The Big Red One Marches on After Vietnam: The REFORGER
Transcription
The Big Red One Marches on After Vietnam: The REFORGER
Summer 2010 P u b l i c a t i o n o f Page 8 t h e S o c i e t y The Big Red One Marches on After Vietnam: The REFORGER Missions In the last issue of the Bridgehead Sentinel the Division’s last days in Vietnam were highlighted, and the REFORGER (Return of Forces to Germany) missions were introduced. Believe it or not, it has now been 40 years since the 1st Infantry Division returned home from Vietnam, and redeployed (as the 1st Infantry Division [Mechanized]) with a new mission during the Cold War. The following is a detailed recap of the first of such operations by the Big Red One, Field Training Exercise: Certain Thrust, which set the stage for future REFORGER missions and, according to some, led to the speed and effectiveness of the 1st Division’s infantry and tanks during Operation Desert Storm. Excerpts taken from documents courtesy of the Research Center at the 1st Infantry Division Museum at Fort Riley. Field Training Exercise Certain Thrust, the tactical highlight of Operation REFORGER II, began October 19, 1970, between the northern Bavarian towns of Hassfurt and Bamberg. The men of the 1st Infantry Division had deployed to the Federal Republic of Germany the first week in October, picking up their prepositioned equipment at five sites along the Rhine River. In the days prior to the 19th, the Big Red One troopers checked out equipment and moved to their tactical assembly areas. FTX Certain Thrust was the outgrowth of a hypothetical situation in which Aggressorland, the totalitarian superpower of Eastern Europe, occupied a neighboring satellite, Orangeland. The Aggressorland forces then launched a propaganda campaign that threatened the security of Freeland. In response to her NATO commitments, Homeland replied by sending the 1st Infantry Division to bolster the defenses of Freeland. Aggressorland answered this deployment of allied forces by invading Freeland, thus setting the stage for FTX Certain Thrust. Aggressor, or Orange Forces, were played by the 1st Brigade of the 3rd Infantry Division and the elite German 35th Panzer Grenadier Brigade. The 1st Infantry Division was the keystone of the Blue forces with other NATO units attached for combat support. Before entering combat, Major General Robert R. Linville, Commanding General of the 1st Infantry Division, met with his senior commanders. “Gentleman, we are the heart of the VII Corps attack. We will hit hard, move fast and move far. When we make contact with the enemy, we will not lose it. If stopped on one route of advance, we will go to the right or left until we find a weak spot and then advance. We must hit the enemy with everything we have: mortars, air and artillery. We will use the APC’s for bases of fire and employ recon elements to the maximum. Find the enemy and hit him continually!” Combat began on the morning of October 19th, 1970. The 1st and 3rd Brigades moved from their tactical assembly areas at 6 a.m. to the four bridge sites along the Main River. This river-crossing operation had been prepared by the U.S. Air Force by “flatten- o f t h e F i r s t I n f a n t r y D i v i s i o n U.S. Army Photo GEN Jack J. Catton, Commanding General, Military Airlift Command, Scott AFB, Illinois, and BG A. L. Hamblin Jr. (right), Assistant Division Commander, 1st Inf. Div., pause before entering the Departure Air Field Control Group Headquarters at Forbes Air Force Base for a briefing on the airlift progress of REFORGER II. The Military Airlift Command is flying the Big Red One troops from Kansas to Germany to take part in Exercise REFORGER II. ing” the surrounding area with low-level bombing raids carried out by F-4 Phantoms. The opposing riverbank was covered with a smokescreen covering 24 square kilometers. While UH-1D helicopters brought in troops, amphibious M113A1 APCs, and amphibious M551 “Sheridan” armored reconnaissance vehicles crossed the river at six different locations to create a bridgehead. After that, the 1st Engineers used M88 Mobile Floating Assault Bridge/Ferrie’s (MFAB/F) to create two bridges across the Main River. Spearheaded by M60 main battle tanks of the 2nd Battalion, 63rd Armor, the opposing riverbank came under fire. To ensure a swift and unopposed rivercrossing, five approach roads were created for each bridge. After the Division had successfully crossed the Main River, it expanded its attack heading for the next objective. D-Day Plus One During the second day of the exercise, October 20, it became the mission of the 1st Infantry Division to drive the Orange Forces N O M I S S I O N T O O D I F F I C U L T. U.S. Army Photo An armored personnel carrier with men of the 1st Inf. Div., Fort Riley, Kansas, forges across the Main River during the first highlight action of Field Training Exercise Certain Thrust. The action took place between Dippach and Rossstadt, Germany, as part of NATO exercise REFORGER II. to the east from this highland, code named Objectives Abilene and Salina. Operations began at 4:00 a.m. with the 1st Brigade, the guardian of the Division’s north flank, moving toward the territory south of Lichtenfels. The 1st Brigade crossed the N O S A C R I F I C E T O O G R E A T. north fork of the Main River at dawn. Moving swiftly, they reached the highlands at 8:00 a.m. There the enemy had halted his retreat and dug in. The 1st Battalion, 28th Infantry Regiment became embroiled with a unit of superior Continued on page 6… D U T Y F I R S T! Society of the First Infantry Division A 1st ID Monument in Cheb Page 10 Foundation Announces New Scholarship Page 15 Page 2 1933 Morris Road Blue Bell, PA 19422-1422 Letter from MG Brooks Sicily: Landing at Gela Non-Profit U.S. Postage PAID Permit No. 6080 Carol Stream, IL 60188 Letter from the CG Vincent K. Brooks Major General, Commanding “Danger 6” The First 111 Days May 23rd – a few days before the 93rd birthday of the 1st Infantry Division – marked our 111th day of duty as United States DivisionSouth. The division’s deployment to southern Iraq is more than one third complete. How you start something sets the tone for how you finish, and the Big Red One has been going strong since we assumed authority of U.S. Forces in Iraq’s southern nine provinces – no doubt, we will finish strong. I indicated in the last Bridgehead Sentinel that our number one priority was support to Iraq’s national elections. The elections were an unqualified success and an unparalleled one for the Middle East. The Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen and Marines serving under the Big Red 1 performed admirably in the weeks leading up to the elections, advising and assisting the Iraqi Security Forces in their preparations to secure polling sites and to prepare for a variety of contingencies. Then, we stepped back on March 7, ready to support the Iraqis in any way they asked, but at the end of the day what we observed were millions of Iraqis in our region voting without any major incidents in eight of nine provinces, secured by the forces of their own country. What a marvelous and historic experience. The Iraqi election process is a complex one. As of this writing, the shape of the next Iraqi Parliament and who will lead it is still not certain. The political process is moving forward slowly and indirectly, but consistent with the rule of constitutional law. That’s a testament to how far this nation has progressed in the past seven years and a tribute to the work of our veterans who have been steadfast in their service here. With the elections over, our focus now is on three primary efforts: advising and assisting the Iraqi Security Forces as they continue to mature into a nationalistic, professional fighting force; building the economic capacity of southern Iraq, and transitioning U.S. Forces from Iraq with success and honor. August 31, 2010 will mark the official end of Operation Iraqi Freedom and with it, the focus on combat operations by American troops that characterized our service to date. The follow-on is Operation New Dawn with a shift of focus to increasing the emerging stability in Iraq, an operation where we concentrate on advising and assisting Iraqi forces and handing over some of the economic and governmental development tasks to other parts of the U.S. government. In large measure we’re already doing these things in southern Iraq. The ISF leads virtually all security operations in our region, and our forces are here in a challenging support role providing advice and assistance daily. We remain under threats of violence from the enemies of Iraq’s future, but we work to defeat them through the actions of the Iraqi security forces, before the enemies attack. The Iraq Security Forces have proven their ability to secure the populace during the elections and major religious pilgrimages. We are now refining their abilities, such as training on evidence collection, border security, and advanced counterterrorism techniques. We assist with methods of planning, with intelligence that we have collected to add to intelligence they have collected, and with a wide-open spirit of teamwork and cooperation. Of New bird takes flight, CAB flies UH-60Ms for first time in Iraq U.S. Army Photo U.S. Army Photo Above: Maj. Gen. Habib Husseini, the commander of the 10th Iraqi Army Division, addresses media during the election March 7. special interest to our region is the professionalization of the Department of Border Enforcement to help Iraq secure itself from illicit activity entering the country by way of its borders. Iraq has extraordinary economic potential with its vast oil reserves, intellectual capital, industrious people and arable land. Unfortunately, decades of violence, oppression, sanctions and continued malign influences from Iran have left much of this region unproductive and in disrepair. During our first 111 days, we worked very closely with Above: Ali Salman, a voter in the Basra Province of southern Iraq, shows off his ink-stained finger after voting March 7. The purple ink indicates he has voted and has become a symbol of Iraqi pride in voting. the region’s Provincial Reconstruction Teams, non-governmental agencies, and provincial leaders to accelerate southern Iraq’s return to prosperity. With security comes stability – with stability comes growth – with growth comes more security and stability. We are working hard to ignite this cycle of development and it looks promising. For the first time in a long time, the majority of southern Iraqis are optimistic about the future. Over the past seven years of ...Continued On Page 18 U.S. Army Photo Spc. Roland Hale CAB Public Affairs There is something foreign to the skies of Iraq flying above Camp Taji. As the Combat Aviation Brigade, 1st Infantry Division replaces the 1st Air Cavalry Brigade, 1st Cavalry Division, they bring with them a battalion of one of the Army’s newest helicopters, the UH-60M Black Hawk. The CAB is the second active duty unit to receive the UH-60M and the first to use the aircraft in Iraq. This new model of Black Hawk was first used by the 159th Combat Aviation Brigade, 101st Airborne Division. Receiving the aircraft Nov. 7, 2009, the unit used the aircraft during a deployment to Afghanistan. The CAB became second to receive a shipment of the aircraft April 21, 2009. On March 30, two crews from the CAB’s 3rd Assault Helicopter Battalion, 1st Aviation Regiment made the M-model’s pioneer flight into Iraq, with the rest of the battalion’s fleet close behind. “There’s a lot of first times for a lot of things in this war. It’s really cool to be a part of one of those times,” said Spc. Corey Corr, a crew-chief from 3-1 AHB who was aboard one of the two first UH-60Ms to cross into Iraq. “It was a pretty smooth flight. As we started getting close to the berm 2 crossing into Iraq, the aircraft pulled up side by side, so that one wasn’t going in before the other.” The most notable improvements introduced to the UH-60M are not the crew seats, however. The new “glass-cockpit” features four multi-function displays, an autopilot system, two electronic flight management systems, dual navigation systems, a digital moving map and an integrated vehicle health management system. Mechanically, the M-models new blades offer 500 lbs. more lift than previous models, and has a strengthened fuselage and infrared suppression. The UH-60M is what many 3-1 pilots call the Cadillac of the sky. “The M-Model made it a smooth flight in [to Iraq],” said Chief Warrant Officer 3 Randy Hendrix, a pilot with 3-1. “The moving map display is a huge plus for us. We didn’t have to fumble with a paper map up in the cockpit. It really increases situational awareness; right there on the screen you look down and see where you’re at as well as other aircraft and units.” 3-1’s pilots are among the first Army pilots to work with these systems. Operating them throughout the CAB’s year-long deploy- ment, they will pave the way for future pilots of the UH-60M. A tour in Iraq will bring the challenges of extremely hot and sandy conditions, said Chief Warrant Officer 3 Jesse Lee, who also flew one of the first aircraft into Iraq. Communicating with their peers who used the M-Model in Afghanistan, CAB pilots will continue to break new ground as they fly the new aircraft in an inclement environment. While CAB pilots can refer to lessons learned by the pilots of the 159th CAB, operation in Iraq poses major differences than operation in Afghanistan, such as terrain, heat and elevation. “It gets hot in Afghanistan, but not quite like this. We’ll really be the ones to see how the M-models holds up in this environment,” said Lee. Despite the addition of this new aircraft, 3-1’s mission remains unchanged. Along with the CAB’s four other battalions, each with its own diverse mission, the battalion’s UH-60Ms will conduct full spectrum aviation operations from the skies of Iraq in support of U.S. and Iraqi ground forces. Above: One of the M-Models used by the CAB. The UH-60M features improved payload, new digital cockpit displays, a strengthened fuselage, new composite spar, wide-chord blades that provide 500 lbs more lift than the UH-60L blade, as well as more powerful engines. U.S. Army Photo Above: A crew chief with Combat Aviation Brigade, 1st Infantry Division, watches his aircraft as it shuts down on Camp Taji Airfield March 30. Bridgehead Sentinel 1st Sustainment Brigade deploys to Kuwait Keeping up with the 1st Division Third deployment supporting Operation Iraqi Freedom By Jordan Chapman 1st ID Public Affairs/Duty First! Magazine Standing at attention and ready for what may come, the Soldiers of the 1st Sustainment Brigade cased their colors during a deployment ceremony in King Field House March 15 before they begin their unit’s third deployment in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom. Lead by 1st Sustainment Brigade Commander COL Donnie Walker Jr. and CSM Miguel Rivera, each “Durable” Soldier will have a part in driving their unit to success, which is to act as the lead brigade in Kuwait for the responsible drawdown of coalition forces in Iraq. Such a task has not been taken lightly. Sustainment Soldiers have been in and out of the Battle Command Training Center (BCTC) since before the beginning of the year to be sure every scenario is covered and planned for, to train each Soldier to the highest level of competence and to train in an environment that is identical to the area they will be deploying to. “I’m operating out of Kuwait U.S. Army Photo with transportation missions supporting the entire theatre,” Walker said, explaining that during the training, his Soldiers also were able to develop personal and working relationships with units they will be supporting while downrange, — BG David Petersen, Deputy Commanding General the 224th Sustain- of the 1st Inf Div–Rear and Fort Riley, salutes ment Brigade, the flag during the National Anthem during the Army National start of the 1st Sustainment Brigade deployment Guard, out of ceremony held in King Field House March 15. Riverside, Calif., the 103rd Sustaintant,” Walker emphasized during ment Brigade, out of Des Moines, the ceremony, before which he Iowa, and a mobile support noted that he and his Soldiers also battalion out of New Jersey, who will be supporting the surge into were present during the exercise Afghanistan and preparing for the to understand how operations will start of Operation New Dawn. work when they arrive in theatre. “It is a lot of behind the scenes work that a lot of people don’t read about, but it is very impor- ‘Dragon’ Brigade Soldiers Begin Their Return Home By Stephanie Hoff, Duty First! Magazine U.S. Army Photo U.S. Army Photo Headquarters (DEPLOYED) In January 2010 the Big Red One headquarters saw its first deployment to Iraq since its 2003 deployment in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom. Soldiers from the Headquarters and Headquarters Battalion were formally sent off in December 2009 from Fort Riley, KS to Iraq. See the “Letter from the CG” in this issue for the most current update from Headquarters. 1st Heavy Brigade Combat Team On May 25, the 1st HBCT bid farewell to their former commander, and welcomed a new commanding officer, Col. Eric Welsh. Col. Welsh will lead the Brigade as it now prepares for the new role of an advice-andassist brigade during its next deployment. 2nd Heavy Brigade Combat Team Soldiers of the 1st Infantry Division “Dagger” Brigade welcomed Col. Paul Calvert as their new commander June 4 on Custer Hill Parade Field. Outgoing commander, Col. Joseph Martin, commanded the Brigade during their last deployment to Iraq from 2008-2009. The Dagger Brigade is currently preparing for their next deployment. 