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4th Infantry Division
Following is a history of the 4th Infantry Division that I compiled
from several sources:
On November 19, 1917, the same year that America
entered World War I, the 4th Infantry Division was formed at Camp
Greene, North Carolina to begin its long tradition of service to
our country. Filled with draftees, the Fourth Division, whose insignia
had been adopted by its first commanding general, Major General
George H. Cameron, became known as the "Ivy" division. Its insignia consisted of four green
ivy leaves joined at the stem and opening at the four corners of a
square on a khaki background. The Division also derived its numerical
designation from the Roman numeral IV, (4 and IV mean the same thing)
hence the nickname "Ivy" division. Also, in the language of flowers,
ivy means "Steadfast and Loyal" - the division's motto.
In April 1918, the Ivy Division's Doughboys
embarked aboard a number of ships - all 29,180 officers and men
- enroute to fight in France. The first casualties of the division
were suffered as the ship carrying men of the 58th Infantry Regiment
was hit by a German torpedo, killing 56 men. After a brief layover
in England, the Ivy division landed at Calais, Bordeaux, and Brest
enroute to the front lines. By mid-June the mighty Aisne-Marne campaign
was shaping up and the Ivy Doughboys were sent to bolster the French
6th Army. Unbeknownst to the men of the Division, their movements
were beginning to create a historic precedent and by the time the "great war" would
end some months hence, the Ivy Division would serve with distinction
- as the only American combat force - with both the French and the
British in their respective sectors. When the war ended on November
11, 1918, the Ivy Division had earned battle streamers with the
names of Aisne Marne, St. Mihiel, Meuse Argonne, and Defensive Sector
emblazoned on them. A price had been paid - 69 officers and 2,000
men killed in action and total casualties of killed and wounded
added up to 499 officers and 13,150 men. The Ivy Division had fought
and defeated sixteen enemy divisions. Nine days after the end of
the war, the Fourth Division marched into Germany to undertake occupation
duties; and it wasn't until August 1919 that the Ivy Division's
Doughboys returned to the United States. France had been the Division's
first battlefield. A generation later, a new breed of Ivy Division
soldiers would again fight in France.
As war clouds engulfed Europe, the 4th Division was reactivated on
June 1, 1940 at Fort Benning, Georgia as America began to increase
the size of our armed forces. Selected to act as an experimental unit
for the development of methods recently demonstrated by the German
blitz through Belgium and France, the 4th Motorized Division began
a three year, wide-open experiment. From August 1940 through August
1943, the division participated in the Louisiana Maneuvers, was moved
to the newly opened Camp Gordon, GA where they participated in the
Carolina Maneuvers, and was moved to Fort Dix, New Jersey before being
redesignated the 4th Infantry Division. A movement in September 1943
to Camp Gordon Johnston, Florida gave the division realistic amphibious
training in preparation for the assault on fortress Europe. January
18, 1944 saw the Ivy Division embark the port of New York enroute
to a final training phase in England. Chosen as the spearhead amphibious
division of the D-Day landing on the Normandy coast of France, the
men of the 4th Infantry Division stormed ashore at H-Hour (0630 hours)
on a stretch of the French coast named, for this operation, Utah Beach.
It was for his actions on this day that assistant division commander,
Brigadier General Theodore Roosevelt, Jr. earned the first Medal of
Honor in the division. After their successful D-Day landing, the men
of the Ivy division fought through the hedgerows of the Cotentin Peninsula
enroute to taking the critically important port of Cherbourg.
The division was in continuous action during the period 6-28 June
when the last resistance around Cherbourg was eliminated. During this
period, the 4th Infantry Division sustained over 5,450 casualties
and had over 800 men killed. With hardly a pause to catch their breath,
the Ivymen continued to attack through the hedgerowed country and,
along with the 2nd Armored Division, spearheaded the breakthrough
that occurred at St. Lo on July 25, 1944. Exploiting the break in
the German lines, the division continued the attack across France
and on August 25, 1944 were, along with the French 2nd Armored Division,
the troops who earned the distinction of liberating Paris from four
years of Nazi rule. Passing through the wildly applauding Parisians,
the Ivymen left the victory parade in honor of the liberation of Paris
for outfits following in our wake and continued the pursuit of the
Germans. On September 11, 1944, a patrol from the 4th Infantry Division
became the first Allied ground force to enter Germany. Fighting in
the Siegfried Line followed. Mid November found the division in the
bloodiest battle of its history. The most gruelling battle in Europe
was fought in the Hurtgen Forest. Fought in the cold rain and snow
and in a forest of pine and fir trees 150 feet in height, the Ivymen
slugged it out yard by yard and day by day against determined German
artillery and infantry resistance. By early December, the division
had fought through what now was a twisted mass of shrapnel-torn stumps
and broken trees and had accomplished its mission. Casualties in the
Hurtgen often exceeded 250% of the original strength of a rifle company.
