794:
246:
309:
570:
1705:
362:, in which it was one of the two American divisions assigned to the Fourth British Army that broke the Hindenburg Line on September 29, 1918. The Thirtieth Division broke through on its entire front, taking Bellicourt and part of Nauroy by noon of the 29th. The Australian 5th Division, coming up at this time, continued the attack with elements of the 30th division. The division had, in three months, from July until October 1918, sustained 1,237 officers and men killed in action (KIA), with a further 7,178 wounded in action (WIA) or missing in action (MIA).
1713:
74:
510:
Artillery
Battalion, which had been sent as a task force to England. The 30th Infantry Division, "having lost within a year the equivalent of a full division in both officers and men" was then moved to Camp Blanding, Florida, to restart training in December, with "two-thirds of its enlisted personnel fresh from the reception center." It stayed at Blanding from October 1942 to May 1943, then moved to Camp Forrest, Tennessee in May 1943, and finally Camp Atterbury, Indiana, from 10 November 1943 to 26 January 1944.
28:
56:
3215:
653:
2231:
2000:
1975:
448:. For that maneuver, the division again operated as part of the IV Corps against the provisional VIII Corps. The division was inducted into active federal service at home stations on 16 September 1940, assigned to the IV Corps, and ordered to move to Camp Jackson, where it arrived about 20 September 1940. After the division’s initial train-up period, it participated in the
603:
thus a landmark road to guide the bombers to the bombing zone was miscommunicated as the point to begin the bombing run. Start point confusion was further compounded by red smoke signals that suddenly blew in the wrong direction, and bombs began falling on the heads of the
American soldiers. There were over 100 friendly fire casualties over the two days, including
427:
experiment was declared a success, but due to budget constraints, the program was never fully implemented. The division was assembled again for the 1932 camp, but units were staggered over a 6-week period, so no large-scale training was conducted. The next opportunity came in August 1938 when the division was assembled at the
418:
for
Tennessee units. The division staff, composed of personnel from all four states, came together to conduct joint training for several summers before World War II. The division staff usually assembled at Camp Jackson most summers, but conducted their training at Tybee Island for at least one camp.
426:
The first opportunity that the division’s units had to operate together came in 1928 when the entire “Old
Hickory” Division was assembled at Camp Jackson from 8–22 July under a War Department experimental program designed to bring together multistate National Guard divisions for joint training. The
394:. The designated mobilization training center for the “Old Hickory” Division was Camp Jackson, where much of the division’s training activities occurred between the wars. For most years, the division’s subordinate units held separate summer camps at locations usually within their respective states:
1774:
The shoulder sleeve insignia was originally approved on 23 October 1918 for the 30th
Division. It was redesignated for the 30th Infantry Brigade on 20 February 1974. The insignia was redesignated effective 1 September 2004, with description updated, for the 30th Brigade Combat Team, North Carolina
767:
followed soon, which brought the war to an end, and the division was subsequently deactivated on 25 November 1945. By its disbandment, It had spent a cumulative 282 days in combat and had participated in the campaigns and battles of
Normandy, Northern France, Rhineland, Ardennes-Alsace and Central
602:
bombers with 500-pound bombs, destroying roads and bridges and complicating movement through the corridor, instead of lighter 100-pound bombs intended as antipersonnel devices against German defenders. Air planners switched the approach of attack by 90 degrees without informing ground commanders,
509:
quotas also contributed to the division's decline from 12,400 officers and men in June to only 3,000 in August. In the fall of 1942, the 119th
Infantry Regiment and 197th Field Artillery Battalion were activated and assigned to the division to replace the 118th Infantry Regiment and 115th Field
1261:
113th
Machine Gun Battalion (Machine Gun Company, 1st Tennessee Infantry, as Company A; Machine Gun Company, 2nd Tennessee Infantry, as Company B; Machine Gun Company, 1st North Carolina Infantry, as Company C; Machine Gun Company, 2d South Carolina Infantry as, Company D; detachments of 2nd
439:
concentration of the Third Army maneuvers. In that maneuver, the “Old
Hickory” Division operated as part of the provisional IV Corps. The division’s final training event before induction came in August 1940 when the 30th Division participated in the Third Army maneuvers in the
593:
a one-by-three-mile corridor of the German defenses opposite the
American line. However, USAAF planners, in complete disregard or lack of understanding of their role in supporting the ground attack, loaded the heavy
1230:(2nd North Carolina Infantry, 1st Battalion, Headquarters Company (less band), Supply Company, and detachments from 2nd and 3rd Battalions, 2nd Tennessee Infantry, and detachments from 1st North Carolina Infantry)
1549:
629:, and fierce fighting in place with all available personnel broke out. The division frustrated enemy plans and broke the spearhead of the enemy assault in a violent struggle from 7–12 August. After the
1253:
115th Field Artillery Regiment (1st Tennessee Infantry, less Machine Gun Company, detachment from 2nd Battalion, 2nd Tennessee Infantry, and detachment from 3rd Battalion, 1st North Carolina Infantry)
1274:
105th Train Headquarters and Military Police (Sanitary Detachment and Headquarters Company (loss band), 2nd South Carolina Infantry, and Troops A and D, 1st Squadron, North Carolina Cavalry)
1700:
Monument in Honor of the brave soldiers of the U.S. 30th 'Old Hickory' Division in Maastricht, Netherlands, Dedicated Sept. 14, 1994, on the 50th anniversary of the liberation of Maastricht.