3rd Infantry Brigade Combat Team Since its move to Fort Knox, KY, 3rd Brigade has been training very hard, undergoing numerous training exercises in preparation for their next deployment. 4th Infantry Brigade Combat Team (DEPLOYED) The 4th IBCT officially deployed to Northern Iraq in September 2009 for 12 months. The “Dragon” Brigade has been tasked with advising and assisting the Iraqi security forces by leading and helping them carry out missions themselves. The 4th IBCT is schedule to return to Fort Riley in August of 2010. 4th IBCT is currently in the process of redeploying to Fort Riley, see “Dragon Brigade” article, this issue, for details. 1st Combat Aviation Brigade The Combat Aviation Brigade deployed to Iraq March 2, 2010, based at Camp Taji, to assist in ushering out Operation Iraqi Freedom and be present to insure Operation New Dawn begins and is moving forward come Sept. 1. At that time, OND will replace the previous OIF campaign. 1st Sustainment Brigade Deployed to Kuwait in March 15, 2010 in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom. Approximately 300 Soldiers of the 2/16th Inf Reg, 4th IBCT, 1st Inf Div were welcomed home during a Redeployment Ceremony, May 23 at Fort Riley. Approximately 150 Soldiers of the 4th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division, returned to Fort Riley in a redeployment ceremony April 26. The Soldiers were comprised of companies from the 2nd Battalion, 16th Infantry Regiment, and elements of the “Dragon” Brigade’s advance party. The “Dragon” brigade deployed to Iraq in September 2009 and assumed control of the Salah ad Din Province in early October; a location approximately the size of New Jersey. While deployed, the unit’s primary mission was the responsible drawdown of U.S. forces out of Iraq through partnered efforts with the 4th Iraqi Army Division, the U.S. State Department Provin- Summer 2010 3rd IBCT Soldiers Train for Expert Field Medical Badge Soldiers of Battery B, 2/32nd Field FA, 4th IBCT, 1st Inf Div rocked the ground during a live-fire exercise at COB Speicher, May 28. This was the second time the “Proud Americans” battalion fired artillery in a combat zone since Vietnam. cial Reconstruction Team and the provincial government. Currently, there are 100,000 service members deployed to Iraq and this is scheduled to decrease to 50,000. The brigade also has focused efforts on anti-corruption measures at Bayji Oil Refinery, reconstruction efforts for the Samarra Golden Mosque and joint ventures with Tikrit University and the Tikrit Women’s College. Since October 2009, the brigade has submitted 159 projects to improve local infrastructure and boost the local economy, spending more than $18 million to support the people in the Salah ad Din Province. In many situations, U.S. funds have been matched with Iraqi funds. The brigade previously deployed to Iraq in 2007. Forty percent of the brigade’s Soldiers are preparing to complete their second tour with the unit. “Unlearning skills and adjusting themselves to a post-surge, less violent Iraq has been an adjustment for most Soldiers,” said Col. Henry Arnold III, brigade commander, in a March 2010 video teleconference. “Soldiers returning to Iraq can observe first-hand the improvements to the country’s economy and security forces.” “The war has been won and the Dragon Brigade has played an essential part in setting the condition for a successful transition of U.S. forces out of Iraq.” Arnold added. By Sgt. John Zumer 3rd BCT U.S. Army Photo Above: Soldiers prepared to evacuate a casualty by litter. Recent Expert Field Medical Badge training on Fort Knox, hosted by the 201st Brigade Support Battalion, provided Soldiers with an opportunity to showcase their talents. If the enthusiasm evident in the training held March 22-24 is any indication, many Soldiers will be prepared to shine when their time to perform arrives. The EFMB is an honor bestowed on worthy Soldiers in the medical field. Just as the Expert Infantryman Badge tests a Soldier’s proficiency in infantry skills, the EFMB tests the proficiency of medical personnel, according to Sgt. Daniel Shirley, who served as an instructor during the three-day training exercise. 3 OPERATION WOLFHOUND Bandido Charlie Association Provides Post Traumatic Stress Disorder Service Dogs For Veterans By Ken Kostich II Operation Wolfhound is a new program that provides dogs specifically bred to be service dogs, for Veterans with a multitude of ailments, most importantly PTSD. While the VA is supporting this program, private breeders are financing it in total. This program is being started by a young lady and her husband, both Veterans, both 100% disabled, who are doing some of the breeding and helping with training and securing breeding commitments from breeders around the country. The dogs are trained for “emotional support” and as Psychiatric (PTSD) Service dogs. The animals used in this program are the Borzoi (aka Russian Wolf Hound) and the Belgian Sheep Dog. Both breeds are known for their ability to operate independently. The breeders are only using specific “bloodlines” of animals to insure that they are as problem-free as possible. The animal donations come from ethical breeders and are carefully screened for health, trainability, and temperament. This is to insure that the dog’s bloodlines do not have a history of cancer, hip dysplasia and the myriad of other problems that are common with larger dogs. And now, the part you have been waiting for. The dogs are free to any qualified Veteran. A Veteran is considered qualified as long as his VA or VET Center PTSD counselor thinks it would benefit him/her and they are capable of the dog’s care or have help caring for the animal. The breeders do welcome contact from the vets if they would like to talk - especially about their dogs. The dogs are transported, in many cases, by Operation Roger or Pilots N Paws without cost to the Veteran. In many instances, arrangements have been made with selected veterinarians through the SPCA who offer discounted (30%) health care services if needed. One of the best benefits is that as Certified Service dogs, the animal can remain with you at all times the same as a “Seeing Eye” dog can remain with its master. That way, the dog is with you at all times, especially when you may need him most. As a matter of fact, it is critically important that the dog be with his master as much as possible so that the Veteran and the dog become co-dependent in each other’s comfort and welfare. I have seen the Borzoi in action and 4 it is an amazing animal. The Vets I have spoken with say their Service Dog is better than any med they have ever taken! If you have interest in this program, you may contact: Above: The pilot who helped deliver Bandit from Omaha to Tucson with his brother Gibson in the foreground, now with a former Marine (PTSD/TBI ) in Colorado. Ken Costich bandidocharlie6@gmail.com Or program originator, Alicia Miller admin@lundr.com . Frequently Asked Questions The basics; 1. The dogs are free of charge. 2. The dogs are available to any veteran with a councilors recommendation and the ability to care for the dog, or assistance in caring for the dog. 3. Although the dogs have been trained in specific service tasks, the veteran must agree to continue the dog’s training for a minimum of 6 months. 4. These dogs are NOT pets; they are dogs with a job (though having a good emotional attachment to the animal is necessary and they work for love and treats) 5. After the completion of a minimum of 6 months of training with the veteran, the dog will be registered with the IAADP. The annual renewal of that registration is $30 USD. Registration with the IAADP provides the veteran with an ID card for the animal, various free or discounted medications/ treatments (heart worm preventative, flea meds), discounted vet care all over the US and Canada and other very useful benefits. Coupons are available from IAMS for discounts on their food products. These coupons are only for service animals. 6. The owner must keep the dog clean, brushed and properly maintained. 7. The dogs should stay with their owner 24/7. They cannot do their job if they are left at home or stuck in a crate. 8. The dogs are covered by the same laws as seeing eye dogs; they are allowed to go everywhere with their owner and even fly in the cabin of the plane with their owner (though you do have to tell the airline ahead of time). Above: Ken Kostich with his service dog, Bandit. Why can’t you just get dogs from the pound? Although we would like to be able to take dogs in from the pound, not just any dog can be a psychiatric service animal. The dog must possess the ability for independent thought, must be self directed, must be protective without a hint of aggression, be a fairly quiet animal, and of a significant size. The animal also must be less than 4 years old, have a clean bill of health, not be prone to genetically based illnesses and be likely to live a long time. A person, who is vulnerable emotionally, cannot deal well with a chronic illness or early death of their service animal. The genetic history of dogs in the pound is generally unknown and unlike most Borzois, their bloodlines have not been screened and selected to be free of disease. Additionally Borzois have longer life spans than is typical for such large breeds. What is so special about the temperaments of these dogs? Borzoi are quiet, loyal and when well socialized (as are all of these dogs) are very gentle without being cowards. The most important trait of the dogs though, is their breed’s emotional independence and self-direction. These dogs do not blindly obey, which makes them a challenge to train, but it is that very trait that makes them such excellent psychiatric service dogs. A German Shepherd or similar working breed will panic if their owner panics and will frequently respond to an owners fear with aggression. They end up escalating the situation instead of soothing it. Basically, a borzoi is just about as likely to spontaneously play fetch, beg or roll over on command as a cat, but they do make up their own mind about any given situation and will respond as they have been trained to do. What does a psychiatric service dog do, and how does it specifically help veterans? These dogs are very effective in treating PTSD. They help reduce hyper-alertness because the veteran can rely on the dog’s superior senses to alert them to any threats or disturbances. They can and will wake the veteran from nightmares, soothe and ground the veteran experiencing a flashback or panic attack through deep pressure stimulation, nudges, leaning hugs. They can check a house for threats on command, help discern between hallucinations and reality. They can brace a veteran unsteady from medication or aid with walking by serving in place of a cane. The dogs will prevent random jostling by serving as a barrier between the veteran and other people. The dog can and will ‘watch your back’ to prevent people from coming up behind the veteran. The dogs can also do specialized tasks from bringing medication, to alerting a vet with hearing loss to phone calls or door knocks. The dogs can be trained to open doors, lift latches, get help, call 911, alert to seizures or even open a window. The dogs can even be trained to act badly on a secret signal so that the veteran can use the dog as an excuse to get out of a normally inescapable social situation. They can be trained for tasks to help with the challenges & frustrations of traumatic brain injury as well. Do you accept monetary donations? In a word—No! Although we may grow to a size in the future where such donations will become necessary, at the moment we are trying to avoid that complication for as long as possible. Right now members of the Borzoi Club of America donate the dogs and volunteers do the training and transportation. If these donations are no longer enough to keep up with the demand, we will begin accepting monetary donations. If you would like to donate a ride for a dog, or your expertise in training a dog, or help by donating goods or services, please contact us. We need people all over the country as we have veterans all over the country. We currently accept donations through the DAV or through Bandido Charlie’s Associations support organization. How do I get a dog if I am a veteran? Talk with your councilor. If they support you getting a Psychiatric Service Dog, then either they or you should contact us with a list of your specific needs. That’s it. I have a friend who is a veteran and needs a dog; can I get them one of yours? No. Obtaining and training a service dog is something they must commit to and is a highly personal choice that will impact their life for years to come. How long will it take to get a dog? As a rule of thumb, it takes two to four months. We rely on donations from breeders and trainers; rides donated by pilots and drivers and very rarely, breed a litter for ourselves. Because of all those factors, it takes time to organize everything. What kinds of training do the dogs have when they are placed? The dogs are given basic training, such as for a CGC certificate from the AKC, socialization with animals and people of all sorts, orientation to basic wheelchair manners and basic off lead training. The dogs are then trained for a minimum of 50 additional hours to do basic service tasks like brace, block, hand signals, pull up, wake and soothing stimulation. After that, the dog will be placed with the owner and they both will do an additional 6 months of training for that person’s specific needs and signals. Bridgehead Sentinel Rapid Fire Letter from the President LTG (Ret) Thomas G. Rhame President, Society of the First Infantry Division Fort Knox Chapter of the Society Any member who is interested in forming a Chapter of the Society in the Fort Knox, Kentucky area is asked to contact the Society. A packet of start-up information is available and the Society will provide every possible assistance. The principle reason for forming a Chapter in the Fort Knox area is to facilitate liaison and support with the 3rd Brigade, 1st Infantry Division, which is stationed at Fort Knox, KY. Society NY / Ft. Dix Branch Greetings to all of you. I sincerely hope that 2010 is working out to be a good year for you. I am pleased to report that the National Park Service has completed the renovation and cleaning of our Division Monument here in Washington, DC. The monument is now open for visitors. They did a good job of improving the drainage and cleaning of the stone and plaques on the monument. They installed a sidewalk that really helps the movement of people across the plot of ground in front of the monument. This sidewalk has greatly increased the attendance of tourists at our monument. I hope that if you visit Washington, DC, that you will take the time to visit our monument on 17th Street. We had a great service on Memorial Day at the monument. We had about 60 folks attend the service. We were blessed to have three World War II veterans of the Division attend. Our speaker this year was BG Richard Longo who served as the 1st Infantry Division Artillery commander during the deployment to Operation Iraqi Freedom II. It was a great opportunity to gather and pay our respects to those who have given their lives in service to our Division, our Army, and our country. The Division Reunion is scheduled to be held in San Antonio during the period 25 August to 29 August. It is really shaping up to be a great event. I hope all of you have made your reservations to attend. It will be a great event. As most of you know, our long-time Chairman of the Board of Trustees for the 1st Infantry Division Foundation, Stephen Row, passed away in February of this year. We will all miss Steve. We will always remember his support and dedication to the Division and the Foundation. Mr. James R. Stone III has graciously stepped forward to assume the position of Chairman of the Foundation. Please give Jim your support as he moves forward with the Foundation. For those of you who follow the education of the children of service members who died in the line of duty after September 10, 2001, you should look closely at the Department of Veterans Affairs Marine Gunnery Sergeant John David Fry Scholarship. Eligible children attending school may receive up to the highest public, in state undergraduate tuition and fees, plus a monthly living stipend and book allowance under the program. It is just wonderful to see the nation step up to take care of the children of the fallen. This scholarship is considered to be more comprehensive than what we currently provide under the DePuy Scholarship. Please read the article about this scholarship in this edition of the Sentinel. I had the honor of attending the funeral of LTG (ret) James F. Hollingsworth on May the 20th at Arlington National Cemetery. Gen Hollingsworth was a great warrior and veteran of our Division. It was truly sad to see DANGER 79 laid to rest. It was a great honor to represent all the veterans of the Division and to be able to salute his casket, bid him “Duty First,” and leave behind a patch of our Division. I just had the opportunity to read another book about the Soldiers of our Division in this current war. This is really a good book! They Fought for Each Other by Kelly Kennedy is really well written. All the Blue Spaders will love this one; it is about the men of C Company, 1-26 Infantry and their remarkable story of serving in Adhamiya, Iraq. If you have found yourself wondering about the stresses our Soldiers face in combat today, you should read this book. This is a story of brave men at war and a factual accounting of American