8th Infantry Division (United States)
The 8th Infantry Division, was an infantry division of the United States Army during the 20th century. The division served in World War I, World War II, and Operation Desert Storm. Initially activated in January 1918, the unit did not see combat during World War I and returned to the United States. Activated again on 1 July 1940 as part of the build-up of military forces prior to the United States' entry into World War II, the division saw extensive action in the European Theatre of Operations. Following World War II, the division was moved to West Germany, where it remained stationed at the Rose Barracks in Bad Kreuznach until it was inactivated on 17 January 1992.
History
World War I
- Activated: January 1918
- Overseas: November 1918
- Commanders:
- *Col. Elmore F. Taggart
- * Col. G. L. Van Deusen
- * Brig. Gen. Joseph D. Leitch
- * Maj. Gen. J. F. Morrison
- * Maj. Gen. William S. Graves
- * Maj. Gen. Eli A. Helmick
- * Brig. Gen. John J. Bradley
Organization
- Headquarters, 8th Division
- 8th Infantry Brigade
- * 12th Infantry Regiment
- * 62nd Infantry Regiment
- * 23rd Machine Gun Battalion
- 16th Infantry Brigade
- * 8th Infantry Regiment
- * 13th Infantry Regiment
- * 24th Machine Gun Battalion
- 8th Field Artillery Brigade
- * 2nd Field Artillery Regiment
- * 81st Field Artillery Regiment
- * 83rd Field Artillery Regiment
- * 8th Trench Mortar Battery
- 22nd Machine Gun Battalion
- 319th Engineer Regiment
- 320th Field Signal Battalion
- Headquarters Troop, 8th Division
- 8th Train Headquarters and Military Police
- * 8th Ammunition Train
- * 8th Supply Train
- * 8th Engineer Train
- * 8th Sanitary Train
- ** 11th, 31st, 32nd, and 43rd Ambulance Companies and Field Hospitals
Moving abroad
The troops who did reach France became the garrison of Brest and assisted in building huge camps for troops about to embark for return to the United States. The 8th Infantry Regiment became part of the American occupation forces in Germany until August 1919 and the remainder returned to the United States in January 1919, after which the division disbanded.
Between wars
The 8th Division officially demobilized at Camp Lee, Virginia, in September 1919. The division was partially reconstituted on 24 March 1923, allotted to the Third Corps Area for mobilization purposes, and assigned to the III Corps. Camp George G. Meade, Maryland, was its designated mobilization station for reactivation. The 16th Infantry Brigade, the 1st Battalion, 16th Field Artillery Regiment, the 15th Ordnance Company, and the 8th Tank Company were assigned to the division in October 1933 as Regular Army active units and formed the force from which the remainder of the division would be reactivated in the event of war. The commanding general of the brigade was considered the division commander for planning purposes. The 16th Infantry Brigade was stationed at Fort Howard, Maryland, from 1922 to 1928; Fort Hunt, Virginia, from 1928 to 1931; in Washington, D.C., from 1931 to 1936; and at Fort Meade from 1936 to the activation of the division.The division headquarters was organized in April 1926 at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, as a Regular Army Inactive unit using personnel of the Organized Reserve. The active units of the division conducted annual training with the III and XIII Corps and the 79th, 80th, and 99th Divisions. Summer training camps were usually conducted at Camp Meade.
The 16th Infantry Brigade's 12th and 34th Infantry Regiments, reinforced by the 3d Cavalry and the District of Columbia National Guard's 260th Coast Artillery, were called out on 28 July 1932 to quell potential trouble from the Bonus Army in Washington, D.C. The 12th Infantry was ordered to clear the United States Capitol and the camps on the Anacostia Flats of the veterans that afternoon. The division was also provisionally organized in 1939 for the First Army Maneuvers at Manassas, Virginia, with the 16th Brigade reinforced by the 66th Infantry. In preparation for becoming a "triangular" division, the 8th Infantry Division was reactivated on 1 July 1940 at Fort Jackson, South Carolina, without its Reserve units and assigned to the I Corps
World War II
- Activated: 1 July 1940 at Camp Jackson, South Carolina
- Trained at Camp Laguna in California in 1943
- Overseas: 5 December 1943
- Campaigns:
- *Normandy
- *Northern France
- *Rhineland
- *Central Europe
- Days of combat: 266.
- Distinguished Unit Citations: 5
- Awards: Medal of Honor – 3 ; Distinguished Service Cross – 33 ; Distinguished Service Medal – 2 ; Silver Star – 768; LM – 12 ; DFC – 2 ; SM – 24; BSM – 2,874; PH – 1 ; AM – 107.
- Commanders:
- *Maj. Gen. Philip B. Peyton
- * Maj. Gen. James P. Marley
- * Maj. Gen. William E. Shedd
- * Maj. Gen. Henry Terrell, Jr.
