9th Engineer Battalion (United States): Difference between revisions
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Organized 1917-05-21 at [[Camp Newton D. Baker]], Texas |
Organized 1917-05-21 at [[Camp Newton D. Baker]], Texas |
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Reorganized and redesignated in July 1917 as the 9th Engineers |
Reorganized and redesignated in July 1917 as the 9th Engineers |
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Assigned 1917-11-27 to the 15th Cavalry Division |
Assigned 1917-11-27 to the [[15th Cavalry Division]] |
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*Relieved 1919-05-22 from assignment to the 15th Cavalry Division |
*Relieved 1919-05-22 from assignment to the 15th Cavalry Division |
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*Battalion (less Company A) inactivated 1922-10-01 at [[Fort Sam Houston]], Texas |
*Battalion (less Company A) inactivated 1922-10-01 at [[Fort Sam Houston]], Texas |
Revision as of 13:58, 12 March 2013
This article needs additional citations for verification. (September 2007) |
9th Engineer Battalion | |
---|---|
Active | 1917–1945 1952–1991 1996–present |
Country | United States |
Branch | United States Army Corps of Engineers |
Type | Engineer battalion |
Garrison/HQ | Schweinfurt, Germany |
Motto(s) | "Asistiremos" (Spanish: We will assist) |
Engagements | Battle of the Bulge Gulf War |
Insignia | |
Distinctive Unit Insignia |
The 9th Engineer Battalion is a unit of the United States Army that deploys to designated contingency areas and conducts combat and/or stability operations in support of a brigade combat team. It is a divisional mechanized combat engineer unit, composed of three line companies and a headquarters company. Its mission is to provide assured mobility, counter-mobility, general engineering and survivability support for the 172nd Infantry Brigade with well trained sappers (combat engineers) ready to deploy anywhere at any time.
History
The battalion was constituted 15 May 1917 in the Regular Army as the 2nd Battalion Mounted Engineers. They were organized 21 May 1917 at Camp Newton D. Baker, El Paso, Texas, and redesignated the 9th Engineers (Mounted) in July 1917. The 9th spent its first years in El Paso while serving at Camp Stewart, Texas.
After World War I, the battalion was declared inactive except for A Company, which was transferred to Fort Riley, Kansas to provide engineer support to the Cavalry School. From 1923 to 1936, A Company provided vital training and infrastructure support to the Cavalry School first as a unit of the 2nd Cavalry Division and later as Troop A, 9th Engineer Squadron. The performance of Troop A during this period established a tradition of excellence for the 9th Engineer Squadron as a mounted cavalry unit. The platoon leader during a significant portion of that period was 1LT Samuel D. Sturgis, Jr., later to become the Chief of Engineers as a Lieutenant General.
Following the outbreak of World War I, the battalion was activated as the 9th Armored Engineer Battalion, part of the newly 9th Armored Division. Landing in France in September from their staging base in England, the 9th Armored Engineers supported the division's movement across France, making first contact with the enemy in the Schoenfels-Wilwerdange-Bissen area. The battalion fought in the Battle of the Bulge in December 1944, with C Company figuring prominently in the holding of Bastogne, for which the company was awarded the Presidential Unit Citation.
On 7 March 1945, during the allied offensive to the Rhine River, Combat Command B of the 9th Armored Division arrived at the town of Remagen, discovering that the Ludendorff Bridge over the Rhine river was intact. A detachment from B Company braved enemy fire to cut wires and dismantle explosive charges set to destroy the bridge. Although several charges were detonated, the Wehrmacht failed to destroy the Ludendorff Bridge; B Company secured the far side of the bridgehead. The next day, C Company kept the bridge open despite a continuous, intense artillery and aircraft attack that struck the bridge twenty-four times. When the smoke cleared, the 9th Armored Engineers had been instrumental in establishing the first bridgehead across the Rhine River since the Napoleonic Campaigns. The unit was awarded the oak leaf for their Presidential Unit Citation for the combat at Remagen.
The 9th Engineers were in the final sweep into Germany, and after the Nazi surrender, established an occupation headquarters in the Bavarian city of Bayreuth, with A Company at Coburg, B Company at Kulmbach, and C Company at Hof. Occupation duty ended in late 1945, so the battalion left West Germany and was deactivated on 13 October 1945.
In 1952, the 9th Engineers were reactivated as the 9th Engineer Combat Battalion (Army). In autumn of 1956, the 9th Engineer Battalion replaced the 35th Engineers at Kitzingen, Germany, moving to Aschaffenburg within the year.
In 1991, the 9th Engineers served in the Persian Gulf War, leading the 1st Infantry Division through the Desert Breach, and assisted in liberating Kuwait. The battalion returned to Aschaffenburg, where it was deactivated in late 1992. The battalion was reactivated as part of the 1st Infantry Division in Schweinfurt, Germany on 5 April 1996; in October, it deployed with the 2nd Brigade Combat Team as part of the covering force for Operation Joint Endeavor and Joint Guard; the battalion returned to Schweinfurt in April 1997. The battalion deployed to Kosovo in June 1999 as part of Task Force Falcon. The battalion returned to Schweinfurt in December 1999, only to return for a second tour in Kosovo from May to November 2002.
In 2003, the 9th Engineers prepared to participate in the initial invasion of Iraq, by deploying select personnel with a large fleet of vehicles to Turkey, but that was cancelled because of Turkish refusal to participate in the Iraqi invasion. In August and September of that year, A Company deployed to Bosnia in support of Task Force 1–18’s Dynamic Response Exercise. In February 2004, the battalion deployed to Kuwait for month-long training before their last deployment, Operation Iraqi Freedom II.