3247:
1239:
115th Machine Gun Battalion (Machine Gun Troop, North Carolina Cavalry, Troops B and C, 1st Squadron, North Carolina Cavalry, and detachment from 2nd Battalion, 1st North Carolina Infantry)
696:'s last attempt to win a decisive victory over the Western Allies. Again the division met the 1st SS Division, and again broke the spearhead of their assault. The 30th Division launched a
1286:
105th Sanitary Train (1st North Carolina Ambulance Company, 1st North Carolina Field Hospital, 1st Tennessee Field Hospital, 1st South Carolina Field Hospital, and individual transfers)
1179:. In 1968 the division was designated as the 30th Infantry Division (Mechanized). On 4 January 1974 the division was again inactivated, and the brigade in North Carolina become the
793:
1265:
105th Engineer Regiment (Companies A, B, and C, North Carolina Engineers, and Sanitary Detachment, Supply Company, Band, and Companies B, C, and D, 1st North Carolina Infantry)
262:
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3257:
127:
3237:
2430:
2212:
221:". The 30th Infantry Division, involved in 282 days of intense combat over a period from June 1944 through April 1945, was regarded by a team of historians led by
461:
1236:(3rd North Carolina Infantry, detachments from 2nd and 3rd Battalions, 2nd Tennessee Infantry and 1st North Carolina Infantry, and band, 2nd Tennessee Infantry)
3242:
3252:
626:
914:
Following the war, the 30th Division was once again reactivated as a National Guard formation in 1947, split between three states. It included the 119th,
2140:
1485:
1277:
105th Ammunition Train (1st and 2d Battalions, 2nd South Carolina Infantry, and detachments from 2nd and 3rd Battalions, 1st North Carolina Infantry)
763:
came soon afterwards and, after a short occupation period, the 30th Division began its return to the United States, arriving on 19 August 1945. The
257:, commander of the U.S. 30th Division, review elements of Lewis's division in France, August 6, 1918. Standing behind the King is Brigadier General
1216:(1st South Carolina Infantry, detachments from 2nd and 3rd Battalions, 1st North Carolina Infantry, and 3rd Battalion, 2nd South Carolina Infantry)
3172:
2493:
1762:
inches (4.1 cm). The letter "H" within the "O". The letters "XXX" on the bar of the "H". The insignia to be worn with long axis vertical.
1462:
1180:
378:
on 2 April 1919 after 11 months of overseas service and was demobilized on 7 May 1919 at Camp Jackson, South Carolina. In accordance with the
2285:
506:
3218:
2423:
1793:, served in the Division in World War II, earned the Distinguished Service Cross as a Medical Evacuation Pilot in the [[Republic of Vietnam
1678:
1899:
649:
on 2 October 1944, and succeeded in contacting the 1st Division on 16 October, resulting in the encirclement and takeover of Aachen.
348:
273:(drawing units from North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia and Tennessee) under a 1917 force plan, but changed designation to the
645:
fell the next day. Moving into Germany and taking up positions along the Wurm River, the 30th Division launched its attack on the
468:, South Carolina, in November 1941 At this time, the 121st Infantry Regiment was relieved from the division and reassigned to the
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3160:
3154:
3148:
3141:
2416:
1233:
1227:
1213:
1207:
919:
915:
3203:
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3117:
3110:
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3092:
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3036:
3024:
3018:
3006:
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2856:
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2838:
2832:
2827:
2821:
2815:
2800:
2785:
2469:
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1184:
332:
149:
2953:
2780:
2775:
2769:
2763:
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2566:
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2337:
2321:
2094:
1250:
114th Field Artillery Regiment (1st Tennessee Field Artillery and detachment from 2nd Battalion, 1st North Carolina Infantry)
618:
469:
2127:
Army Battle Casualties and Nonbattle Deaths (Statistical and Accounting Branch, Office of the Adjutant General, 1 June 1953)
1768:
The letters "O H" are the initials of "Old Hickory" and the "XXX" is the Roman notation for the number of the organization.
2659:
2654:
2648:
2551:
2546:
2541:
2536:
2531:
2526:
2521:
2516:
2510:
1822:
1850:
3188:
465:
382:, the division was allotted to the states of Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Tennessee, and assigned to the
2216:
1694:
Awards: MH-6 ; DSC-50 ; DSM-1 ; SS-1,773 ; LM-12; DFC-3 ; SM-30 ; BSM-6,616 ; AM-154.
