Annual Training 1965 - 63rd Infantry Division USAR Website
Transcription
Annual Training 1965 - 63rd Infantry Division USAR Website
63" INFANTRY DIVISION 63D INFANTRY DIVISION OFFICE OF THE COMMANDING GENERAL, GENERAL GEORGE S. PATTON, JR., USAR CENTER MAYWOOD, CALIFORNIA 90270 ^ A short short history of today's 63d is told in the following pages. Composed of over 7500 officers and men capable of performing its mission of backing up our Active Army, the 'Blood and Fire' Division has shown by dedication to duty and honor that it is an important part of the Nation's military structure. HIXSC Major General USAR Commanding >v, ' ' ' HISTORY OF 63D INFANTRY DIVISION The 6^d Infantry Division was " born" during World War II and formally activated at Camp Blanding, Fla., on June 15» 1943« The division's name-slogan "Blood and Fire," followed the warning pledge to the Axis sounded by President Franklin D. Roosevelt and Prime Minister Winston Churchill at Casablanca in 1943' that the enemy shall "bleed and burn in expiation of their crimes against humanity." The newly-activated division under command of Maj. Gen. Louis E. Hibbs was transferred to Camp Van Dorn, Miss., in August of 1943» and continued extensive training until Nov. 25> 1944» when the first units departed for the European Theater of Operations. One of the advance infantry regiments to enter European combat before Christmas of 1944 was 'the 254th Regiment, which distinguished itself in the bitter fighting that liberated Colmar, France, With the arrival in Europe (Southern France) of artillery and other division units, the 6jd began operations as a division on Feb. 8, 1945* During that month the division forcebly crossed the Saar River and led the Seventh Army in its re-entrance onto German soil. A month later the 63d made the Seventh Army's first penetration of the enemy's vaunted West Wall and the last barrier to the Rhine, the Siegfried Line. Through this gap in the German defenses rolled U. S. armored units to make the Seventh Army's historic victorious link-up with the Third Army. Late in March, 1945* the 63d swept across the Rhine. Then., serving as the left division of the VI Corps, the 63d fought eastward from the Rhine for three weeks of continuous day-and-night combat, forcing the withdrawal of the 1?th S3 German Panzer Division. Continuing the offensive, the 63d turned south, crossing Danube River on April 25, and capturing the cities of Gunsburg and Landsberg. On April 29, within sight of the Bavarian Alps, and just nine days before victory in Europe, the division was withdrawn from combat. The 63d was scheduled for duty in the Pacific and was being refitted with equipment and replacements. But the surrender of the Japanese changed the plan and sent the division home to the U. S. for de-activation or. Sept. 27, 1945. The proud 63d Division colors were unfurled again on Washington's birthday, Feb. 22, 1952, when the division was assigned to the U. S. Army Reserve Forces. On March 1, 1952, the first divisional units were activated in Los Angeles, Calif., replacing the 13th Armored Division and absorbing-its personnel. -2Heserve activity of some of the division's personnel dates back to Nov., 194?5 with the activation of the 19th Armored Division, and successive designations, first as the 13th Armored Division and finally as the 6 3d Infantry Division. Reservists in the 63d, the west's largest Army Reserve unit, have been going to summer training camp since 1948 when the 13th Armored Division trained at ~£~p Hoed, Texas with National Guard and Army troops. In 1949 the "3th pullei ::": = rational "first" in inter-service cooperation, under corr^r.'i of -rig. C-er. . Janes T. Roberts. The entire division moved via rank, true I-:, %r.i autcr.cbile to Camp Pendleton for 15 days of joint maneuvers -ith the X= rir.es. The Korean conflict outbreak cancelled a planned second joint Army Reserve -ferine training encampment a year later, and the division moved its tanks ?nd equipment to Camp Cooke, re-opening that huge military installation that had been closed since World Was II. The