HIGHLY DETAILED 4


 

 
                 
 
 17th   INFANTRY REGIMENT
HIGHLY DETAILED EMBROIDERD PATCH

 3 1/2" X 5" Merrowed Edge
MERROWED EDGE - WAX BACKING
 
                                           
     

 

 17th Infantry Regiment THE BUFFALOES

  

  

While the 17th Infantry Regiment was organized on January 11th, 1812, it was  consolidated with the 3rd Infantry and lost it's identity two years later  until May 3rd, 1861, when it was reorganized.

The 17th Infantry  Regiment was in the Army of the Potomac during the Civil War in Sykes'  Division of the 5th Army Corps, the badge of which was a white cross patee,  which is embodied in the coat of arms and shown on the blue field above and  to the left of the stone wall.

At Fredericksburg the 17th suffered  heavy losses in the assault on the famous stone wall, "For one entire day,  (December 14th) the men of the 17th lay flat on their faces eighty yards in  front of the famous stone wall, behind which the enemy was posted in large  numbers and any movement on their part was sure to draw the fire of rebel  sharpshooters.

The five-bastioned fort, shown on the blue shield  above and to the right of the stone wall, was the badge of the 5th Army  Corps in Cuba in 1898.

The buffalo, shown on the blue shield bellow  the stone wall represents the Regiment's glorious history in the Korean war.  The "Buffalo" nick name was adopted after one of the Regiments Commanding  Officers in the Korean war, Col. William W. "Buffalo Bill" Quinn.

The  shield is blue, being the color representing the infantry.

The Crest  is a sea lion taken from the Spanish Arms of Manila for the fighting around  that city in 1899.

The two arrows represent the Indian campaigns in  which the 17th Regiment participated.
Battle Honors

Civil War

Peninsula
Manassas
Antietam
Fredericksburg
Chancellorsville
Gettysburg
Wilderness
Spotsylvania
Cold Harbor
Petersburg
Virginia 1862
Virginia 1863

Indian Wars

Little Big Horn
Pine Ridge
North Dakota 1872

War with Spain

Santiago

Philippine Insurrection

Manila
Malolos
San Isidro
Tarlac
Mindanao
Luzon 1899
Luzon 1900

Mexican Expedition

Mexico  1916-1917

World War II

Aleutian Islands (with arrowhead)
Eastern Mandates (with arrowhead)
Leyte Ryukyus (with arrowhead)

Korean War

UN Defensive
UN Offensive
CCF Intervention
First  UN Counteroffensive
CCF Spring Offensive
UN Summer-Fall Offensive
Second Korean Winter
Korea, Summer-Fall 1952
Third Korean Winter
Korea, Summer 1953

Vietnam

Counteroffensive, Phase VII
Consolidation I
Consolidation II
Cease-Fire

Armed Forces  Expeditions

Panama (with arrowhead)
Operation Just Cause:  1989-1990

Iraq

Operation Iraqi Freedom: August 2005 to  December 2006
Mosul and Baghdad

Afghanistan

Operation  Enduring Freedom: July 2009 to July 2010
Operation Enduring Freedom: May  2012 to May 2013



Decorations

A Company 1-17 received the Presidential Unit Citation (Navy) for actions  in support of Operation Helmand Spider in Marjah during OEF 09-11.

Presidential Unit Citation (Army), Streamer embroidered LEYTE

Philippine Presidential Unit Citation, Streamer embroidered 17 OCTOBER 1944  TO 4 JULY 1945

Republic of Korea Presidential Unit Citation, Streamer  embroidered INCHON

Republic of Korea Presidential Unit Citation,  Streamer embroidered KOREA 1950-1953

Republic of Korea Presidential  Unit Citation, Streamer embroidered KOREA 1952-1953

Republic of Korea  Presidential Unit Citation, Streamer embroidered KOREA 1945-1948; 1953-1957


4-17 INFANTRY HISTORY

The 4th Battalion 17th Infantry has a proud and distinguished history. The  17th Infantry was created by Congress on the 11th of January 1812 and formed  with personnel from western states and was the only Regular Army regiment in  General James Winchester’s column of Army of the Northwest’s campaign to  regain Detroit. During the War of 1812, the 17th fought at Frenchtown, Fort  Meigs, Fort Stephenson, and Thames River. In 1815, the 17th was consolidated  with the 5th, 19th, and 28th Infantry from the 3rd Infantry.