315:
of the U.S. 30th Division at rest with German prisoners following the capture of Bellicourt, France, September 29, 1918.
1521:
1280:
105th Supply Train (North Carolina Supply Train, Supply Company, 2nd South Carolina Infantry, and individual transfers)
1168:
724:
604:
159:
676:
After a rest period, the 30th Division eliminated an enemy salient northeast of Aachen on 16 November, pushed through
2377:
2307:
359:
122:
1247:
113th Field Artillery Regiment (1st North Carolina Field Artillery and detachments from 1st North Carolina Infantry)
1734:
The letters "O H" blue upon a red background, the "O" forming the elliptical outline of the device long axis to be
832:
355:
230:
278:
225:
as the American infantry division that had "performed the most efficient and consistent battle services" in the
708:
on 27 January, and to another near Aachen to prepare for attack deeper into the western edge of Germany at the
657:
501:. During the summer of 1942, the division was then used as a source of personnel for new units. Volunteers for
226:
202:
518:
After training in the United States for just over two years, the 30th Infantry Division, under the command of
245:
3086:
3047:
3030:
2805:
2795:
2790:
2474:
2390:
760:
751:. Approximately 2,500 prisoners were freed through the efforts of the 30th. The Russians were contacted at
748:
586:
519:
502:
403:
340:
234:
386:. The division headquarters was reorganized and federally recognized 24 August 1926 at 121 Capitol Square,
379:
344:
2137:
1176:
599:
595:
328:
308:
924:
903:
854:
476:
expired and other men were released from active duty for hardship to their dependents as stipulated by
415:
1877:
2282:
2269:
2258:
1431:
894:
823:
812:
473:
449:
441:
1033:
652:
3012:
1362:
878:
870:
17 December 1944: Ninth Army, 12th Army Group, but attached to V Corps, First Army, 12th Army Group
864:
850:
816:
383:
336:
2316:
Russell, Major General Henry D. The Purge of the Thirtieth Division. Naval Institute Press, 2014.
1994:
U.S. Army Order of Battle 1919-1941, Volume 1. The Arms: Major Commands and Infantry Organizations
577:
devastated German tank and mechanized columns attempting to reach the French coast, 7 August 1944.
2999:
2487:
1391:
838:
693:
457:
282:
281:
in April 1917. From August 28, 1917 to May 1. 1918, the 30th Division trained at Camp Sevier in
2480:
2458:
1570:
1556:
1377:
1339:
530:
477:
428:
684:
on 28 November, and then moved to rest areas. On 17 December the division rushed south to the
3183:
2626:
2596:
1903:
1818:
1172:
569:
445:
2170:
1704:
1664:
1618:
1384:
1346:
1332:
874:
752:
533:
472:. In late 1941, the division lost approximately 6,000 men when one-year enlistments in the
411:
298:
178:
139:
1917:
581:
During the operation, on both 24 and 25 July, the 30th Division encountered a devastating
8:
2439:
2391:
Old Hickory Association – 120th Regt., 30th Infantry Division Living History Organization
1542:
719:
The 30th moved back for training and rehabilitation on 3 March, and on 24 March made its
689:
669:
630:
498:
286:
154:
99:
1802:
Donald Mills I, World War II. Distinguished Service Cross, Silver Star, 2 Purple Hearts.
2443:
2396:
1611:
1416:
764:
704:, Belgium on 26 January, before leaving the battle and moving to an assembly area near
641:
on 10 September. Elements of the division entered the Netherlands on 12 September, and
611:
453:
371:
198:
144:
79:
2408:
801:
of the 30th Infantry Div., rolls through the streets of Kinzweiler, November 21, 1944.
3178:
2810:
2373:
2351:
2333:
2317:
2303:
2297:
2090:
1796:
1697:
Foreign Awards: Belgian Fourragere-2 per Belgian decree #1393, dated 20 November 1945
1631:
1400:
720:
622:
544:
420:
399:
254:
1712:
2402:
2299:
Battle for Mortain: the 30th Infantry Division Saves the Breakout August 7-12, 1944
2260:
Report of the Adjutant General of North Carolina, 1 January 1959 – 31 December 1960
2158:
1813:
1790:
1784:
1591:
1577:
1563:
1353:
1322:
685:
646:
607:
387:
258:
2289:
2252:
30th Infantry Division at Camp Atterbury, Indiana, includes re-constructed Roster
2144:
1525:
1262:
Battalion. 2nd Tennessee Infantry and 2nd Battalion, 1st North Carolina Infantry)
882:
556:
494:
375:
222:
1268:
105th Field Signal Battalion (Company A, North Carolina Signal Corps as nucleus)
1219:
114th Machine Gun Battalion (Troops A, B, and C, 1st Squadron Tennessee Cavalry)
2271:
Report of the Adjutant General of North Carolina, 1 January 1963 – 30 June 1964
1854:
1601:
1584:
1315:
574:
391:
294:
290:
214:
2155:
Aumilier, United States Army Infantry, Artillery, and Cavalry/Armor Battalions
1799:, World War II. Recipient of Medal of Honor, Silver Star, and 3 Purple Hearts.