The 9th Engineer Battalion, reorganized and augmented as Task Force 9th Engineer. The headquarters occupied Forward Operating Base Remagen in Tikrit, Salah ad Din province, but elements of it operated as far south as Balad and north into Bayji. In February 2005, the battalion redeployed to Schweinfurt, Germany. In March 2006, the 9th Engineer Battalion was permanently assigned to the 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division. On 28 March 2008, when the 1st Infantry Division completed its move to Fort Riley, the 9th Engineer Battalion came under operational control of 1st Armored Division.[1]
In September 2006, the 9th Engineers was deployed for a second time in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom 06-08. Charlie Company was assigned to Ramadi, while the remainder of the battalion was assigned to parts of Baghdad. The battalion returned to Schweinfurt, Germany, after 15 month deployment, in mid November 2007.
In March 2008, the Gilas changed patches as the 2nd Dagger Brigade of the 1st Infantry Division was reflagged as the 172d Separate Infantry Brigade, "Blackhawks". The Gila Battalion redeployed to Iraq again in late November 2008 for its third turn to Iraq in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom. In March 2009, the 9th Engineer Battalion, reorganized and augmented as Task Force Gila and based in FOB Kalsu, once again provides dynamic full-spectrum maneuver support for the Blackhawk Brigade. As TF Gila, the battalion was supplemented with the Brigade's Signal, Military Intelligence and Brigade Headquarters Company. The battalion redeployed to Germany in November 2009.
The 9th Engineer Battalion, designated as Task Force Gila, deployed to eastern Afghanistan in July 2011 in support of Operation Enduring Freedom.
Lineage
Constituted 1917-05-15 in the Regular Army as the 2d Battalion, Mounted Engineers Organized 1917-05-21 at Camp Newton D. Baker, Texas Reorganized and redesignated in July 1917 as the 9th Engineers Assigned 1917-11-27 to the 15th Cavalry Division
- Relieved 1919-05-22 from assignment to the 15th Cavalry Division
- Battalion (less Company A) inactivated 1922-10-01 at Fort Sam Houston, Texas
- Assigned 1923-03-24 to the 2nd Cavalry Division
- Company A inactivated 1930-04-19 at Fort Riley, Kansas
- Activated 1941-11-01 at Fort Riley, Kansas
- Reorganized and redesignated 1942-07-15 as the 9th Armored Engineer Battalion; concurrently relieved from assignment to the 2d Cavalry Division and assigned to the 9th Armored Division.
- Deployed from the New York Port of Embarkation on 1944-08-20.
- Arrived in England on 1944-08-26, and prepared for entrance into combat.
- Arrived in France on 1944-10-06, and immediately participated in the Rhineland Campaign.
- The 9th Engineer Battalion was withdrawn from the Rhineland Campaign and redirected to the Ardennes-Alsace Campaign on 1944-12-16.
- The Ardennes-Alsace Campaign was concluded on 1945-01-25, and the 9th Engineer Battalion returned to the Rhineland Campaign.
- The Rhineland Campaign concluded on 1945-03-21.
- The Central Europe Campaign commenced on 1945-03-22.
- The Central Europe Campaign concluded on 1945-05-11, and the 9th Engineer Battalion transitioned to Occupation mode.
- The 9th Engineer Battalion was located at Bayreuth, Germany on 1945-08-14.
- 9th EB returned to the Hampton Roads Port of Embarkation on 1945-10-12, and moved to Camp Patrick Henry.
- Inactivated 1945-10-13 at Camp Patrick Henry, Virginia
- Redesignated 1951-12-17 as the 9th Engineer Combat Battalion and relieved from assignment to the 9th Armored Division
- Activated 1952-01-21 at Fort Lewis, Washington
- Redesignated 1953-06-10 as the 9th Engineer Battalion
- Assigned 1991-10-16 to the 3d Infantry Division.
- Inactivated 1992-08-15 in Germany and relieved from assignment to the 3d Infantry Division
- Assigned 1996-02-16 to the 1st Infantry Division and activated in Schweinfurt, Germany
- Assigned 2008-03-15 to the 172nd Infantry Brigade Combat Team in Schweinfurt, Germany
- Deactivated 2012-05-31 in Schweinfurt, Germany as a component of the deactivation of the 172nd Infantry Brigade.
Honors
Campaign participation credit
- Rhineland;
- Ardennes-Alsace;
- Central Europe
- Southwest Asia:
- Defense of Saudi Arabia;
- Liberation and Defense of Kuwait;
- Cease-Fire
- Iraq
- Afghanistan
Decorations
- Streamer embroidered SAMARRA, IRAQ
- Streamer embroidered IRAQ-KUWAIT.[2]
- Meritorious Unit Commendation (Army),
- Streamer embroidered IRAQ 2004–2005[3]
- Streamer embroidered EUROPEAN THEATER.[4]
- Streamer embroidered 1996–1997
- Presidential Unit Citation (Army),
- Streamer embroidered LUXEMBOURG[2]
- Streamer embroidered ST. VITH[5]
- Streamer embroidered REMAGEN BRIDGEHEAD.[5][6]
- Streamer embroidered BASTOGNE[6]
- Cited in the Order of the Day of the Belgian Army for:
- Belgian Croix de Guerre 1940 with Palm for BASTOGNE[6]
See also
References and notes
This article incorporates public domain material from 9th Engineer Battalion Lineage and Honors. United States Army Center of Military History.
- ^ http://www.9en.2bct.1id.army.mil/history.htm
- ^ a b Company A
- ^ "Permanent Orders 222-18". United States Army Center of Military History. 15 August 2007. Archived from the original on 9 June 2010. Retrieved 25 June 2010.
{{cite web}}
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- ^ a b c Company B
- ^ a b c d Company C