The 77th Division was reconstituted in the
Organized Reserve on 24 June 1921, allotted to the Second
Corps Area, and assigned to the
XII Corps. The division was further allotted to the southeastern portion of the state of New York, primarily the metropolitan area of
New York City and
Long Island, as its home area. The division headquarters was organized on 1 July 1921 at the Army Building, 39 Whitehall Street in Manhattan, relocated in 1933 to the
Federal Office Building at 641 Washington Street, and remained there until activated for World War II. The initial formation of the division began with a rush, and by July 1923, the “Statue of Liberty” Division was up to full strength in its complement of officers as required by its peacetime tables of organization and was the first Reserve division to do so. Many of its officers were Great War veterans of the division, and so there was a direct tie to the World War I organization, which established an esprit de corps equaled by few other Organized Reserve divisions during the period between the world wars. Lieutenant Colonel
Charles W. Whittlesey, the commander of the famous “Lost Battalion” during World War I, was instrumental in the initial recruiting efforts to get the division up to strength in the early 1920s. The division established a clubhouse at 27 West 25th Street in
Manhattan which added to the camaraderie. Over a number of years, most units of the division had bronze plaques cast and inscribed with the names of their war dead mounted in the sitting areas of the club. Some 300 officers and men of the division participated annually in the Army Day parade and over 550 participated in the homecoming parade for
Charles Lindbergh on 13 June 1927. All of these served to increase the esprit and camaraderie of the Statue of Liberty Division. The designated mobilization and training station for the division was Camp Dix, New Jersey, the location where much of the 77th’s training activities occurred in the interwar years. The division headquarters generally conducted summer training at Camp Dix, and in 1934 and 1937, conducted major division-level
command post exercises (CPXs) there. On a number of occasions, the division headquarters also participated in Second Corps Area or
First Army CPXs in conjunction with other Regular Army, National Guard, and Organized Reserve units. These training events gave division staff officers opportunities to practice the roles they would be expected to perform in the event the division was mobilized. The 77th Division headquarters occasionally trained with the staffs of the 1st Division or its subordinate 1st Infantry Brigade at Camp Dix, or sometimes at
Fort Slocum, New York. For 1 year, in 1926, the officers of the division headquarters trained with the staff of the
New York National Guard's
27th Division at
Camp Smith, near
Peekskill, New York. In 1923, the division officers, with assistance from Colonel
Peter E. Traub, the division chief of staff, established Camp Blauvelt near
Nyack, New York, for the purposes of providing a small training area for the division. Camp Blauvelt was frequently used for unpaid weekend or two-week inactive duty “contact camps” by subordinate units for their officers, and occasionally by the division staff for mini-CPXs. The subordinate infantry regiments of the division generally held their summer training primarily with the units of the 1st Infantry Brigade at Camp Dix, but other units, such as the special troops, artillery, engineers, aviation, medical, and quartermaster, trained at various posts in the Second and Third Corps Areas usually with other units of the 1st Division. For example, the division’s artillery trained with the
7th Field Artillery at
Pine Camp, New York; the 302nd Engineer Regiment usually trained with the
1st Engineer Regiment at
Fort DuPont,
Delaware; the 302nd Medical Regiment trained with the
1st Medical Regiment at
Carlisle Barracks,
Pennsylvania; and the 302nd Observation Squadron trained with the
5th Observation Squadron at
Mitchel Field, New York. In addition to the unit training camps, the infantry regiments of the division rotated responsibility to conduct the infantry
Citizens Military Training Camps (CMTC) held at Camp Dix and
Plattsburg Barracks each year. The field artillery regiments conducted field artillery CMTC training at
Madison Barracks, New York. Although corps area commanders were nominally in command of the three Organized Reserve divisions in their corps area, with division chiefs of staff handling day-to-day operations, corps area commanders sometimes designated junior Regular Army or Reserve general officers in their corps areas to serve as Organized Reserve division commanders in addition to their other duties. As of 1937, the 77th Division was commanded by Brigadier General
Perry L. Miles, who was concurrently the commander of the 1st Division's 2nd Infantry Brigade. Unlike the Regular and Guard units in the Second Corps Area, the 77th Division did not participate in the Second Corps Area maneuvers and the First Army maneuvers of 1935, 1939, and 1940 as an organized unit due to lack of enlisted personnel and equipment. Instead, the officers and a number of the enlisted reservists were assigned to Regular and Guard units to fill vacant slots and bring the units up to war strength for the exercises. Additionally, some were assigned duties as umpires or as support personnel. Due to the mobilization of many Organized Reserve officers beginning in 1939 for assignment to other units, all officers less those in the infantry and field artillery were relieved from their divisional assignments in July 1941 and assigned to branch pools instead.
Order of battle, 1939 • Headquarters (Manhattan, NY) • Headquarters, Special Troops (Manhattan, NY) • Headquarters Company (Manhattan, NY) • 77th Military Police Company (Manhattan, NY) • 77th Signal Company (Manhattan, NY) • 302nd Ordnance Company (Medium) (Manhattan, NY) • 77th Tank Company (Light) (Manhattan, NY) • 153rd Infantry Brigade (Manhattan, NY) • 305th Infantry Regiment (Brooklyn, NY) • 306th Infantry Regiment (Flushing, NY) • 154th Infantry Brigade (Manhattan, NY) • 307th Infantry Regiment (Manhattan, NY) • 308th Infantry Regiment (Bronx, NY) • 152nd Field Artillery Brigade (Manhattan, NY) • 304th Field Artillery Regiment (75 mm) (Brooklyn, NY) • 305th Field Artillery Regiment (75 mm) (Manhattan, NY) • 306th Field Artillery Regiment (155 mm) (Bronx, NY) • 302nd Ammunition Train (Manhattan, NY) • 302nd Engineer Regiment (Manhattan, NY) • 302nd Medical Regiment (Manhattan, NY) • 402nd Quartermaster Regiment (Brooklyn, NY) ==World War II==