3231:
2235:
2004:
1979:
697:
582:
61:
27:
1969:
My Experiences In The World War, Volume 2. II Corps Attack on September 29th
1650:
Maj. Gen. Ephraim G. Peyton (Regular Army) (1 August 1929-19 September 1932)
1518:
1310:
Italics indicates the state of headquarters allocation of an inactive unit.
1671:
1647:
Maj. Gen. Ezekiel J. Williams (Regular Army) (24 August 1926-1 August 1929)
798:
740:
732:
548:
522:
407:
395:
210:
182:
133:
2279:
The Army Almanac: A Book of Facts Concerning the Army of the United States
929:
744:
590:
540:
493:
In the spring of 1942, the division was reorganized from a four-regiment
432:
206:
117:
2048:
Work Horse of the Western Front: The Story of the 30th Infantry Division
2019:
Work Horse of the Western Front: The Story of the 30th Infantry Division
995:
Headquarters and Headquarters Detachment and 30th Infantry Division Band
585:
incident. As part of the effort to break out of the Normandy hedgerows,
552:
756:
681:
642:
633:, the division drove east through Belgium, crossing the Meuse River at
436:
285:. It was formally activated under its new title in October 1917, as an
1289:
117th, 118th, 119th, and 120th Ambulance Companies and Field Hospitals
1942:
1131:
Headquarters and Headquarters Company and 30th Infantry Division Band
1038:
736:
661:
660:, part of the 30th Infantry Division, move past a destroyed American
563:
302:
218:
213:. It was nicknamed the "Old Hickory" division, in honor of President
2109:
encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/the-30th-infantry-division
713:
419:
The division also participated in several corps area and army-level
1271:
Headquarters Troop, 30th Division (Troop A, South Carolina Cavalry)
705:
701:
665:
560:
551:
on 7 July. Beginning on 25 July, the 30th Division spearheaded the
312:
250:
89:
2267:
2256:
2251:
2176:
2164:
1825:, operating in support of soldiers of the 30th Infantry Division.
1653:
Maj. Gen. Henry D. Russell (Georgia) (September 1940 – April 1942)
887:
18 January 1945: XVIII Airborne Corps, First Army, 12th Army Group
638:
390:. The division headquarters was relocated on 20 September 1932 to
2234:
This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the
2032:
2003:
This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the
1978:
This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the
728:
677:
526:
406:
for North Carolina units; Camp Jackson for South Carolina units;
324:
1996:. Fort Leavenworth: Combat Studies Institute Press. p. 224.
634:
1716:
Maastricht, NL, Monument honoring the US 30th Infantry Division
320:
229:(ETO). In the present day, the division's lineage continues as
625:
began shortly after. The 30th Division clashed with the elite
1283:
105th Engineer Train (Company A, 1st North Carolina Infantry)
354:
The major operations the 30th Division took part in were the
3248:
Infantry divisions of the United States Army in World War II
2330:
Our Great-Hearted Men: The Australian Corps and the 100 Days
2066:
709:
1851:"Fact Sheet – The 30th Infantry Division Veterans of WWII"
2370:
Fire Mission! The Siege at Mortain, Normandy, August 1944
2054:
1437:
105th Quartermaster Regiment (Charleston, South Carolina)
543:, Normandy, on 11 June 1944, five days after the initial
351:(BEF), trading American equipment for British equipment.
2348:
Borrowed Soldiers: Americans under British Command, 1918
2050:. Washington, D.C.: Infantry Journal Press. p. 5-6.
2021:. Washington, D.C.: Infantry Journal Press. p. 5-6.
1708:
Plaque at the Maastricht 30th Infantry Division Monument
1412:
113th Field Artillery Regiment (Raleigh, North Carolina)
1256:
105th Trench Mortar Battery (Troop D, Tennessee Cavalry)
1120:
4th Battalion (155 mm/ 8 in Towed), 113th Artillery
700:
on 13 January 1945 and reached a point 2 miles south of
237:. The unit's most recent combat deployment was in 2019.
