American Revolution What would eventually become the 1st West Virginia was first organized on 17 February 1735 as Captain
Morgan Morgan’s Company of Volunteer Militia of
Orange County, Virginia. Reorganized and redesignated in November 1738 as Captain Morgan Morgan’s Company,
Frederick County Militia. Expanded on 24 February 1742 as Morgan’s Battalion. Captain Robert Rutherford’s Company of Rangers was raised from volunteers of Morgan’s Battalion in early 1758 and served through 1759. Expanded in 1772 as the
Berkeley County Regiment of Militia with the creation of Berkeley County. The Berkeley County Regiment was called into active service by elements at various times from 1775–1782, and additionally furnished companies and replacements for various elements of the
Virginia Line of the
Continental Army. Captain Hugh Stephenson’s Rifle Company was organized from 14 June–17 July 1775 as an independent company in the Continental Army, reorganized and redesignated on 9 July 1776 as Captain Abraham Shepherd’s Company of the
Maryland and Virginia Rifle Regiment, Colonel Hugh Stephenson commanding; the Maryland and Virginia Rifle Regiment was constituted on 27 June 1776 and organized in the summer of 1776 from new and existing rifle companies from Maryland and Virginia, and
was captured on 16 November 1776 at
Fort Washington, New York, being exchanged November 1780 and disbanded on 1 January 1781. The Virginia elements of the Maryland and Virginia Rifle Regiment were consolidated after 16 November 1776 as Captain Gabriel Long’s Detachment and transferred on 12 February 1777 to the 11th Virginia Regiment, Colonel Daniel Morgan commanding, and were disbanded in May 1778 with personnel transferred to other elements of the 11th (later 7th) Virginia Regiment. Reorganized on 22 December 1792 as volunteer companies of the 10th and 16th Brigades, Virginia Militia, embracing what is now northern West Virginia; 18th and 20th Brigades subsequently organized. Volunteer companies of the 10th and 16th Brigades were mustered into active service from September-December 1794. Captain Cornelius Bogard’s Company of Volunteer Rangers of Monongalia County was in state service in 1794.
War of 1812 and Mexican-American War Captain James Faulkner’s Company of Berkeley Artillery was organized in 1808 at Martinsburg. Volunteer companies of the 10th, 16th, 18th, and 20th Brigades were consolidated in September 1812 with five companies from what is now southern West Virginia to form the 2nd Regiment, Virginia Volunteer Militia; mustered out in April 1813. The Berkeley Blues were mustered into federal service on 21 January 1847 at Richmond as Company H, 1st Virginia Volunteer Infantry Regiment, and mustered out of federal service on 31 July 1848 at
Fort Monroe, Virginia.
American Civil War Elements with Union sympathies were reorganized in May 1861 at Wheeling and mustered into federal service as the 1st Virginia Volunteer Infantry Regiment, a three-month unit. The regiment was mustered out of federal service on 27 August 1861, reorganized, and mustered back into federal service on 30 October 1861 at Wheeling. It was consolidated on 10 December 1864 with the 4th Virginia Volunteer Infantry Regiment (organized June-August 1861 at
Grafton and
Point Pleasant) to form the 2nd West Virginia Veteran Volunteer Infantry Regiment, and was mustered out of federal service on 16 July 1865. Elements with Confederate sympathies joined various Virginia regiments of the
Confederate States Army, including the Berkeley Blues, which were mustered into Confederate service on 19 April 1861 and reorganized as Company B (Arbutus-Wise Artillery), 1st Virginia Light Artillery Regiment; reorganized and redesignated 26 April 1862 as Captain James S. Brown’s Independent Battery (Wise Artillery); disbanded 4 October 1862. The northwestern portion of Virginia entered the Union on 20 June 1863 as the state of West Virginia. State forces in northern West Virginia were reorganized on 21 November 1863 as volunteer companies in the 1st Division, West Virginia Militia. Reorganized in 1878 as the 1st Regiment, West Virginia Volunteer Militia. The West Virginia Militia was redesignated in 1889 as the West Virginia National Guard.
Spanish-American War The 1st and 2nd Regiments were consolidated on 29 April 1898 to form the 1st West Virginia Volunteer Infantry, which was mustered into federal service from 7–14 May 1898 at Charleston and mustered out of federal service 4 February 1899 at
Columbus, Georgia. The former 1st Regiment was reorganized in 1899.
World War I During World War I, the 1st West Virginia Infantry Regiment was broken up and assigned to various units of the
38th Division; the Supply Company became part of the 113th Engineer Train, the Machine Gun Company and 1st Battalion part of the 137th Machine Gun Battalion, Companies E and F part of the 113th Engineer Regiment, and Companies G and H became part of the 113th Ammunition Train. The 3rd Battalion and Headquarters Company (less Band) became part of the
150th Infantry Regiment along with the entire 2nd West Virginia Infantry Regiment.
