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Order of Battle - 4th Armd Div 1944



Posted : October 28 2008 / [Related]-[Tags]

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Categories : 12th Armored Division • 26th Infantry Division • 35th Infantry Division • 4th Armored Division • 80th Infantry Division
Tags : 12th Armd Div • 26th Inf Div • 5th Inf Div • Arlon • Arracourt • Avranches • Baerendorf • Bastogne • Binnig • Bitburg Erdorf • Bourcy • Brig-Gen B. L. Clarke • Brig-Gen W. Lyn Roberts • Coincourt • Commercy • Coutances • Creuzburg • Crevic • Czechoslovakia • Darmstadt • Dieuze • Fliessen • Fonteny • Freyung • Geichingen • Gotha • Grossauheim • Hanau • Hill 318 • Hosdorf • Jena • Juvelize • Kyll River • LoreyDieulouard • Lorient • Luneville • Lutrebois • Luxembourg • Main River • Maixe • Maj-Gen Fay B. Prickett • Maj-Gen Henry W. Baird • Maj-Gen Hugh J. Gaffey • Maj-Gen John S. Wood • Maj-Gen William M. Hoge • Matzen • Meuse River • Moncourt • Moselle River • Mrne River • Nantes • Nims River • Noville • Oberweiss • Orleans • Our River • Pisek • Pont-sur-Meuse • Prüm River • Regen • Rhine River • Rittersdorf • Rodable • Romelfing • Saale River • Saare River • Saare-Union • Seé River • Sisnpelt • Treis • Utah Beach • Vannes • Vic-sur-Veille • Werra River • Wolfskirchen • Wolkenburg • Zwick Mulde

The 4th Armored Division was activated on April 15 1941 at Pille Camp New York, and moved to Camp Forrest Tennessee October 2 1942 for the 1st Corps Tennessee Maneuvers. It arrived at Camp Young California November 17 1942 where it participated in the Desert Training Center # 1 California Maneuvers. The 4th was then transferred to Camp Bowie Texas June 13 1943, staged at Camp Myles Standish Massachusetts December 20 1943 until departed Boston PIE 9 days later and arrived in England on January 11 1944. The 4th Armored landed in France on July 13 1944, crossed into Luxembourg February 9 1945 and entered Germany March 9 1945 where it was re-designated 1st Constabulary Brigade on May 1 1946.


4th Armored Division Casualties
Killed in Action : 1143 – Wounded in Action : 4551 – Died of Wounds : 213

4th Armored Division Commanders

Maj Gen Henry W. Baird : April 1941 – May 1942
Maj Gen John S. Wood : May 1942 – December 1944
Maj Gen Hugh J. Gaffey : December 1944 – March 1945
Maj Gen William M. Hoge : March 1945 – June 1945
Brig Gen B. L. Clarke : June 1945 – July 1945
Brig Gen W. Lyn Roberts : July 1945 – September 1945
Maj Gen Fay B. Prickett : September 1945

4th Armored Division Order of Battle 1944

HQs & HQs Co 4th Armored Division
HQs & Hqs Battery Division Artillery
HQs & HQs CCA
HQs & HQs CCB
HQs & HQs CCR
HQs & HQs Division Trains
Military Police Platoon
8th Tank Battalion
10th Armored Infantry Battalion
22nd Armored Field Artillery Battalion
24th Armored Engineer Battalion
25th Cavalry Reconnaissance Squadron, Mecz
35th Tank Battalion
37th Tank Battalion
46th Medical Battalion. Armored
51st Armored Infantry Battalion
53rd Armored Infantry Battalion
66th Armored Field Artillery Battalion
94th Armored Field Artillery Battalion
126th Armored Ordnance Maintenance Battalion
144th Armored Signal Company
489th AAA Auto-Wpns Battalion : attached June 19 1944 – May 19 1945
504th Counter Intelligence Corps Det
704th Tank Destroyer Battalion : attached April 25 1945 – May 9 1945
811th Tank Destroyer Battalion : attached March 3 1945 – March 11 1945

4th Armored Division Combat Narrative (Sjerlby L Stanton)

