66th Armor Regiment (United States)

66th Armor Regiment

66th Armor Regiment coat of arms
Active February 1918–
Country USA
Branch Armor Branch (United States)
Type armor regiment
Size Two Active Battalions
Garrison/HQ 1st BN at Fort Carson, Colorado.

3rd BN at Grafenwoehr, Germany

Nickname Burt's Knights
Motto Uxor is Laxus
Colors Yellow. Red and Blue
Engagements World War I
World War II
Korean War
Operation Desert Storm
Operation Iraqi Freedom
Commanders
Notable
commanders
George S. Patton(304th Tank Brigade)
Elgin Braine (305th Tank Brigade)
James M. Burt (3rd Battalion)
Insignia
Distinctive Unit Insignia

The 66th Armor Regiment is the oldest Armored unit in the United States Army, tracing its lineage to the beginning of the Tank Service in February 1918 under the command of Col. George S. Patton.

Contents

Current Disposition

Two battalions of the regiment are still in service in the Regular Army.

Regimental history

World War I

What would become the 66th Armored Regiment was originally organized as the 1st and 2d Provisional Brigades, United States Tank Corps. The regiment participated in the battle of St. Mihiel, France, where it received its baptism of fire while attached to the 1st Infantry Division in the Meuse-Argonne, and the Somme Offensives.

The casualties among the officers and men were heavy during the short period the regiment participated in World War I and their valor was recognized by General John J. Pershing in the following words: "The percentage of casualties among the officers and men tells the tale of splendid morale and gallantry in action and their unselfish devotion to duty".

Between the world wars the numerical designation of the regiment was changed several times. On 15 July 1940, the unit was redesignated from the "66th Infantry (Light Tanks)" to "66th Armored Regiment" as part of the newly-formed 2nd Armored Division, stationed at Fort Benning, Georgia.

World War II

In December 1942, the regiment participated in the amphibious invasion of French Morocco in North Africa and led the division's entry into Casablanca. The regiment participated in the invasion of Sicily and through fierce fighting earned the unit six battle streamers during the war.

In 1944, the three battalions of the regiment went into action on the European Continent, beginning landing on Omaha Beach on D+3 (9 June 1944.) Four days later the regiment (as part of Combat Command A of the 2nd Armored Division) fought through elements of the German 6th Fallschirmjager Regiment and elements of the 17th SS Panzergrenadier Division southwest of Carentan, France at the Battle of Bloody Gulch. Later progress was also initially difficult in combat against elements of the newly arrived 116th Panzer Division and surviving elements of the Panzer Lehr Division. In a difficult battle in the streets of the village of Percy and on surrounding high ground on 30 July, against some of the eight Panthers Generalleutnant Fritz Bayerlein had found and rallied from workshops at neighbouring Villebaudon on 28 July, the 3/66th was to lose 13 tanks and was forced to pull out of the village losing another five tanks outside Percy to heavy Nebelwerfer and other mortar fire. On 31 July 3/66th was down to only 24 operational tanks. The regiment fought across France to the German border with the rest of the division and the U.S. Third Army, but was diverted north to counter the German advance during the Battle of the Bulge, assisting in the destruction of the 2nd Panzer Division and capturing Houffalize, Belgium.

As a result of its exemplary conduct in the liberation of Belgium, the regiment was twice cited in the Order of the Day of the Belgian Army. Captain James M. Burt, the commander of B Company, 66th Armored Regiment, was awarded the Medal of Honor for his heroism during the Battle of Aachen in October 1944. Captain Burt later served as Honorary Colonel of the Regiment.

Cold War

Following the war, elements of the 66th and other units of the 2nd Armored Division were selected to occupy the American sector of Berlin and serve as the first American troops to enter the fallen German capital.

During the Korean War, an offspring of the 66th fought under the designation "6th Tank Battalion". During the war, the sixth won seven battle streamers and the Korean Presidential Unit Citation. These honors were awarded to the 66th Armored Regiment when the 6th Tank Battalion was deactivated after the conflict.

Throughout the Cold War, the four battalions of the regiment served in the 2nd Armored Division at Ft. Hood, Texas, and as part of the 2nd Armored Division (Forward) in the Federal Republic of Germany.

