served under the 1st Infantry Division and later the 1st Armored Division Respectively serving in Bosnia at Camps Dallas and Angela near Tuzla under the 1ID and then in Croatia at Slavonski Brod under the 1AD serving the Assistant Division Commander for Support then BG George Casey Commanders Edit MG Charles D W Canham November 1953 November 1954 MG Haydon L Boatner December 1954 October 1955 MG George E Lynch October 1955 February 1957 BG Frederick R Zierath March 1957 March 1957 MG Roy E Lindquist March 1957 August 1958 MG John S Upham Jr August 1958 April 1960 MG Albert Watson II April 1960 April 1961 MG William W Dick Jr April 1961 April 1962 BG Morris O Edwards April 1962 June 1962 MG Frank T Mildren June 1962 March 1964 MG Albert O Connor March 1964 February 1966 BG Jack S Blocker February 1966 April 1966 MG Robert H Schellman April 1966 August 1967 BG Lawrence V Greene August 1967 October 1967 MG George P Seneff Jr October 1967 March 1969 MG George M Seignious II March 1969 February 1970 MG Robert C Taber February 1970 April 1971 MG Marshall B Garth April 1971 September 1972 MG Sam S Walker September 1972 June 1974 MG Edward C Meyer June 1974 August 1975 MG Pat W Crizer August 1975 October 1977 MG R Dean Tice October 1977 October 1979 MG Robert L Sam Wetzel October 1979 1981 MG Fred K Mahaffey 1981 1983 MG Howard G Crowell Jr 1983 1985 MG George R Stotser 1985 1987 MG Nicholas S H Krawciw 1987 1989 MG Wilson A Shoffner 1989 1991 BG Richard F Keller 1991 1993 MG Leonard D Holder Jr 1993 1995 MG Montgomery Meigs July 1995 February 1996 MG Joseph E DeFrancisco June 1996 August 1996 MG John W Hendrix August 1996 October 1997 MG James C Riley October 1997 December 1999 MG Walter L Sharp December 1999 December 2001 Global War on Terrorism Edit CommandersMG Buford Blount December 2001 September 2003 MG William G Webster September 2003 June 2006 MG Rick Lynch June 2006 July 2008 MG Tony Cucolo July 2008 April 2011 MG Robert B Abrams April 2011 August 2013 MG John M Murray August 2013 August 2015 MG James E Rainey August 2015 May 2017 19 MG Leopoldo A Quintas May 2017 June 2019 20 MG Antonio Aguto June 2019 June 2021 MG Charles Costanza June 2021 present OIF I Baghdad Spearhead Edit Early in 2003 the entire division deployed in weeks to Kuwait It was called on subsequently to spearhead Coalition forces in Operation Iraqi Freedom fighting its way to Baghdad in early April leading to the end of the Saddam Hussein government The First Brigade captured the Baghdad International Airport and cleared and secured the airport which also resulted in the division s first Medal of Honor since the Korean War awarded to SFC Paul Ray Smith Second Brigade Third Infantry division made the much publicized Thunder Run into downtown Baghdad The Second Brigade was redeployed to Fallujah Iraq during the summer of 2003 The division returned to the United States in September 2003 citation needed Order of Battle during 2003 invasion 1st Brigade2nd Battalion 7th Infantry Regiment Mech 3rd Battalion 7th Infantry Regiment Mech 3rd Battalion 69th Armor Regiment 1st Battalion 41st Field Artillery Regiment 155SP dd 2nd Brigade3rd Battalion 15th Infantry Regiment Mech 1st Battalion 64th Armor Regiment 4th Battalion 64th Armor Regiment Tuskers 1st Battalion 9th Field Artillery Regiment 155SP dd 3rd Brigade203rd FSB 3rd Brigade Combat Team Mech 1st Battalion 15th Infantry Regiment Mech 1st Battalion 30th Infantry Regiment Mech 2nd Battalion 69th Armor Regiment 1st Battalion 10th Field Artillery Regiment 155SP 1st Battalion 39th Field Artillery Regiment 3rd ID DIVARTY MLRS Inactivated May 2006 21 dd 3rd Squadron 7th Cavalry Regiment dd dd Beginning in 2004 the 3rd began re organizing The division shifted from three maneuver brigades to four units of action which are essentially smaller brigade formations with one infantry one armor one cavalry and one artillery battalion in each The former Engineer Brigade became the 4th Brigade at Fort Stewart Each of these units of action engaged in several mock battles at the National Training Center and Joint Readiness Training Center and preparation for a second deployment to Iraq citation needed OIF III Edit An M2A2 Bradley crew from the 3rd Infantry Division drive back to Forward Operating Base Warhorse after a mission near Baqubah Iraq May 2005 In January 2005 the Third Infantry Division became the first Army division to serve a second tour in Iraq citation needed The division headquarters took control of the Multi National Division Baghdad MND B headquartered at Camp Liberty and with responsibility for the greater Baghdad area First and Third Brigades of the Third Infantry Division were placed under control of the 42nd Infantry Division and later under the 101st Airborne Division in MND North In preparation of this deployment a Fourth Brigade was organized and became the first cohesive brigade combat team sent into a combat zone by the US Army cohesive in that it fulfilled the table of organization requirement of such a unit The California Army National Guard s 1st Battalion 184th Infantry Regiment served as one of the brigade s two infantry battalions as well as the detachment from the Hawaii Army National Guard s 29th Brigade Combat Team the 2 299th Infantry also the 48th Brigade Combat Team from the Georgia Army National Guard 2 130 Infantry Battalion of the Illinois National Guard