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The 38th Infantry Division was directed to Camp Anza, California, for final demobilization and inactivation, which was completed on 9 November 1945. [24] For a time, the 38th Infantry Division remained inactivated while debate raged within the federal government as to the size, scope and even the necessity for a separate Army National Guard.
2nd Infantry Division "Indian Head Division" at Camp Humphreys, South Korea. 3rd Infantry Division "Rock of the Marne" at Fort Stewart, Georgia. 4th Infantry Division "Ivy Division/Iron Horse" at Fort Carson, Colorado. 7th Infantry Division “The Hourglass Division” at Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Washington. 10th Mountain Division at Fort Drum ...
32nd Infantry Division (United States) 33rd Infantry Division (United States) 34th Infantry Division (United States) 35th Infantry Division (United States) 36th Infantry Division (United States) 37th Infantry Division (United States) 38th Infantry Division (United States) 39th Infantry Division (United States) 40th Armored Division (United States)
The 2nd Infantry, Indiana National Guard, was called into federal service 25 March 1917, and mustered into federal service 20 April 1917 at Jeffersonville. Drafted into federal service 5 August 1917. [3] It was reorganized and redesignated 1 October 1917 as the 152d Infantry and assigned to the 38th Division.
The current 38th Infantry Regiment was constituted in the Regular Army on 15 May 1917, and was organized on 1 June 1917 at Syracuse, New York.It was assigned 1 October 1917 to the 3rd Infantry Division.
The 38th Infantry Division was activated at Camp Shelby, MS, and would serve in the Pacific from 1944-1945, earning the nickname "Avengers of Bataan." After World War II, the Army debated the necessity of a separate National Guard at all, deciding finally in 1947 to maintain the unique dual-status purpose of the National Guard.
The 30th Armored Division was organized as the result of an agreement between Tennessee and North Carolina to split the 30th Infantry Division. 39th Armored Division: phantom World War II division; 40th Armored Division: 1954–1967; 48th Armored Division: 1954–1968; 49th Armored Division: 1946–1967; 1973–2004; 50th Armored Division: 1946 ...
The division never fought as a single organization. 7,518 National Guardsmen from Kentucky served in World War One. 890 Kentuckians died in the war. [4] In 1941 the National Guard of the United States was mobilized for active service. The 38th Tank Company was detached from the 38th Infantry Division to become Company D of the 192nd Tank Battalion.