2438:
890:
3 February 1945: XIX Corps, Ninth Army, 12th Army Group
1183:. The 2nd Brigade, 30th Infantry Division, became the
1018:
430th Transportation Detachment (Aircraft Maintenance)
860:
29 August 1944: XIX Corps, First Army, 12th Army Group
712:
River. The Roer was crossed on 23 February 1945, near
2215:. The U.S. Army Institute of Heraldry. Archived from
1637:
Brigadier General Samson L. Faison (23 December 1918)
1490:
Headquarters, Special Troops, 30th Infantry Division
930:
30th Infantry Division (Pentomic organization) (1959)
3263:
Military units and formations disestablished in 1974
2365:, New York, NY: Frederick A. Stokes Co., 1931 Vol II
2281:
U.S. Government Printing Office, 1950 reproduced at
1368:
118th Infantry Regiment (Charleston, South Carolina)
1171:
manned formation, as Tennessee's portion became the
1597:
Brigadier General Samson L. Faison (1 January 1918)
688:area to help block the powerful enemy drive in the
217:. The Germans nicknamed this division "Roosevelt's
2401:is available for free viewing and download at the
2350:, Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 2008,
1845:
1843:
1422:118th Field Artillery Regiment (Savannah, Georgia)
1117:3rd Battalion (105 mm Towed), 113th Artillery
1114:2nd Battalion (105 mm Towed), 113th Artillery
1111:1st Battalion (105 mm Towed), 113th Artillery
3258:Military units and formations established in 1917
1607:Brigadier General Samson L. Faison (7 April 1918)
1427:105th Engineer Regiment (Raleigh, North Carolina)
1039:30th Infantry Division (ROAD organization) (1964)
452:Tennessee Maneuvers in May–June 1941, and in the
3238:United States Army divisions during World War II
3229:
2398:Big Picture: The Work Horse of the Western Front
1971:. New York: Frederick A Stokes Co. p. 304.
1840:
1459:Headquarters and Headquarters Battery, DIVARTY
727:, mopping up enemy pockets of resistance, took
566:, thus ending the stalemate that had occurred.
547:, secured the Vire-et-Taute Canal, crossed the
2274:. Raleigh: Adjutant General of North Carolina.
2263:. Raleigh: Adjutant General of North Carolina.
1486:30th Cavalry Reconnaissance Troop (Mechanized)
1185:218th Infantry Brigade (Mechanized) (Separate)
1148:30th Infantry Division Military Police Company
972:1st Rocket Howitzer Battalion, 113th Artillery
370:The 30th Division headquarters arrived at the
2424:
2372:, Shippensburg, PA Burd Street Press, 1998.
2123:
2121:
2119:
2117:
2115:
1627:Major General Samson L. Faison (15 June 1918)
1474:230th Field Artillery Battalion (105 mm)
1471:197th Field Artillery Battalion (105 mm)
1468:118th Field Artillery Battalion (105 mm)
1181:30th Infantry Brigade (Mechanized) (Separate)
857:, 12th Army Group, but attached to First Army
269:The division was originally activated as the
3243:Infantry divisions of the United States Army
1900:"Chapter II: Genesis of Permanent Divisions"
1493:Headquarters Company, 30th Infantry Division
1123:5th Battalion (Honest John), 113th Artillery
3253:United States Army divisions of World War I
2295:
2268:Adjutant General of North Carolina (1964).
2257:Adjutant General of North Carolina (1961).
2072:
2060:
1817:depicted the main characters' tank, of the
1726:
1624:Major General George W. Read (14 June 1918)
2431:
2417:
2112:
1685:
743:, elements of the Division also liberated
589:(USAAF) bombers from England were sent to
1513:30th Counterintelligence Corps Detachment
1167:In 1954, the division became an entirely
1140:230th Supply and Transportation Battalion
559:, which was intended to break out of the
331:soon after. The division, along with the
1966:
1711:
1703:
1496:730th Ordnance Light Maintenance Company
1371:121st Infantry Regiment (Macon, Georgia)
963:1st Reconnaissance Squadron, 196th Armor
792:
651:
568:
529:, 22 February 1944, and trained for the
307:
244:
2207:
2205:
2203:
2177:Adjutant General of North Carolina 1964
2165:Adjutant General of North Carolina 1961
1328:Headquarters Company (Griffin, Georgia)
1128:30th Infantry Division Support Command
987:1st Howitzer Battalion, 252nd Artillery
984:5th Howitzer Battalion, 113th Artillery
981:4th Howitzer Battalion, 113th Artillery
978:3rd Howitzer Battalion, 113th Artillery
975:2nd Howitzer Battalion, 113th Artillery
739:on 17 April. As the 30th was capturing
3230:
2332:. Australia: HarperCollinsPublishers.
