As a mounted regiment The 104th Cavalry Regiment was not actually organized as such until 1921, although some of its subordinate troops can trace their lineage back to the Revolutionary War and the War of 1812. For example, Troop A, 1st Squadron, also known as the
First Troop Philadelphia City Cavalry, is the oldest active mounted unit in the United States Army. Troop B, 1st Squadron, is also known as the "State Fencibles" while Troop C, 1st Squadron, is also known as the "Governor's Troop." The 104th Cavalry has gone through many configurations, its elements serving as the 1st Pennsylvania Cavalry and the 8th Pennsylvania Infantry in
Puerto Rico during the Spanish–American War.
Mexican Expedition and World War I On 6 July 1916, subordinate units of the regiment were mustered into Federal service for the Mexican border and stationed at
El Paso, Texas. The unit was mustered out on 22 January 1917. On 15 July 1917, the regiment was drafted and mustered into federal service for World War I as the 103rd Headquarters Troop, 28th Division; and on 9 December 1917, as 103rd Trench Mortar Battery, 53d Field Artillery, 28th Division. It served in both France and Belgium and was mustered out on 12 April 1919, elements returning to state service as the 8th Pennsylvania with the regimental headquarters at Harrisburg.
Interwar period The 104th Cavalry was constituted in the National Guard in 1921, assigned to the
21st Cavalry Division, and allotted to the state of Pennsylvania. It was organized on 1 June 1921 by the conversion and redesignation of the 8th Infantry Regiment, Pennsylvania National Guard (demobilized in May 1919 at
Camp Dix,
New Jersey, as elements of the 112th Infantry and other units in the 28th Division; reconstituted and federally recognized on 16 October 1919 as the 8th Infantry) as the 104th Cavalry. The regimental headquarters was organized and federally recognized at
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. Subordinate squadron headquarters were organized and federally recognized as follows: 1st Squadron organized at
Tyrone; and 2nd Squadron organized on 20 July 1921 at
Carlisle. Reorganized on 15 March 1929 as a three-squadron regiment, with a new 3rd Squadron headquarters organized at Harrisburg. The regiment, or elements thereof, was called up to perform the following state duties: entire regiment to perform strike duty at coal mines at
Ebensburg and
Cokeburg, 21 July–7 September 1922; Troops B and E for duty near
Clarion to search for a downed airmail pilot from 6–11 October 1925; entire regiment to perform relief duties in connection with the flooding of the
Schuylkill and
Susquehanna Rivers in the spring of 1936. The regiment conducted annual summer training at
Mount Gretna from 1921–35, and
Indiantown Gap from 1936–39. Relieved from the 21st Cavalry Division in January 1939 and assigned to the
22nd Cavalry Division.
As a "horse-mechanized" regiment On 23 September 1940, the regiment was reorganized by combining it with elements of the
103rd Cavalry Regiment (which was concurrently converted into the 190th Field Artillery Regiment) and 28th Division and redesignating it the
104th Cavalry Regiment (Horse-Mechanized). It was relieved from assignment to the 22nd Cavalry Division the following month. The regiment now consisted of one mounted squadron and one mechanized (armored car) squadron. On 17 February 1941, the regiment was inducted into federal service. After transfer to Salem, Oregon, the units of the regiment were retitled in this manner: • Headquarters and Headquarters Troop became
HHT, 104th Cavalry Group (Mechanized) • 1st Squadron became the
104th Cavalry Reconnaissance Squadron (Mechanized) • 2nd Squadron became the
119th Cavalry Reconnaissance Squadron (Mechanized) The 104th Cavalry Group was not sent overseas. The group headquarters and the 119th C.R.S. were inactivated on 15 August 1944 at
Camp Gruber, Oklahoma. The 104th C.R.S. was subordinated to the 115th Cavalry Group (Mechanized) and served in combat with the
VI Corps in Germany in 1945. The 104th C.R.S. returned to the U.S. and was inactivated at
Camp Miles Standish, Massachusetts, on 22 October 1945. On 25 August 1952, the regiment was redesignated the 104th Armored Cavalry Regiment; on 1 June 1959, it was redesignated as the 1st Reconnaissance Squadron, 103rd Armor; on 1 April 1963, the 1st Reconnaissance Squadron, 223rd Cavalry; and finally, on 1 1 April 1975, as the 1st Squadron, 104th Cavalry, headquartered in Philadelphia, PA. In 1980, elements of the 104th Cavalry were used as extras in the
George C. Scott film
Taps (film). On 28 May 2002, elements of the 1st Squadron, 104th Cavalry Regiment were mustered into Federal service as Task Force Saber. TF Saber deployed to Bosnia Herzegovina as a part of
SFOR 12 for a
NATO peacekeeping mission earning the Governor's Unit Citation (Permanent Orders 97-2 dated 25 October 2006). On 4 January 2005, Troop B, 1st Squadron, 104th Cavalry, augmented with platoons from Troops A and C, and teams from the 104th Infantry Detachment (Long Range Surveillance) were mustered into federal service as part of the 2d Brigade Combat Team,
28th Infantry Division. The HBCT was responsible for its own battle space as part of
Ramadi under U.S. military occupation from July 2005 to July 2006 attached to the 2d Marine Division and then the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force, earning the
Navy Unit Commendation twice (DA Memorandums AHRC-PDP-A, dated 20 July 2009 and 5 March 2010). In 2003, the 2d Squadron was reformed and the regiment's current configuration in the Pennsylvania Army National Guard is in two squadrons, one Armored (1st) and one Stryker (2d). In 2005, the 2d Squadron was awarded the Governor's Unit Citation for Operation Katrina Relief (
Hurricane Katrina, Louisiana)Permanent Orders 104-6. In 2009, the 2d Squadron deployed to Taji, Iraq. With several company sized elements working and living on J.S.S.'s (Joint Security Site) with their Iraqi counterparts. The 2d Squadron was awarded the Meritorious Unit Commendation Permanent Orders 337-04. The 1st Squadron was called upon and deployed to the Sinai Peninsula, Egypt in 2008 as part of the 51st rotation of the
Multinational Force and Observers and deployed again in 2012-2013 to the State of Kuwait in support of Operation Enduring Freedom. As of 2014, the 1st Squadron is assigned to the
55th Heavy Brigade Combat Team, 28th Infantry Division. The 2d Squadron is assigned to the 56th Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 28th Infantry Division, Pennsylvania Army National Guard. As with most other Army units, there is no regimental headquarters, although a ceremonial regimental dining in is held annually in the Philadelphia area. From 2020-2022 1st and 2nd squadron took part in Security operations in Philadelphia and The District of Columbia in response to BLM riots and January 6th. After a long break in the deployment rotation, the 1st Squadron was then called up again and deployed to the Sinai Peninsula, Egypt in 2021 as part as the 69th rotation of the
Multinational Force and Observers. The Squadron deployed with all of its troops, HHT, Alpha, Bravo, and Charlie. Composer
Douglas Moore wrote the "104th Cavalry Regiment March" in 1924 in honor of the regiment. ==Distinctive unit insignia==