and Charlie Company 1st Battalion 295th Infantry Battalion from the Puerto Rico Army National Guard served in this Operation citation needed 2 69 Armor was assigned to Camp War Horse in Iraq By Mid 2005 Primary elements of 2 69 Armor 3rd Brigade 3rd Infantry Division was re deployed to Ramadi Iraq replacing elements of the 2nd ID They ran joint missions with 2nd Mar Div and elements of the Pennsylvania National Guard and the 2 130th Infantry of the Illinois National Guard who was redeployed as to Al Taquattum as the infantry battalion OIF V Edit The division redeployed to Fort Stewart and Fort Benning in January 2006 On 17 November 2006 the Army announced that the Third Infantry Division is scheduled to return to Iraq in 2007 and thus become the first Army division to serve three tours in Iraq The division headquarters became the leadership organization of MND C Multi National Division Central a new command established south of Baghdad as part of the Iraq War troop surge of 2007 citation needed In support of operations in Baghdad the unit 3rd Squadron 7th Cavalry was detached from 3ID and assigned by General Petraeus to 3rd BCT 82nd Airborne who was under the command of the 1st Cavalry Division In 2008 82nd Airborne and 1st CAV redeployed home and 3 7 CAV was handed over to 3rd BCT 4th Infantry Division under the command of the 25th Infantry Division They would remain under this command until 3 7 CAV s redeployment back to Fort Stewart being reattached to the 3rd Infantry Division citation needed Similarly 1st Battalion 64th Armor was detached from 3ID and attached to 2nd BCT 1st Infantry Division under 1st Cavalry Division and later under 2nd BCT 101st Infantry Division under command of 4th Infantry Division 22 3rd Infantry Division Soldiers in an M1A1 Abrams conduct a counter improvised explosive device IED mission in Baghdad Iraq December 22 2007 Reassignment of 1st Brigade Edit In the fall of 2008 the 3rd Infantry Division s 1st Brigade was assigned to serve as the on call federal response force under the control of NORTHCOM the combatant command assigned responsibility for the continental United States The brigade remained at its home station of Fort Stewart Georgia and is training to deploy domestically in response to terrorist attacks or other national emergencies 23 The brigade will be trained in responding to WMD attacks crowd control and dealing with civil unrest 24 The force was renamed Chemical biological radiological nuclear or high yield explosive Consequence Management Response Force Its acronym CCMRF is pronounced see smurf 25 and the unit is now under the daily control of United States Northern Command s Army North whose mission is to protect the United States homeland and support local state and federal authorities 24 The unit is a multi branch force with servicemembers from the four branches of the United States Department of Defense Reorganization of 4th Brigade Edit In March 2009 4th Brigade reorganized from a mechanized or heavy brigade to a light infantry brigade As part of this reorganization 4th Battalion 64th Armor was reflagged as 3rd Battalion 15th Infantry Regiment 26 OIF VII Edit This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information December 2011 The 3rd Infantry Division assumed command of the Multi National Division North now United States Division North in October 2009 This milestone marked the division s fourth tour in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom I III V and VII The division has elements operating in every area of Iraq as the mission changes from Operation Iraqi Freedom to Operation New Dawn on 1 September 2010 With the advent of Operation New Dawn the focus will shift from combat operations to stability and advise and assist operations throughout all Iraq s provinces In the course of Operation Iraqi Freedom up until 24 September 2010 436 members of the division were killed in action 27 Operation Enduring Freedom Edit An Infantryman with Bravo Company 3rd Battalion 15th Infantry Regiment 4th Infantry Brigade Combat Team carries an M240L machine gun while on a foot patrol in Wardak province Afghanistan 2013 The Combat Aviation Brigade 3rd Infantry Division deployed to Afghanistan for a 13 month tour The brigade was the first unit from 3ID to deploy to Afghanistan During that tour 3rd CAB soldiers flew about 26 000 missions including 800 air assaults and were responsible for about 2 500 enemy casualties Soldiers of Task Force Brawler conduct a Commander s Emergency Response Program mission 3rd Combat Aviation Brigade CAB Air Ground Mission Regional Command East 2010 3rd CAB is slated to deploy to Afghanistan again in January 2013 The 2500 soldiers will deploy with 3rd Special Troops Battalion for a 9 month tour The Marne Air will be operating out of Kandahar Airfield in the RC South area of operations relieving the 25th CAB Both the 3rd CAB and 3rd STB will fall under their parent division when the 3ID Headquarters and Headquarters Battalion deploys in August and takes over command of RC South from 82nd Airborne Division HQ 28 The 2nd Heavy BCT s two combined arms battalions also deployed individually to Afghanistan 1st Battalion 64th Armor Regiment deployed in March 2012 They are attached to the 3rd Stryker Brigade 2nd Infantry Division United States from Joint Base Lewis McChord WA to help train Afghanistan National