Soldiers sacrifice in Iraq. One of the men in this unit was PFC Ross McGinnis who was awarded the Medal of Honor while serving with this unit. Thanks for listening, I hope you have a great summer. Join the NY/Ft. Dix Branch for their upcoming Summer brunch on 12 September 2010. Brunch will be at Sebastian’s Schnitzelhaus in Wrightstown, NJ at 10:30 am. The Ft. Dix Branch will also be present at the Kokomo, IN Vietnam Veterans Reunion from 17–19 September, 2010 with a locater list of 1st Div Vietnam veterans. To join the New York/Ft. Dix Branch of the Society or to learn more about their events, contact Antonio Maria at 717-583-0821 or black_lions66@yahoo.com. Vietnam veterans appreciation weekend at fort mifflin Historic Fort Mifflin in Philadelphia, PA is holding a Vietnam Veterans Appreciation Weekend from July 23-25, 2010. Vietnam-era weapons and equipment will be on display, as well as a Bob Hope Christmas show! BRO veterans, don’t miss the re-enactors and living history displays, including the D Troop (Air) 1/4 Cav 1st Infantry Division in Vietnam Historical Association. For more information about this event visit: http://fortmifflin.us or call 215-685-4167 For more information about the D Troop (Air) 1/4 Cav in Vietnam Historical Association, visit: http://vnquarterhorse.webs.com/ 40th anniversary of 1st ID’s return from vietnam at first division museum On August 21, 2010 the First Division Museum at Cantigny in Wheaton, IL is hosting a special commemoration of the 40th Anniversary of the 1st Infantry Division’s return from Vietnam. Part of the Museum’s 50th Anniversary celebration, the Museum will have re-enactors, Vietnam-era historic vehicle displays, a memorial service, and unveiling of the Museum’s newly restored UH-1 “Huey” helicopter. Children’s activities will also be available, including a wooden helicopter craft and live jungle animals. Visit www.FirstDivisionMuseum.org for details. McCormick Foundation Makes a Generous $250,000 Grant to the Society! The McCormick Foundation Board of Directors presented a generous grant of $250,000 to Society of the First Infantry Division President, Thomas Rhame, during the Danger 6/7 conference, hosted by the First Division Museum at Cantigny on June 6, 2010. See article on the Museum page in this issue for more information about the Danger 6/7 Conference. “WilLIE AND JOE” CARTOONIST BILL MAULDIN HONORED WITH STAMP On March 31, 2010 the U.S. Postal Service unveiled a new commemorative stamp in honor of World War II cartoonist, Bill Mauldin. Mauldin was well-known for his “Willie and Joe” cartoons, featured in publications such as “Stars and Stripes.” Combat aviation brigade starts new blog while deployed to iraq The Combat Aviation Brigade, 1st Infantry Division has started a new online blog to document their current deployment to Iraq! The Demon Brigade’s blog (a sort of online journal) is updated by the Brigade’s PAO, and shares personal stories and daily life of a CAB soldier while deployed to Iraq. Check out the CAB’s blog site at: http://demondeployment.blogspot.com/ L–R: McCormick Foundation Board members John Madigan, Dennis Fitzsimons, Scott Smith, Don Wycliff, Society President Thomas Rhame, and McCormick Foundation CEO David Hiller. Summer 2010 5 REFORGER II Continued from Page 1 U.S. Army Photo U.S. Army Photo Members of the 9th Engr. Bn., 7th Engr. Bde. secure the moorings on the just-assembled M4T6 mobile assault bridge in the highlight action of the field exercise “Certain Thrust” part of the NATO training exercise REFORGER II. Armored elements from the 1st Inf. Div., Fort Riley, Kansas, rumble across an Army Corps of Engineers’ assault bridge in the first highlight action of exercise “Certain Thrust,” a part of NATO exercise REFORGER II. The major river crossing occurred on 19 October 70 on the Main River between Rossstadt and Dippach. size just prior to reaching their objective. Their advance ground to a dead halt. But the Aggressors who had stopped the 28th Infantry were in for a surprise. In the midst of their contact with the Black Lions, the Panzers were hit from behind. The 1st Battalion, 63rd Armor swooped down from the north, bringing fire upon the Aggressor’s flank and rear, the 1st Brigade’s Armor unit continued their sweep through the enemy’s rear, eventually overrunning an Orange artillery unit and two battalion headquarters, the key to the Armor’s use of the terrain. Rather than try to fight through the ravines and deep woods, they skirted the objective, using instead a well-developed network of roads to the north. completed their circle of the 1st Brigade’s rear, they uknowingly plunged into the heart of the Brigade’s positions. But the Devil’s Brigade, thinking the Panzers were still on the attack, were waiting. As the Aggressors moved down a road, the 2nd Battalion, 16th Infantry ambushed them from concealed positions on both sides of the highway. Flanked on both sides with no room to turn around, the Panzers continued their advance. The 1st Battalion, 63rd Armor was ready to meet the Panzers head on. With enemy forces surrounding them on three sides, the Aggressors tried to retreat back up the road which they came. They now found that route also closed off by the four tanks that had earlier infiltrated the Panzer column. The Orange Forces, cut off from their rear, split up into small groups; Object Riley remained securely in friendly hands. In three days, the 1st Infantry Division had pushed the enemy forces back more than 50 miles. They had captured two major objectives and repulsed a fierce counterattack. The Aggressors were running out of room in which to operate. Slowly but surely they found themselves forced back toward Orangeland, the country from which the invasion had come. It would take two more days and some intense combat, but the final objective, Junction City, was just over the horizon. 2nd Brigade Joins the Fight The harassment of the enemy’s rear was anything but over. The 2nd Brigade, which had been held in the Division’s reserve through the first day’s operations, was now brought forward. Led by the 1st Battalion, 18th Infantry Regiment, the 2nd Brigade moved east along a corridor dubbed the Santa Fe Trail, in an attempt to pull an end run around the Aggressor’s north flank. The 1st Battalion, 2nd Infantry conducted an air mobile assault deep behind enemy lines just east of the town of Michelau. They secured the bridge that dominated access to the town and moved west to link up with the advancing 18th Infantry. While moving through Michelau, the 2nd Infantry Regiment ran into an Aggressor cavalry troop. While the two units engaged one another, the 18th Infantry moved in from the west, sandwiching the enemy. With this last obstacle removed, the 2nd Brigade continued down the Sante Fe Trail until they too reached the ridgeline that was the day’s target, Objec- 6 tive Abilene. There they unleashed their 2nd Battalion, 63rd Armor in the Aggressor’s rear. This plunge by the 2nd Brigade turned the enemy’s flank, enabling the 1st Brigade to clear the area, and with the help of the 3rd Brigade along the southern flank, drive the Orange Forces from the high ground. Later in the evening, the 1st Squadron, 4th Cavalry rejoined the 1st Infantry Division from their mission of screening for the VII Corps. Positioned at both the north and south boundaries of the Big Red One’s area of operations, they assumed the responsibility of preventing Aggressor units from sliding in and hitting the division from its flanks. With the highlands northeast of Bamberg secured, the 1st Infantry Division turned its eyes to the east, upon the city of Bayreuth and Objective Riley. D-Day Plus Two Advancing towards Objective Riley, the 1st Brigade came under attack from a column of Panzers. During the engagement however, the Panzers were surprised by the 4th Battalion, 63rd Armor, part of the Division reserve. The 4th Battalion, 63rd Armor was moving east on the southern flank of the division sector when they hit the rear of the Panzer column. Twentynine of the 31 German tanks fell to the guns of the American tanks. Panzers Attack Falling back to the north, the Panzers hit the positions of the 1st Battalion, 28th Infantry (at that time in brigade reserve). Although moving administratively, the enemy column pushed on to escape friendly positions. They circled to the northeast in an attempt to avoid the 1st Brigade’s war. Unbeknownst to the Aggressors, four tanks attached to the 28th Infantry, unaware of their status, had fallen into the Panzer column. As the Aggressors D-Day Plus Three and Four Objective Riley seemed an excellent jumping off point for the final assault on Objective Junction City, but the weather and administrative problems were to prove otherwise. Freezing rain and snow forced cancellation of several crucial air mobile exercises. The 1st Brigade, which had borne the brunt of the fighting the first three days of the exercise, was placed in reserve, and the 3rd Brigade moved up to assume Area of Operations map indicating the pre-positioned site where the 1st Infantry Division began FTX Certain Thrust. D-Day Plus Three & Four—Weather and the Berlin-Nurnberg Autobahn were obstacles to be overcome on the fourth day of the exercise. Objective Junction City was the target of the day. responsibility for the Division’s south flank. 1st Brigade, however, left the front lines in style. Their 1st Battalion, 28th Infantry surprised a full company from the 35th Panzers eating breakfast in a gasthaus (a small, German Inn or Tavern) in the small town of Elbersberg. The 2nd Brigade continued to maintain the Division’s north flank. They, with the 3rd Brigade, moved through the rain and snow to the east and Objective Junction City. The Division’s advance was further hindered by administrative delays crossing the Berlin-Nurnberg Autobahn and the railroad tracks just beyond. fight of the campaign. The 2nd Battalion, 63rd Armor’s advance was stopped in its tracks. The situation in Creussen had reached an impasse. Both sides moved to break the deadlock, but the 1st Infantry Division proved faster. They detached the 1st Battalion, 63rd Armor from the 1st Brigade and rushed them to the Aggressor’s north flank. This move forced the Aggressors to redeploy, relieving some of the pressure on the 2nd Battalion, 63rd Armor. They fought their way out of town, but it took the Blue Forces until 7:00 the next morning to do so. The Attack, Well Along Armor Units Bottled Up It was mid-afternoon by the time the 2nd Brigade’s 2nd Battalion, 63rd Armor reached the town of Creussen. They moved into town but found themselves suddenly bottled up by a battalion from the 35th Panzers. Movement within the town proved impossible, so the two battalions slugged it out in what proved to be the heaviest fire- By this time, the attack on the final target, Objective Junction City, was well under way. The 1st Battalion, 63rd Armor, still attached to the 2nd Brigade, continued along the Aggressors’ north flank. This flanking fire forced the Orangeland Aggressors to retreat, and the 2nd Brigade occupied the upper two-thirds of Objective Junction Continued on next page… Bridgehead Sentinel …Continued from previous page City. The 3rd Brigade followed suit, pushing the 3rd Infantry Division Aggressors out of their sector of the Objective. 1st Brigade then refreshed after their day in the rear, was again brought forward, this time to secure the small and gnarled hill, code named Objective Little Big Horn. The 1st Battalion, 28th Infantry led the strike but was soon slowed down by stubborn resistance. Elements of the 2nd Battalion, 16th Infantry bypassed the Black Lions and did what the Big Red One had done successfully so many times in the past five days—outflanked the enemy from the north and drove him from the objective. Aggressor Retreat The Aggressor forces were in total disarray. Their defenses had crumbled sooner than expected due to the sharp flanking thrusts of the Big Red One armor. The friendly Blue command decided to go for the jugular. They called to bring the 4th Battalion, 63rd Armor up from Division reserve and sent them barreling through a weak spot in the Aggressors’ defenses. Momentum carried them right into the Headquarters of the 35th Panzer Grenadier Brigade. With so much damage done behind their lines, the Aggressors could not mount the expected counterattack and retreated to Orangeland. Colonel Fritz Herger, the Panzer Commander, conceded he had been “severely punished and totally enveloped by the 1st Infantry Division.” From west of Bamberg to east of Bayreuth, more than 70 miles had been taken in less than five days. With “casualties” that were termed light to moderate, how was it done? Major General Robert R. Linvill based his tactics on the armor theory of envelopment. Rather than the more traditional infantry attack in which the units attack on line, taking every hill, holding every objective, the Big Red One Commanding General searched out the weak spots in the enemy defenses and poured everything available into it. Enemy positions were enveloped and taken from the rear. Although such tactics make control of friendly units extremely difficult, they pay the high return of throwing the enemy into complete disorganization. The key to this tactic is surprise, and often this surprise was made possible by the use of a second theory: There is no terrain over which armor and mechanized troops cannot go. This added another dimension to the tactics of the 1st Infantry Division. On more than one occasion, Aggressor forces found themselves pinned down because they had assumed that the terrain made attack from a given direction impossible. General Linvill summed it up. “It was a matter of initiative. Because our troops looked hard enough, they found passage for their tanks and trucks. This is what gave them the winning edge.” After the end of FTX Certain Thrust, a live-fire exercise was held between October 24-28 at the Grafenwohr training grounds. Following the live-fire exercises, heavy equipment was returned to depots for cleaning and storage and put back in the pre-positioned areas for the next REFORGER. First Engineer Battalion A Memorial and a Reunion On May 15, 2010, a memorial was dedicated to LTC Joe Kiernan and LTC Rod Smith at Milford Lake’s Army recreation area, west of Fort Riley. Under cloudy skies and intermittent rain, the Rear detachment of the First Engineer Battalion gathered to hear COL Eric Wesley, CO of the First Heavy Brigade Combat Team praise the memory of LTC Kiernan, the First Engineer Battalion Commander, and LTC Smith, the Battalion XO (who was about to take command of the battalion), were both killed in a tragic helicopter crash on June 3, 1967, in Vietnam. COL Wesley spoke about the legacy of leadership and achievement of both officers, and exhorted soldiers to honor that legacy by striving for excellence. LTC (Ret) Larry Blair, who served as Charlie Company Commander under Kiernan and Smith, spoke of the lives and careers of both, and related tales LTC (Ret) Larry Blair, Kiernan’s former Company Commander, at the dedication of the Recreation Area on May 15, 2010. of their innovative and dynamic leadership in Vietnam. Not only did the “DIEHARD” engineers conduct the usual missions of road, bridge, airfieldz, and vertical construction, mine and boobytrap clearing, and demolitions, but the First Engineers were the first to take bulldozers into the jungle with the infantry; float its own “Kiernan’s Navy”—pontoon rafts with searchlights and quad 50-caliber machine guns; and send engineer teams down 100-foot ladders under hovering CH-47 helicopters to cut landing zones in the jungle. Blair praised the leadership and example of LTC Kiernan and Smith, and recalled the stunning effect on Winning Photos from the First Division Museum’s 1st Division Photo Contest See the Museum page for details on these winning photos 1st Place Big Red One Patch Changed to Subdued Pattern During REFORGER II By Gordon Longbach Lieutenant Colonel (Ret) Bn XO, 8/6 FA in VN Bn XO, 1/5 FA, Ft. Riley When the Division came to Ft. Riley in April, 1970, General DePuy was asked if the “Red” on the BRO patch was to stay red, or go to black. Of course he said it would stay red. When we arrived in Germany, we found that the 3rd Brigade had already subdued their patch to black. General Westmoreland, seeing this, told the Division CG to, “Get his Division in the same uniform!” When we came home to Fort Riley, the powers that be had sewing machines, and ladies set up in all the gyms, and we took our uniforms in unit-byunit, to go black! P.S. On our return to Ft. Riley our C141 lost its beacon signal Summer 2010 morale when they were killed. A monument and bronze plaque were unveiled at the entrance to the marina area, as a permanent tribute. REUNION coming up! The Veterans of the First Engineer Combat Battalion will hold its annual reunion at the Holiday Inn Patriot in Williamsburg, Virginia September 19-21, 2010. Come and meet your old buddies or make new friends! All ranks and eras welcome! Make hotel reservations by calling 1-757-565-2600. For information, call SGM Bob Brink at 262-639-4405, or rbrink1@ wi.rr.com. Left: Photo by Specialist st Michael Griffiths of the 1 th Battalion, 6 Field Artillery Regiment, 3rd Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 1st Division of a night fire exercise at Goshta, Afghanistan. 