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Army National Guard

The Army National Guard (ARNG), in conjunction with the Air National Guard, is an organized militia force and a federal military reserve force of the United States Army. They are simultaneously part of two different organizations: the ARNG of each state, most territories, and the District of Columbia (also referred to as the Militia of the United States), as well as the federal ARNG, as part of the National Guard as a whole. It is divided into subordinate units stationed in each state or insular area, responsible to their respective governors or other head-of-government.[4]

Army National Guard
Seal of the Army National Guard
ActiveAs state-funded militia under various names: 1636–1903
As federal reserve forces called the Army National Guard: 1903–present
Country United States
AllegianceFederal (10 U.S.C. § E)
State and territorial (32 U.S.C.)
BranchUnited States Army
TypeReserve force
Militia
Size336,000 personnel (authorized end strength for Fiscal Year 2020)[1]
Part ofNational Guard
National Guard Bureau
Garrison/HQArmy National Guard Readiness Center, Arlington Hall
Arlington County, Virginia
Nickname(s)"Army Guard", "The Guard"
Anniversaries13 December 1636 (founding)
Websitewww.army.mil/nationalguard
www.nationalguard.com
Commanders
DirectorLTG Jon A. Jensen
Deputy DirectorMG John C. Andonie[2][3]
Command Chief Warrant OfficerCW5 Teresa A. Domeier
Command Sergeant MajorCSM John T. Raines III

The Guard's origins are usually traced to the city of Salem, Massachusetts, in 1636. That year a regiment of militia drilled for the first time to defend a multi-community area within what is now the United States.[5][a]

Activation edit

The ARNG operates under Title 10 of the United States Code when under federal control, and Title 32 of the United States Code and applicable state laws when under state control. It may be called up for active duty by the state or territorial governors to help respond to domestic emergencies and disasters, such as those caused by hurricanes, floods, and earthquakes, as well as civil disorder.[4] The District of Columbia Army National Guard is a federal militia, controlled by the President of the United States with authority delegated to the Secretary of Defense, and through him to the Secretary of the Army.[7]

Members or units of the ARNG may be ordered, temporarily or indefinitely, into United States service.[8][9] If mobilized for federal service, the member or unit becomes part of the U.S. ARNG, which is a reserve component of the U.S. Army.[10][11][12] Individuals volunteering for active federal service may do so subject to the consent of their governors.[13] Largely on the basis of a 1990 U.S. Supreme Court decision, governors generally cannot veto involuntary activations of individuals or units for federal service, either for training or national emergency.[14]

The President may also call up members and units of the ARNG, in its status as the militia of the several states, to repel invasion, suppress rebellion, or enforce federal laws.[15] The Army National Guard is one of two organizations administered by the National Guard Bureau, the other being the Air National Guard. The Director of the ARNG is the head of the organization, and reports to the Chief of the National Guard Bureau. Because the ARNG is both the militia of the several states and a federal reserve component of the Army, neither the Chief of the National Guard Bureau nor the Director of the ARNG "commands" it. This operational command authority is performed in each state or territory by the State Adjutant General, and in the District of Columbia by the Commanding General of the D.C. National Guard when a unit is in its militia status. While under federal activation, the operational command authority is transferred to the commanders of the unified combatant commands, who command all U.S. forces within their area of responsibility. The Chief of the National Guard Bureau and the Director of the ARNG serve as the channel of communications between the Department of the Army and the ARNG in each state and territory, and administer federal programs, policies, and resources for the National Guard.[16]

The ARNG's portion of the president's proposed federal budget for Fiscal Year 2018 is approximately $16.2 billion to support an end strength of 343,000, including appropriations for personnel pay and allowance, facilities maintenance, construction, equipment maintenance and other activities.[17]

History edit

ARNG recruits arriving at Fort Jackson for BCT

Prominent members edit

U.S. presidents edit

Of the 45[b] individuals to serve as President of the United States as of 2021, 33 had military experience. Of those 33, 21 served in the militia or ARNG.

(Note: President George W. Bush served in the National Guard in the late 1960s and early 1970s, and he was the first Air National Guard member to attain the presidency.)[63]

Units and formations edit

Deployable Army units are organized as Table of organization and equipment (TOE) organizations or modified table of organization and equipment (MTOE) organizations. Non-deployable units, such as a state's joint force headquarters or regional training institutes are administered as Table of distribution and allowance (TDA) units.[64]

Commands edit

Divisions edit

In addition to many deployable units which are non-divisional, the Army National Guard's deployable units include eight infantry divisions.[65] These divisions, their subordinate brigades or brigades with which the divisions have a training oversight relationship, and the states represented by the largest units include:[66]

Army Aviation Magazine wrote on 31 March 2021 that "The ARNG is pressing forward with the Division Alignment for Training (DIV AFT) effort. The DIV AFT intent is to enhance leader development and training readiness through codified relationships across echelons and states to develop combat capable division formations for large scale combat operations. The Director, ARNG.. recently convened a DIV AFT Initial Planning Conference to clarify unit alignments for all eight ARNG Division Headquarters and synchronize activities that will facilitate unity of effort between Division Headquarters and aligned for training States."[67]

Multifunctional Support Brigades edit

The Army National Guard fields 37 multifunctional support brigades.

Maneuver Enhancement Brigades edit

Field Artillery Brigades edit

Sustainment Brigades edit

Military Intelligence Brigades edit

Functional Support Brigades and Groups edit

Engineer Brigades edit

Air Defense Artillery Brigades edit

Theater Tactical Signal Brigades edit

Military Police Brigades edit

Theater and Combat Aviation Brigades edit

Other brigades edit

Other Groups edit

Regular Army – Army National Guard Partnership edit

In 2016, the Army and the Army National Guard began a training and readiness initiative that aligned some Army brigades with National Guard division headquarters, and some National Guard brigades with Army division headquarters. Among others, this program included the National Guard's 86th Infantry Brigade Combat Team becoming affiliated with the Army's 10th Mountain Division[69] and the National Guard's 1st Battalion, 143rd Infantry Regiment affiliating with the Army's 173rd Airborne Brigade Combat Team.[70] In addition, 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division began an affiliation with the National Guard's 36th Infantry Division.[71]

Army units partnering with Army National Guard headquarters include:

By state edit

The Army and Air National Guard in each state are headed by the State Adjutant General. The Adjutant General (TAG) is the de facto commander of a state's military forces, and reports to the state governor.[72]

Legacy units and formations edit

 
Shoulder sleeve insignia of the 47th Infantry Division, inactivated in 1991
 
Shoulder sleeve insignia of the 50th Armored Division, inactivated in 1993

Several units have been affected by Army National Guard reorganizations. Some have been renamed or inactivated. Some have had subordinate units reallocated to other commands. A partial list of inactivated major units includes:

Leadership edit

 
National Guard Bureau organizational chart depicting command and reporting relationships
 
Army National Guard staff organizational chart
 
Chief of the National Guard Bureau Gen. Daniel R. Hokanson administers the oath of office to Lt. Gen. Jon A. Jensen as the 22nd director of the Army National Guard on Monday, 10 August 2020 at the Temple Army National Guard Readiness Center in Arlington, Virginia.

