Fact Sheet of the 28th Infantry Division |
|
TYPE
OF DIVISION:
National Guard Troops
from Pennsylvania NICKNAME: Keystone Division (The Germans called it the “Bloody Bucket” Division.
SHOULDER
PATCH:
A red keystone, symbolic of the State of Pennsylvania, known as
the Keystone State. Division
was composed in 1917 of men from Pennsylvania National Guard units.
HISTORY: Division
was organized in Sep 1917, at Camp Hancock, GA, from Pennsylvania
National Guard troops. It
went overseas in May and June 1918.
It participated in the Champagne-Marne defensive and the Aisne-Marne
offensive. Division’s
outstanding action was in the Mouse-Argonne offensive.
One of its great achievements was rescue of the famous “Lost
Battalion” of the 77th Infantry Division in the Argonne.
During operations the Division took 921 prisoners and its
casualties totalled 13,980. Division
returned to the United States in spring of 1919.
The 109th Infantry Regiment , originally from Scranton PA
distinguished itself in the Marne battle.
The 110th Infantry Regiment bore the full brunt of Ludendorff’s
“Peace Storm,” a bid to break through and capture Paris.
The 112th Infantry Regiment charged over the top at Hill 204 near
Chateau Thierry. Battery
“B” of the 107th Field Artillery Battalion has a history going back
to service the Civil War. The
108th Field Artillery Battalion dates back to 1840 and was the first
unit to use the name “National Guard,” an adaptation of Napoleon’s
Garde Nationale. the 109th
Field Artillery Battalion had three separate companies supporting George
Washington’s Continental Army.
ACTIVATION
DATE:
17 February 1941 at Indiantown Gap PA INACTIVATION
DATE: 13 December 1945, Camp Shelby, Mississippi.
COMPONENT
UNITS:
109th, 110th and 112th Infantry Regiments; 28th Cav Rcn Tp (Mecz);
103rd Engr (C) Bn’ 103 Med Bn. Div
Arty: 107th, 109th and 229th (105 How) and 108th (155 how) FA Bns.
Sp Tps: 28th QM Co;
28th Sig Co; 728th Ord Co(LM); HQ Co; MP Platoon and Band.
TRAINING:
Division trained at Indiantown Gap, PA and in Aug 1941 went to A
P Hill Military Reservation, VA for maneuvers.
Participated in Carolina maneuvers from Sep to Dec 1941.
In Jan 1942, the outfit was sent to Camp Livingston, LA and in
March came under control of Army Ground Forces and was placed under the
IV Corps of the Third Army. From
Sep to Nov 1942, the 28th took part in Third Army Maneuvers in
Louisiana. From Jan to Mar
1943, the 28th received special training in amphibious warfare at
Carrabelle, FL and was assigned to the VII Corps of the Second Army.
in Aug 1943, the Division began almost two months of maneuvers in
mountainous terrain in West Virginia after having changed its permanent
station to Camp Pickett, VA. Three
combat teams participated in amphibious training conducted by the
Amphibious Force, U S Atlantic Fleet, at Camp Bradford, VA.
DEPARTED
U.S. FOR FOREIGN DUTY:
8 October 1943 for ETO.
OVERSEAS
TRAINING:
.Received extensive training in Wales for six months and in
England for three months. Highlight
of training was at Assault Training Center, Braunton, Devonshire,
England.
DATE
ENTERED COMBAT:
Division 27 Jul 1944, FIRST
ELEMENTS 22 Jul 1944.
COMBAT
DAYS (DIV):
196
RETURNED TO U.S.:
August 1945 (HQ)
BATTLE CREDITS: (Division) Normandy; Northern France; Rhineland, Ardennes,
SUCCESSIVE
COMMANDING GENERALS:
MG Edward Martin, Feb to Dec 1941; MG J Garesche Ord, Jan to May
1942; MG Omar N Bradley, Jun 1942 to Jan 1943; MG Lloyd Brown from Jan
1943 to Jul 1944; BG James E Wharton was commanding for one day in Aug
1944 — while visiting a regiment a few hours after taking command he
was fatally wounded; MG Norman D Cota from Aug 1944 to inactivation.
CONGRESSIONAL
MEDAL OF HONOR WINNERS:
T/Sgt Francis J Clark, Co K, 109th Infantry Regiment, for 12 Sep
1944 action at the Our River near Kalborn, Luxembourg.
