On 15 October 1940, before the United States involvement in the Second World War, the 126th Infantry was inducted into active federal service and moved to
Camp Beauregard,
Louisiana, where it arrived 27 October 1940. It was later transferred on 19 February 1941 to
Camp Livingston, Louisiana. The makeup of the 126th included the following units: • Headquarters:
Grand Rapids • Headquarters Company: Grand Rapids • Anti-Tank Platoon: Grand Rapids • Service Company, Band: Grand Rapids • Medical Detachment: Grand Rapids • 1st Battalion Headquarters and Headquarters Detachment:
Adrian • Company A:
Coldwater • Company B: Holland • Company C:
Kalamazoo • Company D:
Holland • 2nd Battalion Headquarters and Headquarters Detachment:
Muskegon • Company E:
Big Rapids • Company F:
Grand Haven • Company G: Muskegon • Company H:
Ionia • 3rd Battalion Headquarters and Headquarters Detachment: Grand Rapids • Companies I, K, L, M: Grand Rapids During the summer of 1941, the regiment participated in the Third and Fourth Army maneuvers—nicknamed the
Louisiana Maneuvers—which provided the army high command a good look at the preparedness of the regiment. The first test, which was held in the vicinity of
Camp Beauregard, was conducted from 16 June through the 27 and included the Thirty-second Division as well as the Thirty-seventh from
Ohio. From 16 to 30 August, the maneuvers expanded to include the Thirty-fourth and Thirty-eighth divisions. During September, the largest maneuvers were held with the
Seventh Corps of the
Second Army, opposing the Fourth, Fifth, and Eighth corps of the Third Army. The Grand Rapids Guard was part of the Fifth Corps. It was the largest maneuver of its kind in the history of the army and included some one hundred thousand men.
Redirected to Pacific Initially trained for the war in Europe, they were turned around in late March and told to be in San Francisco in three weeks. On 18 April 1942, the 32nd Division boarded a convoy of seven
Matson Line ships, and the 126th boarded the
S.S. Lurline, a
luxury liner converted to
transport duty, and four days later sailed for the South Pacific. The regiment crossed the
equator on 30 April, and the
International Date Line on 7 May, reaching
Adelaide, Australia, seven days later. There, the 126th unloaded and moved to Camp Sandy Creek some outside the city. In August 1942, the 126th moved to
Brisbane and was billeted at
Camp Cable. The camp was named in honor of Corporal Gerald Cable, the first member of the 32nd Division killed by the Japanese during World War II. Cable, a member of Service Company, 126th Infantry, along with approximately twenty other men, were on board a ship transporting trucks and other equipment from Brisbane to Adelaide when a
torpedo hit the ship in the
stern.
Move to New Guinea The 126th was organized into a
regimental combat team composed of the entire 126th Infantry Regiment; Company A, 107th Medical Battalion; Company A, 114th Engineer Battalion; 1st Platoon, Company D, 107th Medical Detachment; Section C, 10th Evacuation Hospital; 107th Quartermaster Company; and a number of other support forces. Colonel Lawrence A. Quinn was in command of the combat team. First, Second, and Third battalions were under the command of Lt. Col. Edmund Carrier, Lt. Col. Henry Geerds, and Lt. Col. Clarence Tomlinson, respectively. The regiment was the first U.S. force to be dispatched to
Port Moresby in New Guinea in September 1942. Once in Port Moresby the regiment was put to work constructing the American base camp, once again missing out on valuable training.
Trek across Owen Stanley Range In October 1942 the 2nd Battalion, assisted by several hundred natives carriers, was sent across the
Owen Stanley Ranges via the
Kapa Kapa Trail toward Jaure, where they were to flank the Japanese retreating towards the coast on the
Kokoda Trail. The total distance over the mountains to the Japanese positions was over , and most of the trail had been rarely used. They were completely unprepared; the battalion suffered greatly from
exposure to the elements in the mountains. The troops also suffered from
malaria,
dengue fever,
bush typhus,
trenchfoot, and
tropical dysentery. The men carried only six days rations, expecting to be resupplied en route. Some of their rations included including
hardtack, rice, and Australian
bully beef which had become
rancid. Many men got food poisoning. They had leather toilet seats but no machetes, insect repellent, waterproof containers for medicine or personal effects, and it rained heavily every day. It was "one of the most harrowing marches in American military history." The battalion took 42 days to cross the mountains and reach the coast. They never saw a Japanese soldier during their trek, and the battalion reached the north coast after the Australians who had fought the Japanese down the Kokoda Trail. During their march, the remainder of the regiment was flown across the Owen Stanley Range, arriving before the 2/126th. The battalion earned the nickname "The Ghost Battalion" during the march, referring not only to the ghost-like conditions encountered when they passed -high Mount Obree, which they nicknamed
Ghost Mountain, but to their condition upon arrival.
Battle of Buna-Gona Lt. Gen. Robert Eichelberger found that when the soldiers of 2/126th arrived at the front they were not ready for combat. Nonetheless, after a week's rest, the men were ordered to the front where they were key players in the extremely difficult
Battle of Buna-Gona. The unit was decimated by the battle. The 126th Infantry was the hardest-hit of the three regiments of the 32nd Infantry Division . It had 131 officers and 3,040 enlisted men when it entered combat against the Japanese in mid-November. At the conclusion of the battle on 22 January, the unit had been decimated by disease as well as battle. Only 32 officers and 579 enlisted men were left, less than a full battalion.
Refit and retrained in Australia After the 32nd Division wrapped up operations at Buna, beginning on 1 March 1943, the 126/32 was transferred to Brisbane, Australia. The complete move took several weeks; the last units arrived in April. The division then returned to Camp Cable where it had been stationed before it left for New Guinea. Major General
William H. Gill at Camp Carson, Colorado was ordered to Australia to assume command of the division. After a period of rest, the division began training to induct the many replacements into its ranks and help them incorporate the lessons of jungle warfare the division had gained in battle. The troops also received six weeks' amphibious training.
Landing at Saidor The 126th RCT/32nd Infantry Division was selected to lead
Operation Michaelmas to capture Saidor, bypassing the Japanese garrison at Sio to the east. Transferred from
Goodenough Island, troops from the U.S. 6th Army, 126th/32 ID, plus the 120th Field Artillery, arrived on January 2, 1944, aboard LSTs and landing craft. The forces were commanded by General
Clarence A. Martin. The landing bypassed the Japanese garrison at Sio to the east. They met little opposition. By the end of 2 January, over 8,000 U.S. troops were ashore. On the next day the Americans established a defensive perimeter and began to send out patrols. At Saidor, the U.S. Army used carrier pigeons for the last time in their history to deliver messages from offshore boats to troops ashore, delivering messages before radios were set up. Approximately 200 Japanese defended the Saidor area, but most fled inland and withdrew over inland trails towards Madang. The unit was inactivated in 1946 after occupation duty in Japan.
Recognition Three soldiers in the 126th earned the
Medal of Honor: • PFC
William A. McWhorter. • PFC
Dirk J. Vlug. == Cold War ==