The 169th Field Artillery Brigade (formerly the 169th Fires Brigade) is an artillery brigade in the US Army National Guard. It is part of the Colorado Army National Guard.
169th Field Artillery Brigade | |
---|---|
Active | 1955–present (as group and brigade) |
Country | United States |
Branch | |
Type | Artillery |
Headquarters | Buckley Space Force Base, Aurora, Colorado |
Nickname(s) | Liberators, Shamrock, Rocky Mountain Redlegs |
Engagements | |
Decorations | Croix de Guerre with Palm (headquarters and headquarters battery) |
Commanders | |
Current commander | COL William Diprofio |
Insignia | |
Distinctive Unit Insignia |
History
editThe brigade headquarters was organized on 19 June 1909 as Company M of the 1st Infantry, Colorado National Guard at Denver. The company was transferred to the 2nd Infantry on 19 November, retaining its letter, and on 15 August 1913 returned to the 1st Infantry as Company G. When the National Guard was called up for duty on the Mexican border in 1916, the company was mustered into Federal service on 19 June as Company B of the 1st Colorado Infantry Battalion. After the American entry into World War I, the unit was drafted into Federal service on 5 August 1917 and on 24 September became Company B of the 157th Infantry Regiment, part of the 40th Division. It was sent to France with the division but did not see combat as a unit, being used as a depot to provide replacements. The company returned to the United States after the end of the war and was demobilized at Fort D. A. Russell on 29 April 1919.[1]
When the Colorado National Guard was reestablished postwar, the Denver unit became Headquarters Company of the 2nd Battalion, 157th Infantry and was reorganized and Federally recognized on 26 November 1923. The regiment was assigned to the 45th Division, and on 1 April 1928 the company was reorganized and redesignated as Company B of the regiment. Except for its antitank platoon, the company was reorganized and redesignated as the regimental headquarters company on 1 November 1939. Inducted into Federal service on 16 September 1940, it fought in World War II with the 45th. After the end of the war, the company was inactivated at Camp Bowie on 3 December 1945.[1]
After the end of the war, the 157th was removed from the 45th on 10 May 1946. The Colorado Army National Guard was revived and on 8 January 1947 the regimental headquarters company was reorganized and Federally recognized. Initially at Buckley Field, it was relocated to Denver on 3 September of that year.[1]
Due to a reduction of National Guard regimental combat teams, the Colorado National Guard combat units converted to artillery on 1 August 1955, with the regimental headquarters company of the 157th becoming the headquarters and headquarters battery of the 169th Field Artillery Group.[1][2] The 1st Battalion of the 157th became the 144th Field Artillery Battalion (155mm Howitzer, Towed), the HHC of the 2nd Battalion, and Companies E, K and L became HHB, Service Battery, and Batteries A and B of the 142nd Field Artillery Battalion (155mm Gun, Towed), respectively. Companies F and H became Batteries A and B, respectively, of the 137th Field Artillery Battalion (Observation), while the HHC of the 3rd Battalion, Company M, the Medical Company, and the Tank Company became Service Battery, HHB, and Batteries C and B of the 183rd Field Artillery Battalion (240mm Howitzer, Towed). Company I and Service Company became Service Battery and Battery B of the 169th Field Artillery Battalion (8-inch Howitzer, Self-Propelled), respectively, and the Heavy Mortar Company became Battery A of the 188th Antiaircraft Artillery Battalion (Automatic Weapons) (Self-Propelled).[3] In addition to the 157th, the 199th Engineer Battalion and 193rd Tank Battalion also converted to artillery. The 169th consisted of six field artillery battalions (the 137th, 142nd, 144th, 168th (155mm Gun, Self-Propelled), 169th, and 183rd) and the 188th Antiaircraft Artillery Battalion,[4][5][6] under the command of former 157th Regimental Combat Team commander Colonel Milton Ehrlich. Group executive officer Lieutenant Colonel Felix L. Sparks succeeded Ehrlich in July 1959 when the latter advanced to command of the Colorado Army National Guard.[7][8]
The group was redesignated as the 169th Artillery Group on 1 October 1959. The 110-strong group headquarters was ordered into active Federal service on 1 October 1961 as part of the American reaction to the Berlin Crisis of 1961, and sent to Fort Sill.[9] At Fort Sill, the 169th became one of the two artillery group headquarters under the 34th Artillery Brigade in order to provide control for the increased number of artillery battalions at the post.[10] The group headquarters was released from duty in August 1962 after the end of the crisis. The group returned to its original artillery designation on 1 March 1972 and its headquarters simultaneously relocated to Aurora. The group was redesignated as the 169th Field Artillery Brigade on 1 May 1978.[1] The brigade headquarters was activated in response to Hurricane Katrina in 2005.[11] The 101-strong brigade headquarters was mobilized in March 2006 for service in Iraq and returned in July 2007.[12] It was stationed at Camp Speicher and did not suffer casualties during the deployment.[13] The brigade was officially redesignated as the 169th Fires Brigade on 1 September 2008, returning to its previous designation on 16 October 2014.[14]
