The 6th Infantry Division was activated on Oct 10 1939 at Ft Lewis Washington as 6th Division and moved to Fort Jackson South Carolina Nov 9 1939. It was then relocated to Fort Benning Georgia on Apr 12 1940 and in Alexandria Louisiana on May 8 1940. A little later, the 6th Inf Div was relocated to Fort Snelling Minnesota – Jun 1 1940 and sent to Lincoln Minnesota on Jul 17 1940 before it returned to Fort Snelling Minnesota Aug 19 1940; participated in Arkansas Maneuvers of Aug 1941 and Louisiana Maneuvers of Sep 1941. On Oct 10 1941, the 6-ID moved to Fort Leonard Wood 10 where it was re-designated 6th Motorized Division on Apr 9 1942 and moved to the I Corps Tennessee Maneuvers on Sep 11 1942. Sent back to Fort Leonard Wood on Nov 10 1942 the division moved to Camp Young California on Nov 29 1942 where it participated in the Desert Training Center #1 IV Armored Corps Maneuvers until Feb 22 1943. On Mar 28 1943, the 6-ID arrived at Camp San Luis Obispo, California, where it was re-designated 6th Infantry Division on Mar 21 1943 and departed the San Francisco POE on Jul 21 1943 and arrived in Hawaii on Jul 29. The 6-ID left Hawaii on Jan 26 1944 and arrived in the Milne Bay New Guinea on Jan 31 1944, assaulted Sansapor New Guinea on Jul 30 1944, assaulted Lingayen Gulf Philippines on Jan 9 1945 and arrived in Korea on Oct 18 1945 where it remained active thru 1946.
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Apr
10
2009
Posted by Snafu | Comments : 2273(0)http://www.eucmh.com/2009/04/10/oob-6th-infantry-division-pto/6th+Infantry+Division+%28OOB-WW-2%29%28Pacific%292009-04-10+14%3A06%3A57Snafu
Category : 006th Inf Div, US Army - World War 2
Tags: #1 IV Armored Corps Maneuvers, 6-ID, 6th Infantry Division, 6th Motorized Division, Abucay, Aitape, Alexandria, Amlang, Amsterdam Islands, Apr 12 1940, Arkansas Maneuvers, Bagac, Baler Bays, Bataan, Bayombong, Benchmark Hill, Blue Ridge, Bolog, Bosoboso River, Cabaruan Hills, Cagayan Valley, California, Camp San Luis Obispo, Camp Young, Cape Sansapor, Cape Waimak, Catablan, Cordilleras Mountains, Desert Training Center, Dinglan, Fort Benning, Fort Jackson, Fort Leonard Wood, Fort Lewis, Fort Snelling, Georgia, Hawaii, Hill 363, Hollandia, I Corps Tennessee Maneuvers, Kembu, Kiangan, Lincoln, Lingayen Gulf, Lone Tree Hill, Louisiana, Louisiana Maneuvers, Luzon, Maffin Bay, Malisqui, Manila, Mariquina River, Mataba, May 8 1940, Mega River, Middleburg, Milne Bay, Minnesota, Montalban, Mount Baytangan, Mount Mataba, Mount Pacawagan, Mount Saksin, Munoz, New Guinea, October 10 1939, Philippines, San Francisco POE, San Jose, Sansapor, Shimbu Line, South Carolina, Tirfoam River, Toem, Torres, Urdaneta, Vogelkop Peninsula, Washington, Wawa Dam, Woodpecker Ridge
Feb
27
2009
Posted by Snafu | Comments : 1237(14)http://www.eucmh.com/2009/02/27/vickings-in-the-battle-of-the-bulge/99th+Infantry+Regiment+%28S%29+Vikings+%282%292009-02-27+12%3A24%3A47Snafu
Category : 099th-IR(S)(V), Battle of the Bulge
Tags: 1 SS PanzerKorps, 12th Army Group, 1st Army, 1st Army HQ, 1st Ranger Battalion, 1st Special Service Force, 2nd Armored Division, 30th Infantry Division (US), 3rd Army, 3rd Ranger Battalion, 474th Infantry Regiment, 4th Division Hqs, 4th Ranger Battalion, 4th Reconnaissance Bn, 526th Armored Infantry Battalion, 552nd Anti-Tank Co, 759th Light Tank Battalion, 825th Tank Destroyer Battalion, 99th Battalion HQ, 99th Regiment (Separate), 9th Army, Aachen, Alsdorf, Antoni Pisani, Ardenne Offensive, Army Clerical School, Augusta, Barneville, Belgium, Bristol, Camp Gordon, Camp Hale, Camp Ripley, Camp Shanks, Canteen Service, Cherbourg, Colorado, Denver, Elbeuf, England, Fort Gordon, Fort Snelling, Fourth District Department of Minnesota, France, Georgia, Glenusk Park, Harland Hanson, Harold K. Hanson, Herford, Holland, Horse