's of the 97th Infantry Division in Cologne, Germany, March 18, 1945 The 97th Infantry Division was ordered into active military service during
World War II on 25 February 1943 at
Camp Swift, Texas, the last of the Organized Reserve infantry divisions to enter active duty. Before Organized Reserve infantry divisions were ordered into active military service, they were reorganized on paper as "triangular" divisions under the 1940 tables of organization. The headquarters companies of the two infantry brigades were consolidated into the division's cavalry reconnaissance troop, and one infantry regiment was removed by inactivation. The field artillery brigade headquarters and headquarters battery became the headquarters and headquarters battery of the division artillery. Its three field artillery regiments were reorganized into four battalions; one battalion was taken from each of the two 75 mm gun regiments to form two 105 mm howitzer battalions, the brigade's ammunition train was reorganized as the third 105 mm howitzer battalion, and the 155 mm howitzer battalion was formed from the 155 mm howitzer regiment. The engineer, medical, and quartermaster regiments were reorganized into battalions. In 1942, divisional quartermaster battalions were split into ordnance light maintenance companies and quartermaster companies, and the division's headquarters and military police company, which had previously been a combined unit, was split. Because the activation rate of Army units in late 1942 was proceeding faster than the expected induction rate of new soldiers and there was an urgent need for personnel to participate in the
Operation Torch landings in North Africa planned for November 1942, the reorganization of the 97th was deferred until early 1943 and three partially-trained divisions were stripped to less than 50 percent strength. Most of the cadre for the 97th came from the
95th Infantry Division stationed at
Fort Sam Houston, Texas. In February 1944 the division was moved to
Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri, for additional training. During 1944, approximately 5,000 soldiers were stripped from the division and sent as replacements to other units in Europe. Division strength was eventually restored when the
Army Specialized Training Program and aviation cadet training program were sharply reduced or terminated and many of their personnel were reassigned to
Army Ground Forces for retraining as infantry. The strength of the division upon deployment in Europe was 600 officers and 14,000 men. • Killed in action: 188 • 303rd Field Artillery Battalion (105 mm) • 365th Field Artillery Battalion (105 mm) • 922nd Field Artillery Battalion (105 mm) • 389th Field Artillery Battalion (155 mm) • 322nd Engineer Combat Battalion • 322nd Medical Battalion •
97th Cavalry Reconnaissance Troop (Mechanized) • Headquarters, Special Troops, 97th Infantry Division • Headquarters Company, 97th Infantry Division • 797th Ordnance Light Maintenance Company • 97th Quartermaster Company • 597th Signal Company • 97th Military Police Platoon • 97th Infantry Division Band • 97th Counterintelligence Corps Detachment
Commanders • Major General
Louis A. Craig, 4 February 1943 – 19 January 1944 • Brigadier General
Milton B. Halsey, 20 January 1944 – 24 September 1945 • Major General
Herman F. Kramer, 24 September 1945 – inactivation on 31 March 1946.
Combat chronicle After assembly and training at
Camp Cooke in California, the 97th Infantry Division was transported by train to
Camp Kilmer, New Jersey. The division embarked on
troopships in New York and landed at
Le Havre, France on 2 March 1945, then moved to Camp Lucky Strike. After crossing France by troop train, the division passed through
Maastricht and crossed the German border west of
Aachen on 28 March, taking up a defensive position along the west bank of the
Rhine River opposite
Düsseldorf. According to the
after action report:
Pfc John Hedrick seized an abandoned
assault boat while under heavy enemy fire and used the craft to help ferry troops across the river. He was awarded the
Silver Star. After crossing the river, elements of the 387th Infantry Regiment assaulted the castle: :"The 2d Battalion hit very stiff resistance at the ALLNER Castle and on the ridge in the loop of the river.