In April of 1861, the bombardment of Fort Sumter stood as the opening  engagement of the American Civil War. As tension between the seceded States  and the Union came to a violent. This caused President Lincoln to call for  the buildup of the Union Army, an Army that would and protect the Union and  its interests. The Presidents call resulted in the 17th Infantry once again  being constituted in the Regular Army on the 3rd of May 1861. The Adjutant  Generals office of President Lincoln issued General Order 16 bringing the  regiment back into existence. It differed from the older regiments of  infantry in that it had three battalions with one major, one adjutant, one  quartermaster and commissary, one sergeant-major, one commissary sergeant,  and one hospital steward with eight companies each.

The 17th Infantry Regiment was in the Army of the Potomac as part of “Slow  Trot” Skykes Division. From the 5th Army Corps the 17th Infantry Regiment  adopted the white cross patee which is seen today on the unit’s coat of  arms. At Fredericksburg, the 17th suffered heavy losses in the assault on  the famous stone wall. The men of the 17th lay flat on their faces eighty  yards in front of the famous stone wall and drew heavy fire from rebel  sharpshooters. This wall is also represented on our crest.

The 17th Infantry Regiment fought valiantly in the Indian wars, this is  depicted on our coat of arms by two arrows sable, armed and flighted gules.  Throughout the Indian Wars our Regiment successfully fought over rough  terrain against a determined enemy. The Regiment earned streamers for the  Little Big Horn (1876); Pine Ridge (1890-1891); North Dakota 1872.

The sinking of the USS Maine in Havana Cuba once again led the US into war  on the 21st of April 1898. The 17th Infantry Regiment again found itself in  combat. The five bastioned fort on our crest represents the Regiments  service with the V Corps in Cuba. For three months American Soldiers fought  and the Soldiers of the 17th Infantry distinguished themselves. On the 1st  of July 1898 at El Caney, Cuba: PVT George Berg, PVT Oscar Brookin, CPL  Ulysses Buzzard, PVT Thomas Graves, 1LT Benjamin Hardaway, CPL Norman  Ressler, 2LT Charles Roberts, CPL Warren Shepherd and PVT Bruno Wende earned  this nations highest military award for valor, the Congressional Medal of  Honor, all of these Soldiers were proud members of the 17th Infantry  Regiment.

The Spanish American war left Spain’s military devastated and this proved a  critical point for the Philippine Islands as they grasped the opportunity to  gain freedom. Their alliance with the US was short lived and in 1899 combat  ensued in Manila. A sea lion was taken from the Spanish Arms of Manila and  is proudly depicted on our coat of arms. The 17th Infantry Regiment fought  valiantly and tenaciously, continually displaying heroism and courage.

On the 8th of March 1916 Pancho Villa raided Columbus, NM. Villa’s invasion  of the US spurred the 17th Infantry Regiment into action as they served in  Pershing’s forces to bring Villa to justice.

In June 1942 the Japanese invaded the Aleutian Islands. In 1943 the 17th  Infantry Regiment was called to action as part of the 7th Infantry Division  and the Regiment was chosen to land at Red Beach, Holtz Bay, on Attu Island  in the Bering Sea. The Regiment fought as part of the 7th Infantry Division  “Bayonet” throughout World War II. PFC Leonard Brostrom and PFC John Thorson  both earned the Congressional Medal of Honor for their gallantry during  heavy fighting on Leyte, the Phillipine Islands on the 28th of October 1944  as Soldiers from the 17th Infantry Regiment. During World War II the 17th  fought in the Aleutian Islands, Eastern Mandates, Leyte and Ryukyus.