Security Forces to take over in their country s security operations 29 1st Battalion 30th Infantry Regiment deployed a month earlier They are tasked with providing security to units conducting contingency operations Both battalions will serve nine month tour 30 In December 2012 the 3rd Sustainment Brigade deployed for its fifth deployment over the last decade and first to Afghanistan for nine months in support of Operation Enduring Freedom 12 13 let by COL Ron Novack and CSM Daniels Deployed to Kandahar with 276 soldiers the brigade provided sustainment and retrograde support to the 3rd and 4th Infantry Divisions 1st and 2nd Marine Expeditionary Forces and International Security Assistance Forces operating in Regional Commands South Southwest and National Support Element West The brigade assisted in the closure and transfer of over 61 Forward Operating Bases while simultaneously providing sustainment to the force Additionally the 3rd Sustainment Brigade provided direct support to the 1st and 2nd Brigade Combat Teams and the Combat Aviation Brigade of the 3rd Infantry Division In February 2013 the 4th Infantry Brigade Combat Team 3rd Infantry Division later reflagged as the 2nd Infantry Brigade Combat Team 3rd Infantry Division deployed to Logar Province and Wardak Province Afghanistan in support of Operation Enduring Freedom 6th Squadron 8th Cavalry Regiment was tasked with securing Logar Province and disrupting the almost daily rocket attacks on Forward Operation Base Shank 31 3rd Battalion 15th Infantry Regiment was tasked with securing Wardak Province s highly volatile Highway 1 The soldiers of 4th Infantry Brigade Combat Team 3rd Infantry Division returned home in late November 2013 after serving a 9 month tour Operation Freedom s Sentinel Edit In April 2017 Military com reported that about 200 soldiers from the 3rd Infantry Division Headquarters will deploy to Afghanistan to replace the 1st Cavalry Division Headquarters at Bagram Airfield taking over command of the U S Forces Afghanistan s National Support Element as part of Operation Freedom s Sentinel 32 Starting in December 2018 troops of the Georgia Army National Guard s 48th IBCT of the 3rd Infantry Division were deployed in support of NATO operations in Afghanistan These missions included train advise assist missions for the Afghanistan military as well as attached infantry units from 3rd Battalion 121st Infantry Regiment to Army Special Forces ODAs and other Special Operations forces Operation Atlantic Resolve Edit In February 2015 ArmyTimes reported that More than 3 000 soldiers from the 1st Heavy Brigade Combat Team 3rd Combat Aviation Brigade 3rd ID s Artillery and other units of the 3rd Infantry Division began an accumulative of 12 months deployment to Europe in March 2015 in support of Operation Atlantic Resolve Soldiers from 3rd ID deployed to various European countries including Germany Estonia Latvia Lithuania Poland Romania and Bulgaria with the 1st Brigade acting as the European Rotational Force and NATO Response Force which works and trains with NATO allies to remain prepared for contingency operations within the European Command s area of responsibility 33 Current structure Edit Structure of 3rd Infantry Division 2021 Soldiers from the 3rd Squadron 1st Cavalry Regiment 3rd Heavy Brigade Combat Team of the 3rd Infantry training at Fort Irwin 3rd Infantry Division consists of a division headquarters battalion two armored brigade combat teams an associated brigade combat team a task force unit with the 1st Battalion 28th Infantry Regiment a division artillery a sustainment brigade and a combat aviation brigade along with a maneuver enhancement brigade All BCTs are headquartered at Fort Stewart except for the 48th IBCT which is headquartered in Macon Georgia and Task Force 1 28th Infantry which is located at Fort Benning All field artillery battalions remain connected to their brigade combat teams 3rd Infantry Division Headquarters and Headquarters Battalion 34 1st Armored Brigade Combat Team ABCT 3rd Infantry Division Raider regionally allocated to Europe 35 Headquarters and Headquarters Company HHC 1st BCT 36 5th Squadron 7th Cavalry Regiment Reconnaissance Surveillance and Target Acquisition RSTA Warpaint 1st Battalion 64th Armor Regiment Desert Rogue 3rd Battalion 69th Armor Regiment Speed amp Power 2nd Battalion 7th Infantry Regiment Cottonbalers 1st Battalion 41st Field Artillery Regiment FAR Glory s Guns 10th Brigade Engineer Battalion BEB Bridge the Sky 3rd Brigade Support Battalion BSB Ready to Roll 2nd Armored Brigade Combat Team Spartans 37 HHC 2nd BCT 38 6th Squadron 8th Cavalry Regiment Mustang 3rd Battalion 67th Armor Regiment Hounds of Hell 39 3rd Battalion 15th Infantry Regiment Old China Hands 40 2nd Battalion 69th Armor Regiment Panthers 39 1st Battalion 9th Field Artillery Regiment Battlekings 9th BEB Gila 703rd BSB Maintain 48th Infantry Brigade Combat Team Georgia Army National Guard 3rd Infantry Division associated unit Macon Volunteers 41 HHC 48th IBCT Macon Georgia 1st Squadron 108th Cavalry Regiment Calhoun Georgia Roughriders 1st Battalion 121st Infantry Regiment Winder Georgia Slayers 2nd Battalion 121st Infantry Regiment Forsyth Georgia Warriors 3rd Battalion 121st Infantry Regiment Cumming Georgia Pathfinders 1st Battalion 118th FAR Savannah Georgia Hickory s Howitzer s 148th BSB Macon