. Upon the
entry of the United States into
World War I, all
National Guard infantry regiments received new numerical designation from 101 to 300, and the 69th was renumbered the 165th Infantry Regiment. Doubled in size by new
War Department regulations, its ranks were filled with Irish-Americans and New Yorkers detailed from other regiments. After brief training at
Camp Mills, Long Island, NY, the regiment was sent to the
Western Front in October 1917 as part of the
42nd "Rainbow" Division in the
American Expeditionary Force (AEF) that was commanded by
General John J. Pershing. The 69th still retained its Irish symbolism and spirit, and every member since then has been designated an honorary Irishman. As Father
Duffy described non-Irish who join the regiment, "They are Irish by adoption, Irish by association, or Irish by conviction".
Commanders Wartime commanders of the 165th Infantry included: • Col.
Charles DeLano Hine • Col.
John William Barker • Col.
Frank Ross McCoy • Col. Harry D. Mitchell • Col. Charles A. Dravo • Col.
William J. Donovan • Col. Charles R. Howland
Rouge Bouquet .
Donovan & Father
Duffy upon return from France in 1919. Arriving in France in November 1917, the regiment first engaged in training near Valcouleurs and
Grand. It then undertook a legendary muddy 80-mile march just after Christmas through the
Vosges mountains to Longeau and
Luneville. It had its first combat experience on 26 February 1918 in the nearby
trenches of the
Rouge Bouquet Chaussilles Sector in the Foret de Parroy near the village of Baccarat. While there, it suffered its first combat casualties, including the deaths of 21 men from the 2nd Battalion on 7 March when a dugout collapsed under bombardment. This event was memorialized in
Sergeant Joyce Kilmer's poem "
Rouge Bouquet" and by a painting of the same name by
Emmett Watson.
Champagne Joyce Kilmer, 1918 survivor
Daniel Buckley, KIA 1918. After participating in numerous raids into German territory and suffering significant casualties from
mustard gas attacks, the regiment was placed in reserve in the
Baccarat sector. On 18 June, it moved to the
Champagne sector near
St. Hillaire. There, it and the rest of the Rainbow Division stopped the German advance in the
Second Battle of the Marne that began on 14 July.
Château-Thierry On 24 July, the 42nd Division moved to
Chateau Thierry to relieve the embattled
U.S. 26th Division. The Fighting 69th led with distinction the crossing of the
Ourcq River 28–31 July, but suffering 264
KIA (including poet Sergeant
Joyce Kilmer), 150
MIA, and 1,200
WIA out of the 3,000-man regiment in four days fighting. Having broken the German lines, who were now reluctantly retreating, the
84th Brigade commander,
Brigadier General Douglas MacArthur, was looking to press forward. When informed that the other regiments had replied that they were "too fatigued" but that the decimated 69th replied that it would still "consider an order to advance as a compliment", he exclaimed, "By God, it takes the Irish when you want a hard thing done!"
St. Mihiel , September 1918. After Chateau Thiery, the regiment refitted. Replacements from all over the United States arrived, becoming about 65 percent of the regiment's enlisted men and nearly 75 percent of the officers. Meanwhile, General Pershing, commander of the AEF on the Western Front, had finally amassed enough troops to form an autonomous American
field army. Its first battle would be to pinch off the
St. Mihiel salient. The Rainbow Division with the Fighting 69th would participate from the right side pressing northwest from
Beaumont assisted by
Lieutenant Colonel George Patton's
1st Provisional Tank Brigade, (later redesignated the 304th Tank Brigade). Many days of marches through the rain brought the 69th to the jump-off point by 10 September, but the rain delayed the start to 12 September. The Germans sensed the build-up and were in the process of withdrawing, so resistance was light. The regiment captured thousands of Germans in open field fighting while suffering 47 KIA and reached its objective of St. Benoit on 15 September.
Meuse-Argonne Its final exploits came when the 42nd Division relieved the 1st Infantry Division during the 3rd phase of the
Meuse-Argonne offensive. Attacking against a well-entrenched enemy in terrible terrain without support from units on its flanks, the regiment suffered heavy casualties while moving forward and captured Hill 252 overlooking the Meuse River on 7 November. Once again, it was the tip of the spear of the
American First Army. The war ended four days later with the
signing of the Armistice, but the 69th then served as occupation troops in
Remagen before returning to New York in the spring of 1919.
Return & recognition in
New York City in 1919. Upon the return from France, Colonel Donovan remarked that "The morale of the regiment has never been better than it is today. Formerly 85 percent of its strength were of Irish descent, and now it is only 50 percent, but the spirit of the old Fighting 69th is stronger than ever. The replacements, whether they are Jews, Italians, or other foreign descent, are more Irish now than the Irish!". He also later pointed out that at one point during the Argonne battle, the adjutants of all three battalions were Jews, one lieutenant was born in
Germany, and another lieutenant was a full-blooded
Choctaw from Oklahoma. During World War I, total casualties of the regiment amounted to 644 killed in action and 2,587 wounded (200 of whom would later die of their wounds) during 164 days of front-line combat. One member of the regiment killed in World War I was
Daniel Buckley who survived the sinking of the
RMS Titanic in 1912. Sixty members earned the
Distinguished Service Cross and three of its members were awarded the
Medal of Honor, including its famed 1st Battalion and later regimental commander,
William Joseph Donovan. Colonel Donovan went on to organize the
Office of Strategic Services (OSS) in World War II, retiring as a major general. In February 2022 the unknown remains of a member of the 165th Infantry Regiment were unearthed at
Villers-sur-Fère, France cemetery; he was reburied 7 June 2023 at
Oise-Aisne American Cemetery It also produced Father
Francis Duffy, "The Fighting Chaplain". In France, Duffy was always seen in the thick of battle, assisting the litter bearers in recovering the wounded, administering last rites, burying the dead, and encouraging the men, while unarmed, and at great risk to his own life. His bravery and inspired leadership were so great that at one point the brigade commander, Brigadier General
Michael Joseph Lenihan, even briefly considered making him the regimental commander, an unheard-of role for a chaplain. With the
New York National Guard federalized during the war, a new state force, the
New York Guard, was organized in 1917 in order to have militia troops available if needed by the
Governor of New York under the
New York State Constitution. As part of this, a replacement 69th Infantry Regiment was created. On 7 January 1921, the 165th Infantry Regiment was consolidated with the 69th Infantry of the New York Guard and reorganized as the 69th Infantry Regiment, New York National Guard. ==Interwar period==