112th Infantry Regiment (United States)

112th Infantry Regiment

Coat Of Arms
Active 1st Battalion, 1861; 2nd Battalion, 1858 (Logan Guards and Bellefonte Fencibles)
Allegiance Federal, Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
Branch Army National Guard
Type Infantry
Role Stryker
Garrison/HQ 1st Battalion - Cambridge Springs, PA
2nd Battalion: Lewistown, PA
Nickname Sixteenth Pennsylvania (Special Designation) [1]
Motto Strive, Obey, Endure.
Colors Blue and Red
Engagements American Civil War
War with Spain
World War I
World War II
Operation Iraqi Freedom
Commanders
Current
commander
1st Battalion, 112th Infantry Regiment: LTC Jerome P. Miller
2nd Battalion, 112th Infantry Regiment: MAJ Eric E. Zimmerman
Insignia
Distinctive Unit Insignia
U.S. Infantry Regiments
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111th Infantry Regiment 115th Infantry Regiment

The 112th Infantry Regiment, also known as the Sixteenth Pennsylvania,[1] is a unit in the Pennsylvania National Guard which can trace its lineage back to before the American Civil War.

Contents

Heraldic items

Coat of arms

Blazon

Symbolism

  1. To the old coat of arms of the 112th Infantry Regiment are added a rampant lion as found on the arms of Belgium and the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg grasping a red cross of the province of Lorraine in France.
  2. The lion is in the infantry color and both symbols represent the locale of the Regiment’s combat in World War II.
  3. The shield is white, the old infantry color.
  4. Service in the Civil War is shown by the cross patée, the badge of the 5th Corps, 3rd Division, in which the organization served in that war.
  5. The Spanish castle indicates service in Puerto Rico during the Spanish-American War, while the bridge, which is a representation of the bridge over the Vesle River at Fismes, France, where the Regiment saw its hardest fighting, symbolizes service in World War I.
  1. The coat of arms was approved on 1930-01-02.
  2. It was amended to show additional war service on 1951-08-29.
  3. The insignia was amended to correct the blazon on 2008-05-16.

Distinctive unit insignia

Description

Symbolism

  1. To the old coat of arms of the 112th Infantry Regiment are added a rampant lion as found on the arms of Belgium and the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg grasping a red cross of the province of Lorraine in France.
  2. The lion is in the infantry color and both symbols represent the locale of the Regiment’s combat in World War II.
  3. The shield is white, the old infantry color.
  4. Service in the Civil War is shown by the cross patée, the badge of the 5th Corps, 3rd Division, in which the organization served in that war.
  5. The Spanish castle indicates service in Puerto Rico during the Spanish-American War.
  6. The bridge, which is a representation of the bridge over the Vesle River at Fismes, France, where the Regiment saw its hardest fighting, symbolizes service in World War I.

Background

  1. The distinctive unit insignia was originally approved on 1930-02-02.
  2. It was amended to show additional war service on 1951-08-29.
  3. The insignia was amended to update the description on 2008-05-16.

History

The 1st Battalion 112th Infantry Regiment draws its origins from Civil War era units, including the 13th, 15th, and 17th Regiments and still maintains the right to possess the silver bands and battle streamers awarded for battle service in the Peninsula and Virginia 1861-1863 campaigns and for participation in the battles of Manassas, Antietam, Fredericksburg, Gettysburg, the Wilderness, and Spottsylvania. On 22 November 1878, the battalion was organized as the 16th Regiment, Pennsylvania National Guard. The Regiment consisted of companies from Erie, McKean, Venango, Elk, Warren, and Crawford counties. The units were located in Erie (Co A), Bradford (Co C), Oil City (Co D), Cooperstown (Co E), Franklin (Co F), Ridgway (Co H), Warren (Co I), and Titusville (Co K).

The 2d Battalion 112th Infantry Regiment heritage can be traced back to the Logan Guards (Lewistown) and the Bellefonte Fencibles, both organized in 1858. These units were mustered into federal service during the American Civil War. The Logan Guards were mustered as Company E, 25 Volunteers and then as Company A of the 46th Volunteers and the Bellefonte Fencibles were mustered as Company H, 2d Pennsylvania Volunteers. These units combined have 17 campaign streamers from the American Civil War: Po Valley, Manassas, Antietam, Chancellorsville, Gettysburg, Atlanta, Fredericksburg, Vicksburg, Wilderness, Spotsylvania, Cold Harbor, Petersburg, Appomattox, Virginia 1861, South Carolina 1862, Mississippi 1863, Tennessee 1863. In July 1865, these units were mustered out of federal service.