SLOGAN:
Fire
and Movement:
FOREIGN AWARDS:
109th
Infantry regiment awarded the French Croix de Guerre for 28 Jan to 2 Feb
1945 action in Colmar, France per French decree #565, dated 27 March
1945.
COMBAT HIGHLIGHTS: From Normandy, through France, Belgium, Luxembourg and eventually into Germany itself, the 28th Infantry Division blasted its way to success against the enemy which referred to the Keystone unit as the “Bloody Bucket” division. That phrase described the fury of the assaults which it launched shortly after landing on the Normandy beaches 22 Jul 1944. By 31st Jul, the 28th was in the thick of the hedgerow fighting. Advances were at a crawling pace while towns like Percy, Montbray, Montguoray, Gatheme and St Sever de Calvados and Hill 210 fell. By 20th August, the Division was rolling eastward along the highways of France. An advance north to the Seine to trap the remnants of the German 7th Army saw the capture of Vernauil, Breteuil, Damville, Conchos, Le Neubourg and Elbouf as the bag of prisoners mounted. On 29th August, the Division entered Paris and paraded under battle conditions before a populace delirious with joy. There was no time for rest, however, and the advance continued on through the Forest of Compeigne, La Fere, St Quentin, Laen, Rethel, Sedan, Mezieros, Bouilion and on the 6th of September the crossing of the Mouse was accomplished. The Division swept into Belgium averaging advances of 17 miles a day against the resistance of of German roadblocks and “battle groups.” The city of Arlon, Belgium fell to a task force as the Division fanned out into Luxembourg. Combat Team 112, attached to the 5th Armored Division, liberated the southern portion of Luxembourg and smashed its way into Germany at Wallendorf in an attack aimed at Bitburg. Combat Teams 109 and 110 liberated the northern part of Luxembourg and on 11th September entered Germany in strength. After hammering away in assaults which destroyed or captured 153 pill boxes and bunkers the Division moved north and cleared the Monschau Forest of German forces in the area east of Elsenborn, Rocherath, and Krinkelt, Belgium, moving up to the Siegfried Line again. Further attacks were postponed and the Division made another move northward to the Hurtgen Forest. There the attack began 2nd November 1944 and the Keystoners stormed into Vossenack, Kommerscheidt and Schmidt amid savage fighting. Losses were heavy and ground once wrested from the enemy was lost and regained to be lost again to the ever increasing fury of his counter-attacks. By 12th November, the 28th had completes its Hurtgen Forest mission and moved south to the scene of its initial entry into Germany where it held a 25 sector of the front line along the Our River, from the northeastern tip of Luxembourg to the vicinity of Wallendorf. In this sector the Germans unleashed the full force of their winter offensive against the thinly-held and over-extended division line. Five crack (German) divisions were hurled across the Our River the first day to be followed by four more in the next few days. The Keystone rocked under the overwhelming weight of enemy armor and personnel but refused to become panic stricken. The defense by the Division against Von Rundstedt's assault was termed by one correspondent as “one of the greatest feats in the history of the American Army.” By the time that the 28th was relieved it had thrown the German timetable completely off schedule and had inflicted heavy losses on the enemy. During early January 1945, the Division was charged with defense of the Meuse River from Givet, Belgium to Verdun, France. Later that month a move to the south, to Alsace, was made. There the 28th had the experience of serving in the French First Army in the reduction of the “Colmar Pocket” and to it went the honor of capturing Colmar, the last major French City in German hands. Further advances to the east across the L’Ill River and Rhino-Rhono Canal to the west bank of the Rhine followed. By 23rd February, the Division had returned north to the American First Army and was in the line along the Olef River.
March
6th was the jump-off date in an attack which carried the Keystone to the
Ahr River. Schleiden,
Gomund, Kall, Sotenich, Sistig and Blankonheim all fell in a rapid
advance. Many prisoners and
large stores of enemy weapons, equipment and ammunition were taken.
The Rhine was crossed and an area south of the “Ruhr Pocket”
occupied by the 28th awaiting an southward drive by the German forces
trapped in the pocket. Early
in April the Division moved west of the Rhine and took up occupation
duties in the area north of Aachen along the Holland-German border.
Two weeks later came a move to the permanent occupation area; the
Saarland and Rhonish Palatinate. Early
in July the Division started redeployment to the United States, arriving
home in August 1945. After
V-J Day, the 28th Division reassembled at Camp Shelby, Mississippi and
was inactivated on 12 December 1945.
|
|
![]() James D. West Host106th@106thInfDivAssn.org www.IndianaMilitary.org |