2084:
2045:
2016:
960:2nd Medium Tank Battalion, 196th Armor
831:1 August 1944: XIX Corps, First Army,
664:on their march to capture the town of
343:(AEF) and was instead attached to the
319:In May 1918, the division was sent to
2412:
2327:
2191:
1108:Headquarters and Headquarters Battery
1091:Headquarters and Headquarters Company
1074:Headquarters and Headquarters Company
1057:Headquarters and Headquarters Company
1051:Headquarters and Headquarters Company
1037:
969:Headquarters and Headquarters Battery
942:Headquarters and Headquarters Company
928:
805:
621:near Mortain on 6 August. The German
2200:
1991:
1748:inches (6.4 cm) and short axis
1641:
1447:Headquarters, 30th Infantry Division
1088:3rd Brigade, 30th Infantry Division
1071:2nd Brigade, 30th Infantry Division
1054:1st Brigade, 30th Infantry Division
513:
402:for Georgia units; Camp Glenn near
13:
2033:"Home Page – Indiana Military Org"
1806:
1778:
1190:
1169:North Carolina Army National Guard
735:on 12 April, and helped to reduce
617:The division relieved the veteran
365:
14:
3274:
2384:
1657:
1345:105th Ordnance Company (Medium) (
1297:
1105:30th Infantry Division Artillery
966:30th Infantry Division Artillery
261:, commanding the 30th Division's
3214:
3213:
2229:
1998:
1973:
1875:
1681:(September 1945 to inactivation)
1535:
1415:115th Field Artillery Regiment (
1195:
1175:, which was maintained with the
957:3rd Battle Group, 120th Infantry
954:2nd Battle Group, 120th Infantry
951:1st Battle Group, 120th Infantry
948:2nd Battle Group, 119th Infantry
945:1st Battle Group, 119th Infantry
725:pursued the enemy across Germany
339:but did not serve with the main
231:30th Armored Brigade Combat Team
72:
54:
26:
2363:My Experiences In The World War
2245:
2182:
2149:
2130:
2103:
2078:
2039:
1943:"Camp Sevier Historical Marker"
1691:Distinguished Unit Citations: 8
1674:(September 1942–September 1945)
1479:105th Engineer Combat Battalion
1463:113th Field Artillery Battalion
777:Total battle casualties: 18,446
647:heavily defended city of Aachen
483:
279:American entry into World War I
2025:
2010:
1985:
1960:
1935:
1910:
1892:
1869:
1399:55th Field Artillery Brigade (
1331:30th Military Police Company (
1321:Headquarters, Special Troops (
1004:230th Transportation Battalion
992:30th Infantry Division Trains
573:During the battle of Mortain,
488:
240:
227:European Theater of Operations
1:
1828:
1530:
1314:Headquarters, 30th Division (
1244:55th Field Artillery Brigade
1083:5th Battalion, 119th Infantry
1080:4th Battalion, 119th Infantry
1077:3rd Battalion, 120th Infantry
1066:6th Battalion, 119th Infantry
1063:2nd Battalion, 120th Infantry
1060:1st Battalion, 120th Infantry
799:M8 reconnaissance armored car
771:
761:end of World War II in Europe
721:assault crossing of the Rhine
545:D-Day landings of 6 June 1944
503:United States Army Air Forces
374:, South Carolina, aboard the
235:North Carolina National Guard
1441:
380:National Defense Act of 1920
341:American Expeditionary Force
327:, where it departed for the
7:
2296:Featherston, Alwyn (1998).
1922:South Carolina Encyclopedia
1811:The 2014 World War II film
1352:30th Tank Company (Light) (
1201:Headquarters, 30th Division
1177:Alabama Army National Guard
1143:730th Maintenance Battalion
1134:30th Administration Company
1100:1st Squadron, 196th Cavalry
998:30th Administration Company
349:British Expeditionary Force
253:, along with Major General
10:
3279:
2188:McGrath, The Brigade, 240.
2179:, pp. 18–21, 100–101.
2139:, accessed September 2009
2046:Hewitt, Robert L. (1946).
2017:Hewitt, Robert L. (1946).
1499:30th Quartermaster Company
1097:2nd Battalion, 252nd Armor
1094:1st Battalion, 252nd Armor
1001:30th Quartermaster Company
909:
416:Greenville, South Carolina
3211:
3197:
2723:
2640:
2502:
2450:
2136:Old Hickory Association,
1967:Pershing, John J (1931).
1880:. National Guard Magazine
1432:Henderson, North Carolina
1390:120th Infantry Regiment (
1383:117th Infantry Regiment (
1044:
935:
877:, and attached, with the
846:13 August 1944: XIX Corps
783:Wounded in action: 13,376
499:"triangular" organization
474:Army of the United States
442:Kisatchie National Forest
414:or Camp John Sevier near
172:
167:
113:
105:
95:
85:
67:
49:
37:
25:
20:
2302:. Novato, CA: Presidio.
2089:. Penguin. p. 402.
1833:
1727:Shoulder sleeve insignia
1524:27 February 2021 at the
1517:See all attached units:
1430:105th Medical Regiment (
1409:(Georgia National Guard)
1363:Columbia, South Carolina
1210:(3rd Tennessee Infantry)
1157:105th Engineer Battalion
1024:105th Engineer Battalion
1007:730th Ordnance Battalion
920:121st Infantry Regiments
899:30 March 1945: XIX Corps
843:5 August 1944: VII Corps
507:officer candidate school
32:Shoulder sleeve insignia
2346:Mitchell A. Yockelson,
2213:"30th Infantry Brigade"
2085:Beevor, Antony (2010).
