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Unit Histories

From the Beaches to the Baltic, the Story of the 7th Armored Division. Heidelberger Gutenberg-Druckerei, Heidelberg, Germany, 1945.

The Seventh Armored Division in the Battle of St. Vith, prepared by the 7th Armored Division Association. E. John Schmitz & Sons, Baltimore, Maryland, 1948.

8TH ARMORED DIVISION (RA)

Nickname: Tornado; The Thundering Herda

Shoulder Sleeve Insignia: Same as 1st Armored Division except that the Arabic numeral 8 appears in the apex of the triangle

Lineage

Activated in the Army of the United States 1 April 1942 at Fort Knox, Kentucky
Inactivated 14 November 1945 at Hampton Roads, Virginia

Allotted to the Regular Army 25 February 1953

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Commanders:

Brig Gen John M. Devine
Maj Gen John M. Devine

(Commanding division at termination of hostilities, 8 May 1945) Returned to United States: November 1945

Unit Histories

October 1944

.3 May 1945

In Tornado's Wake, by Charles R. Leach. Published by the 8th Armored Division Association, Argus Press, Chicago, Illinois, 1956

9TH ARMORED DIVISION (RA)

Nickname: Called Phantom Division by the Germans in World War II.

Shoulder Sleeve Insignia: Same as 1st Armored Division except that the Arabic numeral 9 appears in the apex of the triangle

Lineage

Activated in the Army of the United States 15 July 1942 at Fort Riley, Kansas
Inactivated 13 October 1945 at Camp Patrick Henry, Virginia
Allotted to the Regular Army 25 February 1953

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Maj Gen John W. Leonard

(Commanding division at termination of hostilities, 8 May 1945) Returned to United States: October 1945

Nickname: Tiger Divisiona

10TH ARMORED DIVISION (RA)

.October 1942

Shoulder Sleeve Insignia: Same as 1st Armored Division except that the Arabic numeral 10 appears in the apex of the triangle

Lineage

Activated in the Army of the United States 15 July 1942 at Fort Benning, Georgia Inactivated 13 October 1945 at Camp Patrick Henry, Virginia

Allotted to the Regular Army 25 February 1953

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(Commanding division at termination of hostilities, 8 May 1945) Returned to United States: October 1945

Unit Histories

..July 1944

Impact, the Battle Story of the Tenth Armored Division, by Lester M. Nichols. Bradbury, Sales, O'Neill Company, New York, New York, 1954.

Nickname: Thunderbolta

11TH ARMORED DIVISION (RA)

Shoulder Sleeve Insignia: Same as 1st Armored Division except that the Arabic numeral 11 appears in the apex of the triangle

Lineage

Activated in the Army of the United States 15 August 1942 at Camp Polk, Louisiana
Disbanded 31 August 1945 in Germany

Reconstituted and allotted to the Regular Army 25 February 1953

a See footnote a to 1st Infantry Division.

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Brig Gen Charles S. Kilburn

Brig Gen Holmes E. Dager
Maj Gen Holmes E. Dager

(Commanding division at termination of hostilities, 8 May 1945) Disbanded in Germany: 31 August 1945

Unit Histories

March 1944

.21 March 1945 ..3 May 1945

Thunderbolt, by Hall D. Steward. The 11th Armored Division Association, Washington,

D.C., 1948.

Nickname: Hellcat Division a

12TH ARMORED DIVISION (RA)

Shoulder Sleeve Insignia: Same as 1st Armored Division except that the Arabic numeral 12 appears in the apex of the triangle

Lineage

Activated in the Army of the United States 15 September 1942 at Camp Campbell, Kentucky Inactivated 3 December 1945 at Camp Kilmer, New Jersey Allotted to the Regular Army 25 February 1953

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(Commanding division at termination of hostilities, 8 May 1945)

Returned to United States: November 1945

Unit Histories

.September 1944

A History of the United States Twelfth Armored Division, 15 September 1942-17 December 1945. Army & Navy Publishing Company, Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

13TH ARMORED DIVISION (RA)

Nickname: Black Cat Division a

Shoulder Sleeve Insignia: Same as 1st Armored Division except that the Arabic numeral 13 appears in the apex of the triangle.

Lineage

Activated in the Army of the United States 15 October 1942 at Camp Beale, California Inactivated 15 November 1945 at Camp Cooke, California

Allotted to the Organized Reserves 8 August 1947

Activated 21 August 1947 at Los Angeles, California
Inactivated 1 March 1952 at Los Angeles, California
Allotted to the Regular Army 25 February 1953

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(Commanding division at termination of hostilities, 8 May 1945) Returned to United States: November 1945

Unit Histories

The Thirteenth Armored Division, a History of the Black Cats in World War II. Army & Navy Publishing Company, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, 1946.