- * Maj. Gen. James P. Marley
- * Maj. Gen. Paul E. Peabody
- * Maj. Gen. William C. McMahon
- * Maj. Gen. Donald A. Stroh
- * Maj. Gen. William G. Weaver
- * Maj. Gen. Bryant E. Moore
- *Maj. Gen. William M. Miley.
- Returned to U.S.: 10 July 1945.
- Inactivated': 20 November 1945.
Order of battle
- Headquarters, 8th Infantry Division
- 13th Infantry Regiment
- 28th Infantry Regiment
- 121st Infantry Regiment
- Headquarters and Headquarters Battery, 8th Infantry Division Artillery
- * 28th Field Artillery Battalion
- * 43rd Field Artillery Battalion
- * 45th Field Artillery Battalion
- * 56th Field Artillery Battalion
- 12th Engineer Combat Battalion
- 8th Medical Battalion
- 8th Cavalry Reconnaissance Troop
- Headquarters, Special Troops, 8th Infantry Division
- * Headquarters Company, 8th Infantry Division
- *708th Ordnance Light Maintenance Company
- *8th Quartermaster Company
- *8th Signal Company
- * Military Police Platoon
- * Band
- 8th Counterintelligence Corps Detachment
Combat chronicle
During World War II, the 8th Infantry Division was sent to Europe to fight against the Axis. After training in Ireland the 8th Infantry Division landed on Utah Beach, Normandy, 4 July 1944, and entered combat on 7 July. Shortly after its arrival, the division captured the French cities of Rennes and Brest. Fighting through the hedgerows, it crossed the Ay River, 26 July, pushed through Rennes, 8 August, and attacked Brest, France in September. When U.S. Brigadier General Charles Canham, who was at the time the deputy commander of the 8th Infantry Division, arrived to accept the surrender of German troops in Brest, the commander of the Brest garrison, General Hermann-Bernhard Ramcke asked the lower-ranking man to show his credentials. Canham pointed to his nearby troops and said "These are my credentials". That phrase has since become the 8th Infantry Division's motto.Following these actions, the 8th turned eastward toward the German border, taking part in the heavy fighting in the Hürtgen Forest in November 1944. The Crozon Peninsula was cleared on 19 September, and the division drove across France to Luxembourg, moved to the Hürtgen Forest, 20 November, cleared Hürtgen on the 28th and Brandenberg, 3 December, and pushed on to the Roer. That river was crossed on 23 February 1945, Duren taken on the 25th and the Erft Canal crossed on the 28th. The 8th reached the Rhine near Rodenkirchen, 7 March, and maintained positions along the river near Koeln. In early March 1945, the 8th had advanced into the Rhineland. It fought its way into the Ruhr region the following month.
On 6 April the division attacked northwest to aid in the destruction of enemy forces in the Ruhr Pocket, and by the 17th had completed its mission. After security duty, the division, under operational control of the British Second Army, drove across the Elbe, 1 May, and penetrated to Schwerin when the war in Europe ended.
On 2 May 1945, as it advanced into northern Germany, the 8th Infantry Division encountered the Neuengamme concentration camp Wöbbelin subcamp, near the city of Ludwigslust. The SS had established Wöbbelin in early February 1945 to house concentration camp prisoners who had been evacuated from other Nazi camps to prevent their liberation by the Allies. Wöbbelin held some 5,000 inmates, many of whom suffered from starvation and disease. The sanitary conditions at the camp when the 8th Infantry Division and the 82nd Airborne Division arrived were deplorable. There was little food or water, and some prisoners had resorted to cannibalism. In the first week after liberation, more than 200 inmates died. In the aftermath, the United States Army ordered the townspeople in Ludwigslust to visit the camp and bury the dead.
The 8th Infantry Division was recognized as a liberating unit by the U.S. Army's Center of Military History and the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 1988.
Casualties
- Total battle casualties: 13,986
- Killed in action: 2,532
- Wounded in action: 10,057
- Missing in action: 729
- Prisoner of war: 668
Assignments in the European Theater of Operations
- 30 November 1943: Attached to First Army.
- 24 December 1943: XV Corps.
- 1 July 1944: VIII Corps, attached to First Army.
- 1 August 1944: VIII Corps, Third Army, 12th Army Group.
- 5 September 1944: VIII Corps, Ninth Army, 12th Army Group.
- 22 October 1944: VIII Corps, First Army, 12th Army Group.
- 19 November 1944: V Corps.
- 18 December 1944: VII Corps.
- 20 December 1944: Attached, with the entire First Army, to the British 21st Army Group.
- 22 December 1944: XIX Corps, Ninth Army, 12th Army Group.
- 3 February 1945: VII Corps, First Army, 12th Army Group.
- 2 April 1945: XVIII Corps.
- 26 April 1945: XVIII Corps, Ninth Army, 12th Army Group, but attached for operations to the British Second Army in the British 21st Army Group.