2nd Place l Right: Photo by Lieutenant Colone ff, Sta of Shawn Boland, Assistant Chief nG1, Task Force Danger U.S. Divisio San m fro is and South, Basrah, Iraq. Bol Iraq. Antonio, Texas. Door gunner in Current version of the subdued 1st Division patch with a black ‘1’ for use in combat. over the Atlantic Ocean-the navigator used his sextant to “shoot the stars” to get us in to Dover Air Force Base. The Air Force deadlined the plane and we sat around in a gym all day until the Air Force found another plane to get us home. 3rd Place Left: Photo by Captain Christian Durham, Commander, B Company, 2nd Battalion, 16th Infantry Regiment, 4th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 1st Division. A “Brown Out” in Iraq. 7 Invasion of Sicily An Exerpt from One More Hill, by Franklyn A. Johnson See the BRO Books section on page 14 for more details about this book. The night before D-Day it would seem that the enemy stronghold may never be captured or even landed upon, for Sicily’s ring of coastal forts is defended by an even stronger force than gun-fire, God’s stormy sea. At midnight billowing waves flash white with spray before a vicious southwester; by 0245 when advance parties begin slipping into Gela, it has subsided only slightly and hundreds of newly assembled transports, amphibious landing craft, and supporting warships of all sizes, shapes, and cargoes still buck dangerously at anchor. This great panorama of naval might, its British and American ensigns flapping wildly before the wind, stretches to the horizon and beyond. Silver barrage balloons tug violently at captive cables from each vessel. The nerve center of this fleet is the famous Ancon, a five-milliondollar converted passenger freighter, now equipped with radio and telephone so as to concentrate communication and command functions. From here the ranking admirals and generals direct their men. To the northward, the rising sky of dawn reveals the level, hazy plain of Gela, partially obscured by smoke, dust, and flaming bursts of shell fire, this first D-Day scene is augmented by the beautiful yet awesome arcs of 16-inch naval gunfire soaring inland; some are solid flame, some intermittent, but all are dynamic and graceful as they lace the sky. Each of these fiery projectiles from the battlewagon cannon of large caliber lands and expands into an orange explosion, signaling the destruction of a shoreline emplacement. This we call TOT or Time on Target, that is, blanketing an area target by saturation rather than aimed fire on pinpoint objectives. The intermittent fire, like a curved series of dots and dashes spelling out destruction as in Morse code, spits from the automatic weapons, the Oerlikon deck guns, the 50-caliber machine guns, and antiaircraft cannon, which are firing on specific targets – probably soldiers known to be in certain emplacements. Dramatically, as the remnants of the leading wave of assault troops in this great show swarms in toward the shore, the radio crackles from the Ancon the first communiqué to the world from Allied Force Headquarters (AFHq) that the first assault upon the continent of the Festung Europa has begun. To which a GI ironically adds, “The First Infantry Division, supported by the Allied Expeditionary Forces, is landing in Sicily.” It is H-Hour on D-Day. 8 Quickly, too quickly, it is our turn, and the APA moves in a mile or so from our destination, Green Beach. This sector of the shore, from which we shall proceed to the 18th Infantry Regiment, is plainly marked by a large green panel of canvas. Our group clambers heavily down the rope nets from the deck of the APA into a shuttling landing craft; this is no easy task with 90 pounds of pack on your back, plus dispatch cases, map cases, carbines or rifles, ammo, musette bags, home-rigged hunting knives, and all the other impedimenta of invasion clinging around your neck. I am the last man aboard, and as I half fall, half jump, onto the deck, a plane flies over. Some wishful thinker among the boys shouts, “Look, it’s a Spitfire!” His cry dies in a groan as the JU-88 drops its load among the assault boats, and that soldier is wrathfully and obscenely referred to an oculist. As if the bombing were a signal, the enemy shows his hand. The shore guns and more aircraft take the juicy targets in the bay under fire. While LCI’s, LCT’s, LCVP’s, and DUKW’s (“Ducks”) bounce in disorganized masses toward the beach, a fleet of 14 JU-88’s and high-caliber inland artillery begin the attempt to destroy the bridge of ships and waves of assault teams that will hit southern Sicily. Beginning an oftrepeated routine, the white-caps swamp a few small boats, and two or three shells land among the craft disgorging men near the shoreline. Paraphernalia, oil smoke, and flesh sail high into the air. This is Green Beach. As we speed in toward the shore in a succeeding wave, a 500-pound bomb crashes into the open hold of an APA only a hundred yards to starboard. Several sailors are blown right off the deck, and greasy flames and clouds of black smoke swirl upward. 2LT Hugh “Hank” Hudson and I huddle on the deck, dropping behind our pachydermous bedrolls for protection against flying metal. The barrage balloons float free. Our LCI plunges through the chaos all around us and draws to within a hundred yards of Green Beach, which is strewn with equipment, smashed Italian emplacements, and a few bodies sprawled among the shell-holes. A smoking landing barge lies at the water’s edge; skeletonized rubble, once a fighter plane from Niscemi’s Ponte Olivo Airdrome, perches atop a beachside ridge. While riflemen eagerly dig in among the sand dunes, M.P.’s and beachmasters hustle traffic inland. Much of this traffic includes men who have had to swim or wade to shore holding rifles overhead, and the wounded carried ashore by their fellows. With a grating skid, our LCI comes to rest on a sandbar. Still seventy-five yards from solid Italian earth, we are a sitting target for enemy on shore to take potshots at. We yell with gusto to a passing Duck, our front ramps lower, and we transfer. The amphibious vehicle wallows through the surf and drives up on the sand. At last we are on European soil. It is no time to admire the scenery, for shells still explode and planes still strafe on Green Beach. My orders from the combat team commander were to get the men to the far shore, then proceed inland, reporting personally to him at the C.P. of Combat Team 18 as soon as possible. Although no one on Green Beach knows the whereabouts of my regiment, it is supposed to have advanced a few hundred yards and is preparing for an assault by the Axis infantry. The important thing right now is to get away from the vital target beach, and so, leaving the excess baggage, our long column begins hiking straight inland. Passing a P.O.W. cage, I catch a glimpse of John Hoy guarding some prisoners, but we have time only for a quick exchange of greetings. Hank brings up the rear of the long column while Sergeant Young accompanies me at the head. We do not know quite where we are going or what we shall find, and I try to appear confident. But inside I am lonely and apprehensive. Hank and our file of soldiers pass through a chaotic jam of landed vehicles, unloaded supplies and a rising tent hospital; then cross the coastal ridge and descent onto the Plain of Gela. This seems to be one vast wheat field, welltended but deserted. By the time we have traversed another series of round-tops, our tight little column has become an elongated snake of two hundred weary men. Our well-traveled path leads us through a culvert under a single railroad track and through more small knolls, behind which some bewildered-looking Division artillerymen are setting up their howitzers. Although they have not seen the 18th, it is not hard to guess that we are going in the right direction, for the distance, perhaps two miles ahead, firing can be heard. As we move off toward it, the GI’s looks indicate what they think of this damn fool second lieutenant. Suddenly we top a hill and look down upon a beautiful panorama. Orchards and fertile green dot the gentle slopes, across which, our maps tell us, winds the GelaVittorio highway parallel to the coast. Converging with it to our left is the poplar-lined road to Niscemi ten miles inland, while three miles up the beach the roofs of Gela are still being shelled by our battlewagons. On the northwest horizon beyond the Plain of Gela, a rugged mountain range, quite majestic– and deadly – reflects the noontime sunshine. The empty countryside seems much too peaceful as I reach the highway and halt our column. Perhaps four miles straight ahead I can see several tanks coming Above: Map of the 1st Division landing in Gela, Sicily. U.S. Army Photo Above: Various operations on the beach at Licata, Sicily, as American soldiers prepare to move inland. July 1943. this way. They look familiar, and I express surprise that our armor has advanced so far inland, as I hand the glasses to Hank. Then a delayed reflex hits me and I grab the glasses back for another look. Yes, they are! Those tanks are the enemy’s and they’re coming our way – and fast! And here we are, with nothing larger than a rifle in a crowd of two hundred rearechelon infantrymen. Just as I see the Axis Tanks, the 18th C.P., concealed in a ravine five hundred yards ahead of us, also excitedly spots them. Leaving Young and the column, I crawl up to report to CPT George R. Jones, and get “the big picture” from the S-2. While the tanks halt briefly, he gives me all the late poop. As of noon Allied forces have established beachheads all along the south-central coast of Sicily; that of the First Division extends eastward from Gela about six miles. It has smashed inland against moderate opposition about four miles, and the next objectives are Niscemi and the Ponte Olivo Airdrome, whose planes continue to harass the landing beaches. Mainly due to them, no heavy equipment, either for offensive or defensive use, has yet landed except a very few light artillery pieces, 105-mm howitzers. No one has seen any elements of the Antitank Company; but the rest of the 18th has halted and dug in a defensive position a few hundred yards beyond the Gela-Vittorio road. As usual, the enemy location and strength is unknown, but with the tanks’ appearance, we are finding out a little about his armor. What we see we do not like. I crawl back to the road, and tell the men to scatter in the gullies and ditches on the beach side of the highway. At 1230 twelve German Mark IV and Italian tanks are approaching, firing every few hundred feet. Gradually they veer slightly to our left, toward Green Beach. By 1300 there are twentytwo, only a thousand yards away; by 1330 the number is fifty, and we are witnessing the greatest attack by German armor since El Guettar. It is apparent that the tank commander’s plan is to cut the road to Gela, hit the beach, and disrupt landings there, and then turn upon us who are ashore. The First Division can then be chewed up in leisurely fashion and, with only a small expenditure by the enemy, the Allies’ largest landing on the island will have been smashed. From my ditch, it looks as though things are rough all over– but especially just east of Gela. Apparently they look a whole lot worse from the C.P. of C.T. 18, for suddenly a disorganized mob with new regimental commander, Colonel Smith, in the van charges over the hill just in front of us. The appearance is quite ludicrous for, leaving a dug-in defensive position in a mad rush, they are carrying armloads of blankets, shovels, binoculars, and weapons in what seems like complete disorder. And the tanks are still nearly eight hundred fifty yards away and clanking toward Green Beach, not directly toward us. A speeding communications sergeant explains that over a hundred armored vehicles are out front attempting to surround and isolate the regiment. As the Headquarters Company crosses the road and disappears into a grove of bamboo, a gun speaks. It is a hidden American 105 in the rear of the 18th position across the road. This small howitzer, unnoticed in a corner of the olive orchard in front of me, begins to bang away point blank at Continued on next page… Bridgehead Sentinel …Continued From Previous Page the leading tank, which is getting close to the road seven hundred yards away. At first the tank evidently cannot find their leader’s assailant, but soon shells and machine gun slugs are spraying the landscape all around us. Meanwhile German and Italian infantry are backing up the armored attack by an assault on our rifle companies at the front of the olive grove. Smoke and dust rise above the scrubby trees. It is about this time that a staff officer asks General “Terrible Terry” Allen, watching on a knoll behind us, whether he will order a retreat to the beach. He roars back with a history-making shout, “Retreat? Hell no, they haven’t overrun our artillery yet!” And Allen, pistol in hand, prepares to lead the counterattack against men and armor. For the Gela beachhead hangs in the balance. Only one 105 is ashore, the outfit’s back is to the Mediterranean, and that leading German tank, followed by tens of others, is about to cut all lateral communications and then stab through to the sandy beach itself. This must be the crucial battle of all Sicily. Just at the darkest moment, the 105 gets lucky hits on three of the tanks. As they flame brightly the last round of 105 ammo is Continued on page 18… Five “Old Guys” B Co 1/26 Inf 1968-69 Reunion th By Patrick Guy The title of this article expresses what most American’s would say when viewing the accompanying picture. However, they would be wrong. The men pictured are five of the platoon sergeants from Bravo Company; 1/26, Vietnam, 1968—1969. These men along with twentyfive of their comrades gathered in Fort Scott, Kansas recently to celebrate the 40th anniversary of their tour of duty. These men along with others, led our troops in one of the most unpopular wars of modern time. Yet to a man, each is still as proud of his service to his country today as he was 40 years ago. This reunion also reunited the Company Commander, Bill Hoover, with 5 of his subordinate officers—who took the opportunity to toast each other with a “flaming Blue Spader” drink supplied by Sgt. Hershley. For the uninformed that means drinking flaming liquor while challenging your comrades “to do better in the battle against evil.” Members of the 1st MP Co who served during 1964 – 1966 held their annual reunion in September 2009. The 2009 reunion was held in Junction City/Fort Riley, KS where most of them began their service with the Big Red One. A tour of the post was conducted for the members and guests and lunch was served at the “dining facility” at Custer Hill (no longer a mess hall). It was an interesting experience given all the changes that have occurred at the post since they left in 1965. Main Post is pretty much like it was back then. The 2010 reunion will be held in San Antonio, TX at the Society of the First Infantry Division reunion. For information contact Ed Czubernat at (708) 301-5588 or e-mail Ed at e.czubernat@ comcast.net. Summer 2010 Tom Danca, a private, attending from Waltham, Massachusetts was heard to say “leave it to a bunch of officers to try and drink the ‘hootch’ before it is cooked.” As the main banquet speaker MAJ (Ret.) Hoover went on to tell the veterans how proud he was to have lead them in battle, achieving records in enemy killed and captured. Fortunately, for the “grunts” who served under West Point graduate, Major Hoover, affectionly nicknamed the “Pink Panther” Major Doug “Moose” Archibald (ret.) reminded all the attendees it was the men that did the heavy lifting not the leadership of the Company. All such comments were and are meant in the familiarity of the “Band of Brothers” only men who have serve in combat share. On a lighter note, Dr. Horst Mehner entranced the men and their wives with tales from his medical days; while FO Lt. Ron Harper reminded the men of the times when he got the grid coordinates “just a bit off.” The biggest surprise of the night came from Judge Virgil Black (Major, ret.), when he presented the Pink Panther with a hunting knife the Panther had lent him 40 years ago as a young company commander. The guest of honor of the reunion was the widow of Capitan Russell Reinel (Mrs. Patty McGarvey) who died in combat on February 5, 1969. The Friday night reunion Fish Fry was hosted by the Thomas Tuggle family on their farm just north of Ft. Scott; whereas Specialist Richard “Donkey” Daniels said, “the coyotes run wild and the farmers even wilder.” The Josh (Pineapple) Chois traveled from Hawaii; brought pineapples as their contribution to the regional door prize theme. Cheese was of course brought from Wisconsin by Dennis Rockwell. The golf tournament was won Bobby Neathery of Baker, Louisiana with a score of 4 under par. The next Vietnam Bravo Company reunion is scheduled for 2014 in Ft. Scott. 