14TH ARMORED DIVISION (RA)

Nickname: Liberator Division a

Shoulder Sleeve Insignia: Same as 1st Armored Division except that the Arabic numeral 14 appears in the apex of the triangle

Lineage

Activated in the Army of the United States 15 November 1942 at Camp Chaffee, Arkansas Inactivated 16 September 1945 at Camp Patrick Henry, Virginia

Allotted to the Regular Army 25 February 1953

a See footnote a to 1st Infantry Division.

COMBAT RECORD

World War II

Overseas: October 1944

Campaigns: Rhineland, Ardennes-Alsace, Central Europe
Casualties: 2,690; KIA-505; WIA-1,955; DOW-55

Commanders:

Brig Gen Albert C. Smith
Maj Gen Albert C. Smith

(Commanding division at termination of hostilities, 8 May 1945) Returned to United States: September 1945

Unit Histories

..July 1944 19 March 1945

The History of the 14th Armored Division, by Captain Joseph Carter. Albert Love Enterprises, Atlanta, Georgia, 1946.

Traditional Designation: None

16TH ARMORED DIVISION

Shoulder Sleeve Insignia: Same as 1st Armored Division except that the Arabic numeral 16 appears in the apex of the triangle

Lineage

Activated in the Army of the United States 15 July 1943 at Camp Chaffee, Arkansas Inactivated 15 October 1945 at Camp Kilmer, New Jersey

Disbanded 23 March 1953

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(Commanding division at termination of hostilities, 8 May 1945) Returned to United States: October 1945

Traditional Designation: None

20TH ARMORED DIVISION

.September 1944

Shoulder Sleeve Insignia: Same as 1st Armored Division except that the Arabic numeral 20 appears in the apex of the triangle

Lineage

Activated in the Army of the United States 15 March 1943 at Camp Campbell, Kentucky Inactivated 2 April 1946 at Camp Hood, Texas

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(Commanding division at termination of hostilities, 8 May 1945) Returned to United States: August 1945

Unit Histories

Armor in the ETO. Albert Love Enterprises, Atlanta, Georgia, 1946.

27TH ARMORED DIVISION (NG-New York)

.September 1944

Nickname: New York Division

Shoulder Sleeve Insignia: Black khaki-bordered disc containing a red circle in which are the letters NY in red worked into a monogram. Within the circle and interspersed in and around the monogram are red stars depicting the constellation Orion (a tribute to Maj Gen John F. O'Ryan, Division Commander in World War I)

Lineage

Constituted and organized as Headquarters Division, New York National Guard 9 February 1898 at Albany, New York

Redesignated 6th Division and mustered into Federal service 28 June 1916 at Camp Whitman, New York

Mustered out 23 December 1916 at New York, New York

Mustered into Federal service 16 July 1917 at Camp Whitman, New York

Redesignated 27th Division 1 September 1917

Demobilized 1 April 1919 at Camp Upton, New York

Federally recognized in the National Guard on 23 December 1921 at New York City, New York

Inducted into Federal service 15 October 1940 at New York, New York

Redesignated 27th Infantry Division 11 July 1941

Inactivated 31 December 1945 at Fort Lawton, Washington

a See footnote a to 1st Infantry Division.

Federally recognized in the National Guard 21 April 1947 at Albany, New York
Transferred to Buffalo, New York, 5 February 1952
Converted and redesignated 27th Armored Division 1 February 1955

COMBAT RECORD

World War I

Overseas: May 1918

Campaigns: Ypres-Lys, Somme Offensive

Casualties: 8,334; KIA-1,442; WIA-6,892; DOW-387

Commanders:

Maj Gen John F. O'Ryan

(Commanding division at termination of hostilities, 11 November 1918) Returned to United States: March 1919

Overseas: March 1942

World War II

16 July 1917

Campaigns: Central Pacific, Western Pacific, Ryukyus
Casualties: 6,533; KIA-1,512; WIA-4,980; DOW-332

Commanders:

Brig Gen Ralph McT. Pennell

Maj Gen Ralph C. Smith

Maj Gen George W. Griner, Jr.

(Commanding division at termination of hostilities, 2 September 1945) Returned to United States: December 1945

Unit Histories

November 1941 .November 1942 .June 1944

History of the 27th Division, New York's Own. Bennett & Churchill, New York, New York, 1919.

The Pictorial Record of the 27th Division, by Alexander Starlight. Harper & Bros., New York, New York, 1919.

The Story of the 27th Division, by Maj. Gen. John F. O'Ryan. Wynkoop, Hallenbeck, Crawford Company, New York, New York, 1921.

27th Division, Summary of Operations in the World War, prepared by the American Battel Monuments Commission. U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C., 1944. The 27th Infantry Division in World War II, by Captain Edmund G. Love. The Infantry Journal Press, Washington, D.C. 1949.

