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"36TH INFANTRY DIVISION
RECOUNTS ACTIVITIES OF THE 36TH DURING
WORLD WARS I AND II - UNDERSCORES
MAJOR BATTLES AT SALERNO,
SAN PIETRO, CASSINO, ANZIO,
ROME, AND
GERMANY."
US Army film MF 130-7931
Public domain film from the
US National Archives, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and one-pass brightness-contrast-color correction & mild video noise reduction applied.
The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and/or equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original).
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/
3.0/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/36th_Infantry_Division_(United_States)
The
36th Infantry Division ("
Arrowhead"), also known as the "
Texas Division", is a division of the
United States Army and the
Texas Army National Guard. It was activated for service in
World War II on
25 November 1940, and was sent to the
European Theater of Operations in
April 1943, and returned to the Texas Army National Guard in December of
1945.
A unit of the
36th Infantry, the
2nd Battalion, was detached and sent to the
Pacific just before the outbreak of war in late
1941.
Captured by the
Japanese and forced into slave labor, its fate was unknown for most of the rest of World War II, resulting in the name
The Lost Battalion.
The 36th Infantry was reconstituted in a May 2004 reorganization of the
49th Armored Division...
History
World War I
The 36th Infantry Division was activated as the
15th Division, an
Army National Guard Division from Texas and
Oklahoma.
The new unit also received a new commander,
Major General Edwin St. John Greble. The designation was changed to the
36th Division in July
1917...
The unit was sent to
Europe in July
1918 and conducted major operations in the
Meuse-Argonne Offensive. On 9–
10 October, the unit participated in heavy combat near the village of
St. Etienne.
Following this victory, which included the capture of several hundred
German men and officers, as well as artillery, the unit launched an assault near an area known as "
Forest Farm." During World War I, the division suffered 2,584 casualties, 466 killed in action and 2,
118 wounded in action. The unit was inactivated in June
1919.
World War II...
The 36th was called up again for active federal service on 25 November 1940, at
San Antonio, Texas...
The division departed the
New York Port of Embarkation on 2 April 1943, for
North Africa...
Combat chronicle
The 36th Infantry Division landed in North Africa, 13 April 1943, and trained at
Arzew and
Rabat. It was assigned to the
VI Corps,
Fifth Army, but attached to
Services of Supply,
North African Theater of Operations U.S. Army (
NATOUSA), for supply.
The division first saw action on
9 September 1943, when it landed by sea at
Paestum on the
Gulf of Salerno against intense German opposition.
The Germans launched counterattacks on 12–
14 September, but the 36th repulsed them with the aid of air support and naval gunfire, and advanced slowly, securing the area from
Agropoli to
Altavilla.
After a brief rest the 36th returned to combat,
15 November. It captured
Mount Maggiore, Mount Lungo, and the village of
San Pietro despite strong enemy positions and severe winter weather. This grueling campaign against the
Bernhardt Line was marked by futile attempts to establish a secure bridgehead across the
Rapido River, 1
January 1944, to
8 February 1944. The division attacked across the Rapido River
January 20, 1944 but was harshly repulsed by the
15th Panzer Grenadier Division...
On
15 August 1944, as part of the
6th Army Group, the division made another amphibious assault landing, against light opposition in the Saint-Raphaël-Fréjus area of southern
France as part of
Operation Dragoon...
The 36th Division was reassigned to the
XXI Corps on 27
April 1945, and attacked the "
National Redoubt" at Künzelsau on the 30th. Members of the Division's
142nd Infantry Regiment arriving as reinforcements on May 5 tipped the
Battle for Castle Itter in favor of a combined U.S. Army/
Wehrmacht defense against a Waffen SS attack, the only time German and
American forces fought side-by-side in World War II.
By 8 May 1945, the Division was based in
Kitzbühel, Austria where it captured
Field Marshal Gerd von Rundstedt, the commander of all
German army forces on the
Western front, and its final station was at
Kufstein,
Austria on 14
August 1945.
After 400 days of combat, the 36th Infantry Division returned to the
United States in
December 1945. It was returned to the Texas Army National Guard on
15 December 1945...
- published: 14 Sep 2015
- views: 1640