The Buffaloes served during the Korean War. They partook in the UN  Defensive, UN Offensive, CCF Intervention, First UN Counteroffensive, CCF  Spring Offensive, UN Summer-Fall Offensive, Second Korean Winter, Korea  Summer-Fall 1952, Third Korean Winter and Korea, Summer 1953. 7 of the 17th  Infantry Regiments Soldiers earned the Congressional Medal of Honor during  the Korean War: CPT Raymond Harvey, CPL Einar Ingman, PFC Anthony  Kaho’ohanohano, CPL William Lyell, PFC Joseph Rodriguez. Also 1LT Richard  Shea and PVT Charles Barker both earned the Congressional Medal of Honor for  their courage and gallantry at Pork Chop Hill.

1970 saw the arrival of the 17th Infantry Regiment into Vietnam. During this  period President Nixon began the Nixon Doctrine, which later became known as  “Vietnamization.” This plan called for the build up of the ARVN to defend  South Vietnam. The battle hardened Buffaloes served in Counteroffensive  Phase VII, Consolidation I, Consolidation II, and Cease Fire.

In 1989 President George Bush called for the use of force against Panama.  Declaring that an operation was necessary to safeguard the lives of U.S.  citizens in Panama, defend democracy and human rights, combat drug  trafficking, and secure the functioning of the Panama Canal. Operation Just  Cause involved over 27,000 Soldiers including the 17th Infantry Regiment as  members of the 7th IN DIV (L).

The 17th Infantry was activated once again at Fort Bliss Texas as a part of  the Ready First Stryker Brigade Combat Team on the 11th of January 2011. The  Battalion continues to build combat power to prepare for future operations.

1AD History
The 1st Armored Division's commitment to the civic and military values for  which "Old Ironsides" has been renowned for half a century (patriotism,  discipline, readiness, self-sacrifice, combined arms cooperation, shock  action, decisiveness, and generosity in victory) remains relentlessly strong  today. The distinctive insignia of the 1st Armored Division is drawn in bold  colors characteristic of the division. The insignia is designed from the  triangular coat-of-arms of the American World War II Tank Corps. The yellow,  blue, and red colors of the shoulder sleeve insignia represent the combined  arms nature of the armored division (Armor, Infantry, and Artillery).  Superimposed on the triangle is the insignia of the former Seventh Cavalry  Brigade (Mechanized), the predecessors of the Old Ironsides. The tank track  represents mobility and armor protection, the gun denotes firepower, and the  chain of lightening symbolizes speed and shock action. Mobility, firepower,  and shock action are the basic attributes of Armor. The Arabic numeral in  the apex of the triangle indicates the First Armor Division. The nickname of  the division, officially sanctioned by the Department of the Army is  emblazoned under the triangle and is an integral part of the insignia.


OLD  IRONSIDES DESIGNATION
The 1st Armored Division was  activated at Fort Knox on July 15, 1940. Its first commander was Major  General Bruce R. Magruder from July 1940 to March 1942. In 1941 General  George S. Patton Jr. had just named his 2nd Armored Division "Hell on  Wheels" and everyone thought that the 1st Armored Division needed a name  too. Major General Bruce Magruder announced a contest to find a suitable  name for his Division. Approximately 200 names were submitted including  "Fire and Brimstone" and "Kentucky Wonders." The General took them home to  study over the weekend but failed to find any that appealed to him. While  mulling the matter over, he happened to glance at a painting of the U.S.S.  Constitution that he had bought during a drive for funds for the  preservation of that famous fighting ship. From the painting of the U.S.S.  Constitution USS Constitution he noted its nickname, "Old Ironsides".  Impressed with the parallel between the early development of the tank and  the Navy's "Old Ironsides" spirit of daring and durability he decided the  1st Armored Division should also be named "Old Ironsides." Thus a famous  warship of the US Navy and the famous 1st Armored Division of the US Army  are historically and appropriately welded by name "Old Ironsides." That  ended the search for a name. The 1st Armored Division became "Old Ironsides"  that same day and forty months of fighting later testified that its name was  well chosen. This was a fighting Division.