Spanish American War (1st Battalion)

Designated as the 16th Regiment, Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry, the unit was mobilized on 28 April 1898 and activated into federal service for the Spanish-American War on 10 May 1898 at their mobilization site, Mount Gretna, Pennsylvania. They sailed to Puerto Rico on 5 July 1898 and served with the 1st Brigade, 1st Division, 1st Army Corps throughout the campaign. The unit was noted for actions in the Battle of Coamo, where the Regiment sustained six wounded and one killed in action during a blocking action. The unit was awarded the sattle streamer marked Puerto Rico for their service. They were mustered out of federal service in December 1898.

World War I (1st Battalion)

On 3 July 1916, the regiment was called to service for Mexican border duty. The unit was transported to and garrisoned at El Paso, Texas for training, but was never utilized due to the ending of hostilities. The unit was mustered into federal active service on 16 July 1917 for service in World War I. On 11 October 1917 the 16th Regiment was re-designated as the 112th Infantry Regiment, became part of the 28th Infantry Division, and was the first war-strength National Guard regiment in the United States. The regiment reached France in May 1918 as part of the American Expeditionary Force. It went onto the line, 4 July 1918, in the Second Battle of the Marne. From that day on, the names Fismes, Fismette, Fond de Mezieres, and Argonne will never be forgotten. Company G and H lost a combined total of 200 men out of 230 when cut off at Fismette and fended off a frontal attack by a thousand German soldiers. The 112th Infantry Regiment returned home in April 1919 and was mustered out of federal service on 6 May 1919 at Camp Dix, New Jersey. The regiment was awarded battle streamers marked Champagne 1918, Champagne-Marne, Aisne-Marne, Oise-Marne, Lorraine 1918, and Meuse-Argonne for their service in France.

World War II

The Regiment was again called to federal active service on 17 February 1941, 10 months prior to the attack on Pearl Harbor. After years of training, the unit first entered Europe on Normandy Beach following the D-Day landing. Re-designated as the 112th Infantry Regimental Combat Team which consisted of the 112th Infantry Regiment, the 229th Field Artillery Battalion, the 103rd Engineer Battalion, Company C/447th Antiaircraft Artillery Battalion, and Company C/630th Tank Destroyer Battalion. The Regiment plowed through France and Germany, participating in the capture of Paris and the bitter fighting in the Huertgen Forest. During December 1944, the 112th Infantry Regimental Combat Team was holding a 6-1/2 mile sector in which the Germans attacked with nine Divisions. The Combat Team inflicted 1600 casualties and destroyed 18 tanks during nine days of continuous action, which later became known as the "Battle of the Bulge." The Regiment was awarded battle streamers marked Normandy, Northern France, Ardennes-Alsace, Rhineland, and Central Europe for their service in World War II. The unit was also awarded the Presidential Unit Citation for their actions during the Battle of the Bulge, 16–24 December 1944. The unit was mustered out of federal service on 6 December 1945 from Camp Gordon, Georgia.

Operation Iraqi Freedom

Began deployment with the rest of the 56th SBCT on the 19th of September, 2008. Conducted operations in Iraq to help the Iraqi Army and government to establish a strong working relationship with the population of Iraq so that the country might grow stronger. The 56th SBCT redeployed back to the States toward the end of 2009.

Brief timeline (2nd Battalion)

Post-war (2nd Battalion)

Current

Commanders

2nd Battalion

1st Battalion

Campaign participation

1st Battalion
Civil War Silver Bands:
Peninsula - Manassas - Antietam - Fredricksburg - Gettysburg - Wilderness - Spottsylvania - Virginia 1861-1863 Battle Streamers:
Spanish-American War - Puerto-Rico - World War I (Champagne - Champagne-Marne - Aisne-Marne - Oise-Marne - Lorraine - Meuse-Argonne) - World War II (Normandy - Northern France - Ardennes-Alsace - Rhineland - Central Europe)
Unit Decoration: Presidential Unit Citation, 16-23 Dec 1944 112th Infantry

2nd Battalion
American Civil War

War with Spain

World War I

World War II

Central Europe

Operation Iraqi Freedom

See also

References