Desert Storm

In 1991, during Operation Desert Storm, the regiment again proved its worth by assisting in the liberation of Kuwait and the defeat of the Iraqi army. The 2nd and 3rd battalions of the regiment, stationed in Germany as part of the 2nd Armored Division (Forward), deployed and fought under the operational control of the 1st Infantry Division. The 4th battalion, along with the 3d (Phantom) Brigade of the 3rd Infantry Division, was attached to the 1st Armored Division. The Phantom Brigade became the 1st Armor's lead brigade for VII Corps' "left hook" to smash the Iraqi Republican Guard divisions.

In the Spring of 1995, the 1st Battalion of the 66th was assigned to assist over 5,000 Cuban and Haitian refugees interned at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

Global War on Terror

The 1st and 3rd Battalions have both deployed to Iraq in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom.

3–66 Armor was deployed to Operation Iraqi Freedom for 2008–2009.

Coat of arms

Tierced in pairle reversed gules, azure, and or; in chief a label of three points argent.
On dexter side an inescutcheon of the second fimbriated, semé-de-lis, overall a saltire all of the last.
On a wreath of the three colors a wyvern without wings sinister couchant reguardant argent, grasping in its dexter claw a pine tree inverted and eradicated proper.
On its neck a label of three points azure

Motto: Sempre in Hostes. (Always into the enemy).

The coat of arms was originally approved for the 15th Tank Battalion, part of which was in the old 304th Tank Brigade. Therefore, the shield and crest of the 304th Tank Brigade are used with the label added for difference.
The shield is of the colors of the Tank Corps Shoulder Sleeve Insignia.
The Brigade was organized at Langres, France, in 1918, and the arms of Langres are shown on an inescutcheon differenced by a silver border and changing the cross from red to silver.
The wyvern is from the original insignia of the French Tank Corps.
The uprooted pine tree commemorates the activities of the brigade in the Argonne Forest during the Meuse-Argonne operations.

Lineage

World War I

16th Tank Battalion reorganized and redesignated as the 1st Battalion, 1st Tank Regiment (16th Tank Battalion organized in 1918 as Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 327th Battalion, Tank Corps, and Company C, 1st Separate Battalion, Heavy Tank Service, 65th Engineers)
15th Tank Battalion reorganized and redesignated as the 2d Battalion, 1st Tank Regiment (15th Tank Battalion organized in 1918 as Headquarters and Headquarters Company, and Companies A and C, 1st Battalion, 1st Tank Center, and Company A, 1st Separate Battalion, Heavy Tank Service, 65th Engineers)
18th Tank Battalion redesignated as the 3d Battalion, 1st Tank Regiment (18th Tank Battalion organized in 1918 as the 329th Battalion, Tank Corps, and Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 328th Battalion, Tank Corps; inactivated 29 July 1922)
21st Tank Maintenance Company redesignated as the Service Company (21st Tank Maintenance Company organized in 1918 as the 316th Repair and Salvage Company, Tank Corps)

World War II

Regimental Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 1st Battalion, and Company D as the 66th Tank Battalion
2nd Battalion (less Company D) and Headquarters Company, 3d Battalion, as Headquarters and Headquarters Company, Companies A and B, and Service Company, 6th Tank Battalion (remainder of 6th Tank Battalion organized from elements of the 67th Armored Regiment)
Reconnaissance Company as Troop D, 82d Cavalry Reconnaissance Squadron, Mechanized
Service Company as the Service Company, 12th Armored Infantry Battalion
(Band as the 2d Armored Division Band hereafter – separate lineage)
3d Battalion (less Headquarters Company) and Maintenance Company disbanded
66th Tank Battalion redesignated 5 January 1949 as the 66th Medium Tank Battalion Redesignated 1 April 1953 as the 66th Tank Battalion Inactivated (less Company A) 1 July 1957 in Germany and relieved from assignment to the 2d Armored Division
6th Tank Battalion redesignated 31 January 1949 as the 6th Medium Tank Battalion Relieved 14 July 1950 from assignment to the 2d Armored Division Assigned 29 October 1950 to the 24th Infantry Division Redesignated 10 November 1951 as the 6th Tank Battalion Inactivated 5 June 1958 in Korea and relieved from assignment to the 24th Infantry Division
Troop D, 82d Mechanized Cavalry Reconnaissance Squadron, redesignated 17 January 1948 as Company D, 82d Reconnaissance Battalion Inactivated 1 July 1957 in Germany and relieved from assignment to the 2d Armored Division
Service Company, 12th Armored Infantry Battalion, redesignated 11 October 1948 as Company D, 12th Armored Infantry Battalion Inactivated 1 July 1957 in Germany and relieved from assignment to the 2d Armored Division
Maintenance Company and Companies G, H, and I, 66th Armored Regiment, reconstituted 1 July 1957 in the Regular Army