Medals of Honor
- Private First Class Ernest Prussman, 13th Infantry Regiment. Prussman took over his squad on 8 September 1944 during the advance on Les Coates ' in Brittany, and disarmed several Germans, including a machine gun crew. Shot by a German rifleman, his dying act was to unleash a hand grenade that killed the man who shot him. His Medal of Honor was awarded posthumously.
- Private First Class Walter C. Wetzel, 13th Infantry Regiment. As acting squad leader in the regimental Anti-Tank Company, PFC Wetzel defended his platoon's command post from an enemy attack on 3 April 1945. Wetzel threw himself on either 1 or 2 enemy grenades thrown into the C.P. His Medal of Honor was awarded posthumously.
- Staff Sergeant John W. Minick''', Company I, 121st Infantry Regiment. After his battalion was halted by enemy minefields during an advance on 21 November 1944 during the Hurtgen fighting, he led four men through the obstacle, then successfully destroyed an enemy machine gun post that had opened fire on the small party. Moving forward again, he single-handedly engaged an entire company of enemy soldiers, killing 20 men and capturing 20 more. Resuming the advance, he tried to scout through another minefield, but detonated a mine in the attempt. His Medal of Honor was awarded posthumously.
After World War II
From the late 1950s until the early 1960s, the 8th Infantry Division was organized as a partially Airborne Pentomic division, with two of its five battle groups on jump status. In 1963 the division was reorganized into a brigade structure with the 1st Brigade on jump status, and 1-504th was reorganized and reflagged as the 1st Battalion, 509th Infantry and 1-505th as the 2d Battalion, 509th Infantry. Supporting units throughout the division were also on jump status. The 8th Infantry Division operated its own jump school at Wiesbaden Air Base to support its 1st Brigade as well as other elements of the United States Army, Europe. In 1973 the 1st Brigade's assets were transferred to Vicenza, Italy, to establish a separate Airborne Task Force there and the two Airborne infantry battalions were replaced by the 2d Battalion, 28th Infantry and the 2d Battalion, 87th Infantry.
Desert Storm
Four battalions deployed to Operation Desert Storm.- Attached to 3rd Armored Division:
- * 4th Battalion, 34th Armor Regiment
- * 12th Engineer Battalion
- * 5th Battalion, 3rd Air Defense Artillery Regiment
- Attached to the 42nd Field Artillery Brigade:
- * 2nd Battalion, 29th Field Artillery Regiment
Inactivation
Commanders
- Maj. Gen. Frank McConnel Aug 50 Jan 51
- Maj. Gen. Harry J. Collins Jan 51 Feb 52
- Maj. Gen. W.P. Sheppard Feb 52 Jan 53
- BG John A. Dabney Jan 53 Jan 54
- Maj. Gen. Riley E. Ennis Jan 54 Jun 54
- Maj. Gen. Harry J. Collins Jun 54 Aug 54
- Maj. Gen. Thomas L. Harold Aug 54 Nov 54
- Maj. Gen. Thomas L. Sherburne Sept 54 Nov 54
- Maj. Gen. John G. Van Houten Nov 54 Jan 56
- Maj. Gen. Thomas M Watlington Jun 56 Aug 57
- Maj. Gen. Philip F. Lindman Aug 57 Mar 59
- Maj. Gen. Loyd R. Moses Mar 59 Oct 60
- Maj. Gen. Edgar C. Doleman Oct 60 Oct 61
- Maj. Gen. Andrew Goodpaster Oct 61 Oct 62
- Maj. Gen. Stanley R. Larsen Nov 62 Apr 64
- Maj. Gen. Joseph R. Russ Apr 64 Apr 66
- Maj. Gen. Patrick F. Cassidy Apr 66 Jun 68
- Maj. Gen. George L. Mabry, Jr. Jun 68 Feb 69
- Maj. Gen. Elmer H. Almquist Feb 69 Aug 70
- Maj. Gen. Donald V. Rattan Aug 70 May 72
- Maj. Gen. Frederic E. Davison May 72 Oct 73
- Maj. Gen. Joseph C. McDonough Oct 73 Jul 75
- Maj. Gen. John R.D. Cleland Jul 75 Jun 77
- Maj. Gen. Paul F. Gorman Jun 77 May 79
- Maj. Gen. William J. Livsey May 79 Jun 81
- Maj. Gen. Carl E. Vuono Jun 81 Jun 83
- Maj. Gen. Charles W. Dyke Jun 83 Jun 85
- Maj. Gen. Orren R. Whiddon Jun 85 Jun 87
- Maj. Gen. Calvin A. H. Waller Jun 87 Jun 89
- Maj. Gen. David M. Maddox Jul 89 Nov 90
- Maj. Gen. John P. Otjen Nov 90 Jan 92
In Popular Culture
Soldiers in the camp are seen wearing the same patch in ACU.