Georgia Wishmasters 177th BEB Statesboro Georgia Task Force 1st Battalion 28th Infantry Regiment Fort Benning Georgia 42 3rd Infantry Division Artillery DIVARTY Marne Thunder 43 44 has training and readiness oversight of field artillery battalions which remain organic to their brigade combat teams Headquarters and Headquarters Battery DIVARTY Combat Aviation Brigade CAB Falcon 45 HHC CAB Talons 2nd Battalion General Support 3rd Aviation Regiment UH 60A UH 60L CH 47 Knighthawk 4th Battalion Assault 3rd Aviation Regiment UH 60M Brawler 3rd Squadron 17th Cavalry Regiment AH 64D AH 64DW Lighthorse 603rd Aviation Support Battalion Work Horse 3rd Infantry Division Sustainment Brigade HHC 3rd Infantry Division Sustainment Brigade Special Troops Battalion 87th Combat Sustainment Support Battalion 648th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade 46 The 2nd Brigade Combat Team inactivated on 15 January 2015 as part of the Army s modular brigade reorganization Special Troops Battalion 3rd Squadron 7th Cavalry Regiment 1st Battalion 9th Field Artillery Regiment and 26th Brigade Support Battalion were inactivated concurrently with some of their companies joining other brigades battalions The maneuver battalions of 2nd Brigade Combat Team moved to other brigades in the division 1st Battalion 64th Armor Regiment moved to 1st Brigade Combat Team and 1st Battalion 30th Infantry Regiment moved to 4th Brigade Combat Team With the inactivation of 2nd Brigade Combat Team 4th Brigade Combat Team was reflagged as the 2nd Brigade Combat Team After the reorganization the division had three BCTs each with three maneuver battalions The 42nd Fires Brigade was activated at Fort Stewart on 17 October 2013 and later reflagged as 3rd Infantry Division Artillery Division Artillery has training oversight of the division s artillery battalions although the battalions remain organic to their respective BCTs As part of budget driven downsizing the Army announced that it would inactivate the 3rd Brigade Combat Team by the end of 2015 and replace it with a Battalion Task Force centered around the 1st Battalion 28th Infantry The 3rd Brigade Combat Team inactivated on 15 December 2015 Lineage and honors EditDivision Edit Constituted 12 November 1917 in the Regular Army as Headquarters 3d Division Organized 21 November 1917 at Camp Greene North Carolina Redesignated 1 August 1942 as Headquarters 3d Infantry Division Reorganized and redesignated 1 April 1960 as Headquarters and Headquarters Company 3d Infantry Division Reorganized and redesignated 16 May 2004 as Headquarters and Tactical Command Posts 3d Infantry Division Reorganized and redesignated 16 November 2010 as Headquarters and Headquarters Battalion 3d Infantry Division 47 Campaign participation credit Edit World War IAisne Champagne Marne Aisne Marne Saint Mihiel Meuse Argonne Champagne 1918World War IIAlgeria French Morocco with arrowhead Tunisia Sicily with arrowhead Naples Foggia Anzio with arrowhead Rome Arno Southern France with arrowhead Rhineland Ardennes Alsace Central EuropeKorean WarCCF Intervention First UN Counteroffensive CCF Spring Offensive UN Summer Fall Offensive Second Korean Winter Korea Summer Fall 1952 Third Korean Winter Korea Summer 19531st Gulf WarOperation Desert Shield Operation Desert StormWar on TerrorismLiberation of Iraq Transition of Iraq Iraqi Governance National Resolution Iraqi Surge Decorations Edit Ribbon Award Year Notes Presidential Unit Citation Army 1945 Streamer embroidered COLMAR Presidential Unit Citation Army 2003 Streamer embroidered IRAQ 2003 Meritorious Unit Commendation 2007 2008 Streamer embroidered IRAQ 2007 2008 Meritorious Unit Commendation 2009 2010 Streamer embroidered IRAQ 2009 2010 Meritorious Unit Commendation 2012 2013 Streamer embroidered AFGHANISTAN 2012 2013 French Croix de guerre with Palm 1945 Streamer embroidered COLMAR French Fourragere in the colors of the Croix de guerre 1945 Fourragere Presidential Unit Citation Korea 1951 Streamer embroidered UIJONGBU CORRIDOR Presidential Unit Citation Korea 1953 Streamer embroidered IRON TRIANGLE Chryssoun Aristion Andrias Bravery Gold Medal of Greece 1950 1953 Streamer embroidered KOREA Division Artillery Edit Constituted 12 November 1917 in the Regular Army as Headquarters 3rd Field Artillery Brigade and assigned to the 3rd Division Organized 26 November 1917 at Camp Stanley Texas Disbanded 16 October 1939 at Fort Lewis Washington Reconstituted 1 October 1940 in the Regular Army as Headquarters and Headquarters Battery 3rd Division Artillery and activated at Fort Lewis Washington Redesignated 1 July 1957 as Headquarters and Headquarters Battery 3rd Infantry Division Artillery 48 Campaign participation credit Edit World War IChampagne Marne Aisne Marne Saint Mihiel Meuse Argonne Champagne 1918World War IIAlgeria French Morocco with arrowhead Tunisia Sicily with arrowhead Naples Foggia Anzio with arrowhead Rome Arno Southern France with arrowhead Rhineland Ardennes Alsace Central EuropeKorean WarChinese Communist Forces Intervention First United Nations Counteroffensive Chinese Communist Forces Spring Offensive United Nations Summer Fall Offensive Second Korean Winter Korea Summer Fall 1952 Third Korean Winter Korea Summer 1953 Decorations Edit 48 Ribbon Award Year Notes Presidential Unit Citation Army 1945 Streamer embroidered COLMAR Meritorious Unit