Honors

Campaign participation credit

  1. Somme Offensive;
  2. St. Mihiel;
  3. Meuse-Argonne
  1. Algeria-French Morocco (with arrowhead);
  2. Sicily (with arrowhead);
  3. Normandy;
  4. Northern France;
  5. Rhineland;
  6. Ardennes-Alsace;
  7. Central Europe
  1. UN Defensive;
  2. UN Offensive;
  3. CCF Intervention;
  4. First UN Counteroffensive;
  5. CCF Spring Offensive;
  6. UN Summer-Fall Offensive;
  7. Second Korean Winter;
  8. Korea, Summer 1953
  1. Defense of Saudi Arabia;
  2. Liberation and Defense of Kuwait;
  3. Cease-Fire

Decorations

  1. Presidential Unit Citation (Army) for NORMANDY
  2. Presidential Unit Citation (Army) for VIRE RIVER
  3. Presidential Unit Citation (Army) for ROER RIVER
  4. Valorous Unit Award for IRAQ-KUWAIT
  5. Valorous Unit Award for IRAQ OIF 07-09 New Baghdad
  6. Belgian Fourragere 1940
  7. Meritorious Unit Citation (3RD BN) awarded 10 March 2010 for Operation Iraqi Freedom 08-10
  8. Cited in the Order of the Day of the Belgian Army for action in BELGIUM 1944
  9. Cited in the Order of the Day of the Belgian Army for action in the ARDENNES

See also

Bibliography

  1. OMAHA BEACHHEAD (6–13 June 1944); CMH Pub 100-11.
  2. UTAH BEACH TO CHERBOURG (6–27 June 1944); CMH Pub 100-12
  3. ST-LO (7–19 July 1944); CMH Pub 100-13
  1. UNITED STATES ARMY IN THE KOREAN WAR; POLICY AND DIRECTION: THE FIRST YEAR; CMH Pub 20-1-1
  2. SOUTH TO THE NAKTONG,NORTH TO THE YALU (June–November 1950) CMH Pub 20-2-1
  3. TRUCE TENT AND FIGHTING FRONT; CMH Pub 20-3-1
  4. EBB AND FLOW NOVEMBER 1950-JULY 1951; CMH pub
  1. Barth, George B. Tropic Lightning and Taro leaf in Korea. N.p.: 1953.
  2. Blumenson, Martin. Breakout and Pursuit. 1961
  3. Cole, Hugh M. The Ardennes: Battle of the Bulge. 1965
  4. Harrison, Gordon A. Cross-Channel Attack. 1951
  5. Garland, Albert N., and Howard McGaw Smith. Sicily and the Surrender of Italy. 1965
  6. Howe, George F. Northwest Africa: Seizing the initiative in the West. 1957
  7. MacDonald, Charles B. The Siegfried Line Campaign. 1963
  8. Stadtmauer, Saul A.., editor. A Pictorial History of the Victory Division in Korea. Tokyo, Japan: 1953
  9. Guderian, Major Heinz Gunther.., From Normandy to the Ruhr: With the 116th Panzer Division.
  10. Bayerlein, Generalleutnant Fritz.., After Action Reports of the Panzer Lehr Division Commander: From D-Day To the Ruhr.

References

 This article incorporates public domain material from the United States Army Center of Military History document "Lineage and Honors 66th Armor (Iron Knights)".

External links