With the Hurtgen Forest behind them, the division
moved into a defensive position in Luxembourg and were soon to be
engaged in the Battle of the Bulge. General George S. Patton wrote
to Major General Raymond Barton of the 4th Infantry Division - "Your fight in the Hurtgen Forest
was an epic of stark infantry combat; but, in my opinion, your most
recent fight - from the 16th to the 26th of December - when, with
a depleted and tired division, you halted the left shoulder of the
German thrust into the American lines and saved the City of Luxembourg,
and the tremendous supply establishments and road nets in that vicinity,
is the most outstanding accomplishment of yourself and your division." As
the German push was halted in the Bulge, the Ivy division resumed
the attack and continued the pursuit back through the Siegfried Line
at the same location it had crossed in September and fought across
Germany as the war ground on in the first four months of 1945. When
the war ended on May 8, 1945, the 4th Infantry Division had participated
in all of the campaigns from the Normandy Beach to Germany. Personnel
of the Division during this period wear the five campaign stars for
Normandy, Northern France, Rhineland, Ardennes, and Central Europe.
Four Ivy Soldiers earned the Medal of Honor. The division suffered
almost 22,000 battle casualties and over 34,000 total casualties during
their eleven months fighting across Europe. On July 11, 1945, the
Ivy Division returned to New York harbor and began preparing for the
invasion of Japan - fortunately, the war ended before that was required.
The Cold War found the 4th Infantry Division again standing tall
in defense of freedom. While others fought the Communists in Korea,
the Ivy Division again returned to Germany in the early 1950's and
stood strong against the Communist threat to Western Europe. After
returning to the States, the division trained at Fort Lewis, Washington
for the next time they would be called into battle. The next time
was in Vietnam in late summer of 1966, twenty-two years and two months
after the Ivymen landed on Utah Beach in World War II.
Led in August 1966 by the 2nd Brigade, the Ivy Division headquarters
closed into the central highlands of Vietnam on September 25, 1966
to begin a combat assignment against the North Vietnamese that would
not end until December 7, 1970.
Eleven additional battle streamers would be added to the 4th Infantry
Division colors as the Ivy soldiers fought in places such as the Ia
Drang Valley, Plei Trap Valley, Fire Base Gold, Dak To, the Oasis,
Kontum, Pleiku, An Khe, and Cambodia. With the largest assigned area
of operations of any division in Vietnam, the Ivy division was charged
with screening the border of South Vietnam as the first line of defense
against infiltration down the Ho Chi Minh trail through Laos and Cambodia
and to preempt any offensive on the more populated lowlands. Triple
canopy jungles, extreme heat, and seasonal monsoons were constant
challenges to the division as were the North Vietnamese Regulars and
Viet Cong which they fought. By the time the Ivy Division completed
their assignment in Vietnam and returned to Fort Carson, Colorado
at the end of 1970, 2,531 Ivy soldiers had been killed and 15,229
had been wounded. Eleven Ivy division soldiers had earned the Medal
of Honor during that time period.
Resuming training and Cold War missions, the
4th Infantry Division remained stationed at Fort Carson, Colorado
from 1970 through 1995. During this period, the division was converted
to a Mechanized organization and frequently sent units to Europe
to continue the Cold War mission of standing tall against the Communist
threat. In December 1995, the Ivy Division was moved to Fort Hood,
Texas. Combining the armor strength of the 2nd Armored Division
with the Mechanized Infantry strength of the 4th Infantry Division,
the Ivy Division again became the experimental division of the Army,
as it had been in the early 1940's. Today the Ivy men and women
are leading the United States Army into the 21st century under the
anner of Force XXI. They are busy developing and testing state-of-the-art
digital communications equipment, night fighting gear, advanced
weaponry, and doctrine to prepare the United States Army for wars
in the next century. Recently, the division has adopted to nickname "Iron Horse" to
better reflect the power they possess.
Bob Babcock "Deeds Not Words"
Industry Marketing Executive
Midmarket Business, IBM Americas
Atlanta, GA T/L 445-8392, 770-835-8392
E-mail: babcock@us.ibm.com
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