Upon the creation of the United States Air Force in 1947, the National Guard Bureau was organized into two divisions; Army National Guard and Air National Guard. Each were headed by a major general who reported to the chief of the National Guard Bureau. The head of the Army National Guard was originally established as the chief of the Army Division at the National Guard Bureau. The position was downgraded to brigadier general in 1962 due to force reduction. It was renamed to Director of the Army National Guard and elevated back to major general in 1970. The position was later elevated to the rank of lieutenant general in 2001. The Army National Guard is also authorized a deputy director which was originally established as a brigadier general office in 1970. It was elevated to the rank of major general in 2006.

The director of the Army National Guard oversees a staff which aids in planning and day-to-day organization and management. In addition to a chief of staff, the Director's staff includes several special staff members, including a chaplain and protocol and awards specialists. It also includes a primary staff, which is organized as directorates, divisions, and branches. The directorates of the Army National Guard staff are arranged along the lines of a typical American military staff: G-1 for personnel; G-2 for intelligence; G-3 for plans, operations and training; G-4 for logistics; G-5 for strategic plans, policy and communications; G-6 for communications; and G-8 for budgets and financial management.

List of chiefs and directors edit

No. Commander Term
Portrait Name Took office Left office Term length
Chiefs of the Army Division at the National Guard Bureau
1
 
Major General
Raymond H. Fleming
194819502 years
2
 
Major General
William H. Abendroth
195119554 years
3
 
Major General
Donald W. McGowan
195519594 years
4
 
Major General
Clayton P. Kerr
195919623 years
5
 
Brigadier General
Francis Greenlief
196219631 year
6
 
Brigadier General
Charles L. Southward
196419662 years
7
 
Brigadier General
Leonard C. Ward
196819702 years
Directors of the Army National Guard
8
 
Major General
Francis Greenlief
197019711 year
9
 
Major General
La Vern E. Weber
197119743 years
10
 
Major General
Charles A. Ott Jr.
197419784 years
11
 
Major General
Emmett H. Walker Jr.
197819824 years
12
 
Major General
Herbert R. Temple Jr.
198219864 years
13
 
Major General
Donald Burdick
198619915 years
14
 
Major General
Raymond F. Rees
199119921 year
15
 
Major General
John R. D'Araujo Jr.
199319952 years
16
 
Major General
William A. Navas Jr.
October 1995May 19983 years
17
 
Lieutenant General
Roger C. Schultz
1 June 199815 June 20057 years, 14 days[95]
18
 
Lieutenant General
Clyde A. Vaughn
15 June 20059 May 20093 years, 328 days
 
Major General
Raymond W. Carpenter
Acting
9 May 200928 November 20112 years, 203 days
19
 
Lieutenant General
William E. Ingram Jr.
28 November 201114 January 20142 years, 47 days
 
Major General
Judd H. Lyons
Acting
14 January 201427 March 20151 year, 72 days
20
 
Lieutenant General
Timothy J. Kadavy
27 March 201525 March 20193 years, 363 days
21
 
Lieutenant General
Daniel R. Hokanson
20 June 20193 August 20201 year, 44 days
22
 
Lieutenant General
Jon A. Jensen
10 August 2020Incumbent3 years, 186 days

See also edit

Comparable organizations

Notes edit

  1. ^ The 181st Infantry, the 182nd Infantry, the 101st Field Artillery and the 101st Engineer Battalion of the Massachusetts Army National Guard stem from the 1636 unit.[6]
  2. ^ As of 2021. While there have been 46 presidencies, only 45 individuals have served as president. Grover Cleveland served two non-consecutive terms and is numbered as both the 22nd and 24th U.S. president.

References edit

  1. ^ Office of Legislative Affairs (13 June 2019). "FY20Senate National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA)" (PDF). National Guard.mil. Arlington, VA: National Guard Bureau. p. 1.
  2. ^ "Clifton Park resident John Andonie, an Iraq War veteran, promoted to two-star general on Friday, January 22". Retrieved 24 March 2021.
  3. ^ Durr, Eric (22 January 2021). "Major General John Andonie, new deputy director of the Army National Guard, promoted at New York National Guard headquarters". DVIDS. Retrieved 30 December 2023.
  4. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 12 May 2016. Retrieved 14 August 2008.
  5. ^ "Salem, Mass., declared National Guard's birthplace". Boston Globe. Boston, MA. Associated Press. 19 August 2010. Retrieved 14 May 2018.
  6. ^ Maj. Avery Schneider, New York National Guard (13 December 2022) Deployed Guardsmen celebrate National Guard's 386th birthday
  7. ^ National Archives and Records Administration, Executive Order 11485—Supervision and control of the National Guard of the District of Columbia, 1 October 1969
  8. ^ 10 USC 12211. Officers: Army National Guard of the United States
  9. ^ 10 USC 12107. Army National Guard of United States; Air National Guard of the United States: enlistment in
  10. ^ 32 USC 101. Definitions (NATIONAL GUARD)
  11. ^ 10 USC 12401. Army and Air National Guard of the United States: status
  12. ^ 10 USC 10105. Army National Guard of the United States: composition
  13. ^ North Atlantic Treaty organization, Fact Sheet, National Reserve Forces Status: United States of America, 2006, p. 1
  14. ^ National Guard Bureau, Today in Guard History (June), 11 June 1990, 2013
  15. ^ 10 USC 12406. National Guard in Federal service: call
  16. ^ Cornell University, legal Information Institute, 10 USC § 10503 – Functions of National Guard Bureau: Charter, accessed 20 June 2013
  17. ^ Matthews, William (1 July 2017). "Busting The Caps". National Guard. Arlington, VA.
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  44. ^ James S. Brisbin (1868). The campaign lives of Ulysses S Grant and Schuyler Colfax. Gale Cengage Learning. pp. 58–59.
  45. ^ Ulysses Simpson Grant (1969). The Papers of Ulysses S. Grant: April to September, 1861. SIU Press. p. 29. ISBN 978-0-8093-0366-3.
  46. ^ William Farina (2007). Ulysses S. Grant, 1861–1864: His Rise from Obscurity to Military Greatness. McFarland. p. 22. ISBN 978-0-7864-8051-7.
  47. ^ William Dean Howells; Rutherford Birchard Hayes (1876). Sketch of the life and character of Rutherford B. Hayes. Also a biographical sketch of William A. Wheeler. Hurd and Houghton. p. 29.
  48. ^ Hardesty's Historical and Geographical Encyclopedia, Military and Personal Sketches of Ohio's Rank and File from Sandusky County in the War of the Rebellion, 1885, republished on the Rutherford B. Hayes Presidential Center web site
  49. ^ John Clark Ridpath (1881). The Life and Work of James A. Garfield ...: Embracing an Account of the Scenes and Incidents of His Boyhood. Jones brothers. pp. 91–92.
  50. ^ James T. Wall (2008). Wall Street and the Fruited Plain: Money, Expansion, and Politics in the Gilded Age. University Press of America. p. 82. ISBN 978-0-7618-4124-1.
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  52. ^ Lew Wallace; Murat Halstead (1892). Life and Public Services of Hon. Benjamin Harrison, President of the U.S.: With a Concise Biographical Sketch of Hon. Whitelaw Reid. Edgewood Publishing Company. pp. 178–181.
  53. ^ Newburgh Daily Journal, "Death of General Harrison", 14 March 1901
  54. ^ Muncie Free Press, Daniels adds President Benjamin Harrison to Hoosier Heritage Portrait Collection 24 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine, 20 March 2009
  55. ^ Eric Foner (2002). Reconstruction: America's Unfinished Revolution, 1863–1877. HarperCollins. p. 584. ISBN 978-0-06-093716-4.
  56. ^ John W. Tyler (1901). The Life of William McKinley. P. W. Ziegler & Company. p. 37.
  57. ^ Kevin Phillips (2003). William McKinley: The American Presidents Series: The 25th President, 1897–1901. Henry Holt and Company. p. 23. ISBN 978-0-8050-6953-2.
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  73. ^ National Guard Educational Foundation, 26th Infantry Division, 2011
  74. ^ National Guard Educational Foundation, 27th Infantry Division, 2011
  75. ^ National Guard Educational Foundation, 27th Armored Division, 2011
  76. ^ "Ceremonies Today for 30th Armored". The Tennessean. Nashville, TV. 28 October 1973. p. 11. The 30th Armored Division of the Tennessee National Guard will be retired today...
  77. ^ National Guard Educational Foundation, 30th Infantry Division, 2011
  78. ^ Tuscaloosa News, 31st Dixie Division Turning to Armor, 19 January 1968.
  79. ^ Wisconsin Historical Society, Dictionary of Wisconsin History, Red Arrow Division 22 December 2015 at the Wayback Machine, accessed 19 June 2013
  80. ^ New York Times, Illinois Commander of Guard Replaced, 4 March 1968
  81. ^ Al Goldberg, Toledo Blade, Taps Sounds for Ohio Guard's Famed 37th, 18 February 1968
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  83. ^ California State Military Museum, Lineages and Honors of the California National Guard: 40th Armored Brigade Headquarters and Headquarters Company, accessed 19 June 2013
  84. ^ Tri-City Herald, Taps for the 41st, 8 June 1967
  85. ^ Washington Army National Guard, Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 81st Brigade Combat Team 13 May 2014 at the Wayback Machine, 2007
  86. ^ Associated Press, The Telegraph, Yankee Infantry Division is Facing Reorganization, 30 November 1967
  87. ^ Eugene Register-Standard, Army Disbands 44th Division, 18 September 1954
  88. ^ National Guard Education Foundation, 45th Infantry Division, 2011
  89. ^ National Guard Educational Foundation, 46th Infantry Division, 2011
  90. ^ Minnesota Military Museum, The 47th "Viking" Infantry Division, 1991
  91. ^ National Guard Educational Foundation, 48th Armored Division 27 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine, 2011
  92. ^ Texas Army National Guard, History of the 36th Infantry Division 5 April 2013 at the Wayback Machine, accessed 19 June 2013
  93. ^ Texas Military Forces Museum, 36th Infantry Division, The "Texas" Division, accessed 19 June 2013
  94. ^ U.S. House Appropriations Committee, Hearing Record, Department of Defense Appropriations for 1995, Volume 1, 1994, p. 296
  95. ^ Served as director in the rank of major general from 1998 to 2001. The 2001 National Defense Authorization Act, elevated the position to lieutenant general. Schultz was appointed another term as director and was promoted.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Army National Guard News
  • Unit Designations in the Army Modular Force, accessed 23 November 2006
  • Army National Guard Old Website