Division returned to Cooke in In 1952> operating at summer training for the first time as infantry, following re-activation as the 63d, the reserve soldiers went to HunterLiggett Military Reservation. This sprawling maneuver and artillery firing area near King City, Calif, also had been virtually shut down since World War II. Since 1954> the 63d has made its annual summer maneuver headquarters at Camp Roberts, the famed West Coast infantry training center during World War II and the Korean conflict. In recent years, division artillery units have bivouaced and conducted firing exercises with their bigger guns at HLMR. Division tank and armored cavalry units from El Monte and San Diego have trained at Fort Irwin, on the desert, near Barstow. And rocket artillerymen have received specialized firing practice at Port Lewis, Washington. The 6jd came under the ROCID concept in 1959> and a second reorganization to a ROAD pentomic division in 1963» Major General William J. Hixson assumed command, of Southern Calif ornia's 63d Infantry Division on Nov. 1, 1961, succeeding Major General Henry K. Kellogg, who, during his service did much to build the 63d to its present size and status as the largest Army Reserve unit in the west. General Hixson had served as Assistant division commander during the entire period of growth. -X-**"**-******* 63D INFANTRY DIVISION COMMANDERS ROSTER COMMAND/ORGANIZATION SEPARATE COMPANY STATION COMMANDER H'4 6 3D INF DIV Maj Gen Gillian J Hixson Bell HHC 6 Jd Inf Mv 6Jd KF Co 63d Avn ?n 163d Sig 3n 263d Er.£-r 3n 1st I.t George 1st I.t Leiand Capt Harold B Lt Col Erie H Lt Col Robert Bell Bell Long Beach Torrance Van Nuys W Bettinger J Hendrie Hundley Frady Jr J Gilraore \l Raymond J Nepute SUPPORT CCMI'IAND Bell 1st Lt 1st Lt Lt Col Lt Col Lt Col 1ST BRIGADE Col Edward D Miller Bell HHC 1st Brigade 3d Bn 15th Inf 3d Bn 27th Inf 3d Bn 30th Inf 3d Bn 31st Inf Capt Walter J Barthuly Maj James R Helms Jr Lt Col Walter B Kroener Maj Jerrold E Fisher Lt Col Milton I Bremer Bell Santa Ana Hazard Park Pasadena Playa del Rey 2D BRIGADE Col Tommy R- Gillian Pasadena HHC 2d Brigade 5th Bn 4(-'th Armor 5th Sq. 8th Cav Capt Herman P Velasco Jr Maj ;-'alter Dennis Lt Col Robert E Miller Pasadena San Bernardino San Diego 3D BRIGADE Ccl Banner P Rice West L A HHC 4th 4th 7th Capt Gerald C Lt Col Lucius Lt Col Gordon Lt Col John J West L A Santa Barbara Long Beach El Monte 3d Bn Bn Bn Brigade 15th Inf 27th Inf 40th Armor Scott M Kirk Vernon L Giles John E Affeldt James B Price Jr Ralph J Hippert Bell Bell Bell Bell Bell HHC and Band 63d Admin Co 363d Med Bn ?63d Maint Bn 63d Sup & Trans Bn L1Estrange M Spencer H Wallace Coveney 63D INF. DIV ARTY Lt Col Robert B Davis Bell HHB 63d Inf Div Arty 6th Bn 4th Arty 5th Bn 11th Arty 5th Bn 19th Arty 4th Bn 21st Arty 3d Bn 77th Arty 1st Lt Richard A Heimann Maj John D Gum Maj Salvador H Dippollet Lt Col Walter R Maxwell Lt Col Royce V Griffith Lt Col Norwin S Yoffie Bell Playa del Rey Fresno San Bernardino Bell Van Nuys ATTACHED UNITS 227th MI Det 337th MI Det Maj Don N Yamaoka Capt Roy R Archer Hazard Park San Diego 63D INFANTRY INF 3-4 ARTY 15 6 3 -4 27 3 DIV 4 5 11 30 5 3 31 5-7 19 3 77 40 ARM 5 8 CAV D 163 SIG 263 ENGR 363 MED 763 MT Citizen GIs Learn War THE INFANTRY WITH MUD BEHIND THEIR EARS By EO LEYDON Htrlld-lxvmlmr Staff Writer CAN MIGUEL, July 31 — More t h a n 8000 men from the Southland today are learning new skills they hope they will never use. They are members of Southern C a l i f o r n i a ' s "Blood ana Fire" 63rd infantry Division of the Army Reserve, now on their annual two-week active trainIng program, ending Aug. 7. Bulk of the forces are at Camp Roberts near here. Thursday the men there demonstrated what t h e y were learning. The effect was both real «nd unreal. The terrain is typical rural Califonia. Cattle should be grazing peacefully on its golden flat areas, watched by vaqueros. But the men scrambling about in dusty uniforms are citizens from the good life in Southern California — bookkeepers, salesmen, plumbers, social workers, offlee workers and m a n y other