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The
History of the 76 Infantry Brigade Combat Team
The
roots of the 76th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, Indiana Army
National Guard, reach back to
1917, and the first months of America’s military build-up for the
First World War. To supplement the Regular Army, Congress approved
the formation of seventeen new National Guard divisions numbered 26
through 42. The National Guard of the states of Indiana, Kentucky,
and West Virginia were chosen to provide units for the 38th
Division. That division was
organized according to prevailing American military doctrine as a
“square” division of two brigades and four infantry regiments.
The 149th Infantry from Kentucky and the 150th Infantry from West
Virginia formed the 75th Brigade, and the 151st and 152nd of Indiana
formed the 76th Brigade. The 38th Division, with its two component
regiments, assembled at Camp Shelby, Mississippi there it remained
for the duration of the war, having never been deployed to the
battlefields of France. In 1919, the division was released from
Federal service.
The component units of the 38th
Division returned to their respective states, and during the next
two decades, the 76th Brigade remained an Indiana National Guard
unit, composed of the 151st and 152nd Infantry. The Brigade was
under state control for over two decades, and fulfilled its state
mission while remaining a force capable of federal service if the
need arose.
With the outbreak of World War II
in 1939, the Army again called upon the National Guard to supplement
the regular forces. In January 1941 the 38th Division was activated
for federal service. The states of Indiana, Kentucky, and West
Virginia again supplied 75th and 76th Brigades, with the same “square”
organizational structure that had been used in World War I. However,
during the years between the wars, Army doctrine shifted from the
“square” division of four regiments and two brigades to a “triangular”
division of three regiments, thus eliminating the brigade as a
component of the division. This re-organization of the 38th Division
was carried out in 1942. The 150th Infantry of the West Virginia
National Guard was detached from the division, and the 75 and 76th
Brigades were decommissioned. The 38th Division went on to fight
with distinction in the Philippines as the “Avengers of Bataan”,
but the 76th Brigade had ceased to exist as in identifiable military
organization.
After World War Two, the 38th
Division returned to its peace-time duties as a state controlled
military force of Indiana and Kentucky. The “triangular”
organization was retained through the 1950’s, with the 149th
Infantry in Kentucky, and the 151st and 152nd Infantry in Indiana.
In the early 1960’s, the Army began the Reorganization Objective
Army Division (ROAD) project. This was designed to create a more
flexible structure, and re-introduced the brigade as an
organizational component of the division. The 38th Infantry Division
began its re-organization in 1963 with the creation of a 1st and 2nd
Brigade. The 1st Brigade was re-named the 76th Brigade in 1965,
thereby restoring for the first time in two decades the designation
of one of the original brigades formed in 1917. In 1966, the 76th
Brigade headquarters was located in Columbus, Indiana, in 1969 in
Edinburgh, Indiana, and in 1977 re-located to Bedford, Indiana,
where it would remain for the next seven years. During that time the
76th Brigade was a component of the 38th Infantry Division, and
remained under state command.
By the early 1990’s, the collapse
of Communism, the disintegration of the threat of the Soviet Union
in Europe, and the first gulf war caused the Defense Department to
review the organization and role of the various divisions of the
National Guard. Concluding that a smaller, lighter force was more
appropriate to the strategic defense needs of the United States, the
Army announced the creation of 15
“enhanced” or “separate” brigades from existing Army
National Guard units.
Separate brigades would operate
independently of a division, and would have organic combat support
and combat service support elements that would enable a more robust
mission performance. The separate brigades would also receive more
funding, equipment, and training to create smaller but more flexible
units that could be rapidly mobilized and deployed. The Indiana Army
National Guard was selected to receive one of the enhanced Brigades.
Accordingly, on September 1, 1994, at a ceremony held at Tyndall
Armory in Indianapolis, the 76th Brigade, 38th Infantry Division was
transformed into the 76th Infantry Brigade (Separate).
During the summer of 2001, the
Brigade was called upon to utilize its skills and share its training
with military organizations from other countries. Units from the
Brigade participated in Regional Cooperation, which was a CENTCOM
mission designed to bring several countries together to form a
partnership for training. These countries were from the former
Warsaw Pact and were in need of operational and logistical training
in order to make them capable of conducting Peace Keeping missions
abroad. Some of these same countries would be called upon in the
coming years to serve in countries like Iraq and Afghanistan.
The 1-151 Infantry Battalion,
deployed to Bosnia in support of SFOR-11 in the spring of 2002. The
other two infantry battalions, 1-293 IN and 1-152 IN, were activated
in 2003 and deployed to combat in Iraq. This marked the first
battalion sized deployment of National Guard troops into ground
combat since the Korean War. The 2(M)-152 deployed along with part
of the 38th Infantry Division to Bosnia in support of SFOR 15 in
early 2004. In the spring of 2004, the Nighthawk Brigade, minus the
two battalions that fought in Iraq, were mobilized for deployment to
Afghanistan for service in Operation Enduring Freedom.
Under the leadership of Brigadier
General Richard Moorhead, the Nighthawks mobilized and trained at
Camp Atterbury, Indiana, and deployed to Afghanistan during the
summer of 2004. There the brigade formed the core of Coalition Joint
Task Force Phoenix III. The mission for that Task Force was to
train, mentor, and assist the Afghan National Army as it prepares to
restore the rule of law and civil society to the shattered country.
After the return from Afghanistan,
the Brigade went through a substantial rebuilding process, as this
was the first time in over three years of deployments that the
entire Brigade was together again. Under the leadership of Brigadier
General David L. Harris, the Nighthawks embarked upon a Recruiting,
Retention, Training and Transformation campaign to get the Brigade
ready for when they would once again be called to fight overseas.
The Brigade led the State on all
fronts with the new Command Based Recruiting program and continued
their emphasis on realistic, individual and collective level
training. They were chosen by the National Guard Bureau to test and
validate a new training program: External Combat Training
Capability, or XCTC. This program was designed to mirror the
capabilities provided by the Department of Defense’s Combat
Training Centers so that they could meet the requirement to validate
the large number of units deploying overseas. They also began the
process of transforming into a new Modular Fighting Configuration,
known as the Infantry Brigade Combat Team, in order to align with
the Army’s new strategy of fighting Brigades, also know as units
of action, the primary maneuvering element of combat forces.
The 76th Infantry Brigade received
mobilization orders in September and is currently training in order
to prepare over 3,400 soldiers for the largest single mobilization
in the State of Indiana since WW II. The 76th Infantry Brigade (SEP)
has transformed into the 76th Infantry Brigade Combat Team under the
command of Col. Courtney Carr as it embarks upon a year-long
deployment in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom.
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