army, national, guard, arng, conjunction, with, national, guard, organized, militia, force, federal, military, reserve, force, united, states, army, they, simultaneously, part, different, organizations, arng, each, state, most, territories, district, columbia,. The Army National Guard ARNG in conjunction with the Air National Guard is an organized militia force and a federal military reserve force of the United States Army They are simultaneously part of two different organizations the ARNG of each state most territories and the District of Columbia also referred to as the Militia of the United States as well as the federal ARNG as part of the National Guard as a whole It is divided into subordinate units stationed in each state or insular area responsible to their respective governors or other head of government 4 Army National GuardSeal of the Army National GuardActiveAs state funded militia under various names 1636 1903As federal reserve forces called the Army National Guard 1903 presentCountry United StatesAllegianceFederal 10 U S C E State and territorial 32 U S C BranchUnited States ArmyTypeReserve forceMilitiaSize336 000 personnel authorized end strength for Fiscal Year 2020 1 Part ofNational GuardNational Guard BureauGarrison HQArmy National Guard Readiness Center Arlington HallArlington County VirginiaNickname s Army Guard The Guard Anniversaries13 December 1636 founding Websitewww army mil nationalguard www nationalguard comCommandersDirectorLTG Jon A JensenDeputy DirectorMG John C Andonie 2 3 Command Chief Warrant OfficerCW5 Teresa A DomeierCommand Sergeant MajorCSM John T Raines III The Guard s origins are usually traced to the city of Salem Massachusetts in 1636 That year a regiment of militia drilled for the first time to defend a multi community area within what is now the United States 5 a Contents 1 Activation 2 History 3 Prominent members 3 1 U S presidents 4 Units and formations 4 1 Commands 4 2 Divisions 4 3 Multifunctional Support Brigades 4 3 1 Maneuver Enhancement Brigades 4 3 2 Field Artillery Brigades 4 3 3 Sustainment Brigades 4 3 4 Military Intelligence Brigades 4 4 Functional Support Brigades and Groups 4 4 1 Engineer Brigades 4 4 2 Air Defense Artillery Brigades 4 4 3 Theater Tactical Signal Brigades 4 4 4 Military Police Brigades 4 4 5 Theater and Combat Aviation Brigades 4 4 6 Other brigades 4 4 7 Other Groups 4 5 Regular Army Army National Guard Partnership 5 By state 6 Legacy units and formations 7 Leadership 7 1 List of chiefs and directors 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksActivation editThe ARNG operates under Title 10 of the United States Code when under federal control and Title 32 of the United States Code and applicable state laws when under state control It may be called up for active duty by the state or territorial governors to help respond to domestic emergencies and disasters such as those caused by hurricanes floods and earthquakes as well as civil disorder 4 The District of Columbia Army National Guard is a federal militia controlled by the President of the United States with authority delegated to the Secretary of Defense and through him to the Secretary of the Army 7 Members or units of the ARNG may be ordered temporarily or indefinitely into United States service 8 9 If mobilized for federal service the member or unit becomes part of the U S ARNG which is a reserve component of the U S Army 10 11 12 Individuals volunteering for active federal service may do so subject to the consent of their governors 13 Largely on the basis of a 1990 U S Supreme Court decision governors generally cannot veto involuntary activations of individuals or units for federal service either for training or national emergency 14 The President may also call up members and units of the ARNG in its status as the militia of the several states to repel invasion suppress rebellion or enforce federal laws 15 The Army National Guard is one of two organizations administered by the National Guard Bureau the other being the Air National Guard The Director of the ARNG is the head of the organization and reports to the Chief of the National Guard Bureau Because the ARNG is both the militia of the several states and a federal reserve component of the Army neither the Chief of the National Guard Bureau nor the Director of the ARNG commands it This operational command authority is performed in each state or territory by the State Adjutant General and in the District of Columbia by the Commanding General of the D C National Guard when a unit is in its militia status While under federal activation the operational command authority is transferred to the commanders of the unified combatant commands who command all U S forces within their area of responsibility The Chief of the National Guard Bureau and the Director of the ARNG serve as the channel of communications between the Department of the Army and the ARNG in each state and territory and administer federal programs policies and resources for the National Guard 16 The ARNG s portion of the president s proposed federal budget for Fiscal Year 2018 is approximately 16 2 billion to support an end strength of 343 000 including appropriations for personnel pay and allowance facilities maintenance construction equipment maintenance and other activities 17 History editMain article History of the United States Army National Guard Main article Militia United States source source source ARNG recruits arriving at Fort Jackson for BCTProminent members editMain article Prominent members of the US Army National Guard U S presidents edit Main article List of presidents of the United States by military service Of the 45 b individuals to serve as President of the United States as of 2021 update 33 had military experience Of those 33 21 served in the militia or ARNG George Washington commissioned a Major in the Virginia Militia in 1753 He attained the rank of colonel before resigning his commission at the end of the French and Indian War 18 19 Thomas Jefferson colonel and commander of the Albemarle County Militia at the start of the American Revolution 20 James Madison colonel in the Orange County Militia at the start of the American Revolution and aide to his father James Madison Sr who was the commander 21 James Monroe served in the militia while attending the College of William and Mary After being wounded at the Battle of Trenton while serving in the Continental Army he returned to Virginia to recruit and lead a regiment as a militia lieutenant colonel but the regiment was never raised In 1780 the British invaded Richmond Virginia and Jefferson commissioned Monroe as a colonel to command the militia raised in response and act as