NORTH AFRICA
As part of Operation Torch, the Allied invasion of French Northwest Africa,  November 8, 1942. In doing so, Old Ironsides became the first American  Armored Division to see combat. Although encountering unexpectedly heavy  Vichy-French opposition, the Allied invasion force suppressed all resistance  in the beachhead within three days. The Division then advanced toward  Tunisia where it clashed with Axis forces and learned many hard lessons in  armored warfare. Harsh conditions and primitive roads spoiled an early  opportunity to capture Tunisia and cut off Rommel's supply lines. January  1943 found the Division under control of the II Corps. Old Ironsides  received the mission of defending central Tunisia against an Axis  counterattack. A month later, the 1st Armored Division collided with a  superior German armored force at Kasserine Pass. Sustaining heavy personnel  and equipment losses, Old Ironsides withdrew, battered but wiser. Outrunning  his supply lines and facing stiffening Allied resistance, Rommel's advance  ground to a halt. Regardless, three more months of fierce fighting followed  before the Allies could finally claim victory in North Africa.

On 25  March 1944, Private Nicholas Minue, Company A, 6th Armored Infantry, 1st  Armored Division, was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor for gallantry  and intrepidity at the loss of his life above and beyond the call of duty in  action with the enemy on 28 April 1943 in the vicinity of MedjezelBab,  Tunisia.

ITALY
The fall of Sicily in the summer of 1943 cleared the way for an Allied  Invasion of the Italian mainland. As part of General Mark Clark's Fifth  Army, the 1st Armored Division crushed enemy resistance in an assault  landing at Salerno on September 9, and led the drive to Naples. The city  fell on October 1, and the Allies pressed onto the Volturno River. In  November, the 1st Armored Division attacked the infamous Winter Line.  Although breaching the line, the Allied advance came to a halt in the  mountainous country near Cassino. To break the stalemate, the Allies made an  amphibious assault well behind enemy lines at Anzio on January 23, 1944.  Beating back repeated German counterattacks, the 1st Armored Division led  the Allied breakout from the beachead on May 23, and spearheaded the drive  to Rome, liberating the city on June 4. The 1st Armored Division continued  its pursuit of the enemy to the North Apennies where the Germans made their  last stand. Rugged mountains and winter weather now stood between the Allies  and the open land of the Po Valley. The 1st Armored Division broke into the  valley in April 1945 and on May 2, 1945, German forces in Italy surrendered.

1950s
In June 1945 the 1st Armored Division was transferred to Germany to serve as  part of the Allied occupation forces. Old Ironsides returned to the United  States in April 1946 and was inactivated at Camp Kilmer, New Jersey. Several  of the Division's Units, however, remained in Germany as part of the U.S.  Constabulary. The success of the Russian made T-34 Tank at the outbreak of  the Korean War in 1950 brought renewed enthusiasm for armor. As part of the  Korean War build up of American forces, the 1st Armored Division was  reactivated at Fort Hood, Texas on March 7, 1951. Continuing its tradition  of "firsts", Old Ironsides became one of the first divisions in the Army to  integrate black soldiers throughout the ranks. It was also the only  combat-ready armored division in the continental United States and the first  to receive the M48 Patton Tank. Training for nuclear war became a major  theme in the mid-1950s. Accordingly, the 1st Armored Division participated  in tests of the "Atomic Field Army" at Fort Hood and in Operation Sagebrush,  the largest joint maneuver conducted since World War II. Upon completion of  the exercise in February 1956, the 1st Armored Division moved to its new  home at Fort Polk, Louisiana.