Commendation 2007 2008 Streamer embroidered IRAQ 2007 2008 French Croix de guerre with Palm 1945 Streamer embroidered COLMAR French Fourragere in the colors of the Croix de guerre 1945 Fourragere Presidential Unit Citation Korea 1951 Streamer embroidered UIJONGBU CORRIDOR Presidential Unit Citation Korea 1953 Streamer embroidered IRON TRIANGLE Chryssoun Aristion Andrias Bravery Gold Medal of Greece 1950 1953 Streamer embroidered KOREA Combat Aviation Brigade Edit Constituted 16 March 1985 in the Regular Army as Headquarters and Headquarters Company Aviation Brigade 3rd Infantry Division and activated in Germany 49 Deployed to Afghanistan in November 2009 and returned home in November 2010 Division Band Edit Constituted 20 August 1943 in the Regular Army as the Band 3rd Infantry Division Redesignated 1 December 1943 as the 3d Infantry Division Band and activated in North Africa Consolidated 20 March 1963 with Headquarters and Headquarters Detachment 3rd Infantry Division Trains and consolidated unit reorganized and redesignated as Headquarters Headquarters and Band 3rd Infantry Division Support Command Reorganized and redesignated 15 March 1968 as Headquarters Headquarters Company and Band 3rd Infantry Division Support Command Band element withdrawn 21 May 1972 from Headquarters Headquarters Company and Band 3rd Infantry Division Support Command and absorbed by the 3d Adjutant General Company Band element withdrawn 1 October 1984 from the 3d Adjutant General Company and redesignated as the 3rd Infantry Division Band 50 Campaign participation credit Edit World War IAisne Champagne Marne Aisne Marne Saint Mihiel Meuse Argonne Champagne 1918World War II EAMEAlgeria French Morocco with arrowhead Tunisia Sicily with arrowhead Naples Foggia Anzio with arrowhead Rome Arno Southern France with arrowhead Rhineland Ardennes Alsace Central EuropeKorean WarChinese Communist Forces Intervention First United Nations Counteroffensive Chinese Communist Forces Spring Offensive United Nations Summer Fall Offensive Second Korean Winter Korea Summer Fall 1952 Third Korean Winter Korea Summer 1953War on TerrorLiberation of Iraq Transition of Iraq Iraqi Governance National Resolution Iraqi Surge Iraqi Sovereignty New DawnDecorations Edit Ribbon Award Year Notes Presidential Unit Citation Army 1945 Streamer embroidered COLMAR Presidential Unit Citation Army 2003 Streamer embroidered IRAQ 2003 Meritorious Unit Commendation 1951 1952 Streamer embroidered KOREA 1951 1952 French Croix de guerre with Palm 1945 Streamer embroidered COLMAR French Fourragere in the colors of the Croix de guerre 1945 Fourragere Republic of Korea Presidential Unit Citation 1951 Streamer embroidered UIJONGBU CORRIDOR Republic of Korea Presidential Unit Citation 1953 Streamer embroidered IRON TRIANGLE Chryssoun Aristion Andrias Bravery Gold Medal of Greece 1950 1953 Streamer embroidered KOREANotable members Edit 51 Lloyd Austin General 3d Division Iraq General officerDavid G Perkins General 3d Division Iraq General officerRobert B Abrams General 3d Division Iraq Son of General Creighton AbramsLucian Adams Staff Sergeant 30th Infantry World War II Medal of HonorSylvester Antolak Sergeant 15th Infantry World War II Medal of HonorJames Arness Private 7th Infantry World War II ActorJohn L Barkley Private First Class 4th Infantry World War I Medal of HonorStanley Bender Staff Sergeant 7th Infantry World War II Medal of HonorEmory L Bennett Private First Class 15th Infantry Korea Medal of HonorMaurice L Britt Captain 3d Division World War II Medal of HonorEdward H Brooks Lieutenant General 76th Field Artillery World War I Distinguished Service CrossPreston Brown Brigadier General 3d Division World War I Distinguished Service MedalFrank Burke Major 15th Infantry World War II Medal of HonorAgustin Ramos Calero Sergeant First Class 65th Infantry World War II Most decorated Hispanic soldier of WW IIHerbert F Christian Private 15th Infantry World War II Medal of HonorGarlin Murl Conner First Lieutenant 7th Infantry World War II Distinguished Service CrossJames P Connor Sergeant 7th Infantry World War II Medal of HonorRobert Craig Second Lieutenant 15th Infantry World War II Medal of HonorJerry K Crump Master Sergeant 7th Infantry Korea Medal of HonorMichael J Daly Captain 15th Infantry World War II Medal of HonorRudolph B Davila First Lieutenant 7th Infantry World War II Medal of HonorJoseph T Dickman Major General 3d Division World War I First commander of the 3d DivisionRussell E Dunham Technical Sergeant 30th Infantry World War II Medal of HonorJohn W Dutko First Sergeant 30th Infantry World War II Medal of HonorDwight D Eisenhower General of the Army 15th Infantry World War I President of the United StatesJohn Essebagger Jr Corporal 7th Infantry Korea Medal of HonorEric G Gibson Technician Fifth Grade 3d Division World War II Medal of HonorCharles L Gilliland Corporal 7th Infantry Korea Medal of HonorClair Goodblood Corporal 7th Infantry Korea Medal of HonorJohn R Guthrie General 3d Division Korea General officerCharles P Hall Lieutenant General 3d Division World War II Principal commander duringthe Battle of BataanLloyd C Hawks Sergeant First Class 30th Infantry World War II Medal of HonorGeorge Price Hays Lieutenant General 10th Field Artillery World War I Medal of HonorRobert Lee Howze Major General 3d Division World War I Medal of Honor while in 6th