1686:Awards and distinctions
1505:Military Police Platoon
1482:105th Medical Battalion
1456:120th Infantry Regiment
1453:119th Infantry Regiment
1450:117th Infantry Regiment
1392:Raleigh, North Carolina
1376:60th Infantry Brigade (
1361:59th Infantry Brigade (
1302:
1234:120th Infantry Regiment
1228:119th Infantry Regiment
1214:118th Infantry Regiment
1208:117th Infantry Regiment
1154:30th Aviation Battalion
1137:105th Medical Battalion
1010:105th Medical Battalion
883:British 21st Army Group
828:28 July 1944: XIX Corps
780:Killed in action: 3,003
658:117th Infantry Regiment
283:Taylors, South Carolina
1717:
1709:
1407:105th Ammunition Train
1378:Graham, North Carolina
1340:Canton, North Carolina
1224:60th Infantry Brigade
1204:59th Infantry Brigade
1151:130th Signal Battalion
1021:130th Signal Battalion
802:
789:Prisoner of war: 1,164
786:Missing in action: 903
673:
627:1st SS Panzer Division
578:
497:into a three-regiment
429:DeSoto National Forest
421:command post exercises
335:, was assigned to the
316:
266:
195:30th Infantry Division
21:30th Infantry Division
2328:Brune, Peter (2019).
2288:21 March 2021 at the
1992:Clay, Steven (2010).
1819:66th Armored Regiment
1775:Army National Guard.
1715:
1707:
1338:30th Signal Company (
1173:30th Armored Division
1015:30th Aviation Company
796:
655:
619:1st Infantry Division
572:
495:"square" organization
470:8th Infantry Division
446:Alexandria, Louisiana
311:
248:
2219:on 29 September 2012
2143:3 March 2016 at the
1823:2nd Armored Division
1571:Clarence P. Townsley
1557:Clarence P. Townsley
1385:Knoxville, Tennessee
1347:Nashville, Tennessee
1333:Springfield, Georgia
875:XVIII Airborne Corps
668:at the close of the
600:B-17 Flying Fortress
534:invasion of Normandy
179:William Hood Simpson
2197:Clay, Vol. 1, p.224
2087:Battle for Normandy
1857:on 26 February 2021
1552:(19 September 1917)
1543:John Frank Morrison
1502:30th Signal Company
690:Battle of the Bulge
670:Battle of the Bulge
631:liberation of Paris
287:Army National Guard
2444:United States Army
2361:John J. Pershing,
1718:
1710:
1665:William H. Simpson
1617:Brigadier General
1600:Brigadier General
1594:(28 December 1917)
1590:Brigadier General
1587:(22 December 1917)
1583:Brigadier General
1580:(17 December 1917)
1576:Brigadier General
1562:Brigadier General
1548:Brigadier General
1417:Memphis, Tennessee
873:22 December 1944:
811:18 February 1944:
806:Assignments in ETO
803:
765:surrender of Japan
674:
623:drive to Avranches
612:Army Ground Forces
605:Lieutenant General
587:US Army Air Forces
579:
454:Carolina Maneuvers
372:port of Charleston
317:
267:
199:United States Army
80:United States Army
3225:
3224:
2356:978-0-8061-3919-7
2339:978-1-4607-5651-5
2322:978-0-87021-066-2
2167:, pp. 19–21.
2096:978-0-241-96897-0
2075:, pp. 16–17.
1797:Jack J. Pendleton
1632:Edward Mann Lewis
1602:Lawrence D. Tyson
1585:Lawrence D. Tyson
1573:(6 December 1917)
1566:(1 December 1917)
1559:(14 October 1917)
1401:Savannah, Georgia
1164:
1163:
1031:
1030:
867:, 12th Army Group
863:22 October 1944:
555:break-through of
400:St. Simons Island
188:
187:
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2403:Internet Archive
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1902:. Archived from
1896:
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1889:
1887:
1885:
1878:"Still Shocking"
1873:
1867:
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1853:. Archived from
1847:
1791:Charles L. Kelly
1785:Kenneth W. Bilby
1761:
1760:
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1746:
1742:
1739:
1667:(May–July 1942),
1592:George G. Gatley
1578:Samson L. Faison
1564:Samson L. Faison
1550:William S. Scott
1545:(28 August 1917)
1519:30thInfantry.org
1354:Forsyth, Georgia
1323:Griffin, Georgia
1035:
1034:
926:
925:
849:26 August 1944:
747:, a sub-camp of
686:Malmedy-Stavelot
662:M5 "Stuart" tank
608:Lesley J. McNair
514:Combat chronicle
388:Atlanta, Georgia
259:Samson L. Faison
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1672:Leland S. Hobbs
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1642:Interwar period
1619:Robert H. Noble
1604:(30 March 1918)
1538:
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1526:Wayback Machine
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1191:Order of Battle
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837:4 August 1944:
833:12th Army Group
808:
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672:, January 1945.
