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William C. Bilo was born in Washington, D.C., on November 15, 1944. He enlisted in the Army in 1964 and received his commission as a Second Lieutenant of Artillery after graduation from Officer Candidate School at Fort Sill.
August 1997 – July, 2000, commander, 103rd Field Artillery Brigade, Providence Rhode Island; August 2000 – June 2002, deputy assistant commandant-Army National Guard, United States Army Field Artillery School, Fort Sill, Oklahoma
He was posted to the School of Fire at Fort Sill, Oklahoma, on 10 December as an instructor. He received promotions to lieutenant colonel on 30 July 1918 and colonel on 24 October 1918. [2] He became executive officer of the 9th Field Artillery Regiment, his former unit from Hawaii now at Fort Sill, on 15 October 1918. [2]
During World War I, Montgomery M. Macomb, a brigadier general and career artillery officer who had retired in 1916, was recalled to active duty to command Fort Sill and oversee the schools and training programs that prepared soldiers for combat in France. [14] Fort Sill was once the site of a large Boot Hill cemetery. Many soldiers who were ...
The 95th Division was first constituted on 4 September 1918 in the National Army. The division, minus the 377th and 378th Infantry Regiments of the 189th Infantry Brigade and the 170th Field Artillery Brigade (including the 320th Ammunition Train), were organized at Camp Sherman, Ohio, in September.
Fort Sill, Oklahoma: Arthur T. Brown October 2, 1944 Oro Bay, New Guinea, Southwest Pacific Area: Andrew Gibson Leroy E. Greene Charles A. Horne Eugene A. Washington, Jr. Lloyd L. White, Jr. Madison Thomas October 12, 1944 Shepton Mallet, United Kingdom, European Theater ** James B. Sanders October 25, 1944 European Theater ** Ray W. Anderson
Maples became the commanding general of the United States Army Field Artillery Center at Fort Sill on 23 August 2001. Prior to assuming his duties as DIA Director, Maples served at Headquarters, Department of the Army as the director of operations, readiness and mobilization, and the director of military support in the Office of the Deputy ...
Kristoffer Bryan Domeij (October 5, 1982 – October 22, 2011) was a United States Army soldier who is recognized as the U.S. soldier with the most deployments to be killed in action; at the time of his death he was on his fourteenth deployment.