Anti-tank company and the TD's blasted the castle from the S bank of the SIEG River and G Company was able to clear it out." Entering
Siegburg on 10 April, troops again encountered heavy resistance at the Glockner works. On 12 April Pfc
Joe R. Hastings of Company C, 386th Infantry Regiment, distinguished himself in action at
Drabenderhöhe, Germany while attacking an enemy position. He received the
Medal of Honor posthumously for his actions. On 14 April, intelligence officers from the 97th Division liberated approximately 800
prisoners of war, including 177 Americans, being held at a
POW camp in Hoffnungstal, near
Much, Germany. Düsseldorf fell without much fighting the next day, after the
German Resistance launched
Aktion Rheinland, and the Ruhr pocket was eliminated by 21 April. and a colonel from the
90th Infantry Division later took credit for liberating the camp. Members of the 97th Division treated sick and dying prisoners and buried the several hundred corpses discovered in the camp. Brigadier General Milton B. Halsey inspected the camp as did General Sherman V. Hasbrouck, the commanding officer of the division artillery. Members of the
Counter Intelligence Corps, which included
Robie Macauley,
Ib Melchior and
Anthony Hecht, interviewed former prisoners and gathered evidence for trials of former camp officers and guards. The following day a unit of the 97th CIC Detachment led by Captain Oscar M. Grimes captured about two hundred
Gestapo officers and men in hiding near
Hof, Bavaria. They were in possession of American uniforms and equipment, but had evidently made the decision to surrender.
Czechoslovakia On 25 April the division entered Czechoslovakia, moving to protect the left flank of the
Third Army on its southern drive. The 97th took
Cheb, Czechoslovakia, on 25 April 1945 and attacked the Czechoslovak pocket near
Weiden, Germany on 29 April. Part of the division was in
Teplá where the German 2nd Panzer Division had surrendered. The troops used the monastery there as a
POW camp for the Germans. The 97th Infantry Division was credited with firing the last official shot in the
European Theatre of Operations during World War II. This shot was fired by
Pfc. Domenic Mozzetta (1925-2001) of Company B, 387th Infantry Regiment, 97th Infantry Division, at a German sniper near Klenovice, Czechoslovakia shortly before midnight, 7 May 1945. • 28 April 1945: First Army, 12th Army Group • 30 April 1945:
V Corps • 6 May 1945: Third Army, 12th Army Group
Command posts in the ETO • 2 Mar 45 -
Camp Lucky Strike,
Seine-Inferieure, France • 28 Mar 45 -
Lövenich,
Rhineland, Germany • 31 Mar 45 -
Glehn, Rhineland, Germany • 4 Apr 45 -
Oberpleis, Rhineland, Germany • 12 Apr 45 -
Siegburg, Rhineland, Germany • 14 Apr 45 -
Rosrath, Rhineland, Germany • 15 Apr 45 -
Bergisch Gladbach, Rhineland, Germany • 17 Apr 45 -
Solingen, Rhineland, Germany • 21 Apr 45 -
Hof, Bavaria, Germany • 23 Apr 45 -
Wunsiedel,
Bavaria, Germany • 29 Apr 45 -
Weiden in der Oberpfalz, Bavaria, Germany • 5 May 45 -
Tachov,
Bohemia, Czechoslovakia • 7 May 45 -
Konstantinovy Lázně, Bohemia, Czechoslovakia • 9 May 45 -
Tachov, Bohemia, Czechoslovakia • 15 May 45 -
Memmelsdorf, Bavaria, Germany • 1 Jun 45 -
Camp Old Gold, Seine-Inferieure, France
Post-war duties The division left
Le Havre on 16 June 1945 aboard the , arriving at
Camp Shanks on 24 June. After a 30-day leave, the division reassembled at
Fort Bragg, crossed the US by troop train and on 1 September embarked aboard the for redeployment to the Pacific, arriving at
Cebu, Philippine Islands on 16 September and then sailing to Japan for
occupation duty, the first unit previously stationed in Europe to arrive in Japan after the end of the war. Arriving at
Yokohama on 25 September 1945, the division relieved the
43rd Infantry Division and established its headquarters at Mitsugahara Airfield in
Kumagaya. By December the 97th had reached its maximum deployment through six prefectures:
Saitama,
Gunma,
Nagano,
Niigata,
Fukushima, and
Tochigi. Confiscating and disposing of Japanese military property proved to be the Division's prime task. The 97th returned 198,142,046 pounds of foodstuffs, 670,226 gallons of gasoline, 8,568,857 yards of cloth and 480,343 pairs of boots and shoes to the Japanese government for distribution to civilians. On 31 October,
Special Agent Robie Macauley of the division's counter-intelligence unit arrested 26 prominent Nazis who were in hiding in
Karuizawa. The division was inactivated on 31 March 1946 in Yokohama. == Cold War ==