614:under Malisau.
610:, commander of
557:Operation Cobra
516:
491:
486:
456:as part of the
435:for the Fourth
368:
366:Interwar period
360:Somme offensive
323:and arrived in
255:Edward M. Lewis
243:
223:S.L.A. Marshall
205:that served in
191:
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155:Ardennes-Alsace
145:Northern France
123:Somme Offensive
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1630:Major General
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2221:. Retrieved
2217:the original
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1947:www.hmdb.org
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1894:
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1871:
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1855:the original
1812:
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1764:
1732:Description:
1731:
1730:
1722:
1719:
1658:World War II
1614:(3 May 1918)
1516:
1406:
1309:
1306:
1298:World War II
1166:
913:
902:8 May 1945:
741:Braunschweig
733:Braunschweig
731:on 7 April,
718:
675:
616:
580:
538:
536:until June.
523:Leland Hobbs
517:
492:
484:World War II
466:Chesterfield
425:
396:Tybee Island
369:
353:
318:
274:
271:9th Division
270:
268:
263:60th Brigade
211:World War II
201:unit of the
194:
192:
183:Leland Hobbs
134:World War II
132:
15:
1884:11 December
1772:Background:
1536:World War I
1196:World War I
745:Weferlingen
656:Men of the
591:carpet bomb
541:Omaha Beach
489:Early years
433:Mississippi
345:Second Army
241:World War I
207:World War I
118:World War I
114:Engagements
106:Nickname(s)
3232:Categories
3189:Philippine
1829:References
1766:Symbolism:
1677:Maj. Gen.
1670:Maj. Gen.
1663:Maj. Gen.
1531:Commanders
1045:Components
936:Components
904:XIII Corps
879:First Army
865:Ninth Army
855:Third Army
817:First Army
772:Casualties
757:Elbe River
749:Buchenwald
682:Inde River
643:Maastricht
549:Vire River
437:Corps Area
358:, and the
277:after the
175:commanders
168:Commanders
2440:Divisions
1442:1942-1945
895:XVI Corps
881:, to the
824:VII Corps
813:XIX Corps
753:Grunewald
737:Magdeburg
564:beachhead
450:VII Corps
412:Tullahoma
408:Camp Peay
356:Ypres-Lys
313:Doughboys
303:Tennessee
150:Rhineland
128:Ypres-Lys
45:1947–1974
43:1926–1945
41:1917–1919
3219:Category
3198:Mountain
3179:Hawaiian
2724:Infantry
2451:Airborne
2286:Archived
2223:26 April
2141:Archived
1522:Archived
1307:Source:
851:XV Corps
768:Europe.
706:Lierneux
702:St. Vith
666:St. Vith
575:Typhoons
561:Normandy
553:Saint-LĂ´
478:Congress
384:IV Corps
249:British
140:Normandy
100:Division
90:Infantry
2641:Cavalry
2503:Armored
2442:of the
1861:25 June
1757:⁄
1743:⁄
910:Postwar
839:V Corps
755:on the
729:Hamelin
694:Germans
680:to the
678:Alsdorf
527:England
458:I Corps
347:of the
325:England
299:Georgia
173:Notable
50:Country
2376:
2354:
2336:
2320:
2306:
2093:
1952:7 July
1927:7 July
918:, and
759:. The
714:JĂĽlich
531:Allied
462:Cheraw
321:Europe
301:, and
197:was a
77:
68:Branch
59:
38:Active
3173:108th
3167:106th
3161:104th
3155:103rd
3149:102nd
3142:100th
2494:108th
2488:101st
1834:Notes
916:120th
723:. It
692:—the
639:Liège
460:near
444:near
410:near
3204:10th
3136:99th
3130:98th
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2572:13th
2567:12th
2562:11th
2557:10th
2481:82nd
2475:80th
2470:17th
2465:13th
2459:11th
2374:ISBN
2352:ISBN
2334:ISBN
2318:ISBN
2304:ISBN
2225:2019
2091:ISBN
1954:2023
1929:2023
1886:2012
1863:2010
1814:Fury
1508:Band
1303:1939
710:Roer
637:and
635:Visé
598:and
209:and
193:The
96:Size
86:Type
2781:9th
2776:8th
2770:7th
2764:6th
2759:5th
2753:4th
2746:3rd
2739:2nd
2732:1st
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2649:1st
2552:9th
2547:8th
2542:7th
2537:6th
2532:5th
2527:4th
2522:3rd
2517:2nd
2511:1st
2283:CMH
797:An
431:in
423:.
398:or
3234::
2202:^
2114:^
1945:.
1920:.
1842:^
1821:,
1403:)
1380:)
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1187:.
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219:SS
2432:e
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1394:)
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1349:)
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1318:)
819:.
464:-
265:.
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.