employments. Quickly Adapt To New Life Some of them are more familiar with how to negotiate the freeway in heavy traffic than how to ascend a hill under enemy fire. But they quickly adapt to their new life. The ear-splitting blasts from their big 106 mm recolless rifles are very real. And so is the thud of its charge as it hits a target 1500 yards across the oncepeaceful valley with unerring accuracy. "Look at that! Did you see that?" a colonel exalted as smoke rose from one tercet. "No, these are an reservists," he said proudly to a question. "Whatever they know, they've learned parUime (Continued on Page B-8. col. 51 Behind a heavy durtain of smoke and flames, men of Southern California's "Blood and Fire" 63rd Infantry Division of the Army Reserve advance to wipe out an enemy outpost. Their twoweek active training program will end on Aug. 7. Section B Louella Parsons Edrtorial Page Comment-Opinion Comics Movies & Drama U.S. Weather, Tides SiCOND FRONT PAGE LARGEST EVENING C I R C U L A T I O N IN AMERICA VOL. XCV SAT., JUL? 31, 1965 NO. 127 Infantrymen m o v e up behind barbed wire to attack enemy f o r c e s . This group had been waiting for three days for their patrols to force the enemy into their trap. 'Blood and Fire' Pfc. Steve Fisher of Los Angeles foetuses his sight in 81mm mortar as he waits for one of his patrols to flush out enemy. The maneuvers were held on the. hillsides at and near Camp Roberts. These men are shown loading 106mm recoiless rifles. More than 8000 men, from all walks of life, including salesmen, plumbers, social workers, office workers, bookkeepers and others, took part in the annual maneuvers. —HeraM-Examiner Pliottt by BUD GRAY . CALIFORNIA'S PART TIME G/s Same Training for Citizens By BILL DUNCAN over the plain. A squad of Photos by BOB SHUMWAY infantrymen, crouched low in an assault boat, inches A 106mm recoiless rifle, its way across a swift river mounted on a jeep, lurches and lands in thick vegetabackwards, spewing fire as tion at the water's edge. * * * # it hurls a deadly projectile across a sunburned plain. THE infantrymen storm The target, a lank fashion- out of the boat amid the ed of old oil drums welded crack of small-arms fire together, explodes sending and advance toward a maup a pall of black smoke chine-gun nest. Shell exlaced with tongues of plode near the soldiers, flame. causing the ground to A second 106mm shell tremble convulsively. streaks across the plain The action is over the like a ball of fire and finds rolling hills and plains on the target. A third and the 44,000 acre Camp fourth shell follow in close Roberts military reservabehind. tion at Paso Robles. The As the shelling continues, area is almost desert-like, a tank, churning up a except for scattered forests smoke screen of dust, races of trees that thrive on the moisture from the winding tributary coursing the reservation and emptying into the Salinas River. It is a typical Army camp. It is typical Army training for infantrymen and artillerymen. Only the men are different. Hours before they were out in the workaday world, p u n c h i n g time clocks, teaching school, minding a business or even extracting a tooth. They are citizensoldiers. * * * * WHO IS THE citizensoldier? He is an oral surgeon from Burlingame who is on the consulting staff for • JUMP! . . . When They Say It, You Do It Mayo Clinic. He is a music hats to become an infantry teacher at Santa Ana High general. He is a civilian most of School. He is a furniture the year, working at any worker for a Downey man- profession, trade, craft or ufacturing plant. job you can name. He is a San Francisco Today, n e a r l y 10,000 architect who leaves his c i t i z e n - soldiers are enplush offices and becomes camped at Camp Roberts. a corporal in the ranks. He They are members of the is a Santa Barbara car- famed 63rd Infantry Divipenter, a Los Angeles col- sion, the largest reserve dilege student, a Downey vision on the West Coast. doctor, a Palos Verdes college professor who switches (Continued Page B-ll, Col. 1) Independent" SUNDAY, AUGUST SECTION B '...-'..'-'.'..,,'. 