The brigade was deployed for Operation Inherent Resolve between 13 December 2016 and 11 September 2017, controlling field artillery battalions of Central Command.[15] The 1st Battalion, 109th Field Artillery Regiment of the Pennsylvania Army National Guard was placed under the operational control of the brigade headquarters in May 2018, remaining under the 55th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade for administrative purposes.[16]
Current Structure
editThe 169th Field Artillery Brigade (169th FAB) is headquartered at Buckley Space Force Base, Aurora, Colorado,[17] with units under the Colorado Army National Guard and additional battalions aligned under 169th FAB from Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, and Michigan:
- 169th Field Artillery Brigade, at Buckley Space Force Base in Aurora, Colorado
- Headquarters Battery, at Buckley Space Force Base in Aurora, Colorado
- 3rd Battalion, 157th Field Artillery Regiment (M142 HIMARS), in Colorado Springs, Colorado
- 147th Brigade Support Battalion, in Fort Collins, Colorado
- 540th Signal Company, at Buckley Space Force Base in Aurora, Colorado
- Battery E, 161st Field Artillery Regiment, in Great Bend, Kansas (Kansas Army National Guard)
Three additional field artillery battalions of the brigade are under administrative control of other formations:
- 1st Battalion, 119th Field Artillery Regiment (M777A2), in Lansing, Michigan (Michigan Army National Guard)
- 2nd Battalion, 123rd Field Artillery Regiment (M777A2), in Milan, Illinois (Illinois Army National Guard)
Honors
editThe 169th brigade headquarters is entitled to the following campaign streamers and decorations for the 157th Infantry Regiment, which was awarded one campaign streamer in World War I and eight campaign streamers and one unit decoration in World War II.[1]
Unit decorations
editRibbon | Award | Year | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
French Croix de Guerre, World War II (With Palm) | 1943–1944 | Embroidered "Italy" |
Campaign streamers
editConflict | Streamer | Year(s) |
---|---|---|
World War I | Streamer without inscription | |
World War II | Sicily (with Arrowhead) | 1943 |
World War II | Naples-Foggia (with Arrowhead) | 1943 |
World War II | Anzio (wirth Arrowhead) | 1943 |
World War II | Rome-Arno | 1944 |
World War II | Southern France (with Arrowhead) | 1944 |
World War II | Rhineland | 1944—1945 |
World War II | Ardennes-Alsace | 1944—1945 |
World War II | Central Europe | 1945 |
References
editCitations
edit- ^ a b c d e f McKenney 2010, pp. 184–186.
- ^ "Guard Combat Team To Become Artillery Unit". Daily Sentinel. AP. 16 June 1955. p. 20 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Headquarters and Headquarters Battery, 169th Artillery Group Lineage and Honors Certificate". Colorado National Guard History Project. United States Army Center of Military History.
- ^ Report of the Adjutant General of Colorado, 1 January 1955 – 31 December 1956. pp. 66–69.
- ^ Year Book of the State of Colorado, 1956–1958. Colorado State Planning Division. 1958. p. 263.
- ^ House Committee on Armed Services Subcommittee No. 1 (1957). Subcommittee Hearings on H.R. 7697. U.S. Government Printing Office. p. 2802.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ General Officers of the Army and Air National Guard. Office of Public Affairs, National Guard Bureau. 1966. p. 133.
- ^ "Colonel Ehrlich Heads State Guard". Daily Sentinel. 1 August 1959. p. 4 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "4 Colorado National Guard Report For Active Service". The Daily Sentinel. 2 October 1961. p. 1.
- ^ Eggerman, Don (21 January 1962). "Sill's 34th Artillery Brigade Unique Outfit In U.S. Army". Lawton Constitution. p. 20. The brigade was tasked to "support with cannon artillery the requirements of the Artillery and Missile School; it included 10 howitzer battalions under the 41st and 169th Groups; the 2nd Battle Group, 30th Infantry; the 45th Transportation Battalion (itself made up of the 57th Aviation Company and the 159th Evac Hospital); the NCO Academy, three small CSS units, and several chapels.
- ^ Holguin, Lindsay (16 September 2006). "169th Fires Brigade Taking Charge". 138th Mobile Public Affairs Detachment – via DVIDS.
- ^ Stone, Spc. Jessi. "169th Fires Brigade welcome home ceremony". Retrieved 18 August 2009.[permanent dead link ]
- ^ Pankratz, Howard (17 July 2007). "Guard unit brings it all home". Denver Post. p. B5. Retrieved 18 June 2020.
- ^ "169th Fires Brigade". United States Army Institute of Heraldry. Retrieved 17 June 2020.
- ^ Bailey, Ronald (29 September 2017). "Colo. National Guard field artillery Soldiers return from combat in Middle East". Colorado National Guard. Retrieved 17 June 2020 – via DVIDS.
- ^ Livermore, Alicia (11 June 2018). "Patching ceremony and change of association for 1-109th Field Artillery Regiment". Pennsylvania National Guard – via DVIDS.
- ^ https://co.ng.mil/Army/Artillery-FA-Bde/, accessed July 2020.
Bibliography
edit- McKenney, Janice E. (2010). Field Artillery: Regular Army and Army Reserve, Part 1 (Army Lineage Series) (PDF). CMH Pub 60-11. Washington, D.C.: Center of Military History. OCLC 275151269. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 September 2015. Retrieved 17 June 2020.