CUBA
Toward the end of the 1950s, the Army's preoccupation with a nuclear  battlefield waned. The Army experienced years of austere budgets. Reduced in  size and moved back to Fort Hood, the 1st Armored Division reverted to a  training cadre for new inductees. The start of the 1960s, however,  inaugurated a period of military renewal. Important changes in organization,  doctrine, and equipment stemmed from the realization that the Army must be  prepared to fight anytime, anywhere. In 1962, the 1st Armored Division was  brought back to full strength and reorganized. Brigades replaced Combat  Commands, and the Division's aviation assets doubled. Intense training  followed the reorganization. In October 1962 the 1st Armored Division was  declared combat ready, just in time for the Cuban Missile Crisis. In  response to the Soviet stationing of missiles in Cuba, Old Ironsides  deployed from Fort Hood, Texas to Fort Stewart. The entire operation took  just 18 days. For the next six weeks, the 1st Armored Division conducted  live-fire training and amphibious exercises on the Georgia and Florida  coasts. One highlight was a visit from President John F. Kennedy on November  26, 1962. Shortly thereafter, tensions eased and the 1st Armored Division  returned to Ft. Hood.

VIETNAM
Although the 1st Armored Division did not participate as a Division in the  Vietnam War, two units, Company A, 501st Aviation and 1st Squadron, 1st  Calvary served with distinction. Both earned Presidential Unit Citations,  and 1-1 Cavalry received two Valorous Unit Awards and three Vietnamese  Crosses of Gallantry. Neither unit was officially detached from the 1st  Armored Division and veterans of both units may wear the Old Ironsides as a  combat patch. In addition, in 1967 the 198th Infantry Brigade was formed  from three of the Division's Infantry Battalions and deployed from Fort Hood  to Vietnam. After the war, two of the three battalions, 1-6 Infantry and  1-52 Infantry, returned to the 1st Armored Division. 1968 was a  crisis-filled year of domestic unrest. After the assassination of Martin  Luther King, several inner cities exploded into violence. The 3rd Brigade  deployed to Chicago to assist in restoring order. The early 1970's brought  the withdrawal of American Forces from Vietnam and a major restructuring of  the Army. Old Ironsides was rumored to be on the list of units to be  inactivated. Veterans of the Division organized a letter-writing campaign to  "save" the 1st Armored Division. Their efforts were rewarded when on May 10,  1971, 1st Armored Division left its home at Fort Hood, Texas to replace the  4th Armored Division in Germany.

On 9 November 1967, Captain (then  First Lieutenant) James Allen Taylor, Troop B, 1st Cavalry, Americal  Division, was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor for his valor in  contributing to the success of the assault on an enemy position and saving  the lives of a number of his fellow soldiers.

DESERT SHIELD/DESERT STORM
Old Ironsides marched into its second half century celebrating victory in  the Cold War - a triumph symbolized by the fall of the Berlin Wall, the  unification of Germany, and the crumbling of East European, communist  regimes. Almost immediately the 1st Armored Division was called upon to meet  a new challenge. In November 1990 it was alerted for deployment to the  Middle East in response to the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait. In less than two  months the Division moved 17,400 soldiers and 7,050 pieces of equipment by  rail, sea, and air to Saudi Arabia for Operation Desert Shield/Storm. The  Division's own 1st Brigade stayed in Germany and was replaced by 3d Brigade,  3d Infantry Division. On February 24, 1991, the 1st Armored Division crossed  into Iraq leading VII Corp's main flanking attack - its mission to destroy  the elite, Iraqi Republican Guards Divisions. In its 89-hour blitz across  the desert Old Ironsides traveled 250 kilometers; destroyed 768 tanks, APCs  and artillery pieces; and captured 1,064 prisoners of war. Four 1st Armored  Division soldiers made the ultimate sacrifice in this historic effort. Old  Ironsides marked its successful return to Germany on May 8, 1991, when MG  Griffith uncased the Division Colors in Ansbach. The 1st Armored Division  celebrated its triumph with a visit from the Vice President of the United  States and attendance at victory parades in Washington, D.C. and New York  City.