liaison to the Continental Army in North Carolina 22 23 Andrew Jackson commander of the Tennessee Militia as a major general prior to the War of 1812 24 25 William Henry Harrison commander of Indiana Territory s militia and Major General of the Kentucky Militia at the start of the War of 1812 26 27 John Tyler commanded a company called the Charles City Rifles part of Virginia s 52nd Regiment in the War of 1812 28 James Polk joined the Tennessee Militia as a captain in a cavalry regiment in 1821 He was subsequently appointed a colonel on the staff of Governor William Carroll 29 30 31 32 Millard Fillmore served as inspector of New York s 47th Brigade with the rank of major 33 Commanded the Union Continentals a militia unit raised to perform local service in Buffalo New York during the American Civil War 34 Franklin Pierce appointed aide de camp to Governor Samuel Dinsmoor in 1831 He remained in the militia until 1847 and attained the rank of colonel before becoming a brigadier general in the Army during the Mexican American War 35 James Buchanan a member of the Pennsylvania Militia His dragoon unit took part in the defense of Baltimore Maryland during the War of 1812 36 37 Abraham Lincoln served in the Illinois Militia during the Black Hawk War He commanded a company in the 4th Illinois Regiment with the rank of captain from April to May 1832 He was a private in Captain Alexander White s Company from May to June 1832 He served as a private in Captain Jacob Earley s company from June to July 1832 38 Andrew Johnson served in the Tennessee Militia in the 1830s and attained the rank of colonel 39 40 During the American Civil War he remained loyal to the Union and was appointed Military Governor of Tennessee with the rank of brigadier general 41 42 43 Ulysses S Grant having left the Army as a captain at the start of the Civil War he served in the Illinois Militia as aide de camp and mustering officer for Governor Richard Yates 44 45 He held these positions until being appointed commander of the 21st Illinois Infantry which set him on the path to becoming a general and commander of all Union armies 46 Rutherford B Hayes joined a militia company in 1846 intending to fight in the Mexican American War but resigned because of ill health 47 Enlisted as a private in a Cincinnati militia company at the start of the Civil War in 1861 and was elected commander with the rank of captain He was subsequently appointed a major in the 23rd Ohio Infantry and ended the war as a brigade commander and brevet Major General 48 James A Garfield commissioned a lieutenant colonel in the Ohio Militia in 1861 he took part in recruiting and training the 42nd Ohio Infantry Regiment which he commanded as a colonel 49 He later served as Chief of Staff for the Army of the Cumberland and received promotion to Major General 50 Chester A Arthur became a member of the New York Militia soon after becoming a lawyer During the Civil War he served on the staff of Governor Edwin D Morgan as Quartermaster General with the rank of brigadier general He later served as Morgan s inspector general responsible for visiting New York s front line units assessing conditions and recommending improvements 51 Benjamin Harrison commissioned in the Indiana Militia by Governor Oliver P Morton to recruit a regiment during the Civil War he was subsequently appointed a second lieutenant and captain in and then colonel and commander of the 70th Indiana Infantry Regiment He received the brevet of brigadier general as a commendation of his service and later commanded a brigade 52 53 54 He also enrolled in the militia again during labor unrest in Indianapolis in 1877 55 William McKinley joined a volunteer militia company called the Poland Guards at the start of the Civil War The company was subsequently mustered in as part of the 23rd Ohio Infantry the same regiment in which President Hayes served McKinley ended the war as a major and chief of staff for division commander Samuel S Carroll 56 57 Theodore Roosevelt commissioned as a second lieutenant in the 8th New York Infantry Regiment in 1884 he served until 1888 and attained the rank of captain During the Spanish American War he was commissioned lieutenant colonel of the 1st United States Volunteer Cavalry which he later commanded as a colonel In 2001 a review of his war record led to a posthumous award of the Medal of Honor 58 59 Harry S Truman served in the Missouri Army National Guard from 1905 to 1911 rising to the rank of corporal During World War I he rejoined and was commissioned a first lieutenant in the 2nd Missouri Field Artillery This regiment was federalized as the 129th Field Artillery and Truman commanded Battery D as a captain He continued to serve in the Army Reserve retiring as a colonel in 1953 60 61 62 Note President George W Bush served in the National Guard in the late 1960s and early 1970s and he was the first Air National Guard member to attain the presidency 63 Units and formations editDeployable Army units are organized as Table of organization and equipment TOE organizations or modified table of organization and equipment MTOE organizations Non deployable units such as a state s joint force headquarters or regional training institutes are administered as Table of distribution and allowance TDA units 64 Commands edit nbsp 46th Military Police Command MI ARNG nbsp 135th Sustainment Command Expeditionary AL ARNG nbsp 167th Sustainment Command Theater AL ARNG 184th Sustainment Command Expeditionary MS ARNG nbsp 263rd Army Air and Missile Defense Command SC ARNG Divisions edit In addition to many deployable units which are non divisional the Army National Guard s deployable units include eight infantry divisions 65 These divisions their subordinate brigades or brigades with which the divisions have a training oversight relationship and the states represented by the largest units include 66 Army Aviation Magazine wrote on 31 March 2021 that The ARNG is pressing forward with the Division Alignment for Training DIV AFT effort The DIV AFT intent is to enhance leader development and training readiness through codified relationships across echelons and states to develop combat capable division formations for large scale combat operations The Director ARNG recently convened a DIV AFT Initial Planning Conference to clarify unit alignments for all eight ARNG Division Headquarters and synchronize activities that will facilitate unity of effort between Division Headquarters and aligned for training States 67 nbsp 28th Infantry Division PA ARNG 2nd Infantry Brigade Combat Team PA ARNG 56th Stryker Brigade Combat Team PA ARNG 28th Expeditionary Combat Aviation Brigade PA ARNG nbsp 29th Infantry Division VA