U S Cavalry Elden H Johnson Private 15th Infantry World War II Medal of HonorHarold Keith Johnson General 7th Infantry Korea Army Chief of StaffVictor L Kandle First Lieutenant 15th Infantry World War II Medal of HonorGus Kefurt Staff Sergeant 15th Infantry World War II Medal of HonorPatrick L Kessler Private First Class 30th Infantry World War II Medal of HonorRichard D Kisling Chief Master Sergeant of the Air Force 3d Division World War II Third Chief Master Sergeant of the Air ForceAlton W Knappenberger Private First Class 3d Division World War II Medal of HonorNoah O Knight Private First Class 7th Infantry Korea Medal of HonorDarwin K Kyle Second Lieutenant 7th Infantry Korea Medal of HonorFloyd K Lindstrom Private First Class 7th Infantry World War II Medal of HonorJohn P Lucas Major General 3d Division World War II Distinguished Service MedalRobert D Maxwell Technician Fifth Grade 7th Infantry World War II Medal of HonorLeroy A Mendonca Sergeant 7th Infantry World War II Medal of HonorJoseph F Merrell Private 15th Infantry World War II Medal of HonorHarold O Messerschmidt Sergeant 30th Infantry World War II Medal of HonorJames H Mills Corporal 15th Infantry World War II Medal of HonorHiroshi H Miyamura Staff Sergeant Honorary Sergeant Major 7th Infantry Korea Medal of HonorOla L Mize Colonel 15th Infantry Korea Medal of HonorAudie L Murphy Major 15th Infantry World War II Medal of Honor actorCharles P Murray Jr Colonel 30th Infantry World War II Medal of HonorJohn W O Daniel Lieutenant General 3d Division World War II Distinguished Service CrossArlo L Olson Captain 15th Infantry World War II Medal of HonorTruman O Olson Sergeant 7th Infantry World War II Medal of HonorForrest E Peden Technician Fifth Grade 10th Field Artillery World War II Medal of HonorCharles F Pendleton Corporal 15th Infantry Korea Medal of HonorWilburn K Ross Master Sergeant 350th Infantry World War II Medal of HonorHenry Schauer Technical Sergeant 3d Division World War II Medal of HonorWilliam R Schmidt Major General 3d Division World War II 3d ID commanderGeorge J Schultz Private First Class 30th Infantry World War II Distinguished Service CrossDonald K Schwab First Lieutenant 3rd Division World War II Medal of HonorPaul Ray Smith Sergeant First Class 11th Engineer GWOT Iraq Medal of HonorJohn C Squires Sergeant 30th Infantry World War II Medal of HonorJohn J Tominac Colonel 15th Infantry World War II Medal of HonorLucian Truscott General 3d Division World War II General officerJose F Valdez Private First Class 7th Infantry World War II Medal of HonorKeith L Ware Major General 15th Infantry World War II Medal of HonorDavid C Waybur First Lieutenant 3d Division World War II Medal of HonorFrederick C Weyand General 7th Infantry Korea Army Chief of StaffEli Whiteley Captain 15th Infantry World War II Medal of HonorJohn A Wickham Jr General 1st Brigade Korea Army Chief of StaffStanley Brach Staff Sergeant 15th Infantry World War II Silver StarAlwyn Cashe Sergeant First Class 15th Infantry GWOT Iraq Medal of HonorDivision Song EditDogface Soldier 52 See also Edit92nd Engineer Battalion 256th Infantry Brigade US Army unit attached to 3rd ID in OIF III Baker Boys Inside the Surge 2010 documentary about a company in 3rd ID Dogface term referring to soldiers of the 3rd ID Heavy Metal a Tank Company s Battle to Baghdad 2005 book co written by former 3rd ID company commander Over There 2005 fictional television series about a 3rd ID unit To Hell and Back 1955 film based on Audie Murphy s 1949 autobiographical novel References Edit a b c World War II Divisional Combat Chronicles history army mil Retrieved 8 October 2021 Tomko Angel 21 June 2021 3rd Infantry Division welcomes new commander U S Army 3RD INFANTRY DIVISION UEx tmg110 tripod com Special Unit Designations United States Army Center of Military History 21 April 2010 Archived from the original on 9 June 2010 Retrieved 23 June 2010 3rd Infantry Division Medal of Honor Recipients US Army Retrieved 25 May 2020 Dalessandro Robert J 25 June 2014 Lineages and Honors Information U S Army Center of Military History Archived from the original on 6 September 2015 Retrieved 12 October 2021 Blue and White Devils United States Army Hemenway Frederic Vinton 1919 History of the Third Division United States Army in the World War M Dumont Schauberg p 155 Commanding Generals of the Third Infantry Division United States Army Units Battle Credits and Commanding Generals of the 3rd Infantry Division Warfoto com 15 February 2019 Retrieved 13 February 2021 3rd Infantry Division US Army Center of Military History Retrieved 25 May 2020 Lone Sentry Blue and White Devils The Story of the 3rd Infantry Division WWII G I Stories Booklet lonesentry com a b Special Unit Designations United States Army Archived from the original on 20 July 2013 Stanton Shelby World War II Order of Battle An Encyclopedic Reference to U S Army Ground Forces from Battalion through Division 1939 1946 Revised Edition 2006 p 80 World War II Race to Seize Berchtesgaden Historynet com 12 June 2006 Retrieved 14 August 2012 a b c d e Army Battle Casualties and Nonbattle Deaths Statistical and Accounting Branch Office of the Adjutant General 1 June 1953 Rottman Gordon L Korean War order of battle Greenwood Publishing Group Incorporated December 2002 ISBN 978 0 275 97835 8 Cowart Glenn C 1992 Miracle in Korea The Evacuation