Cavalry, HQ-AGF, Iowa, Iwo Jima, Junction City, Kaiseroda, Kansas, King Haakon, LCI, Lt Lester Carlson, Maastricht, Madison, Malmedy, Merkers, Meuse Canal, Michigan, Miles Green, Minneapolis, Minnehaha Co, Minnesota, Mississippi River, Normandy, North Carolina, North Dakota, Norway, Norwegian, Omaha Beach, Operation Greif, Operations in Norway, OSS, OSS Teams, Panzerbrigade 150, Perham Downs Camp, Post Exchange, Provisional Ranger Group, Reichsbank in Frankfurt, Ridge at Elsenborn, Scandinavian, Scotland, Seine River, Sibley, Sioux City, Sioux Falls, South Dakota, South Pacific, SS- Obersturmbannführer Otto Skorzeny, Star Spangled Banner, State Highway Patrol, Stavelot, Swedish Guards, Task Force Hansen, Tidworth, Tilff, Ubach Pallenberg, US Army Ski Cantonment, USMC, USS Mexico, Veterans of Foreign Wars, Vickings, Vikings, Wales, Wiltshire, Wurselen
Dear Gunter, the press request 99th got had me find this which will be of interest to you and your website. You will get detailed explanation with my letters home of going into Army and joining the 99th Infantry Battalion Separate, the 99th Formation and Training. Followed by full write up the Belgian Ardenne or Battle of the Bulge done with nearly hundreds of quotes from 99ers. What follows is from my November 2007 99th Informations and Newsletter. Below are quotes from many of my Dad’s letters written during the War many and perhaps even most of your readers know of 99er letters written during the War.

Copies you have typed up on your computer or legible photocopies that fill in much more of the 99th’s story and tell your 99er’s story. The following has been written in response to questions from Antoni Pisani the Norwegian who lives in Oslo that is now working on a book about all of the 99th, and not just “C” Company as it first started out, for a Norwegian publishing company.
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Feb
15
2009
Posted by Snafu | Comments : 731(1)http://www.eucmh.com/2009/02/15/a-soldier-story-orv-iverson-1940-1945/Orville+Iverson+1944-1945+%289th+TAC%292009-02-15+18%3A16%3A10Snafu
Category : Archive Stories, O. Iverson - 9-TAC
Tags: 2nd Armored Division, 3rd Infantry Division, 414th Signal Company (Avn), A/926 Signal Battalion, Aachen, Aden, Algiers, B-17 Radio, Battle Creek, Belgium, Boise, Bournernouth, British Navy, Brown Street Baptist Church, Buzz Bomb, Cairo, Camp Crowder, Camp Kilo 13, Camp Patrick Henry, Carbon Dioxide capsule, Casablanca, Cosmoline, Criqueville, Dog Red, East-Africa, Egypt, England, Fedala, Fort Snelling, Gibraltar, Gowen Field, Grandcamp, Heliopolis, Helwan, Herb Person, Idaho, International Morse Code, Joplin, Kansas City Belle, LCT, Libya, Liège, Liverpool, M-1903, Mariposa, Massawa, Matson Line Luxury Ship, Michigan, Middlewallop Airbase, Missouri, Neosha, Newport News, Nile River, Ninth Tactical Air Command, North-Africa, Notre Dame Cathedral, Omaha Beach, Oxford, Palais of Justice, Paris, Peace Palace, Point du Hoc, Port Said, Pyramids, Red Sea, Rio de Janeiro, Royal Air Force, Royal Navy, Salisbury, Salt Lake, Seabees, Signal Section, Spa, Sphinx, Springfield-1903, St Lô, Sugar Loaf Mountain, Tennessee, Trowbridges, United Steel and Wire Company, Utah, Vernon Iverson, Versailles, Verviers, Virginia, Wendover Airbase, Wiltshire County
This is the wartime story of an American GI. In fact, this is the story of a GI like many other GI’ stories. It’s about friendships, cold, winter, rain, snow, mud, blood, war and dead. But this story has something else. It is the story over one of these GIs who were in Verviers and Liège during the period September 1944 to December 1944. This GI, Orville Iverson – Ivy – had built a strong friendships with the Jacquet Family from Verviers. Especially Claude and Ninette.
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