ARNG nbsp 30th Armored Brigade Combat Team NC ARNG nbsp 53rd Infantry Brigade Combat Team FL ARNG 116th Infantry Brigade Combat Team VA ARNG 29th Combat Aviation Brigade MD ARNG nbsp 34th Infantry Division MN ARNG 1st Armored Brigade Combat Team MN ARNG 2nd Infantry Brigade Combat Team IA ARNG nbsp 32nd Infantry Brigade Combat Team WI ARNG nbsp 116th Cavalry Brigade Combat Team ID ARNG 34th Combat Aviation Brigade MN ARNG nbsp 35th Infantry Division KS ARNG nbsp 39th Infantry Brigade Combat Team AR ARNG nbsp 45th Infantry Brigade Combat Team OK ARNG nbsp 155th Armored Brigade Combat Team MS ARNG 35th Combat Aviation Brigade MO ARNG nbsp 36th Infantry Division TX ARNG 56th Infantry Brigade Combat Team TX ARNG 72nd Infantry Brigade Combat Team TX ARNG nbsp 81st Stryker Brigade Combat Team WA ARNG nbsp 256th Infantry Brigade Combat Team LA ARNG nbsp 278th Armored Cavalry Regiment TN ARNG 36th Combat Aviation Brigade TX ARNG nbsp 38th Infantry Division IN ARNG nbsp 33rd Infantry Brigade Combat Team IL ARNG nbsp 37th Infantry Brigade Combat Team OH ARNG nbsp 76th Infantry Brigade Combat Team IN ARNG 38th Combat Aviation Brigade IN ARNG nbsp 40th Infantry Division CA ARNG nbsp 29th Infantry Brigade Combat Team HI ARNG nbsp 41st Infantry Brigade Combat Team OR ARNG nbsp 79th Infantry Brigade Combat Team CA ARNG 40th Combat Aviation Brigade CA ARNG nbsp 42nd Infantry Division NY ARNG nbsp 27th Infantry Brigade Combat Team NY ARNG nbsp 44th Infantry Brigade Combat Team NJ ARNG nbsp 86th Infantry Brigade Combat Team VT ARNG 42nd Combat Aviation Brigade NY ARNG Multifunctional Support Brigades edit The Army National Guard fields 37 multifunctional support brigades Maneuver Enhancement Brigades edit nbsp 26th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade MA ARNG nbsp 55th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade PA ARNG nbsp 67th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade NE ARNG nbsp 110th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade MO ARNG nbsp 130th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade NC ARNG nbsp 136th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade TX ARNG nbsp 141st Maneuver Enhancement Brigade ND ARNG nbsp 149th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade KY ARNG nbsp 157th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade WI ARNG nbsp 158th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade AZ ARNG nbsp 196th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade SD ARNG nbsp 204th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade UT ARNG nbsp 218th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade SC ARNG 226th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade AL ARNG nbsp 404th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade IL ARNG nbsp 648th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade GA ARNG Field Artillery Brigades edit nbsp 45th Field Artillery Brigade OK ARNG nbsp 65th Field Artillery Brigade UT ARNG nbsp 115th Field Artillery Brigade WY ARNG nbsp 130th Field Artillery Brigade KS ARNG nbsp 138th Field Artillery Brigade KY ARNG nbsp 142nd Field Artillery Brigade AR ARNG nbsp 169th Field Artillery Brigade CO ARNG nbsp 197th Field Artillery Brigade NH ARNG Sustainment Brigades edit nbsp 17th Sustainment Brigade NV ARNG nbsp 36th Sustainment Brigade TX ARNG nbsp 38th Sustainment Brigade IN ARNG nbsp 108th Sustainment Brigade IL ARNG nbsp 111th Sustainment Brigade NM ARNG nbsp 113th Sustainment Brigade NC ARNG nbsp 224th Sustainment Brigade CA ARNG nbsp 230th Sustainment Brigade TN ARNG nbsp 369th Sustainment Brigade NY ARNG nbsp 371st Sustainment Brigade OH ARNG Military Intelligence Brigades edit nbsp 58th Military Intelligence Brigade Expeditionary MD ARNG nbsp 71st Military Intelligence Brigade Expeditionary TX ARNG nbsp 300th Military Intelligence Brigade Linguist UT ARNG TDA organization Functional Support Brigades and Groups edit Engineer Brigades edit nbsp 16th Engineer Brigade OH ARNG nbsp 35th Engineer Brigade MO ARNG nbsp 111th Engineer Brigade WV ARNG nbsp 117th Engineer Brigade SC ARNG nbsp 168th Engineer Brigade MS ARNG nbsp 176th Engineer Brigade TX ARNG nbsp 194th Engineer Brigade TN ARNG nbsp 219th Engineer Brigade IN ARNG nbsp 225th Engineer Brigade LA ARNG Air Defense Artillery Brigades edit nbsp 164th Air Defense Artillery Brigade FL ARNG nbsp 174th Air Defense Artillery Brigade OH ARNG nbsp 678th Air Defense Artillery Brigade SC ARNG Theater Tactical Signal Brigades edit nbsp 228th Theater Tactical Signal Brigade SC ARNG nbsp 261st Theater Tactical Signal Brigade DE ARNG Military Police Brigades edit nbsp 35th Military Police Brigade MO ARNG nbsp 43rd Military Police Brigade RI ARNG nbsp 49th Military Police Brigade CA ARNG nbsp 92nd Military Police Brigade PR ARNG nbsp 142nd Military Police Brigade AL ARNG nbsp 177th Military Police Brigade MI ARNG Theater and Combat Aviation Brigades edit nbsp 63rd Theater Aviation Brigade KY ARNG nbsp 77th Combat Aviation Brigade AR ARNG nbsp 185th Theater Aviation Brigade MS ARNG nbsp 449th Combat Aviation Brigade NC ARNG Other brigades edit nbsp 31st Chemical Brigade AL ARNG nbsp 91st Cyber Brigade VA ARNG 68 TDA organization nbsp 100th Missile Defense Brigade CO ARNG Other Groups edit nbsp 19th Special Forces Group UT ARNG nbsp 20th Special Forces Group AL ARNG 111th Explosive Ordnance Disposal Group AL ARNG nbsp 56th Theater Information Operations Group WA ARNG 71st Theater Information Operations Group TX ARNG 204th Theater Aviation Operations Group LA ARNG 1100th Theater Aviation Sustainment Maintenance Group MD ARNG 1106th Theater Aviation Sustainment Maintenance Group CA ARNG 1107th Theater Aviation Sustainment Maintenance Group MO ARNG 1108th Theater Aviation Sustainment Maintenance Group MS ARNG 1109th Theater Aviation Sustainment Maintenance Group CT ARNG nbsp 42nd Regional Support Group NJ ARNG nbsp 50th Regional Support Group FL ARNG 109th Regional Support Group SD ARNG nbsp 115th Regional Support Group CA ARNG 120th Regional Support Group ME ARNG 139th Regional Support Group LA ARNG 143rd Regional Support Group CT ARNG nbsp 151st Regional Support Group MA ARNG 191st Regional Support Group PR ARNG nbsp 198th Regional Support Group AZ ARNG nbsp 201st Regional Support Group GA ARNG 213th Regional Support Group PA ARNG nbsp 272nd Regional Support Group MI ARNG 297th Regional Support Group AK ARNG 329th Regional Support Group VA ARNG nbsp 347th Regional Support Group MN ARNG nbsp 635th Regional Support Group KS ARNG nbsp 734th Regional Support Group IA ARNG nbsp 1889th Regional Support Group MT ARNG Regular Army Army National Guard Partnership edit In 2016 the Army and the Army National Guard began