1965 PAGE B-l . TANK TRAINING . . . A Spe cial World Unto Themselves ITS ROUTINE . . . Pvt. Ernie Holguin of Los Angeles Stands Guard With Malcolm €pley TUNY Stacy Gay, 3, daughter of Atty. Art Guy, slipped into the family car and slipped the brake. Parked on an incline, the machine rolled for a way and bumped into a neighbor's station wagon. Said Stacy's 11-year-old brother, Doug: "There's a woman driver for you!" the Press-Telegram, and developed his interest in the rails when, while carrying his route, he saw trains switching on the Union Pacific freight branch here. He has since spent considerable time traveling to logging camps and elsewhere to ride the lumber company rail lines, and he worked a COMETIMES I wonder. couple of years as a Union a The other day one of ourPacific fireman. His hobby men, recently out of the also took him to Latin Midwest, wrote a bit of America. editorial banter under the Adolf and a pal are about heading, "We're Being In- to take off for Colorado vaded." With tongue virtu- where they'll inspect the ally sticking through the operations of the Denver am cheek, this piece playfully Rio Grande Western's narsugested a ban on the immi- row-gauge line over Cumbres gration m o v e m e n t that Pass, the last narrow gauger brought virtually all of us in general service operation here, and if not us, our par- in the country. ents. This young fellow is havYet a few readers took ing a lot of fun. He also this literally. They thought plans to write a book that we really were advocating may turn the hobby Into an electric fence patrolled something more practical by dogs to keep the would* than fun. be new settlers out. To anyone as humorless DED Cross has asked this as that, how can you even dept. to put out a speexplain that you didn't mean cial appeal for volunteers to it? serve elderly patients at -ong Beach General HosA MONO local train buffs is >ital. Some 400 patients at Adolph Gutohrlein, State he hospital are lonely, many College student, whose fan- have no visitors, and there's ship for rails and rolling a great field there for some stock has won a notice in good humane service. the national magazine, "RailNeeded are women of the road." 0-55 age bracket who can Adolf, native of Germany ive one day a week, shopwho now lives in Lakewood, ling for the patients and is the youngest subject of a isiting with them. An autolong series in the mag titled mobile is needed for the "Interesting Railfans." rrands. Persons interested This young fellow is a tiould call Kate Rogers, former newspaper boy of Volunteer Services, Long eacn chapter of the Amerian Red Cross. IT'S A FOOT SOLDIERS BATTLE . . . Ov er Hill, Over Dale, Over Rivers, Over Trails ALL D R Y . . . Until the Boat Tips RECOILESS . . . But Kicks Up Dust DRINK UP . . . Sgt Armando Carrion, Downey I, P-T WANT AD ^ONG Beach Public Transportation Co. is running special bus on Sundays, thereby a passenger can "Had over 20 calls in re- de all day for 50 cents and sponse to my I, P-T want ee the town. ad, and hired just the babyOne fellow who tried it is sitter I was looking for," rving Gaspard. He says he reports Mrs. Clara Foster, ad an enjoyable experi&739 E. 14th St. i nce, learned a lot about the Looking for a reliable t hings he hadn't known beemploye? An I.P-T classi- f ore about the city, and figfled want ad will help you <J res it was a four-bit piece find just the right person n nighty well spent. e a s i l y and economically. Here's a way to see the For the hot line to better c ommunity while leaving the results phone HE 2-5959. < riving to somebody else. Over 20 Calls on Baby-Sitter FIRST THE TROOPS OBSERVE . . . Then They Take Part in Fighting Battle of Camp Roberts FILL 'ER UP ... Pfc. Henry Chavez Re-filled £TT • ***? 4* , ' '"W <i/» M " Regarding the human element of the Army, the requirement today is the same in principle as that established by Major Rogers in 1759 for his Rangers who he directed to 'Have your musket clean as a whistle, hatchet scoured, sixty rounds of powder and ball, and be ready to march at a moment's notice.' General Earle G. Wheeler