Interwar period What would become the 201st Infantry was demobilized from January–June 1919 as the various elements of the 38th Division noted above. The 1st West Virginia Infantry was rerganized from 1924–27, and was redesignated the 201st Infantry on 11 May 1926. The regimental headquarters was organized on 17 December 1927 and federally recognized at
Fairmont, West Virginia. The headquarters was relocated on 5 June 1930 to
Morgantown, West Virginia. The regiment was assigned to the Second Army on 1 October 1933. The regiment, or elements thereof, were called up to perform the following state duties: 1st Battalion called up to perform martial law in connection with a mine explosion at
Everettville, West Virginia, 1–5 May 1927; Headquarters Company to perform firefighting duties at
Terra Alta, West Virginia, 9–10 February 1934. The regiment conducted annual summer training most years at Camp Dawson, West Virginia, and some years at Camp William G. Conley, West Virginia, from 1921–40. For at least three years (1931–33) the regiment also trained some 26 company-grade
Organized Reserve infantry officers of the
100th Division at Camp Dawson. The regiment was relieved from assignment to, and attached to, the Second Army on 30 December 1940. ===
World War II=== On 6 January 1941 the 201st was inducted into federal service at home stations, and moved to
Fort Benjamin Harrison,
Indiana, on 10 January 1941 where it was attached to the
Second Army. The regiment staged at
Camp Murray, Washington, on 5 August 1941 until it departed the
Seattle port of embarkation on 12 September 1941, arriving at
Kodiak, Alaska, on 16 September 1941. The 201st transferred to
Adak Island in November 1942 and to
Amchitka in January 1943 before departing Alaska on 22 March 1944 and returning to Seattle on 2 April 1944. The regiment moved to
Camp Carson,
Colorado, on 10 April 1944 under the XVI Corps, and was reassigned to the XXXVI Corps on 17 July 1944. Beginning in April 1944, the regiment provided an accelerated six-week course of infantry training (four weeks of familiarization, qualification, and transition firing, and two weeks of tactical training) to men who were formerly members of disbanded anti-aircraft and tank destroyer units or who had volunteered for transfer to the infantry from other branches of the Army. It relocated to
Fort Jackson,
South Carolina, on 10 September 1944 under
IX Corps and was assigned to
XXIII Corps on 25 September 1944. It arrived at
Camp Rucker,
Alabama, on 3 March 1945 under the Replacement & School Command and was inactivated there on 26 September 1945. Following the war’s end the 201st reverted to state control where it was reorganized and redesignated as the 201st Field Artillery Battalion. ===
Gulf War=== In December 1990, the unit was called to serve in
Operation Desert Storm. The unit was activated for 180 days unless sooner released or later extended. The 201st left Fairmont and went to
Fort Campbell, Kentucky for training. It joined XVIII Corps Artillery,
18th Field Artillery Brigade. On the exact 256th anniversary of its founding, the unit fired 256 rounds downrange at Iraqi forces. David Tucker was a
chaplain's assistant of the unit at the time and noted this in a letter to
The Fairmont Times. The units of the 201st returned to their home base in May, 1991. The "First West Virginia" did not lose a single soldier during the war. ===
Iraq War=== In December 2003, the 201st was again called to active duty for
Operation Iraqi Freedom. The soldiers trained at
Fort Drum, New York in January and February, 2004 before going overseas. While in theater, the battalion was subordinated to the
197th Fires Brigade of the
New Hampshire National Guard and commanded by Colonel James Guise. The 197th reported directly to
III Corps Artillery, under the command of Brigadier General
Richard Formica. The unit spent one year in Iraq before returning home in February 2005. The Battalion Headquarters (HHB) operated out of Camp Cedar II and
Tallil Airbase, both of which are approximately west of
An Nasiriyah in the
Dhi Qar province of Iraq. B Battery and Service Battery were co-located with the HHB. A Battery operated out of Convoy Support Center (CSC)
Scania and C Battery operated out of CSC Navistar in
Kuwait. The Battalion's mission was convoy security and route clearance for
Main Supply Route (MSR) Tampa, the primary route for supplies in Iraq at the time. C Battery would later move north to Camp Cedar II and Tallil Airbase and continue convoy security. Some members of C Battery were also attached to the 1st Cav Division in Jan 2005 to provide extra security in Baghdad (they were stationed in the Hotel District: the Baghdad, Palestine and Sheraton Hotels across the river from the Green Zone) for the first elections while the rest of the unit and battalion trained their replacements. ==Current organization==