a training and readiness initiative that aligned some Army brigades with National Guard division headquarters and some National Guard brigades with Army division headquarters Among others this program included the National Guard s 86th Infantry Brigade Combat Team becoming affiliated with the Army s 10th Mountain Division 69 and the National Guard s 1st Battalion 143rd Infantry Regiment affiliating with the Army s 173rd Airborne Brigade Combat Team 70 In addition 3rd Brigade Combat Team 10th Mountain Division began an affiliation with the National Guard s 36th Infantry Division 71 nbsp 48th Infantry Brigade Combat Team GA ARNG associated with nbsp 3rd Infantry Division nbsp 81st Stryker Brigade Combat Team WA ARNG associated with nbsp 7th Infantry Division nbsp 86th Infantry Brigade Combat Team VT ARNG associated with nbsp 10th Mountain Division nbsp 1st Battalion Airborne 143rd Infantry Regiment TX ARNG associated with nbsp 173rd Airborne Brigade Combat Team nbsp 1st Battalion 151st Infantry Regiment IN ARNG associated with nbsp 2nd Brigade Combat Team 25th Infantry Division 840th Engineer Company TX ARNG associated with nbsp 36th Engineer Brigade 249th Transportation Company TX ARNG associated with nbsp 1st Cavalry Division Sustainment Brigade 1176th Transportation Company TN ARNG associated with nbsp 101st Sustainment Brigade 1245th Transportation Company OK ARNG associated with nbsp 1st Cavalry Division Sustainment Brigade 2123rd Transportation Company KY ARNG associated with nbsp 101st Sustainment BrigadeArmy units partnering with Army National Guard headquarters include nbsp 5th Engineer Battalion associated with nbsp 35th Engineer Brigade MO ARNG By state editMain article State Adjutant General The Army and Air National Guard in each state are headed by the State Adjutant General The Adjutant General TAG is the de facto commander of a state s military forces and reports to the state governor 72 State Abbr StateAL AlabamaAK AlaskaAZ ArizonaAR ArkansasCA CaliforniaCO ColoradoCT ConnecticutDE DelawareDC District of ColumbiaFL FloridaGA GeorgiaGU GuamHI HawaiiID IdahoIL IllinoisIN IndianaIA IowaKS Kansas State Abbr StateKY KentuckyLA LouisianaME MaineMD MarylandMA MassachusettsMI MichiganMN MinnesotaMS MississippiMO MissouriMT MontanaNE NebraskaND NevadaNH New HampshireNJ New JerseyNM New MexicoNY New YorkNC North CarolinaND North Dakota State Abbr StateOH OhioOK OklahomaOR OregonPA PennsylvaniaPR Puerto RicoRI Rhode IslandSC South CarolinaSD South DakotaTN TennesseeTX TexasUT UtahVT VermontVA VirginiaVI U S Virgin IslandsWA WashingtonWV West VirginiaWI WisconsinWY WyomingLegacy units and formations edit nbsp Shoulder sleeve insignia of the 47th Infantry Division inactivated in 1991 nbsp Shoulder sleeve insignia of the 50th Armored Division inactivated in 1993Several units have been affected by Army National Guard reorganizations Some have been renamed or inactivated Some have had subordinate units reallocated to other commands A partial list of inactivated major units includes nbsp 26th Infantry Division inactivated 1 September 1993 73 nbsp 27th Infantry Division reorganized as 27th Armored Division 1 February 1955 See below 74 nbsp 27th Armored Division inactivated 1 February 1968 75 nbsp 30th Armored Division inactivated 1 December 1973 See below 76 nbsp 30th Infantry Division inactivated 4 January 1974 77 nbsp 31st Infantry Division inactivated 14 January 1968 Units allocated to 30th Armored Division 78 nbsp 32nd Infantry Division inactivated 1 December 1967 79 nbsp 33rd Infantry Division inactivated 1 February 1968 80 nbsp 37th Infantry Division inactivated 15 February 1968 81 nbsp 39th Infantry Division inactivated 1 December 1967 82 nbsp 40th Armored Division inactivated 29 January 1968 83 nbsp 41st Infantry Division inactivated 1 January 1968 84 85 nbsp 43rd Infantry Division inactivated 16 December 1967 86 nbsp 44th Infantry Division inactivated 10 October 1954 87 nbsp 45th Infantry Division inactivated 1 February 1968 88 nbsp 46th Infantry Division inactivated 1 February 1968 89 nbsp 47th Infantry Division inactivated 10 February 1991 90 nbsp 48th Armored Division inactivated 29 January 1968 91 nbsp 49th Armored Division inactivated 1 May 2004 reflagged as the 36th Infantry Division 92 93 nbsp 50th Armored Division inactivated 1 September 1993 94 Leadership edit nbsp National Guard Bureau organizational chart depicting command and reporting relationships nbsp Army National Guard staff organizational chart nbsp Chief of the National Guard Bureau Gen Daniel R Hokanson administers the oath of office to Lt Gen Jon A Jensen as the 22nd director of the Army National Guard on Monday 10 August 2020 at the Temple Army National Guard Readiness Center in Arlington Virginia Upon the creation of the United States Air Force in 1947 the National Guard Bureau was organized into two divisions Army National Guard and Air National Guard Each were headed by a major general who reported to the chief of the National Guard Bureau The head of the Army National Guard was originally established as the chief of the Army Division at the National Guard Bureau The position was downgraded to brigadier general in 1962 due to force reduction It was renamed to Director of the Army National Guard and elevated back to major general in 1970 The position was later elevated to the rank of lieutenant general in 2001 The Army National Guard is also authorized a deputy director which was originally established as a brigadier general office in 1970 It was elevated to the rank of major general in 2006 The director of the Army National Guard oversees a staff which aids in planning and day to day organization and management In addition to a chief of staff the Director s staff includes several special staff members including a chaplain and protocol and awards specialists It also includes a primary staff which is organized as directorates divisions and branches The directorates of the Army National Guard staff are arranged along the lines of a typical American military staff G 1 for personnel G 2 for intelligence G 3 for plans operations and training G 4 for logistics G 5 for strategic plans policy and communications G 6 for communications and G 8 for budgets and financial management List of chiefs and directors edit No Commander TermPortrait Name Took office Left office Term lengthChiefs of the Army Division at the National Guard Bureau1 nbsp Major GeneralRaymond H Fleming194819502 years2 nbsp Major GeneralWilliam H Abendroth195119554 years3 nbsp Major GeneralDonald W McGowan195519594 years4 nbsp Major GeneralClayton P Kerr195919623 years5 nbsp Brigadier GeneralFrancis Greenlief196219631 year6 nbsp Brigadier GeneralCharles L