1st Military Police Co 1964-66 Reunion By Ed Czubernat Above: Members of the 1st MP Co who served between 1964 and 1966 pose for their group picture in front of the old 1st MP Co barracks at Main Post, Fort Riley, KS Summer 2010, #2; ISSN 1092-4892 Copyright © 2010 All rights reserved.. The Bridgehead Sentinel is published in accordance with the terms of the 1957 agreement between the Society of the First Infantry Division and the Cantigny First Division Foundation. Address Changes and Dues Please send DUES and ADDRESS CHANGES to: Society of the First Infantry Division 1933 Morris Road Blue Bell, PA 19422 SOCIETY OF THE FIRST INFANTRY DIVISION Society HQ Mailing Address: Society of the First Infantry Division 1933 Morris Road Blue Bell, PA 19422-1422 E-Mail: Soc1ID@aol.com Society Web Site: http://www.1stID.org President: Thomas G. Rhame Executive Director: Edward J. Burke Administrative Staff: Jennifer Sanford Nancy Freeston Phone: 215.661.1969 (direct) 888.324.4733 (toll free) BRIDGEHEAD SENTINEL PRODUCTION Staff: Dave Blake Bridgehead Mailing Address: Paul Herbert Bridgehead Sentinel Steve Hawkins c/o First Division Museum at Cantigny 1s151 Winfield Road E-Mail: Wheaton, IL 60189-3353 Phone: Bridgehead@ 630.260.8234 FirstDivisionMuseum.org Fax: 630.260.9298 Editorial Policy The purpose of the Bridgehead Sentinel is to serve the needs of the Society and the interests of its members by: -Disseminating information from the Society to its members; -Publishing articles and items of interest to Society members; -Promoting the history and heritage of the Big Red One. The Bridgehead Sentinel will publish three issues per year to be mailed out 1 March, 15 June, and 15 Oct. To be considered for publication in a particular issue of the Bridgehead, articles must be received by the following dates: -For the Spring issue, received by 15 Jan; -For the Summer issue, received by 15 May; -For the Fall/Winter issue, received by 1 Sept. Submissions received after these dates will normally be considered for publication in a subsequent issue. The Bridgehead Sentinel encourages members to send stories they have written about their time spent with the division. Feature articles should not be longer than 6 pages, typed. The Bridgehead Sentinel staff reserves the right to edit all articles for length, grammar, and content. The Bridgehead Sentinel does not publish material relating to political issues or campaigns, paid advertisements or solicitations, or material that may be considered defamatory or libelous. Because of issues involved in securing permissions for articles and original copies of photos, the Bridgehead Sentinel does not typically re-publish articles that appeared previously in other newspapers, journals and magazines. The Bridgehead Sentinel reserves the right to publish or not publish any article or item sent for its review. All stories, photos and other items sent to the Bridgehead Sentinel will be automatically considered for donation to the First Division Museum in Wheaton, Illinois, unless otherwise requested. Send your stories to the Bridgehead Production address above. 9 Big Red ‘1’ still marks Czech spot for GIs-and grateful German By Ron Jensen Used with permission from Stars and Stripes. ©1994, 2010 Stars and Stripes. This article, printed in 1994 in Stars and Stripes, tells the dedicated story of Rudolf Zeitler, who currently takes care of the 1st Division Monument in Cheb. CHEB, Czech Republic — A tall, slender obelisk just outside this city is a testament to the combat efforts of the 1st Inf Div during World War II. So is Rudolf Zeitler. The Division built the monument soon after the war’s end to honor the men it lost while fighting from the Normandy beaches to this point. Zeitler is one of the countless who benefited from the Division’s sacrifice. “We, Germans were not liberated. That is wrong,” said the man who was a 13-year old high school student when the Division swept through near his home in eastern Bavaria in the spring of 1945. “But we were relieved that the war was finished.” In an attempt to reimburse the Division for helping to rid Germany of the Nazis and ending the war, Zeitler volunteers his time and efforts in caring for the granite monument, located just two miles from town on the road to Karlovy Vary. “We were enemies. Then we were friends,” said Zeitler, who owns a sign making business in Tnierstein, less than five miles from the Czech-German border. He said the Americans provided meals at his school following the war. The American-funded Marshall Plan allowed his country to rebuild from the devastation wrought by Adolf Hitler. That’s why he crosses the border from time to time to clean the area and clear the trash and weeds. That’s why he bought and scattered small, white gravel at the monument’s base in the summer of 1991. His effort won him words of praise from BG William J. Mullen III, the commander of the 1st Inf Div (Fwd) when it inactivated three years ago. “Your unselfish hard work is heartwarming to all of us who wear the 1st Infantry Division patch,” the general wrote in a letter to Zeitler before the unit returned to the United States. Another honor came at this year’s D-Day anniversary, which Zeitler attended. He had the opportunity to meet General Gordon R. Sullivan, the Army chief of staff. When Zeitler told the general of his work at the monument, Sullivan beamed and told him that he was the Division’s European commander a few years ago. Zeitler was given a gold Army coin and an autograph. The monument, about 30 feet tall, was built in late 1945 by the Division with money donated by its soldiers. The structure was one of five ultimately constructed in Europe. As befits a unit known as the Big Red One, its main feature is a big red one. Chiseled in the stone are the names of soldiers who died along the Division’s combat trail, “fighting for the liberty of the world.” Separated by rank, the names are too numerous for an accurate count. Zeitler only learned of the monument after the Cold War ended. A collector of American World War II-era vehicles, he met a fellow collector in Cheb, who told him of the monument. “It was dirty, in one word,” he recalled. Before its inactivation, the Division’s forward-deployed unit twice held memorial ceremonies at the monument in 1990 and 1991. It was after the second ceremony that Zeitler spread the gravel. After the Normandy ceremonies in June, several veterans of the Big Red One traced their advance across Europe. In doing so, they met Zeitler, who escorted them to the monument. There, Zeitler said, the old men cried as they recalled lost comrades. Zeitler has made it his hobby to learn about the American Army’s advance across Europe, specifically through Bavaria. He has several English-language history books on the subject. On visits to the United States, he has searched the massive collection of the National Archives for information. He is proud that his business buys material from American companies. When the Americans held large maneuvers across the Bavarian landscape before the drawdown, Zeitler often welcomed soldiers to his home, showing off his collection of more than a dozen World War II-era vehicles and providing food and comfort. 1st Infantry Division Attends Ceremony in Cheb, Czech Republic U.S. Army Photo Left: Soldier of the Year, SGT Clancey Henderson (Center), of the 4th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade, 1st Infantry Division poses with other Big Red One soldiers at the 1st Division Monument in Cheb, Czech Republic. On April 24, 2010, Liberation Day ceremonies were held by the mayor of Cheb, in the Czech Republic, to celebrate the 65th Anniversary of the liberation of Cheb from Nazi occupation in 1945. The 1st Infantry Division participated in commemoration ceremonies around Czechoslo- 10 vakia, including Cheb, to honor American Soldiers and all who died in liberating Czechoslovakia 65 years ago. During the final weeks of World War II, the 1st Infantry Division, along with other Divisions of the Third Army, were tasked with freeing the western portion o U.S. Army Phot 65 Years Ago... Colors are held at attention during a V-E Day ceremony of the 1st Infantry Division at Eger (Now Cheb), Czechoslovakia. Holding the American Flag is Staff Sergeant Theodore Dobol. May 9, 1945. of Czechoslovakia. The 1st Division Monument in Cheb honors those BRO soldiers who were lost during those battles. Above: This memorial commemorates the 775 soldiers of the 1st Infantry Division who fell between 8 February and 6 May 1945. Stars and Stripes Photo. Left: Rudolf Zeitler says his maintenance of the 1st Infantry Division’s monument near Cheb in the Czech Republic is his way of paying back America for ridding Germany of the Nazis. “I owe something to the Americans, so I help them when I can,” he said. As Zeitler stood beneath the names —Hooper, Gioppo, McDonald, Zamostny, Czlkowsky and many, many more — he uttered a quiet explanation for his efforts. “They should not be forgotten,” he said. “They should not be forgotten.” World War II Personnel Accounting: 1st Infantry Division See next page for list of names The Defense Prisoner of War/ Missing Personnel Office (DPMO) is responsible for oversight of policies on the rescue of live Americans and the recovery and identification of the remains of those who never returned from foreign battlefields. DPMO is joined in that mission by many other Department of Defense (DoD) Agencies, and the scientific community. We encourage the next-of-kin of missing servicemembers to provide family DNA samples, as well as full-face photographs of their missing family members to their Service Casualty Office. Analysts from DPMO attend Veterans Reunions where they interview veterans concerning the fates of the missing men from their units. These interviews are leading to remains recovery missions and aiding in the identification of previously unknown remains. Concerning WWII specifically: At the end of the war, approximately 79,000 Servicemen were not recovered. This number includes those buried with honors as unknowns, those lost at sea, and those missing in action. That number also includes the 1,100 sailors entombed in the USS Arizona Memorial in Pearl Harbor. Today, approximately 78,000 Americans remain unaccountedfor, and approximately 28,000 may be recoverable. According to our records, the st 1 Infantry Division has 149 men unaccounted-for from WWII, and they are listed on the next page. If anyone has information concerning any of these missing men, please contact Lieutenant Colonel Matt Kristoff at DPMO at: 241 18th Street S., Crystal Square 4, Suite 100B, Arlington, VA 22202, or call (703) 699-1240. Bridgehead Sentinel World War II 1 Infantry Division Casualties Still Unaccounted st Unit 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 16 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV Summer 2010 Name ANDERSON HARRY R BAILEY JACK R BALE CLIFFORD L BAROK JOHN J JR BARRAVECHIA JAMES M BAYERL HENRY T BUZZARD HAMPTON CASEY DAVID G CERCE PASQUALE A CLOWERS HENRY T CONWAY JOSEPH E DE VLIEGER ADOLPH V DIXON PERCY H FULLOWN ROBERT J GLADHILL HABARD T GODFRAY LEONARD C GULLEDGE THOMAS E HARRIS ROBERT R HELMS RALPH E HICKEY JAMES R JENSEN HAROLD J JONES CURTIS L KENNEDY JOHN KING JOHN R LAWALT GORDON LAWYER ALLAN B LEONARD RAYMOND R MANAK JOSEPH S MC COLLUM WILLIAM D O BRIEN WILLIAM J ONORATO MICHAEL A PAINTER LESLIE W PEARCE DALE W RIGGSBY BILLY D SAMMONS LAWRENCE H SCUTARO VINCENT T SHIELDS KENNEDY J SHINGLETON DONALD J SMITH ALVEY H SPECHLER NORMAN THOMAS THADDEUS J VASO GEORGE E WRIGHT HUGH E BARTH KENNETH G BLEVINS HARLESS L BOYLIN HENRY C JR BROWN HARRY C CAMPBELL NOEL CARTER WILLIAM M COLAVITO LEE A CRAWFORD CARL H CURRAN JOSEPH J DAVIS GEORGE L GIBSON ROBERT I GILL EDWARD A GREEN JAMES C HUFFER EMMETT J HUSKEY CLELL HYDOCK PAUL JAMES JOHN JOHNSON WALTER K KIBBEE FORREST H KIERNAN KENNETH S KNIGHT WALTER B LAFEVER JOHN M MARTIN CHRISTOPHER J MAZZEO FERDINAND MC GUINESS VINCENT P MESSER WILLIAM H MICKLE LLOYD H MILLER ROBERT P MOSS ALBERT NEVARDOUSKY BERNARD PHILLIPS STANLEY Rank PVT PFC PFC PFC PVT PFC PVT PVT PFC PVT PVT PVT PVT CPL SSG MAJ PVT PVT PVT PFC PVT PVT PVT PVT PVT PFC PVT PVT SGT PVT PVT CPL 2LT PFC PFC PFC PVT PVT PFC PVT CPL PFC PVT SGT PFC SSG 1LT SGT PVT PFC T/5 T/SGT 2LT PFC CPL PFC PVT PVT PFC PVT PVT SSG PFC PFC PVT PVT PVT SGT 1LT PVT PVT CPL SGT PVT Service No. 13120553 35115901 12009758 35263827 32343082 32552030 38147715 36225381 31208394 34191387 12023106 36519004 13014736 12007741 6848366 O-020344 34196883 34256706 36696184 37398133 32301968 42114650 35640062 35456705 33604833 6978228 13145831 6690882 6954771 6905803 32410894 34334638 O-486780 35638774 33137859 12025617 33707106 35754377 33130967 12026085 13022189 35057511 14155439 12017336 33091886 12017529 O1304010 12012157 17043719 12016758 33146089 12009163 O-447027 12016198 33146993 36545571 33442871 34363654 33137464 7022080 16015466 6143557 12018974 34191432 34365405 12009632 12019059 6719896 O-422329 12017315 12017231 12015641 12020206 6562520 Date of Death 30-Apr-43 29-Jan-43 31-Jan-43 1-Apr-43 31-Jan-43 7-Jun-45 18-Nov-45 1-Apr-44 7-Jun-45 1-May-44 31-Jan-43 26-Jul-43 31-Jan-43 31-Jan-43 31-Jan-43 6-Jun-44 1-Apr-44 31-Jan-43 7-Jun-45 6-Jun-44 31-Jan-43 12-Jul-44 10-Jul-43 7-Jun-45 6-Jun-44 6-Jun-44 28-Jan-43 14-Feb-44 6-Jun-44 31-Jan-43 16-Feb-46 31-Jan-43 18-Nov-44 18-Jul-43 2-Apr-43 18-Nov-45 7-Jun-45 31-Jan-43 6-Jun-44 31-Jan-43 1-Apr-45 21-Apr-46 25-Mar-43 24-Apr-44 10-Oct-45 24-Jun-44 15-Apr-44 23-Apr-43 24-Dec-43 13-Jul-43 1-Mar-46 6-Feb-44 23-Apr-43 1-Aug-44 7-Jun-45 7-Jun-45 7-May-44 19-Oct-45 11-Oct-45 25-Mar-44 31-Jan-45 24-Dec-42 22-Apr-43 23-Apr-43 23-Dec-43 16-Jan-43 23-Dec-43 6-Jun-44 24-Dec-43 1-Nov-44 6-Feb-44 25-Mar-44 25-Mar-43 Unit 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 18 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 26 INF 1 DIV 32 FA BN 1 DIV 32 FA BN 1 DIV 32 FA BN 1 DIV 32 FA BN 1 DIV 33 FA BN 1 DIV 33 FA BN 1 DIV 33 FA BN 1 DIV 5 FA BN 1 DIV 5 FA BN 1 DIV 5 FA BN 1 DIV 5 FA BN 1 DIV 7 FA BN 1 DIV If you have any information on any of the soldiers listed here, please see article on previous page for details Name RAINES CHARLES N ROSSON MELVIN V ROTARIUS JOSEPH A RUSSELL ROBERT O SCHEAR ROBERT L SPEARS BERNARD Q SPINOSE RALPH J STOUTNER WILLIAM V SZELUGOSKI WALTER TAFT INGWALD P TRELLA WILLIAM R TROTTER ANDREW S VICTOR EDWARD J WALKER JOHN H WERNER JOSEPH F JR WESTCOTT JOHN B JR WITCHER SHIRLEY ACKERMAN LESLIE I ALLEN WILLIAM W AMOROSO FRANK A BAILEY GROVER C BOOS WILLIAM H CAPOZZA EDWARD J COBB GEORGE F COLLIER ULYSSES G CROWL RICHARD H DALY WILLIAM J DE LECCI TONY JR DEPTULA VINCENT J EKBERG ERNEST A FLOUM EDWARD FOUNTAIN CHARLES H GRAHAM JOSEPH R GUNN EDWARD B HELISEK PETER P JR HOLLINGSHEAD LLOYD G JANKOWSKI LUCIAN J KANE WILLIAM G JR KLANDUCH GEORGE LOBEL MORRIS MAUCK JAMES M MILLS ROSCOE F MUNDZIAK WALTER R MYERS WILLIAM J NORWOOD EDWARD L O CONNELL DANIEL W PARK JAMES K PENN BILLY W PETER HOWARD L POWERS FRANK E JR REYES VIVIAN G SARGENT KERMIT E SPINARELLI JOHN J STOTT DONALD I TRAVELPIECE GORDON L VAN ART LAWRENCE H VERONA STANLEY JR VICKOWANICH MIKE WALKO JOHN A WILHOIT ERNEST YOWELL MITCHELL T ZIEMER GEORGE J DANLEY JAMES P HOLLO FRANK LANDA ALBIN SULLIVAN DANIEL J ALDREDGE CHARLES R BRULEY HOLLAND J RAYANNIC STEPHEN G STOUT WARREN C SMITH HAROLD W STAFFELBACH GEORGE T WASSMER HARRY SCHMALTZ FRED E Rank PFC PFC PFC PVT PFC PVT PVT PFC CPL 2LT SGT PVT SGT PFC SGT 2LT PFC PVT SSG PVT SGT CPL PVT PVT CPL PFC PFC PFC PFC PVT T/5 PFC SGT 2LT CPL SGT PFC PFC PVT PFC 1LT PVT PVT PVT PFC 1LT SGT PFC CPT PVT PFC PVT PVT PFC PFC PFC PFC PFC PFC PFC SGT PFC PVT PVT CPL CPL PFC PFC PVT LTC PFC CPT PFC PFC Service No. 33131237 33229573 36855291 32294437 37666136 15115643 33587727 12005202 11010304 O-432922 6880670 35284217 19000526 37692327 6975273 O1286216 8006955 12004734 13184989 33146254 7082227 13008828 32287595 33727066 13014507 6956932 32309120 33105812 31009162 31002162 33121387 12001033 6975851 O-514002 33146672 16171775 7074275 11024033 33146567 32105274 1309290 35506296 33146700 37442653 12023137 O1287983 38418145 33644889 O-023239 31069525 38216427 33527043 32589777 33137597 33137290 13053316 33144942 36572842 33763575 35812899 15305528 37170983 34057973 6136365 6133895 31006089 34156004 11000003 32191383 O-015260 12009111 O-394767 12008699 37274507 Date of Death 23-Apr-43 9-Oct-44 19-Oct-45 24-Dec-43 30-Nov-45 24-Apr-44 9-Jun-44 23-Dec-43 24-Mar-43 23-Dec-42 23-Apr-43 16-Jan-43 3-Jan-45 25-Nov-45 25-Mar-44 4-Jan-43 6-Apr-44 1-Feb-44 21-Dec-44 1-Feb-44 30-Apr-43 1-Feb-44 10-Jul-43 3-Nov-44 10-Jul-43 25-Apr-43 1-Oct-45 16-Jul-43 28-Jan-43 28-Jan-43 10-Jul-43 10-Jul-43 28-Jan-43 17-Jun-45 11-Jul-44 8-Mar-46 4-Feb-44 28-Jan-43 28-Jan-43 20-Feb-44 17-Nov-44 25-Apr-43 25-Apr-43 10-Jul-43 1-Mar-45 28-Apr-43 24-Nov-45 24-Feb-46 28-Jan-43 1-Nov-45 4-Aug-44 30-Nov-45 10-Aug-45 10-Jul-43 10-Jul-43 5-Mar-45 1-Feb-44 2-Jul-45 20-Oct-44 24-Nov-45 22-Dec-45 11-May-46 23-Mar-43 7-May-43 23-Mar-43 23-Mar-43 10-Jul-43 10-Jul-43 10-Jul-43 29-Nov-42 29-Nov-42 29-Nov-42 1-Dec-42 10-Jul-43 11 2008 ANNUAL REUNION, Colorado Springs, Colo Distinguished Service Cross Recipients, 1st Infantry Division Vietnam Addresses Unknown The First Division Museum is commemorating the 40th Anniversary of the 1st Infantry Division’s return from Vietnam in 1970. As part of that event, we would like to establish contact with 1st Infantry Division Distinguished Service Cross recipients of the Vietnam War. The attached list is of those DSC recipients for whom we have no contact information. We would like to ask for your assistance in locating these veterans. If you happen to know of any of the persons listed, please ask them if they would be interested in being contacted by us. If they agree, please provide us with their contact information. Please contact Eric Gillespie: egillespie@firstdivisionmuseum.org or (630) 260-8186. Name Rank Unit Date of Action Gen.Order# Date of G.O. Blanford, Raymond Burnett, William D. Charles, Paul D. Christian, David A. Crabtree, Ormand B. Dobbins, Raymond Farrelly, Hubert Garcia, Candelario Henry, Jeffery J. Johnston, John R. Kendall, Joe A. Manley, Glen R. Monnick, Edward W. Murray, Michael J. Myers, Richard J. Parrish, Andrew W. Porter, Alfred L. Ramirez, Ramiro Rankin, Howard F. Rodriquez, Enrique Sykes, Larry W. Wall, Lee O. Webb, Francis R. Whitted, Jack G. Worbington, John H. CPT SP4 SP4 1LT SGT CPT PFC SGT PFC 1LT 2LT SP5 SP4 SP4 PFC SP4 SP4 1SGT SSGT CPT PFC SGT SSGT LTC SP4 A/2/28 A/1/4 CAV HHC/1/2 CS/1/26 I/75 D/1/26 C/1/4 CAV B/1/2 B/1/4 CAV C/1/4 CAV A/1/28 C/2/18 B/1/2 C/1/26 A/2/16 B/1/16 A/1/4 CAV C/1/18 C/2/2 C/1/26 A/8/6 FA B/2/2 C/1/26 HHC/1/28 B/1/16 06/11/66 WIA 11/12/65 10/04/67 10/29/68 WIA 05/11/12/69 11/07/06 WIA 07/09/66 WIA 12/08/68 02/24/66 