of X Corps from the Hungnam Beachhead Columbia University of South Carolina Press ISBN 0 87249 829 8 These were the 6 most massive tank battles in US history 24 March 2016 Major General Tony Cucolo assumed command of the 3rd Infantry Division and Fort Stewart Hunter Army Airfield Georgia on 14 July 2008 MG Tony Cucolo Commanding General 3rd Infantry Division www stewart army mil Archived from the original on 17 July 2009 Whitten Jeff 8 May 2017 Fort Stewart has new commander Coastal Courier Archived from the original on 20 May 2017 Retrieved 11 May 2017 Division Artillery History stewart army mil Archived from the original on 21 August 2017 Retrieved 23 June 2017 Rayburn Joel D Sobchak Frank K January 2019 THE U S ARMY IN THE IRAQ WAR VOLUME 2 SURGE AND WITHDRAWAL 2007 2011 PDF U S Army War College Press p 206 Archived PDF from the original on 26 October 2019 Retrieved 22 March 2021 Balko Radley Constitutional Refuseniks Reason May 2011 a b Cavallaro Gina 30 September 2008 Brigade homeland tours start 1 October Army Times Retrieved 14 August 2012 Democracy Now Staff 2 October 2008 Invasion of the Sea Smurfs Democracy Now the War and Peace Report Archived from the original on 14 October 2008 Retrieved 15 October 2008 3d Battalion 15th Infantry Regiment History army mil Retrieved 14 August 2012 Fort Stewart Warriors Walk Stewart army mil Archived from the original on 25 August 2012 Retrieved 14 August 2012 Dickstein Corey 8 June 2012 3rd ID s Combat Aviation Brigade others to deploy to Afghanistan this year savannahnow com Retrieved 14 August 2012 Dickstein Corey 22 March 2012 3rd ID Battalion Heads to Afghanistan Savannah Morning News Retrieved 13 June 2013 Dickstein Corey 4 January 2012 3rd Infantry Division soldiers tapped for Afghanistan deployment Savannah Morning News Vanguard s Mustang Squadron fights until end of mission Article The United States Army Army mil Retrieved 13 October 2015 Army to Deploy Nearly 6 000 Soldiers to Europe Afghanistan Military coom 27 April 2017 3rd ID soldiers to deploy to Europe armytimes 17 February 2015 Headquarters and Headquarters Battalion 3d Infantry Division Lineage and Honors U S Army Center of Military History history army mil Regionally allocated force accessdate 2016 05 14 Headquarters 1st Brigade Combat Team 3d Infantry Division history army mil Spartan Brigade to become Army s newest armored brigade www army mil Headquarters 2d Brigade Combat Team 3d Infantry Division Lineage and Honors U S Army Center of Military History CMH a b Coleman Dash 3rd Infantry Division s 2nd Brigade goes back to armored status Savannah Morning News The Dragon PDF 15th Infantry Regiment Association Retrieved 8 June 2022 Army to pair National Guard Reserve units with active duty units Stars and Stripes by Corey Dickstein dated 22 March 2016 last accessed 27 November 2016 Georgia National Guard s 48th Infantry Brigade Combat Team selected for Army pilot program Army mil by Desiree Bamba dated 24 March 2016 last accessed 27 November 2016 3rd Infantry Division Artillery Facebook com Retrieved 13 October 2015 Division Artillery Archived from the original on 26 December 2014 Retrieved 16 January 2015 Headquarters and Headquarters Company HHC Aviation Brigade 3rd Infantry Division History army mil Retrieved 14 August 2012 2015 Georgia Department of Defense Annual Report by Georgia National Guard Issuu issuu com CMH U S Army Center of Military History Headquarters and Headquarters Battalion 3d Infantry Division Lineage and Honors U S Army Center of Military History CMH history army mil a b Headquarters and Headquarters Battery 3d Infantry Division Artillery history army mil Headquarters and Headquarters Company Aviation Brigade 3d Infantry Division history army mil 3rd ID Band Lineage and Honors history army mil Recipients Page stewart army mil Archived from the original on 27 September 2011 Retrieved 20 June 2011 Dog Face Soldier Song AboutBibliography EditAmerican Battle Monuments Commission American Armies and Battlefields in Europe Washington Government Printing Office 1938 Reprint Washington Government Printing Office 1992 American Battle Monuments Commission 3d Division Summary of Operations in the World War Washington Government Printing Office 1944 Appleman Roy E South to the Naktong North to the Yalu June November 1950 United States Army in the Korean War Washington Government Printing Office 1961 1986 Blue and White Devils The Story of the 3rd Infantry Division 1945 Retrieved 10 September 2012 Blumenson Martin Salerno to Cassino United States Army in World War II Washington Government Printing Office 1969 1988 Cairns Bogardus S The Breakout at Anzio A Lesson in Tank Infantry Cooperation Military Review 28 January 1949 23 32 Clarke Jeffrey J and Smith Robert Ross Riviera to the Rhine United States Army in World War II Washington Government Printing Office 1993 Crawford Charles Six Months with the 6th Brigade Kansas City E B Barnett 1928 Dickman Joseph T The Great Crusade A Narrative of the World War New York D Appleton and Co 1927 Dolcater Max W ed 3rd Infantry Division in Korea Tokyo Toppan Printing Co 1953 A Fiftieth for the Marne Division Army Digest 22 November 1967 22 Fisher Ernest F Jr Cassino to the Alps United States Army in World War II Washington Government Printing Office 1977 1989 Garland Albert N and Smyth Howard McGaw Sicily and the Surrender of Italy