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The 101st Airborne Division consists of a division headquarters and headquarters battalion, two infantry brigade combat teams, one mobile brigade combat team, division artillery, a combat aviation brigade, a sustainment brigade. 101st Airborne Division, Fort Campbell, Kentucky. Headquarters and Headquarters Battalion "Gladiators" [148]
Inactivated 1 July 1958 in Germany and relieved from assignment to the 11th Airborne Division; Redesignated 15 November 1962 as Headquarters and Headquarters Battery, 2d Battalion, 320th Artillery, and assigned to the 101st Airborne Division (organic elements concurrently constituted) Battalion activated 3 December 1962 at Fort Campbell, Kentucky
Command and control facility for 101st Airborne Division at Fort Campbell Lyndon B. Johnson and Major General Ben Sternberg at Fort Campbell on July 23, 1966.. The site for Fort Campbell was selected on September 9, 1941, and the Title I Survey was completed November 15, 1941, coincidentally the same time the Japanese Imperial Fleet was leaving Japanese home waters for the attack on Pearl Harbor.
The 326th Engineer Battalion (Sapper Eagles) [1] [5] is one of three air assault engineer battalions in the United States Army. [5] [6] The 326th is part of the 1st Infantry Brigade Combat Team ("Bastogne")(♣), 101st Airborne Division and has been a part of the 101st since World War I.
The soldiers were part of the 101st Airborne Division, the U.S. Army’s only air assault division. That division been based at the Fort Campbell army post since 1956, according to official U.S ...
Constituted 16 December 1989 in the Regular Army as the 9th Battalion, 101st Aviation Regiment, assigned to the 101st Airborne Division, and activated at Fort Campbell, Kentucky In 2004, the 9th Battalion (Support) was redesigned as the 563rd Aviation Support Battalion and was deployed in 2005 to Iraq.
This image shows a flag, a coat of arms, a seal or some other official insignia produced by the United States Army Institute of Heraldry.It is in the public domain but its use is restricted by Title 18, United States Code, Section 704 and the Code of Federal Regulations (32 CFR, Part 507), .
The 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault) was the only division in the US Army to have two aviation brigades. On 7 May 2015 the 159th Combat Aviation Brigade was inactivated at a ceremony at the Fort Campbell, Kentucky, Division Parade field, leaving only the 101st Combat Aviation Brigade in the division. [10]