TASK FORCE EAGLE
On December 14, 1995, the 1st Armored Division was ordered to  Bosnia-Herzegovina as part of Operation Joint Endeavor. This task force,  known as Task Force Eagle, assumed control of its area of responsibility  during a transfer of authority ceremony with United Nations forces at Eagle  Base, Tulza on December 20, 1995. After the historic bridging of the Sava  River on December 31, 1995, the Old Ironsides Division, with supporting  forces from the 5th U.S. Corps, was joined by Nordic-Polish, Turkish, and  Russian brigades - in total - 12 Nations: Denmark, Estonia, Finland,  Iceland, Latvia, Lithuania, Norway, Poland, Russia, Sweden, Turkey, and the  United States. Task Force Eagle, one of the most powerful formations ever  fielded, enforced the cease-fire, supervised the marking of boundaries and  the zone of separation between the former warring factions, enforced  withdrawal of the combatants, and the movement of the heavy weapons to  designated storage sites. Task Force Eagle also supported the Organization  for Security and Cooperation in Europe's efforts to administer the country's  first ever democratic national elections. On November 10, 1996, the 1st  Armored Division transferred authority for command and control of Task Force  Eagle to the 1st Infantry Division. The 1st Infantry Division deployed as a  covering force to allow the safe return of the 1st Armored Division to  Germany.

KOSOVO
In April 1999, the 1st Armored Division was alerted to send soldier to  Albania as part of Operation Allied Force in response to the ethnic  cleansing and fighting in Kosovo. The 1st Armored Division then sent the  first soldiers into Kosovo in operation Joint Guardian to uphold the United  Nations Security Council resolution to bring peace back to the Kosovo  region. On June 20, 2000, the 1st Armored Division took over the mission as  the U.S. contingent in Kosovo assuming control of the Multinational Brigade  - East, and continues to bring a lasting peace and stability to the region  and help build the infrastructure for all in Kosovo.

OPERATION IRAQI FREEDOM
The Division again answered the Nation's call to duty March 4, 2003 when it  received orders to deploy to the U.S. Central Command area of responsibility  in support of the global war on terrorism . "Old Ironsides" began moving out  April 15 in Support of Operation Iraqi Freedom. The division and task force  marked some major "firsts" during the 15-month long mission. For Soldiers of  the 1st Armored Division, this was longest deployment of any division in  Iraq. Task Force 1st Armored Division was the largest division-based task  force in U.S. Army history. Units serving with the Task Force included  brigade-sized elements of the 82nd Airborne and 3rd Infantry and 1st Cavalry  Divisions, the 2nd Armored Cavalry Regiment, the 124th Infantry Battalion,  the 18th and 89th Military Police Brigades and 168th MP Battalion. Engineer  units serving with the task force included the 153rd, 203rd, 389th, 439th,  535th, 842nd and 1457th Engineer Battalions, the 493rd Engineer Group, and  the 249th and 671st Engineer Companies. Also serving the task force were the  55th Personnel Service Battalion, the 8th Finance Battalion, the 350th and  354th Civil Affairs Battalions, the 315th and 345th PSYOP Battalions and the  16th Corps Support Group. At its height, more than 39,000 Soldiers were part  of the task force. The task force secured some of Baghdad's roughest  neighborhoods and brought stability to the city and its surrounding  countryside. The Task Force's accomplishments included planning and  executing Operations Iron Hammer, Iron Justice, Iron Grip, Longstreet, Iron  Bullet, Iron Promise and Iron Sabre. During these task force operations,  Soldiers captured more than 700 criminals and former regime insurgents. They  also confiscated thousands of rockets, mortars, tank rounds,  rocket-propelled grenades and small arms. In addition to combat, task force  Soldiers protected and improved the quality of life for over 5 million Iraqi  residents in the city of Baghdad. The task force trained Iraqi police and  national guardsmen, renovated schools, established neighborhood councils and  spent over $60 million on these and other projects.