The 4th Armored Division landed across Utah Beach France on July 13 1944 and entered combat on July 17 1944, taking Coutances with CCB by July 28 1944. It took Avranches and captured the Seé River bridge July 30 and then drove south to cut off the Brittany Peninsula as it reached Vannes August 5. After investing Lorient on August 7 it entered an evacuated Nantes August 11 and took Orléans with CCA on August 16. By August 31 CCA had reached the Meuse River at Commercy and Pont-sur-Meuse and established bridgeheads. Relieved there by the 80th Infantry Division on September 2 1944, the division crossed the Moselle River near Lorey against heavy opposition with CCB as CCA crossed into the Dieulouard Bridgehead stopping strong German counterattacks during September 11 to 13. CCB forced the Marne-Rhine Canal at Crevic and Maixe against strong opposition September 15 and CCR moved into Lunéville the next day.
In a series of tank duels, the division mopped up the Arracourt region September 19 - 22 1944. A German attack overran CCA lines on September 25 and the division lost Vic-sur-Veille and Moncourt, then withdrew the next clay from Juvelize and Coincourt. The Battle for Hill 318 was fought September 27 to 28 with heavy losses, but on September 29 the division finally defeated the German attempt to take Arracourt.
The division then went over to the defensive on line from Chambrey to Xanrey to Henamenil untill October 11 and on October 12 was relieved by the 26th Infantry Division for rehabilitation.
The division attacked November 9 1944 and reached Fonteny which was taken by CCB November 11. After suffering heavy tank losses to a German counterattack which retook Rodalbe on November 12, the division advanced against strong opposition to capture Dieuze and recapture Rodalbe on the 19. CCB crossed the Saare at Romelfing on the 24 and cleared Baerendorf in a house-to-house fighting, checked a German counterattack there the next clay, and took Wolfskirchen despite flooded streams by November 27 1944. The division then cleared its zone of responsibility, and next opened the attack on Saare-Union December 1 1944, which was taken the following day by the 26th Infantry Division. The division fought the Battle of Bining December 5 to 6 and was relieved by the 12th Armored Division on December 7 1944.
ln response to the German Ardennes Counteroffensive the division moved 150 miles as it assembled in the the Arlon - Luxembourg area on December 20 1944 while CCB reached the Bastogne area and contacted 10th Armored Division. On December 22 1944 the division took Martelange in the drive to relieve Bastogne, fought the Battle for Chaumont December 23 - 25 and selzed Bigonville in heavy combat on the 24. CCR pushed through Assenois to Bastogne on December 26, and the next day vehicles from division entered the city and ended the siege.
On December 29 1944 CCA opened the Arlon - Bastogne Highway. The division then held the corridor into Bastogne and gave fire support to the 35th Infantry Division, helping to clear Lutrebois on January 2 1945. CCB attacked toward Noville January 9 and the division attacked through the 6th Armored Division toward Bourcy on January 10 1945. The division then maintained defensive positions, clearing Hosdorf on the Our River in a local attack February 2 1945.
CCB attacked through the 80th Infantry Division at Geichlingen February 22 and seized the bridge over the Pruem River at Sinspelt intact the next day. As CCA crossed the Pruem at Oberweiss on the 25, CCB established a bridgehead across the Nims at Rittersdorf.
The following day it seized the high ground north of Bitburg but was unable to clear Erdorf on the Kyll River. On February 27, CCA took Matzen and CCB captured Fliessen. The division assembled near Bitburg March 3 1945 and attacked through the 5th Infantry Division on March 5, reaching the Rhine River March 8 where it regrouped and mopped up. The division then attacked out of the Moselle Bridgehead at Treis March 15 and reached the Nahe River at Bad Kreuznach on the following day. It moved to the Rhine River at Worms March 20 and crossed March 24, driving through the bridgehead there to reach the Main River near Hanau March 25. It took an undefended Darmstadt same clay. On March 28 1945 the division attacked across the Main at Grossauheim and crossed the Werra River at Creuzburg April 1. The division took Gotha April 4 1945 and reached the Saale River south of Jena which it crossed on April 12 to establish bridgeheads over the Zwick Mulde at Wolkenburg on April 13. It withdrew to reserve on April 19, and attacked again May 6 through the Regen and Freyung Passes in Czechoslovakia. Forward elements were at Pisek when hostilities ended May 7 1945.

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  • Gunter G. Gillot Jr, born 1955 Aachen, Germany, Belgian Citizen, and one of the best in the area : US World War Two Military Photos, Movies, Ammunitions and Militaria. As, Charles B. McDonald, one of America's top Military Historian and World War Two Veteran said once to me : Gunter, now ya gonna tell me how do you managed to know the thing as well as a veteran that fought in the Battle of Bulge ! This is as amazing as incredible.

    European Center of Military History- Gunter G. Gillot Jr
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