08/25-26/66 11/04/67 WIA 11/01/66 05/11/68 02/01/69 08/13/68 WIA 12/02/66 WIA 08/12/69 WIA 10/10/68 WIA 12/19/68 WIA 02/01/69 05/12/69 WIA 10/13/68 WIA 02/01/69 11/08/66 WIA 02/28/67 GO 6969 GO 21 GO 6564 GO 1192 GO 4343 GO 6703 GO 5895 GO1166 GO 181 GO 1587 GO 726 GO 2378 GO 4330 GO 2249 GO 1750 GO 4323 GO 4496 GO 706 GO 2073 GO 2211 GO 3416 GO 897 GO 2213 GO 7018 GO 5071 12/20/66 06/01/66 11/22/67 04/07/69 1969 12/30/67 10/03/66 04/04/69 08/02/66 04/08/67 02/16/68 05/25/67 09/11/68 06/25/69 05/15/69 08/25/67 12/22/69 02/27/69 06/12/69 06/24/69 09/07/69 03/01/69 06/24/69 1966 10/04/67 B Company, 1st Battalion, 2nd Infantry Regiment,“Dracula” in the Summer of 1968 From April to mid-June, 1968, Dracula (B/1/2) carried out extensive recon-in-force operations in the Quan Loi, An Loc, and Song Be areas. Mini-TET brought in the 1st Battalion, 2nd Infantry back to the Saigon area for mopping up and pacification operations. From June 20th until the end of October, the Black Scarves worked extensively around Lai Thieu control of the 2nd Brigade. However, Division sent the battalion north on several occasions between July and September to counter NVA threats against Loc Ninh. The major Communist offensive against Loc Ninh began with an attack on district headquarters and the Special Forces camp on August 18th, 1968. Five days of relative calm followed. Then, while CSM Clarence Sprouse and Jungle Training in Vietnam U.S. Army Photo In March 1966, MG (then BG) William E. DePuy assumed command of the 1st Infantry Division from MG Seaman, who left to take command of II Field Force, Vietnam. MG DePuy had been the Operations Officer for the Military Assistance Command, Vietnam in Saigon. Two innovations that General DePuy brought with him to the Division were to prove extremely valuable as they were tested in battle. DePuy taught a “cloverleaf” method of saturation patrolling, where units move out from a central area and “loop” back toward the main advance unit’s direction starting point. This technique would enable the infantry to search a large area without massing of its troops in any one spot. When contact was made and the infantry had determined the size, strength, and location of the enemy, massive artillery shellings and air strikes would be called to destroy the enemy. General DePuy selected CSM Clarence R. Sprouse to command a highly trained team of handpicked NCO’s and officers to teach combat units his programs on operations of jungle warefare, including the clover-leaf patrolling method, which is still taught today in the Infantry School at Fort Benning, Georgia. Pictured: CSM Sprouse with the 1st Div in Vietnam, 1966. Sprouse entered the Army in 1942 at the age of 17. He served in World War II, and in Korea as a Parachute Infantryman. Sprouse also served as the chief trainer that trained the Cubans for the Bay of Pigs. Sprouse was one of the Danger 7’s who attended the Danger 6/7 Conference held at the First Division Museum at Cantigny (see the Museum page for information about this event). 12 U.S. Army Photo moving east out of town towards Hill 178 on August 23rd, Dracula ran into an intense barrage of mortars, RPGs and small arms. Pushing steadily forward against determined opposition, the battalion overran a mortar position and sent the NVA defenders into headlong retreat. Dracula continued the drive against Hill 178 for two days against massive NVA counterattacks, which threatened to envelop the battalion on several occasions. In a final three hour battle on August 24th, Dracula repulsed a desperate charge by an entire NVA battalion and temporarily ended the major threat against Loc Ninh. On August 31st, the 1st Battalion, 2nd Infantry extracted to Lai Khe and became the Ready Reaction Force for the Division. Bridge Reconnaissance December 1967 A reconnaissance sergeant from the 1st Bn, 2nd Inf watches as PSGT Louis Brown of Mount Holly, NJ (Left) and LT Manfred Schmitt of Jacksonville, FL, perform engineer reconnaissance on a small wooden bridge along Route 14A running into Du Bop. Led by LT John A. Raymer of Long View, TX, the Recon Platoon from the 1st Bn, 2nd Inf provided security for the 1st Engineer Bn. Just a trim please May 26, 1967 At the 1st Battalion, 2nd Infantry Reigment “Ramrods” Command Post (CP), soldiers get a close haircut that will make it cooler during the blazing summer afternoons in Vietnam. The 1st Infantry Division unit was operating in an area north of Saigon. U.S. Army Photo orado Still Serving: 1st Division Vietnam Veteran Back in Service with the BRO By James G. Perlmutter Colonel, GS Army Review Boards Agency COL Jim Perlmutter, 65, currently on active duty recall status with the Army Review Boards Agency, in Arlington, VA served with the Big Red One from AUG 67-AUG 68 with C/2-2 (Mech) ”Daring-Charlie.” He was a platoon medic and later senior company medic. After Vietnam, he completed college, received a direct commission as a Medical Service Officer, and served seven active years at Walter Reed, Madigan, and Fitzsimons Army Medical Centers. The next twenty-seven years he was with the USAR and eventually became a Hospital and Group Commander. BRO Soldier Remembers Coming Home By Donald W. Weigand HHB, Div Arty May 1969–April 1970 I was a member of the Color Guard that returned the Division’s Colors from Vietnam to Fort Riley as a representative of the enlisted men of Division Arty. We practiced for the ceremonies in Di An after moving down from Lai Khe and Phu Loi. What a motley crew learning how to march again to the consternation of many a NCO and officer. In only the Army’s infinite wisdom, our first ceremony on American soil was in Alaska in jungle fatigues! We were transported back on Air Force jets. I’ll never forget the canvas-like seats, facing backwards, three to a row. It was made most tolerable after a refueling stop and the purchase of a bottle of scotch that we managed to bring aboard. We were housed in the old hospital at Riley, seemed like heaven. One of the funny moments at Riley was when we were stopped by an MP who insisted that we tuck our shirts into our pants. Guess he never saw jungle fatigues before, and was only saved when his CO came to his rescue. I’m sure that the bowling alley has since gotten over our calling in fire missions at the bowling pins, the rounds were most effective. It was the best of times/the worst of times, and yet a memory that will live within me forever. Summer 2010 In addition he graduated from resident Army War College and deployed to Bosnia. He retired in 2000. In 2005 he was offered a one-year recall to active duty that has turned to five years. Thanks to the internet, he has become reacquainted with his former Charlie Company Commander, “Charlie 6,” Ed Roby, as well as the Bravo Company Commander, “Bandit 6,” Sonny Gratzer. “Being back on Active Duty and proudly wearing the Big Red One patch is an honor, and I am thankful for having the opportunity to still serve.” Above: Photo of Jim Perlmutter serving with the 1st Infantry Division in Vietnam, in front of an APC “Somewhere in the Iron Triangle.” Above: Photo taken of Jim Perlmutter last June 2009, next to the APC on display at the First Division Museum at Cantigny in Wheaton, Illinois while on TDY in Chicago. Then and Now: Farm Boys, Soldiers, and Friends SGT Ralph Metivier, CSM Robert Delia, and SGT David McAllister By David McAllister They all grew up and worked on farms in Minnesota and Massachusetts and all three belonged to the illustrious unit, 2nd Battalion, 28th Infantry Regiment, of the Big Red One. Delia hailed from Minnesota and was serving in Japan when the Korean War started, and spent three tours there. He served over 30 years in the regular Army, assignments included Battalion Command Sergeant Major 196970. Ralph Metivier and David McAllister both grew up in Massachusetts and hold the distinction of being the only two, from their small town, to be drafted for the Vietnam War. Metivier and McAllister both completed basic training at Fort Gordon and ended up in AIT at Fort Polk. They traveled over to Vietnam on the same airplane and both ended up assigned to the same 1st Infantry Division battalion, company, platoon, and squad. Ralph, after paying his dues “humping” ammo, became a 60 machine gunner, and David soon became the platoon leader’s RTO. Both young men were soon promoted to sergeant in their capacity. Fast forward 40 years, CSM Delia retired after serving as Post Command Sergeant Major at Fort Devens, in Massachusetts, 1973-78. He remained in the area after retirement, working Above: Left to Right—SGT Ralph Metivier, CSM Robert Delia, and SGT David in the advertising McAllister. 2nd Battalion, 28th Infantry Regiment, Vietnam 1969-1970 business. Ralph Metivier spent over 35 years in the custom sheet metal and welding business, and David McAllister hung up his automotive repair shop tools. Forty years later, they now enjoy many lunches together without having to use C-4, bug dope, or P-38’s. And as you can see by the current picture, they have hardly changed at all! Above: Left to Right—SGT Ralph Metivier, CSM Robert Delia, and SGT David McAllister. Meeting up in 2005, at the Bull Run Restaurant in Shirley, MA. 13 Unit News Unit News is a section is for smaller units of the BRO who do not have their own newsletter. 745 News th He’s given up driving, but he’s only 5 minutes from his daughter Margaret. I’m betting she will bring him to lunch on 6/17. SOCIAL ACTIVITIES: By Bud Spencer Obituaries: No Obituaries to report (that I know of) and that is good! Sick Call: Clayton “Bud” Buck had a stroke and is now in a Nursing Home (Need address). Bill Moreland fell, was hospitalized, and is now staying in a Nursing Home. Address: Cordia Senior Residence 865 North Cass Avenue, Westmont, Il 60559 Phone: 630-734-9900. BRO Books The books in this section are not published by the Society of the First Infantry Division, but they are BRO-related and may be of interest to members of the Society. If you have written a book about 1st Division, and would like it in the BRO Books section, mail a copy of the book to: 1st Tuesday of the month: 9:30 a.m., breakfast at Loves Park, Illinois (Sheri’s Place Family Eatery, 5859 Forrest Hills Road). 3rd Thursday of the month: 11:30 (lunch or late breakfast) at Bob Evans Restaurant. It is located on the west side of Joliet, IL, just off of I-80 at mile post 130. Exit North on Larkin, at 1st traffic light turn right, then right into their parking lot. It is diagonally across the street from Sam’s and only two or three miles from the Empress gambling boat. 4th Thursday in October: Lunch at Starved Rock, the facilities there are beautiful, rustic, modernized, even an indoor pool. You might want to consider a “mini” vacation by arriving early or staying overnight. You can contact the Lodge at (815) 667-4211, or www.starvedrock- One More Hill By Franklyn A. Johnson Part of the Cantigny Military History Series ISBN# 1-890093-25-4 First Division Museum at Cantigny ATTN: BRO BOOKS 1s151 Winfield Rd Wheaton, IL 60189 Warrior to Spiritual Warrior By Jess E. Weiss BookSurge Publishing ISBN# 1-4392-3800-6 A multi-decorated combat veteran of WWII, Jess Weiss tells his compelling and poignant personal story of war, life, death, and Post Traumatic Stress (a debilitating condition unrecognized and untreated in WWII) that led him to a most profound and transcendent spiritual journey. Weiss recounts his actions on Omaha Beach with E Company, 16th Infantry Regiment during the D-Day invasion of Normandy and how he coped with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder afterwards. Available on: www.Amazon.com 14 statepark.org. For the lunches at Starved Rock, they need to know how many to expect so please let me know at 1107 31st St., Apt 223, Peru, IL 61354, or call me at 815/220-1558, or send E-Mail to: Bud745@ivnet.com. 4th Thursday in August: Luncheon at Cantigny Park. Look for a special mailing for details. The hospitality shown by Paul Herbert and his dedicated staff cannot be duplicated or beaten, they’re terrific, and what’s more– they like the 745th! We are very appreciative of that! I have no idea what it will be this year. “C” rations in the woods? A couple of new acquaintances here went on separate Honor Flights out of Moline, IL in recent weeks. They are still walking on air. If you haven’t gone you should make every effort to go. Visit http://honorflight.org/ programs/index.cfm for details. Don’t worry or be embarrassed if you need a wheel chair, they’ve got lots of them, and the people are there to help. It costs you nothing. Franklyn Johnson was a replacement officer and then platoon leader of an anti-tank platoon with the 18th Infantry Regiment of the 1st Infantry Division in World War II. His story illustrates those of many soldiers of that and every war: the training, the camaraderie, the apprehension, the fighting, the boredom, and then more fighting. He initially saw action firsthand with the Big Red One in Tunisia in North Africa. He made two amphibious assault landings: one at Gela, Sicily, in 1943, the other on Omaha Beach at Normandy in 1944. This is a reprint of the original 1949 edition with updated text, photos, and maps. To order, visit: www.FirstDivisionMuseum.org Above: Eddie Ireland, and Bud Spencer, at the April 2010 luncheon at Starved Rock. Above: The day of the Starved Rock luncheon was also Bill Moreland’s Birthday! Diary of a Combat Infantryman By Jim Sharp Published by Ag Press Manhattan, KS ISBN# 0-9843585-1-X The personal accounts of Jim Sharp, Company B, 18th Infantry Regiment, 1st Infantry Division, in World War II. Jim follows his battles as a replacement during the Battle of the Bulge, Rhineland, Central Europe, and being wounded in Uslar, Germany. Jim earned three battle stars during the Battle of the Bulge, and a Bronze Star for heroism at the Rhine River crossing. Following the war, he was selected for special guard duty at the Nuremburg Trials for Nazi war crimes. He was assigned as Sgt. of the Guard in both the courtroom and the prisoner cell blocks. Available on: www.Amazon.com Swanage in World War II By Stewart Borrett Published by Amberwood Graphics ISBN# 978-0-9522281-1-0 Stewart Borrett takes sixteen contributers from GIs, evacuees, schoolchildren, and others who helped keep the town of Swanage, England functioning during the war. Personal accounts from William Lee and Wes Mullen, from the 26th Infantry Regiment, give examples of how the Big Red One helped the town prior to the D-Day Invasion of Normandy. To order contact: Stewart Borrett 34 North Street Wareham, BH20 4AQ United Kingdom 01929 554 482 or: stewartborrett@aic.co.uk Bridgehead Sentinel We thank all who have responded to our requests for support of our Scholarship FundS. Your generosity will enable us to fulfill our obligation to the children of all Big Red One soldiers who have lost their lives in combat— over 180 children to date—and to the children and grandchildren of our 1st Infantry Division veterans. Following is a list of contributors to the 1st Infantry Division Foundation Scholarship Fund from 1 February – 21 May 2010. Duplicate names indicate additional contributions. The Zimmermann scholarships have been discontinued because the original grant of $100,000 from Miss Sarah Zimmerman has now been depleted. Twenty-five students have received Zimmerman scholarships from the time of its inception in 1999. 