Southward196419662 years7 nbsp Brigadier GeneralLeonard C Ward196819702 yearsDirectors of the Army National Guard8 nbsp Major GeneralFrancis Greenlief197019711 year9 nbsp Major GeneralLa Vern E Weber197119743 years10 nbsp Major GeneralCharles A Ott Jr 197419784 years11 nbsp Major GeneralEmmett H Walker Jr 197819824 years12 nbsp Major GeneralHerbert R Temple Jr 198219864 years13 nbsp Major GeneralDonald Burdick198619915 years14 nbsp Major GeneralRaymond F Rees199119921 year15 nbsp Major GeneralJohn R D Araujo Jr 199319952 years16 nbsp Major GeneralWilliam A Navas Jr October 1995May 19983 years17 nbsp Lieutenant GeneralRoger C Schultz1 June 199815 June 20057 years 14 days 95 18 nbsp Lieutenant GeneralClyde A Vaughn15 June 20059 May 20093 years 328 days nbsp Major GeneralRaymond W CarpenterActing9 May 200928 November 20112 years 203 days19 nbsp Lieutenant GeneralWilliam E Ingram Jr 28 November 201114 January 20142 years 47 days nbsp Major GeneralJudd H LyonsActing14 January 201427 March 20151 year 72 days20 nbsp Lieutenant GeneralTimothy J Kadavy27 March 201525 March 20193 years 363 days21 nbsp Lieutenant GeneralDaniel R Hokanson20 June 20193 August 20201 year 44 days22 nbsp Lieutenant GeneralJon A Jensen10 August 2020Incumbent3 years 186 daysSee also editNational Guard United States Space National Guard 19th Special Forces Group 20th Special Forces GroupComparable organizations United States Army Reserve United States Marine Corps Reserve United States Navy Reserve United States Coast Guard Reserve Air National Guard U S Air Force Air Force Reserve Command U S Air Force Notes edit The 181st Infantry the 182nd Infantry the 101st Field Artillery and the 101st Engineer Battalion of the Massachusetts Army National Guard stem from the 1636 unit 6 As of 2021 update While there have been 46 presidencies only 45 individuals have served as president Grover Cleveland served two non consecutive terms and is numbered as both the 22nd and 24th U S president References edit Office of Legislative Affairs 13 June 2019 FY20Senate National Defense Authorization Act NDAA PDF National Guard mil Arlington VA National Guard Bureau p 1 Clifton Park resident John Andonie an Iraq War veteran promoted to two star general on Friday January 22 Retrieved 24 March 2021 Durr Eric 22 January 2021 Major General John Andonie new deputy director of the Army National Guard promoted at New York National Guard headquarters DVIDS Retrieved 30 December 2023 a b Military Reserves Federal Call Up Authority Archived from the original on 12 May 2016 Retrieved 14 August 2008 Salem Mass declared National Guard s birthplace Boston Globe Boston MA Associated Press 19 August 2010 Retrieved 14 May 2018 Maj Avery Schneider New York National Guard 13 December 2022 Deployed Guardsmen celebrate National Guard s 386th birthday National Archives and Records Administration Executive Order 11485 Supervision and control of the National Guard of the District of Columbia 1 October 1969 10 USC 12211 Officers Army National Guard of the United States 10 USC 12107 Army National Guard of United States Air National Guard of the United States enlistment in 32 USC 101 Definitions NATIONAL GUARD 10 USC 12401 Army and Air National Guard of the United States status 10 USC 10105 Army National Guard of the United States composition North Atlantic Treaty organization Fact Sheet National Reserve Forces Status United States of America 2006 p 1 National Guard Bureau Today in Guard History June 11 June 1990 2013 10 USC 12406 National Guard in Federal service call Cornell University legal Information Institute 10 USC 10503 Functions of National Guard Bureau Charter accessed 20 June 2013 Matthews William 1 July 2017 Busting The Caps National Guard Arlington VA Mark Lardas 2011 George Washington Bloomsbury Publishing p 14 ISBN 978 1 84908 881 7 Aaron Bancroft 1855 The Life of George Washington Phillips Sampson p 39 Fawn McKay Brodie 1974 Thomas Jefferson An Intimate History W W Norton amp Company p 112 ISBN 978 0 393 31752 7 Ralph Louis Ketcham 1990 James Madison A Biography University of Virginia Press p 64 ISBN 978 0 8139 1265 3 Michael Teitelbaum 2002 James Monroe Capstone p 14 ISBN 978 0 7565 0253 9 Carl Cavanagh Hodge Cathal J Nolan 2007 U S Presidents and Foreign Policy From 1789 to the Present ABC CLIO p 45 ISBN 978 1 85109 790 6 H W Brands 2006 Andrew Jackson His Life and Times Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group p 90 ISBN 978 0 307 27854 8 Samuel Putnam Waldo 1819 Memoirs of Andrew Jackson Major general in the Army of the United States and Commander in Chief of the Division of the South J amp W Russell pp 41 42 Spencer Tucker James R Arnold Roberta Wiener Paul G Pierpaoli John C Fredriksen 2012 The Encyclopedia of the War of 1812 A Political Social and Military History ABC CLIO p 331 ISBN 978 1 85109 956 6 James Hall 1836 A Memoir of the Public Services of William Henry Harrison of Ohio Key amp Biddle p 310 Stuart L Butler 2012 Defending the Old Dominion Virginia and Its Militia in the War of 1812 University Press of America p 282 ISBN 978 0 7618 6040 2 Louise A Mayo 2006 President James K Polk The Dark Horse President Nova Publishers p 14 ISBN 978 1 59454 718 8 Soldiers Department of the Army 1980 p 4 Barbara Bennett Peterson 2002 Sarah Childress Polk First Lady of Tennessee and Washington Nova Publishers p 5 ISBN 978 1 59033 145 3 John Seigenthaler 2004 James K Polk The American Presidents Series The 11th President 1845 1849 Henry Holt and Company p 34 ISBN 978 0 8050 6942 6 Roger Sherman Skinner ed 1830 The New York State Register for 1830 1831 New York p 361 Buffalo Historical Society Buffalo Historical Society Buffalo N Y 1907 Publications The Society p xxxii John Farmer G Parker Lyon eds 1832 The New Hampshire Annual Register and United States Calendar p 53 Ralph E Eshelman 2011 A Travel Guide to the War of 1812 in the Chesapeake Eighteen Tours in Maryland Virginia and the District of Columbia JHU Press p 114 ISBN 978 0 8018 9837 2 Philip Shriver Klein 1962 President James Buchanan a biography Pennsylvania State University Press p 18 Illinois Adjutant General s Office 1882 Record of the Services of Illinois Soldiers in the Black Hawk War 1831 32 and in the Mexican War 1846 8 H W Rokker state printer pp 100 176 183 Hans L Trefousse 1997 Andrew Johnson A Biography W W Norton Incorporated p 14 ISBN 978 0 393 31742 8 James Knox Polk 1989 Wayne Cutler Herbert Weaver eds Correspondence of James K Polk Vol 7 Univ of Tennessee Press p 439 ISBN 978 0 8265 1225 3 Kate Havelin 2004 Andrew Johnson Twenty First Century Books p 21 ISBN 978 0 8225 1000 0 Gary L Donhardt 2007 In the Shadow of the Great Rebellion The Life of Andrew Johnson Seventeenth President