United States Army in World War II Washington Government Printing Office 1965 1991 Gaul Jeffrey History of the Third Infantry Division Rock of the Marne Paducah Kentucky Turner Publishing 1988 Golden Joe E Third U S Infantry Division in Italy Military Review 24 June 1944 5 10 Hemenway Frederick Vinton ed and comp History of the Third Division United States Army in the World War For the period 1 December 1917 to 1 January 1919 Cologne Germany M DuMont Schauberg 1919 Hermes Walter G Truce Tent and Fighting Front United States Army in the Korean War Washington Government Printing Office 1966 1988 Historical Division Department of the Army Anzio Beachhead 22 January 25 May 1944 American Forces in Action Washington Government Printing Office 1948 1990 Historical Section Army War College Order of Battle of the United States Land Forces in the World War American Expeditionary Forces Divisions Washington Government Printing Office 1931 Reprint Washington Government Printing Office 1988 History of the Third Division United States Army in the World War for the Period 1 December 1917 to 1 January 1919 Cologne Germany M DuSchaubery 1919 Holmes Howard W 100 Miles to Nijmegen Army Digest 22 January 1967 29 30 Howe George F Northwest Africa Seizing the Initiative in the West United States Army in World War II Washington Government Printing Office 1957 1991 Jacobs Bruce Soldiers The Fighting Divisions of the Regular Army New York W W Norton and Co 1958 Kahn E J Jr and McLemore H Fighting Divisions Washington Infantry Journal Press 1945 Reprint Washington Zenger Publishing Co 1980 Kittler Glenn D From Chateau Thierry to Anzio to Wonson The Fighting Third SAGA True Adventures for Men 8 September 1954 10 13ff Lacey Jim The Third Infantry Division s Twenty One Day Assault on Baghdad US Naval Institute Press 2007 Lamb David S Till We Meet Again Cleveland Stevens Publishing Co 1944 Le Mon Warren The Marne Division Army Information Digest 20 October 1965 37 43 MacDonald Charles B The Last Offensive United States Army in World War II Washington Government Printing Office 1973 1990 Military Intelligence Division War Department From the Volturno to the Winter Line 6 October 15 November 1943 American Forces in Action Washington Government Printing Office 1945 1990 Military Intelligence Division War Department Salerno American Operations from the Beaches to the Volturno 9 September 6 October 1943 Washington Government Printing Office 1944 1990 Mohr G William Third Infantry Division WWII The Victory Path Thru France and Germany Kokomo Ind O amp M 1985 Murphy Audie To Hell and Back New York Henry Holt and Co 1949 Pass in Review Army Information Digest 20 October 1965 32 36 Pass in Review The Pictorial History of the Third Division United States Army Operations Training Maneuvers Camp Ord California 1940 Baton Rouge Army and Navy Publishing Co 1940 Personnel Service Division Adjutant General Section 3d Infantry Division Administrative Service Branch Adjutant General Section 1971 Rescigno Richard J and Wiltamuth Richard L Alert That s the Watchword of the Marne Division Today Army Digest 25 August 1970 38 43 Road to Rome n p 1945 Rosson William B Operational Highlights of the 3d Infantry Division Military Review 25 December 1945 42 45 Rosson William B 3d Infantry Division Crosses the Meurthe Military Review 26 February 1947 24 35 Scott Hugh A The Blue and White Devils A Personal Memoir and History of the 3rd Infantry Division in World War II Nashville Tenn Battery Press 1984 Stitt Edgar A 100 Days 100 Hours Phantom Brigade in the Gulf War Hong Kong Concord Publications 1991 Small Collie The Third Tops in Honors Saturday Evening Post 218 11 August 1945 28 29ff Stanton Shelby World War II Order of Battle An Encyclopedic Reference to U S Army Ground Forces from Battalion through Division 1939 1946 Revised Edition 2006 Stackpole Books ISBN 0 8117 0157 3 Taggart Donald G ed History of the Third Infantry Division in World War II Washington Infantry Journal Press 1947 Reprint Nashville Tenn Battery Press 1987 Taylor Horace G Milam Michael M and Ericksen Scott R 3d Infantry Division Infantry 68 January February 1978 18 22 The Third Division at Chateau Thierry U S Army Chemical Corps Historical Studies Gas Warfare in World War I Study No 14 Washington U S Army Chemical Corps Historical Office 1959 Third Division Citations Andernach on the Rhine Germany Carl Reinartz 1919 3rd Infantry Division Gyroscoping Enlistments Open Recruiting Journal 10 May 1957 8 9 3rd Infantry Division in Korea Society of the Third Infantry Division 1987 3rd Infantry Division Information Office 3d Infantry Division 1917 Forty Year Odyssey 1958 Wurzburg Germany Konrad Triltsch 1958 Valor 3d Division in Sicily Infantry Journal 54 March 1944 16 18 June 1944 44 Westover John G Combat Support in Korea Washington Combat Forces Press 1955 Reprint Washington Government Printing Office 1990 External links Edit Media related to 3rd Infantry Division United States at Wikimedia Commons 3rd Infantry Division Home Page official site Society of the 3d Infantry Division Photographic Journey Anzio to Austria Sgt William Heller s World War II Memoirs 3rd Infantry Division GlobalSecurity org 3d Infantry Division Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 3rd Infantry Division United States amp oldid 1128008996, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.