40TH ARMORED DIVISION (NG-California)

Traditional Designation: Grizzly Division a

Shoulder Sleeve Insignia: A dark blue diamond on which is centered a yellow sun with twelve rays

Lineage

Organized as 40th Division 25 August 1917 at Camp Kearney, California

Demobilized 20 April 1919 at Camp Kearney, California

Reorganized and Federally recognized in the National Guard 18 June 1926 at Berkeley,

California

Transferred to Los Angeles 1 October 1937

Inducted into Federal service 3 March 1941

Redesignated 40th Infantry Division 11 July 1941

Inactivated 7 April 1946 at Camp Stoneman, California

Reorganized and Federally recognized in the National Guard 14 October 1945 at Los Angeles, California

Ordered into active Federal service 1 September 1950 at Los Angeles, California Released from Federal service and returned to state control on 30 June 1954 at Los Angeles, California

Converted and redesignated 40th Armored Division 1 July 1954

COMBAT RECORD

World War I

Overseas: August 1918

Campaigns: Streamer without inscription

Casualties: Not listed

Commanders:

Maj Gen Frederick S. Strong

(Commanding division at termination of hostilities, 11 November 1918) Returned to United States: March 1919

Overseas: August 1942

World War II

.25 August 1917

Campaigns: Bismarck Archipelago, Luzon (with arrowhead), Southern Philippines
Casualties: 3,025; KIA-614; WIA-2,407; DOW-134

Commanders:

Maj Gen Rapp Brush

Brig Gen Donald J. Myers

(Commanding division at termination of hostilities, 2 September 1945)

Returned to United States: April 1946

a See footnote a to 1st Infantry Division.

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Korea

Overseas: April 1951

Campaigns: Second Korean winter, Korea summer-fall 1952, Third Korean winter, Korea summer-fall 1953

Casualties: 1,848; KIA-311; WIA-1,504; DOW—47

Commanders:

Maj Gen D. H. Hudelson

Brig Gen Joseph P. Cleland

Maj Gen Joseph P. Cleland

Maj Gen Ridgely Gaither

(Commanding division at termination of hostilities, 27 July, 1953) Returned to United States: June 1954

Decorations

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Streamer, Philippine Presidential Unit Citation, embroidered 17 OCTOBER 1944 TO 4 JULY 1945 (World War II)

Streamer, Republic of Korea Presidential Unit Citation, embroidered KOREA (Korean

War)

Unit Histories

40th Infantry Division, the Years of World War II. Army & Navy Publishing Company, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, 1947.

50TH ARMORED DIVISION (NG-New Jersey)

Traditional Designation: Jersey Blues a

Slogan: Prepared in All Things

Shoulder Sleeve Insignia: A blue-bordered orange circle containing two Arabic 4's back to back

Lineage

Organized as 44th Division 26 March 1924 in the National Guard at Trenton, New Jersey Inducted into Federal service 16 September 1940 at Trenton, New Jersey

Redesignated 44th Infantry Division 11 July 1941

Inactivated 30 November 1945 at Camp Chaffee, Arkansas

Redesignated 50th Armored Division 15 July 1946

Federally recognized 14 October 1946 at Newark, New Jersey

COMBAT RECORD

World War II

Overseas: September 1944

Campaigns: Northern France, Rhineland, Ardennes-Alsace, Central Europe
Casualties: 5,655; KIA-1,038; WIA-4,209; DOW-168

Commanders:

Maj Gen Robert F. Spragins

Brig Gen William F. Dean
Maj Gen William F. Dean

(Commanding division at termination of hostilities, 8 May 1945)

Returned to United States: July 1945

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Combat History of the 44th Infantry Division, 1944-1945. Albert Love Enterprises. Atlanta, Georgia, 1946.

11TH AIRBORNE DIVISION (RA)

Traditional Designation: Angels a

Shoulder Sleeve Insignia: A shield of royal blue. A red circle is centered on the shield and contains a white Arabic numeral 11. The circle is bordered in white with white wings rising obliquely from the white periphery. The word Airborne is aligned acrosE the arc of the shield

Lineage

Carolina

Activated in the Army of the United States 25 February 1943 at Camp Mackall, North Allotted to the Regular Army 15 November 1948

Overseas: May 1944

COMBAT RECORD
World War II

Campaigns: New Guinea, Leyte, Luzon (with arrowhead)

Casualties: 2,431; KIA-494; WIA-1,926; DOW-120

Commanders:

Maj Gen Joseph M. Swing

(Commanding division at termination of hostilities, 2 September 1945) Returned to United States: May 1949

Decorations

Streamer, Distinguished Unit Citation, embroidered MANILA

.February 1943

Streamer, Philippine Presidential Unit Citation, embroidered 17 OCTOBER 1944 TO 4 JULY 1945

* See footnote a to 1st Infantry Division,

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