2nd Brigade, 29th Infantry Division was formed on 22 March 1963 as part of the
United States Army Reorganization Objective Army Division (ROAD) reorganization, which assigned three brigades to each division, replacing the previous
Pentomic system. The Headquarters and Headquarters Company (HHC) of the brigade was redesignated from
Staunton-based Company D, 2d Battle Group, 116th Infantry, which had previously served as the headquarters company of the 116th Infantry Regiment between 1956 and 1959, after which it was consolidated with the regiment's Tank Company during the Pentomic reorganization. The 29th Division was eliminated on 1 February 1968, and the 2nd Brigade became the 116th Brigade,
28th Infantry Division. The brigade headquarters was consolidated with Detachment 3, 28th Adjutant General Company on 1 April 1975 when the brigade became the 116th Infantry Brigade, a nondivisional unit supervised by the
Virginia Department of Military Affairs. Its units included the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd Battalions of the 116th Infantry, the 1st Battalion,
246th Field Artillery, Troop C,
183rd Cavalry, the 76th Aviation Company, the 237th Engineer Company, and the 684th Heavy Equipment Maintenance Company. The 29th was reformed in 1985 and the brigade was accordingly redesignated as the 1st Brigade, 29th Infantry Division on 1 May 1986. During the army's reorganization into brigade combat teams in 2005, 1st Brigade, 29th Division again became the 116th Brigade, this time as an infantry
brigade combat team, on 1 September. The battalion conducted combat operations in
Ghazni and SECFOR operations at
Bagram Airfield. Numerous slice elements were placed under the operational control of the battalion. The newly formed task force assumed the name of the beaches the regiment stormed more than 60 years prior – Normandy. During the deployment two 116th Infantry soldiers were killed by a roadside bomb, the first
Virginia National Guard soldiers to die in combat since
World War II. The battalion returned to the United States in July 2005. In August 2006, the 1st Battalion mobilized in support of
KFOR as part of the 29th Infantry Division to provide stability operations in the Serbian province of
Kosovo with
NATO. They become known as Task Force Red Dragon for the duration of their deployment. In 2007, the Brigade Special Troops Battalion, 116th BCT of the Virginia Army National Guard replaced the 229th Engineer Battalion. In May 2007, the Brigade Headquarters Company mobilized in support of
Operation Iraqi Freedom. Headquarters Company was stationed on the
International Zone and did not suffer any casualties. A company 116th BSTB was stationed in Camp Cedar II, near the city of
An Nāşirīyah, Iraq. Among many tasks, the combat engineer unit conducted route clearance throughout MSR route Tampa to clear convoys for safe travel. In February 2008, the unit demobilized at
Fort Dix, NJ and returned to
Fredericksburg, VA In June 2007, the 2d Squadron,
183rd Cavalry Regiment commanded by LTC Walt Mercer; the 3d Battalion, 116th Infantry Regiment commanded by LTC John M. Epperly; and Company F, 429th Brigade Support Battalion were deployed to Iraq and
Kuwait. Companies A, B, and C of the 3d Battalion, 116th Infantry Regiment successfully conducted convoy security patrols throughout Iraq. HHC & Co D, 3–116th, 2–183rd CAV, and F/429th conducted security force missions in Kuwait and Southern Iraq for strategically vital assets; to include
2-183rd CAV Troops A and C, with HQ and Colorado Guard components completing several extended roadside and personal security, surveillance and mercy missions, and numerous combat patrols throughout Kuwait and Southern Iraq provinces and along oil pipelines outside Basrah. The
Purple Heart was awarded during the deployment for taking shrapnel from sniper fire, and the
Iraq Campaign Medal was issued for those members serving in the Iraq theater of operations. In January 2010, the first battalion mobilized with the
Louisiana National Guard's 256th IBCT to Iraq and conducted convoy security missions in southern Iraq. Known at TF Overlord, a tribute the unit's D-Day heritage, the unit includes the Headquarters Company from Lynchburg, VA; Company A from Bedford, VA; Company B from Lexington, VA; Company C from Christiansburg, VA; and Company D from Pulaski, VA. The battalion was commanded by LTC E. Scott Smith of Lynchburg, VA. The unit returned with no losses in September 2010. , in response to severe snowstorms in late December 2010. In May 2011, the Brigade Headquarters Company (HHC) plus the
UAV Platoon (B/116 BSTB) were mobilized in support of
Operation Enduring Freedom. Approximately 185 Soldiers were mobilized for this deployment. They served as the control element for Combined Team Zabul in Zabul Province, Afghanistan. During their deployment, the HHC directed a mix of US Active Duty and National Guard units as well as Romanian units in continuing operations in Zabul Province. They were commanded by COL Blake Ortner and suffered no combat casualties during the deployment. The brigade HHC returned to the US and demobilized at the beginning of January 2012. In June 2011, Task Force 183 (TF183) mobilized to support
Operation New Dawn. This was the largest mobilization of the Virginia Army National Guard since WWII, consisting of 825 soldiers. TF183 comprised most of the 2d Squadron, 183d Cavalry Regiment plus elements of the 116th BSTB, 116th BSB, 1-116 Infantry and D Co 3-116 Infantry. TF183 returned to the US and demobilized in December 2011. On 15 October 2016, the Brigade Special Troops Battalion became the 229th Brigade Engineer Battalion. == Organization ==