1st Infantry Division Foundation Scholarship Funds LTC Daniel L. Turner CPT Kimberly Brabson, Jr. SGM Albert N. Pike MAJ Joseph M. Batistoni, Ret. LTG Ronald L. Watts, Ret. LTC Richard M. Livingston SGM Albert N. Pike MAJ Joseph N. Batistoni, Ret. LTC Gilbert N. Conforti The UPS Store, Fort Riley, KS BG John R. Gallagher, Jr. Paul Grupp SGM Albert N. Pike James E. Lalley Richard L. Ort Richard J. Keogh John W. Long LTC Daniel Weaver MAJ Joseph M. Batistoni, Ret. MAJ Neal F. Siebert Wally E. Chapla CPT Wilmer K. Benson Dean McConnell SGM Albert N. Pike Lion Virginia Nordstrom In Memory of Verlin Deutscher Mr. & Mrs. Michael Bozzi In Memory of Stuart Quigg Society for International Affairs in the name of Thomas Donovan, Government Speaker of the Year for 2009 In Memory of Stephen E. Row Ronald J. Betts Mr. & Mrs. Alan I. Cooper COL Robert W. Siegert, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Joseph P. Wirs Mr. & Mrs. Keith Sanford Mr. & Mrs. Brian Burke Cantigny First Division Foundation Hughes & Smith, Inc. Heidenberger Construction, Inc. Antonio Maria Bobrick Washroom Equipment, Inc. Hadrian Manufacturing, Inc. Alexander & Doris Chung Gabriella Maguire Cheryl Yoffee James H. Gormley, III Architectural Resources, Inc. Gary Arthur Noubarian Romana Governatori Fay R. Keith & Carol Green Richard L. Biehl LTC Edmund K. Daley, Jr. William K. Thelemann In Memory of 2LT Clinton Anderson, 1/16 KIA, VN, 1966 In Memory of Antoinette Rapkiewicz New York/Fort Dix Branch MAJ Rolland L. Schmucker P.O. Box 350025, 1 Carr Ct. Palm Coast, FL 32135 In Honor Jay Earl Naumann In Memory of Mrs. Juliette Huebner Buck Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Hopler COL George Juskalian Robert R. McCormick Foundation Mr. & Mrs. Chan Kim Nhan In Memory of Mary Stewart New York/Fort Dix Branch In Memory of LTC Stigall & MAJ Hollider In Memory of BG Randolph Paulsen COL Richard C. Rosendahl, Ret. New York/Fort Dix Branch Veterans Administration Announces New Scholarship! The Veterans Administration has recently begun accepting applications for a program called the “Gunnery Sergeant John David Fry Scholarship.” This scholarship entitles the children of service members who die in the line of duty after Sept. 10, 2001 and attending college to receive up to the highest public, in-state undergraduate tuition and fees, plus a monthly living stipend and a book allowance. Since this program is considerably more generous and advantageous than our DePuy Scholarship, the Trustees of our 1st Infantry Division Foundation are studying just how we can best assist our eligible children with their education. We will not be extending any new DePuy scholarships until this study has been completed. Letters have been sent to the 125 dependent children of our OIF/OEF killed that we have contact with to advise them of this new scholarship. This letter, however, emphasizes our unshakeable commitment to these children should they elect a DePuy scholarship. Since it will be many years before most of these children are in a position to make an election about which scholarship to accept, our Foundation will maintain a reserve fund sufficient to accommodate requirements for DePuy scholarships. The Foundation trust- Who Died During Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom 1 Feb 2010 – 31 May 2010 412th Aviation Support Battalion, 12th Combat Aviation Brigade, Katterbach, Germany PFC Scott G. Barnett, 24, of Concord, California 28 January 2010 Military Training Teams, Afghanistan, 1st Brigade, 1st Infantry Division, Fort Riley, Kansas SFC Glen J. Whetten, 31, of Mesa, Arizona 12 March 2010 people … your children and grandchildren… who show so much promise and potential. Applications for these scholarships were due on 1 June 2010 and will be announced in the fall issue of this paper. Member’s comments, ideas and suggestions on the subjects of scholarships are welcome. Send them to: I wanted to send you my sincere thanks yet again for the First Infantry Division Scholarship. The fall semester was especially full this year – not only was I enrolled in five classes, I was also deep in the process of applying to my spring semester study abroad program. I took Statistics, Global Christianity, Organizational Behavior, Digital Photography and Graphic Design. This made for an interesting course-load as I not only participated in some broad classes to fulfill general requirements, but also was able to delve deeper into one of my areas of concentration (art). I particularly enjoyed Graphic Design class as it taught me many new and interesting concepts about the design world. This coming semester will find me overseas – I will be studying at Regent’s American College in London, England! While I am there I will be taking several classes that are sure to be fascinating. How could I resist a course in Shakespeare when I will be on his home soil? I am looking forward to all of these classes as well as the opportunity I will have to travel in and about the U.K. and Europe. This opportunity is in a great part possible because of the aid this scholarship provides. I am so very grateful to be the recipient of this scholarship – it is a great help to me in furthering my education and knowledge of the world. Thank you again. Best Regards, 1 Infantry Division Foundation 1933 Morris Rd. Blue Bell PA 19422. st Chelsey Fenn 1st Infantry Division Soldiers ees have also approved a plan to increase the level of scholarship support to the children and grandchildren of 1st Infantry Division veterans. Formerly, the Foundation awarded 3 scholarships of $4,000 each. Effective with the 2010-2011 school year, the Foundation will award up to 5 scholarships of $10,000 each to these children. Your continued support for this program will enable us to reward the efforts of these talented young Below, is a letter from Chelsey Fenn, who was awarded one of our Zimmerman Scholarships in 2007. Chelsey is the granddaughter of Thomas Fenn, who served in Company G, 26th Infantry, in World War II. Scholarship Fund Yes . . . Here is my TAX DEDUCTIBLE contribution to the Scholarship Fund! $15 $30 $60 $100 $150 Other$ Name Address City Phone( ) State Zip E-Mail Please make your check payable to: 1st Infantry Division Foundation. Mark it “Scholarship Fund” and mail it to: 1st Infantry Division Foundation, 1933 Morris Road, Blue Bell, PA 19422. Your contribution is 100% deductible for income tax purposes. NOW Contribute online! Visit www.1stID.org and click on “Foundation” then “Contributions.” Summer 2010 15 In the Spring 2010 issue of the Bridgehead Sentinel, there was an article written by CSM (Ret) Tom McRoberts, entitled “Our last shot in Vietnam.” He describes the crest of the field artillery battery in which he was the section chief as follows: “When we were in base camp, we wore the unit crest patch on our left pocket. The patch had the Ramparts of Chapultepec, two cannon tubes designating the first split battery operations, and a broken arrow to symbolize the annihilation of Charlie Battery. Unfortunately, the crest has been lost to history as I have been unable to find one.” My daughter works as a historical researcher at the National Museum of the U.S. Army (Project Office) at Ft. Belvoir. Recently, she cataloged & preserved one of the largest collections of U.S. Army unit crests in existence. After reading CSM McRoberts article, she did a bit of research & came up with the info (see photo). He apparently was assigned to B Battery, 1st Battalion/5th Field Artillery, which supported the 1st Brigade of the Big Red One in Vietnam from 1965-1970. The 1/5 FA includes the oldest continuously active unit in the U.S. Army (D Battery), which is the only unit that can trace an unbroken lineage back to the Revolutionary War. D Battery began as Alexander Hamilton’s Provincial New York Artillery Company, raised by the then 19-year old Hamilton on 1 March 1776. It fought during the Revolutionary War and was the only unit in the Army not deactivated at the end of that war. For a period of time, it was the ONLY unit in the Army, protecting the stores at West Point. The 1/5 FA fought in the War of 1812, Mexican War, Indian Wars, Civil War, Spanish-American War, and Philippine Insurrection. During WWI, it was assigned to the newly formed 1st (Infantry) Division, and served with the Big Red One during WWI, WWII, and Vietnam (from 1965-1970). The unit continues to be part of the 1st ID’s 1st Brigade Combat Team and has served in Iraq. The battalion is the only artillery unit in the U.S. Army with batteries designated A, B, and D (instead of C)—in honor of the lineage of D Battery 5th Artillery going back to the Revolution. The official description of the unit crest is nearly identical to that described by CSM McRoberts (though the symbolism is somewhat different). Eric Hammersen COL, FA, U.S. Army (Ret) (formerly a battery commander in 2/33d FA, 1st Inf Div (FWD) in Germany from 1978-1981) Left: The old design of the D Battery patch, used in Vietnam by the 1st Battalion, 5th Field Artillery. I share Colonel Toner’s interest in finding out whom, when, and why the alchemists amongst us changed the Iron Brigade into “Dukes.” I look forward to seeing what the explanation is, and hope it will be published in the Bridgehead. The Iron Brigade has an illustrious heritage including its heroic stand as a part of the 1st Division, First Corps, Army of the Potomac, when it stopped the on-rushing Confederates at the Battle of Gettysburg, giving the remainder of the Army of the Potomac time to concentrate on the high ground. One could easily argue that the Iron Brigade saved the Union by their action that day. One Confederate, upon seeing the Hardee hat of the Iron Brigade is reported to have said, “That ain’t militia, that is the damn Iron Brigade of the Army of the Potomac.” I doubt he would say the same about the “Dukes.” Dukes sounds like a motorcycle gang from Los Angeles or fugitives from the West Side Story. I think any of our adversaries would know and understand what the Iron Brigade meant in the field of battle. We do a lot of good things in the Army in preserving our history and lineage, and for good reasons. How can we let such a historical unit go unnamed and unrecognized? The decision was a real clunker. Donald W. Hansen Brigadier General, U.S. Army (Retired) Honorary Member of the Iron Brigade I am searching for relatives of a 1st Division soldier, Joseph J. Czernia (service number 36954742). He served in World War II with the 18th Infantry Regiment, 1st Infantry Division. Mr. Czernia died on November 22, 1944 and is buried at HenriChapelle American Cemetery in Belgium, where I have adopted his grave. To honor fallen soldiers, organizations for the cemetery give interested people the opportunity to adopt a grave. These people go to the cemetery on important days (Memorial Day, Christmas etc.), and pay their respects to these men. Many times these people are in contact with the family of the soldier to let them know that someone in Europe is taking care of their grave. Those who adopt these graves often want to find out more about the soldier whose grave they have adopted. This gives the soldiers an identity so they will not be forgotten. For more information about these programs, visit: www.adoptiegraven.nl This is why I adopted Joseph Czernia’s grave, because I wanted to look after someone who did so much for the people of Europe, who are still very thankful of what they did for us. All I know now is that Mr. Czernia was born in Cook County, Illinois. I would like to know where his hometown was, what battles he had been in, where he was killed in action, or any other details about his life. Simon Schuurman Alholm 79 2133 DB Hoofddorp The Netherlands My cousin Mike Gregoreski served proudly in Vietnam from November ‘66 to March ‘67 with C Company, 2nd Battalion, 2nd Infantry Regiment, 1st Infantry Division. He was seriously injured in March ‘67. I don’t have the exact date, but I am looking for anyone who may have served with him that has pictures from that time. Mike passed in 1999 due to complications from his injuries. He was honored in April in Washington, D.C. at the Vietnam War Memorial. I would appreciate if anyone has any information about Mike, and possibly even the date of his injury, to contact me at pallessi@stny.rr.com. Thank you and God Bless! Pam Allessi I am looking for someone who may have known or remembered this veteran of WWII: Carroll E. Powell, Headquarters Company, 26th Infantry Regiment, 1st Infantry Division. He served 38 months in North Africa, Sicily, D-Day invasion and all throughout Europe during the war. He passed away in 1997 but I, his wife, am hoping to locate some of the men he may have known. We were lucky enough to make a few contacts in the earlier reunions, but I have lost contact with them. Alma Powell 6051 Camden Street Indianapolis, In 46227 Phone: 317-786-8889 Cell: 317-627-1610 almapowell@comcast.net Origins of the 3rd Brigade “Dukes” Check out the display Donald R. Nuttall has put in his front yard, honoring the Big Red One! “This is located on my front lawn, facing the main road.” The Division’s motto, emblem, as well as the POW/MIA flag are seen by all who pass by. 16 There are two stories that describe the origins of the call sign “Dukes.” The first story comes from the Brigade S3 from 199698, David Sage who explains, “I’m the guy who came up with Duke. I was “Duke 3” from 1997-98 but, I was “Dancer 3” from 1996-97.” The call sign “Dancer” was not very popular so the discussion came up, “Sir, Dancer stinks.” “Got a better idea?” “How about Dukes?” Dancer 3 had a framed picture of John Wayne from the Horse Soldiers on his office wall, and decided “Duke” was a better call sign than “Dancer” and COL Que Winfield, the Brigade Commander at that time, had it officially changed. The second explanation, from Clinton T. Anderson, the Brigade Commander from 1998-2000, is similar but also includes another representation of the heraldry. “All Big Red One call signs begin with the letter ‘D.’ Hence “Danger” “Devil” “Dagger” etc. The Third Brigade was call sign “Dancer.” Since the 1st and 2nd Brigades were both infantryheavy, and the 3rd Brigade was the tank-heavy brigade and given the rather lame call sign of “Dancer,” the commander preceding me, COL Que Winfield, was given permission to change the call sign to “Duke,” which was short for “The Iron Duke.” The logo used on brigade presentations was that of an armored knight. During my tour of duty the old armored knight logo was retired and replaced with the historically correct and current triangular shield with Iron Cross that was used by the Brigade during its time in Vietnam.” Bridgehead Sentinel Hollingsworth, James of San Antonio, TX on 3 March 2010 (VN, 1ADM) Lauten, John of Simi Valley, CA on 22 March 2010 (WWII, HHC/16) Fischetti, Michael of Cogan Station, PA on 21 October 2008 (WWII, A/16) Betancourt, Arthur of Lakeland, FL on May 9, 2010 (16, WWII) Garrett, George of Muskogee. OK on 3 April 2010 (Cold War, L/3/26) Benton, Steven of Pittsfield, MA on 11 February 2010 Bianco, Jr., of Bayville, NJ on 22 February 2010 Bullard, Carroll of Blackshear, GA on 12 April 2010 (VN, B/2/18) Eveland, William of St. Petersburg, FL on 8 April 2010 (WWII, F/1/26) Gaysek, Frank of Fort Myers, FL on 28 January 2010 (WWII, AT/18) Haig, Jr., Alexander of McLean, VA (VN,1/26) Harpin, Ray of Morrison, CO on 4 August 2009 (Cold War, C/32FA) Hess, Charles of Ridgewood, NJ on 5 May 2010 (WWII,I/16) Fenstemaker, Robert of Levittown, PA (VN) CHANGES TO OUR CONSTITUTION AND BY-LAWS At its April meeting, the Board of Directors approved the idea of eliminating the Annual Meeting that is held in conjunction with our Annual Reunion. This notice is the next step in that process. A final vote on the matter will be held at the Annual Meeting in San Antonio. In 2007 the Society Constitution and By-laws was amended to increase the term of office of all Society officers from one year to three years and to change the make-up of the Board of Directors from members elected by the general membership at the Annual Meeting, to unit representatives selected by their unit or groups of units. The latter change was intended to give units, the heart and soul of the Society, a stronger voice in the governance of the Society. At the same time it provides individuals an avenue to the Board of Directors through their unit meetings and unit representative on the Board. These changes have now been in place long enough to judge that they are working as intended, but they also call into question the purpose of the Annual Meeting, currently required by our Constitution to be held at each Annual Reunion. There is huge redundancy between the Board of Directors meeting at the Annual Reunion, and the Annual Meeting at the Annual Meeting. Many of our members also see no purpose or have no interest in the Annual Meeting. The major impact of elimination of the Annual Meeting is on Article V of our Constitution, VOTING. If the Annual Meeting is eliminated, instead of an election held at the Annual Meeting, voting for Society Officers will be done by a ballot printed in the Bridgehead Sentinel with responses by mail, fax or e-mail. Presentations, such as those often given by the 1st Infantry Division Commanding General, will either be done in a separately scheduled seminar or at the reunion banquet. Articles VII, Order of Business and IX Annual Meeting Committees of our By-laws which deal with the organization of the Annual Meeting would be eliminated. A complete list of changes to our Constitution and By-laws will be given to all attendees at this year’s Annual Reunion in San Antonio. Lieber, Albet of Avenue, MD on 29 August 2009 (VN, 2/18) Lonzi, Albert of Getzville, NY BRO SUPPORT FUND Argenzio, Joseph of Locust Grove, VA on 17 April 2010 (WWII, HHC/3/16) Levitz, Herbert of Blackstone, VA on 12 March 2010 (VN, C/2/28) Nedin, Richard of Poughkeepsie, NY died on March 5, 2010 (3/26, WWII) Thompson, Ron Middletown, OH (VN, C/1/2) Watson, Gerald of Perry, NY (VN, B/1/16) Rohrbacker, Jr., John of Aurora, IL (WWII, E/2/16) Scanlon, George of Westwood, MA on 4 April 2010 (WWII) Talbot, Jacques of Glasgow, VA on 3 September 2009 (WWII, Zumbrunnen, James (VN, HHC/1/28) Associate Members Huebner-Buck, Juliette of McLean, VA on 24 March 2010 The Bro Support Fund The Big Red One Support Fund is the Society’s own fund that provides assistance to serving 1st Infantry Division soldiers and their families in nonemergency situations—our 1st Infantry Division Foundation handles the emergencies. As the Global War on Terror has progressed, the number of needs and assistance programs have multiplied dramatically, yet there are often needs that fall between the cracks. These situations are the reason the BRO Support Fund exists. If you would like to donate to the BRO Support Fund, please use the coupon below or the membership renewal application on page 18 to do so. With your generosity, help and support, the Big Red One continues to take care of its own! CENTURY CLUB Welcome to the new members of the Century Club! These are members who have donated $100 or more toward the Big Red One Support Fund. Thank you for partnering with us to support our division! John and Kathleen Abizaid James Anderson Gordon Aycock Thomas Barnes Calvert Benedict Wilmer Benson Thomas Bollen Joseph Bonaparte William Bruce Howard Bushman David Confer Walter Crowder, Jr. Stephen Delacy Terence Doddy Arne Eliasson John Fourham Robert Fuller William Gates Gerald Grasso Raymond Hahn Robert Haley Oscar Hall Jonel C. Hill Richard Hime James Hixon Ronald Jebavy James Jensen Skip Kriz Robert Lesher John Long Dean McConnell Edward Molnar Aric Schumacher Willie Shy, Jr. Frank Solimine Joseph Spiak Rich and Kaye Tocci Jim Tucker Larry Van Lancker Charles Ziegenfuss BRO Support Fund Yes . . . I want to help our Society help the Soldiers of the BIG RED ONE! Here is my TAX DEDUCTIBLE contribution to the BRO Support Fund! The following businesses in the Ft. Riley community area are supporting your Society. Encourage a business you know to join the Society! $15 $30 $60 $100 $150 Other$ Name Summer 2010 HHC/1/26) If you would like to donate to the BRO Support Fund, please use the coupon below or the membership renewal application on page 18 to do so. Business Memberships v Briggs Auto v Century 21 Gold Team Realtor v First National Bank & trust Co v Flint Hills Veterinary Hospital aka Casey Thomas, DVM v Hi-Tech Interiors, Inc v Holm Automotive Center v Junction City Transportation Co v Picerne Military Housing v Sheila Burdett Agency (WWII, E/18) Address City Phone( ) State Zip E-Mail Please make your check payable to: Society of the First Infantry Division. Mark it “BRO Support Fund” and mail it to: Society of the First Infantry Division, 1933 Morris Road, Blue Bell, PA 19422. Your contribution is 100% deductible for income tax purposes. 