of the United States 1808 1875 Nova Publishers p 6 ISBN 978 1 60021 086 0 Clifton R Hall 1916 Andrew Johnson Military Governor of Tennessee p 19 James S Brisbin 1868 The campaign lives of Ulysses S Grant and Schuyler Colfax Gale Cengage Learning pp 58 59 Ulysses Simpson Grant 1969 The Papers of Ulysses S Grant April to September 1861 SIU Press p 29 ISBN 978 0 8093 0366 3 William Farina 2007 Ulysses S Grant 1861 1864 His Rise from Obscurity to Military Greatness McFarland p 22 ISBN 978 0 7864 8051 7 William Dean Howells Rutherford Birchard Hayes 1876 Sketch of the life and character of Rutherford B Hayes Also a biographical sketch of William A Wheeler Hurd and Houghton p 29 Hardesty s Historical and Geographical Encyclopedia Military and Personal Sketches of Ohio s Rank and File from Sandusky County in the War of the Rebellion 1885 republished on the Rutherford B Hayes Presidential Center web site John Clark Ridpath 1881 The Life and Work of James A Garfield Embracing an Account of the Scenes and Incidents of His Boyhood Jones brothers pp 91 92 James T Wall 2008 Wall Street and the Fruited Plain Money Expansion and Politics in the Gilded Age University Press of America p 82 ISBN 978 0 7618 4124 1 Emma Rogers 1921 Chester A Arthur Man and President University of Wisconsin Madison pp 7 9 Lew Wallace Murat Halstead 1892 Life and Public Services of Hon Benjamin Harrison President of the U S With a Concise Biographical Sketch of Hon Whitelaw Reid Edgewood Publishing Company pp 178 181 Newburgh Daily Journal Death of General Harrison 14 March 1901 Muncie Free Press Daniels adds President Benjamin Harrison to Hoosier Heritage Portrait Collection Archived 24 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine 20 March 2009 Eric Foner 2002 Reconstruction America s Unfinished Revolution 1863 1877 HarperCollins p 584 ISBN 978 0 06 093716 4 John W Tyler 1901 The Life of William McKinley P W Ziegler amp Company p 37 Kevin Phillips 2003 William McKinley The American Presidents Series The 25th President 1897 1901 Henry Holt and Company p 23 ISBN 978 0 8050 6953 2 William Montgomery Clemens 1914 The Ancestry of Theodore Roosevelt W M Clemens p 11 Bill Bleyer Long Island Newsday Roosevelt s Medal of Honor Coming to LI 21 February 2001 Gabriele Arnold 2006 Harry S Truman his foreign policy GRIN Verlag p 4 ISBN 978 3 638 51025 7 Michael J Devine 2009 Harry S Truman the State of Israel and the Quest for Peace in the Middle East Truman State Univ Press p 93 ISBN 978 1 935503 80 4 Truman Harry S 1983 Ferrell Robert H ed Dear Bess The Letters From Harry to Bess Truman 1910 1959 Norton p 306 ISBN 978 0 8262 1203 0 OCLC 9440945 Clarke Rountree 2011 George W Bush A Biography ABC CLIO pp xviii xix ISBN 978 0 313 38500 1 U S Army Center of Military History History of Table of Distribution and Allowances TDA Units 30 May 1995 updated 20 May 2011 Richard Goldenberg U S Army National Guard Division Leaders Gather to Face Challenges for Missions at Home Overseas 9 June 2010 University of North Texas U S Army National Guard Archived 3 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine 17 January 2013 BG David L Hall Army National Guard Aviation Continuing to Change Adapt and Modernize PDF Cotton Puryear 29 September 2017 91st Cyber Brigade activated as Army National Guard s first cyber brigade army mil Retrieved 30 May 2020 Dwyer Brian 17 October 2016 Patching Ceremony Unites 10th Mountain Division and Vermont Army National Guard Unit TCW News Watertown NY Tan Michelle 19 August 2016 Army units change patches as part of active Guard and Reserve pilot program Army Times Springfield VA Block Gordon 20 October 2016 Programs link Fort Drum soldiers with Army Guard Reserve personnel Watertown Daily Times Watertown NY Bowling Green Daily News Guard s Command Structure Unique in the Armed Forces 27 June 1999 National Guard Educational Foundation 26th Infantry Division 2011 National Guard Educational Foundation 27th Infantry Division 2011 National Guard Educational Foundation 27th Armored Division 2011 Ceremonies Today for 30th Armored The Tennessean Nashville TV 28 October 1973 p 11 The 30th Armored Division of the Tennessee National Guard will be retired today National Guard Educational Foundation 30th Infantry Division 2011 Tuscaloosa News 31st Dixie Division Turning to Armor 19 January 1968 Wisconsin Historical Society Dictionary of Wisconsin History Red Arrow Division Archived 22 December 2015 at the Wayback Machine accessed 19 June 2013 New York Times Illinois Commander of Guard Replaced 4 March 1968 Al Goldberg Toledo Blade Taps Sounds for Ohio Guard s Famed 37th 18 February 1968 National Guard Education Foundation 39th Infantry Division Archived 29 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine 2011 California State Military Museum Lineages and Honors of the California National Guard 40th Armored Brigade Headquarters and Headquarters Company accessed 19 June 2013 Tri City Herald Taps for the 41st 8 June 1967 Washington Army National Guard Headquarters and Headquarters Company 81st Brigade Combat Team Archived 13 May 2014 at the Wayback Machine 2007 Associated Press The Telegraph Yankee Infantry Division is Facing Reorganization 30 November 1967 Eugene Register Standard Army Disbands 44th Division 18 September 1954 National Guard Education Foundation 45th Infantry Division 2011 National Guard Educational Foundation 46th Infantry Division 2011 Minnesota Military Museum The 47th Viking Infantry Division 1991 National Guard Educational Foundation 48th Armored Division Archived 27 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine 2011 Texas Army National Guard History of the 36th Infantry Division Archived 5 April 2013 at the Wayback Machine accessed 19 June 2013 Texas Military Forces Museum 36th Infantry Division The Texas Division accessed 19 June 2013 U S House Appropriations Committee Hearing Record Department of Defense Appropriations for 1995 Volume 1 1994 p 296 Served as director in the rank of major general from 1998 to 2001 The 2001 National Defense Authorization Act elevated the position to lieutenant general Schultz was appointed another term as director and was promoted External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to United States Army National Guard Official website Army National Guard News Unit Designations in the Army Modular Force accessed 23 November 2006 National Guard Maneuver Enhancement Brigade s Role in Domestic Missions Guard Knowledge Online Army National Guard Old Website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Army National Guard amp oldid 1194607522, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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