17 …Continued From Page 2 R Letter from the CG …Continued From Page 9 Sicily slammed into the breech and the gunner desperately aims at the leader’s tank, now starting to cross the road. He sets the ambitious monster afire, and we breathe again, for this action is quickly followed by two others; other tanks, apparently not knowing how near victory they are, take fright and turn clumsily about, then scuttle back up the plain to their mountain hideout. And five of our medium tanks, hastily brought ashore in this hour of danger, clank up in time to destroy several of the fleeing tanks of the hated Hermann Goering Panzer Division. The beachhead, at least momentarily, is safe, thanks to an old burned-out 105 and its battered crew. That smoking weapon should be in a museum and its crew decorated with heroes’ medals. 18 U N Who: When: Where: Contact: 1st Engineer Combat Battalion 19–22 Sept 2010 Holiday Inn Patriot Williamsburg, VA Bob Brink 7642 Botting Rd Racine, WI. 53402 1-262-639-4405 rbrink1@wi.rr.com Who: When: Where: Contact: All Veterans 17–19 Sept 2010 Kokomo, IN TURKEY aka Robert Youngberg 17822 Chicago Ave. Lansing, IL. 60438 (708) 474-3416 or 5327 B1aBigRed1@AOL.com (subject: BRO KOKOMO) or call (708) 474-3416 Who: When: Where: Contact: I 1st MP Company ‘64–’66 25-29 August 2010 Crowne Plaza Riverwalk San Antonio, TX Who: When: Where: Contact: O N S Who: When: Where: Contact: D, 2/16th Infantry, ‘67–’68 29-31 July 2010 Mooresville, NC Don Dignan 16485 Pollyanna Livonia, MI 48154-2741 (734) 525-0157 dondignan@sbcglobal.net 1st Division Band Sept 23-26, 2010 Embassy Suites Hotel Bloomington, MN Keith R. Erickson P.O. Box 43 Crystal Bay, MN 55323-0043 952-473-7051 kognw@gte.net MEMBERSHIP APPLICATION / RENEWAL Effective For 2010 line! n o n i Jo g tID.or s 1 . w ww Society of the First Infantry Division 1933 Morris Road, Blue Bell, PA 19422-1422 DATE:______________ TITLE: _______ NAME: __________________________ _________ _______________________ _________ (Rank or Mr/Mrs/Ms) (First) (Initial) (Last) (Suffix– MD, RET, etc.) l If you do not want your contact information (name, address, email, era, unit) LAST 4 DIGITS OF SSN: ___ ___ ___ ___ listed in the Members Only online directory on our website, please check here. (Required) Complete this section to apply for membership or to update our records Mailing Address (All Members) _____________________________________________________________________ (Street or Unit/CMR) _________________________________________________ __________________________ (Suite #, Apartment # or Box #) __________________ (City or APO) __ __ __ __ __ - __ __ __ __ (State or AE) (Zip Code + 4) Permanent/BILLING Address (Active Duty Soldiers Only) ________________________________________ _________________________ ________ _______________ (Street, Apt #) (City) (State) (Zip Code + 4) Your phone # will not be released for any reason including the website.. Phone (__ __ __) __ __ __ - __ __ __ __ EMail: _________________________________________________________ Your service with the big Red One (assigned, attached or in support–eligible; please check all that apply) l WWII l Vietnam l Cold War l Peacetime l Gulf War l Balkans l Iraq l Afghanistan UNIT: Company:_______ Battalion:________ Regiment:________BCT_________ Years of Service: __________ to__________ Have you served in combat with another unit? l Yes l No Select a Membership Type (please check only one) combat in Iraq, the U.S. has built up a massive infrastructure to support our forces. Now it is time to responsibly draw down that force. We’ve already made huge strides. Since our arrival, we have closed or turned over control of 13 bases in our division area (the size of Washington State). Thousands of pieces of rolling stock (trucks, trailers, generators) and shipping containers have been turned in by USD-S in the past 111 days. Imagine packing up a small city and everything and everyone within it and shipping all somewhere else within a matter of days – that’s what your Big Red 1 troops are doing. “No mission too difficult” fits this idea pretty well. Of course, our headquarters is not the only representative of the BRO patch. 4th Brigade of the 1st Division is finishing its tour of duty having served with distinction under 25th Infantry Division and 3rd Infantry Division headquarters in northern Iraq. 1st Combat Aviation Brigade and 1st Sustainment Brigade both deployed here recently and are just beginning their tours of duty under the direct control of our higher headquarters: US Forces – Iraq. 1st Brigade and 2d Brigade are training at Fort Riley for fall and winter deployment to Iraq. 3d Brigade is training at Fort Knox for winter deployment to Afghanistan. Finally, the remaining “transition teams” of combat advisors trained by our 1st Brigade at Fort Riley continue to serve here and in Afghanistan and they too wear our proud patch with honor. We will have, as a Division and all of our patch-bearing units, much to do over the next 111 days. I have great confidence in what we will accomplish and that we will be honored to add to the luster of this historic Division. No mission too difficult, no sacrifice too great. DUTY FIRST! E All Membership types include a subscription to the Bridgehead Sentinel and the Annual Calendar ANNUAL Membership Active Duty VeteranS l Regular ($30 per year) l Executive ($60 per year) Currently serving with the BRO Associates Family and Friends of the Big Red One l Regular ($30 per year) l Executive ($60 per year) l Business ($100 per year) Life Membership veterans l E-8 & above, 01 & above ($30 per year) l E-5 to E-7 ($25 per year) l E-4 & under ($20 per year) PCS: Mo_____ Day_____ Year_____ RANK (Required): _________________ l Widow(er)s of BRO Vets (FREE) l Under 39 ($400) l 40 - 49 ($350) l 50 - 59 ($300) l 60 - 69 ($250) l 70 - 79 ($200) l over 80 ($100) Life - Active Duty l Currently serving w/ BRO ($100) Contributions l I would like to make a tax deductible contribution of $_____________, beyond my regular dues to be used for the: Society’s General Fund ________ or the BRO Support Fund _________ that supports active duty soldiers and their families. (Note: Donations of $100 or more will be recognized as CENTURY CLUB members in the Bridgehead Sentinel.) Payment (for “Membership Type” and “Contributions”) l Enclosed is my check payable to the SOCIETY OF THE FIRST INFANTRY DIVISION in the amount of $___________ l Please charge my (circle one): Visa / Mastercard / American Express / Discover Card #: ___________________________________________ EXP DATE: _____/_____ (month / year) Credit Card orders must be $25.00 or more** CVC: ___________ (code on back of card) Signature: ___________________________________________ CVC# and signature are required. Return this form and your check, if applicable, to the address at the top of the form. If paying by credit card, you may fax this form to 215-661-1934. For your convenience, you may also join online on our website at www.1stID.org by clicking on the “Membership” link. OLD SUPPLY SARGE Or order online at www.1stID.org Drawing by Alban B. Butler © Cantigny First Division Foundation 5-Billed Cap (White, Khaki, Desert Camo) 30-Shoulder Patch 38-Window Decal 36-Visor 6Blazer Patch 9-Coffee Mug 4-Baseball Cap (White, Black) 28-Shopping bag Reusable - Green 26-SandwichBilled Hat (black) 31-Teddy Bear 37-Window Cling - Clear (Blank, VN or Member) 16-Dbl. Rocks Glasses (Set of 4) 2- Auto Licence Plate Holder 8-Can Holder 19-Navy Golf Shirt w/out pocket 34-Tee Shirt Long Sleeve 3-Auto Tag 13-Doo-Rag 29-Shotglass 10-Coin 17-Knit Golf Shirt w/pocket, (White or Black) 27-Shaving Kit (Navy) 32-Tee Shirt w/pocket (White or Black) 33-CIB Tee Shirt, no pocket 23-Mini Badge CIB, CIB 2nd, 1-“1” Charm, Sterling Silver New! 21-Ladies New! Charm 7-Bumper Stickers 24-Pillbox, 7 Day 3½” Diameter 35Tie Tac or Lapel Pin 39-Wind Shirt, 18-Knit Golf Shirt (Navy) no pocket (Tan only) New! 23-Mini Badge CMB, CAB 15Garden Flag/ Pennant 22-Lapel Pin King Size or Regular 40-Woven Throw 14-Nylon Flag 20-Jacket (3 Season) 12-Denim Shirt, Long Sleeve (Blue only) Order Form 11-Denim Shirt Short Sleeved (Blue only) 25-Pocket Knife Mail to: Supply Sarge, Society of the 1st Inf Division, 1933 Morris Rd, Blue Bell, PA 19422-1422 Name Address City Zip No. Item Cost 1 “1” Charm, Sterling Silver $11.00 2 Auto Licence Holder 9.00 3 Auto Tag - Society 9.00 4 Baseball Cap 20.00 5 Billed Cap 20.00 6 Blazer Patch 13.00 7 Bumper Sticker 5.00 Bumper Sticker 5.00 8 Can Holder - Coolie 6.00 9 Coffee Mug 18.00 10 Coin, Commemorative 11.00 11 Denim Shirt, Short Sleeve 39.00 12 Denim Shirt, Long Sleeve 41.00 13 Doo-Rag (head cover) 13.00 14 Flag / banner (nylon) 85.00 15 Garden Flag / Pennant 26.00 16 Glasses, Dbl. Rocks (4) 30.00 17 Golf Shirt w/ Pocket 41.00 18 Golf Shirt w/out pocket 41.00 19 Golf Shirt w/out pocket 56.00 20 Jacket, 3 Season 110.00 21 Ladies Charm 10.00 22 Lapel Pin 13.00 23 Miniature Badge 10.00 Miniature Badge 10.00 24 Pill Box 6.00 25 Pocket Knife 10.00 26 Sandwich Cap 20.00 27 Shave/Toiletry Kit 20.00 28 Shopping Bags (2) 15.00 29 Shot Glass, BRO 10.00 State Qty Circle Circle Size/type Color Blk/Wht Wht/Khaki DesertCamo Blank/WWII/VN DS/Iraq/Afghanistan Red only M L XL XXL M L XL XXL M L XL XXL M L XL XXL M L XL XXL L XL Blue only Blue / Khaki Black only Black / White Tan only Navy only Black only Kingsize / Reg CIB/CIB 2nd CAB/CMB Phone Total E-mail No. Item Cost 30 Shoulder Patch 4.00 31 Teddy Bear, BRO 15.00 32 Tee Shirt w/pocket 23.00 33 Tee Shirt, CIB no pocket 25.00 34 Tee Shirt, Long Sleeve 28.00 35 Tie-tac/Lapel Pin 10.00 36 Visor 20.00 37 Window Cling (LG-Inside) 6.00 38 Window Decal 2.00 39 Wind Shirt, Navy 46.00 40 Woven Throw 62.00 Qty Size/type Color M L XL XXL M L XL XXL M L XL XXL Black / White Lt. Blue only Black only Total Stone only Blank, VN, or Member Inside/Outside M L XL XXL Navy only This order form is valid through 2010 only! SHIRTS & JACKETS – nonstock sizes are available on special order for the following premiums: Small and Medium +$5 each XXL +$10 XXXL +$12 each (Please indicate the size required at the item line) Nonstock note: 4-6 weeks for delivery. SUB-TOTAL *All prices include shipping and handling. Shirt/Jacket Special Order Premium PA Residents ADD 6% for state sales tax +(x .06) Overseas Orders ADD 10% +(x .10) TOTAL Make Checks payable to: Society of the First Infantry Division Payment method (circle one): Cash, Check, Visa, MC, Amex, Discover Large/Reusable Black only Navy only Green **Credit Card orders must be $25.00 or more** Card Number Expiration Date: Month________ Year________ (e.g. 08 10) Security Code ____ ____ ____ (Back of card) Signature__________________________________________________ 19 1s151 Winfield Road, Wheaton, IL 60189-3353 Phone: 630.260.8185 Fax: 630.260.9298 E-mail: Info@FirstDivisionMuseum.org www.FirstDivisionMuseum.org Part of the McCormick Foundation F I R ST D I V I S I O N M U S E U M AT c A N t I G N Y McCormick Research Center Former Big Red One Commanders Attend the 4th Annual Danger 6/7 Conference at the Museum Above: Visitors to the Museum get a soldier’s view of deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan at the opening of the “Snapshots from the 1st Division” photo exhibit. Right: The opening of the photo exhibit coincided with a Date With History event, about 2nd Brigade’s deployment to Iraq. L–R: LTC Richardson, Exhibits Manager, Teri Bianchi, and Spc. Griffiths at the Exhibit opening. “Snapshots from the 1st Division” Photo Exhibit Opens, Winners Announced Front L–R: David Hiller, Clarence Sprouse, Phillip Kaplan, Thomas Rhame, Neal Creighton, Gordon Duquemin, Calvert Benedict. Back L–R: Lou Marsico, Ronald Watts, Fred Davenport, BG David Petersen, CSM Darrell Wallace, Leaonard Wishart, Keith Gill. The fourth annual Danger 6/7 Conference was held at the First Division Museum June 6-8, it included discussion of the 1st Infantry Division from 1970-2010 and a video teleconference with the current Danger 6, Major General Vincent Brooks, and his Danger 7, Command Sergeant Major Jim Champagne, from Basra, Iraq about the current state of the Big Red One. This year participants included MG Gordon Duquemin (Danger 6 1973-74), MG Calvert Benedict (Danger 6 1976-78), MG Phillip Kaplan (Danger 6 1978-80), MG Neal Creighton (Danger 6 198384), LTG Ronald Watts (Danger 6 1984-86), LTG Leonard Wishart (Danger 6 1986-88), LTG Thomas Rhame (Danger 6 1989-91), CSM Clarence Sprouse (Danger 7 in Vietnam) and CSM Fred Davenport (Danger 7 in Desert Storm). Also in attendance were Brigadier General David C. Petersen, Deputy Commanding General-Rear, 1st Infantry Division, Ft. Riley, Kansas and Command Sergeant Major Darrell Wallace, CSM-Rear, 1st Infantry Division, Ft. Riley, Kansas. Attendees also met with the CEO of the McCormick Foundation, David Hiller, Senior Vice President of Operations, Lou Marsico, as well as several board members of the Robert McCormick Foundation. Along with discussions on the history and state of the Division, the Danger 6 and 7’s also received a tour of the museum and its facilities and took part in a public ceremony honoring the 93rd birthday of the Big Red One. The First Division Museum at Cantigny is pleased to announce the winners of its 1st Division Photography Contest. The top prize goes to Specialist Michael Griffiths of the 1st Battalion, 6th Field Artillery Regiment, 3rd Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 1st Division. His photo of a night fire exercise at Goshta, Afghanistan, will be included in the museum’s summer exhibit, “Snapshots from the 1st Division,” which opened June 2 and runs through Labor Day. “Our goal was to show the public, from a soldier’s viewpoint, the full range of roles that 1st Division soldiers are playing in Iraq and Afghanistan,” according to Teri Bianchi, exhibits manager for the museum. The Second Place winner is Lieutenant Colonel Shawn Boland, Assistant Chief of Staff, G1, Task Force Danger U.S. Division-South, Basrah, Iraq. Boland is from San Antonio, Texas. Third Place belongs to Captain Christian Durham, Commander, B Company, 2nd Battalion, 16th Infantry Regiment, 4th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 1st Division. Durham’s hometown is Hephzibah, Georgia. Griffiths, from McKeesport, Pennsylvania, will receive prizes valued at $1,000 for his first-place image. Boland and Durham will be awarded prizes worth $750 and $500, respectively, and their photos will also be included among the 83 to be displayed. All three soldiers will be invited to the First Division Museum this summer for a first-hand look at the exhibit. The Museum’s UH-1 “Huey” Helicopter Will Present the Markings and Story of 3rd Platoon, A Company, 1st Aviation Battalion, “Rebels” The UH-1C/M helicopter on loan from the US Army is being prepared for painting, which is the last major part of its restoration that is taking place in Copley, Ohio. This Huey will be unveiled in August as part of the First Division Museum’s 50th Anniversary on August 21st. The staff is very excited to have the opportunity to honor the service of America’s Vietnam veterans through this iconic artifact. The exhibit will also include an audio clip that will allow visitors to hear to the “whop whop whop” sound of the blades! The helicopter will be re-interpreted and marked as a gunship of the 3rd platoon of A Company of the 1st Aviation Battalion “Rebels,” which was a gunship platoon that served in the 1st Division from 1965-1970. The “Rebels” had a unique camouflage pattern that will be replicaged. The Museum has had great input from “Rebel” veterans. The gunship allows us to talk about a wider helicopter story of air mobile operations, which were a critical component of the 1st Division’s experience and central to the war in Vietnam. Dust-offs, troop movement, and LRRP insertions will also be covered. If you have stories, photos or artifacts that relate to your 1st Aviation experience in Vietnam, please contact Terri Navratil, Curator of Collections at tnavratil@firstdivi- sionmuseum.org, 630-260-8220. We are specifically searching for donations of both crew and pilot body armor that were used during that period as well as photos of the Huey “in action” from any unit in the Big Red One. The helicopter will be stored at the Illinois Aviation Museum (IAM) in Bolingbrook, Illinois, prior to the anniversary event at Cantigny, and it will return there around August 23rd. The museum is looking forward to working with IAM and its visitors in sharing the 1st Division’s experience in Vietnam. A Company “Bulldogs” of the 1st Aviation Battalion, 1st Infantry Division in Vietnam, 1967. Third Platoon was known as the “Rebels” and painted a rebel flag on the sides of their Gunship Model, UH-1 helicopters. From L–R: Sp4 Danny Breckenridge, WO Galen Lichty, WO James Lungwitz, Crew Chief Bell, CPT Henry Fitzgerald.