The
1920 amendments to the National Defense Act of 1916 set out the postwar National Guard structure. The 35th Division was reconstituted in the National Guard in 1921, allotted to the states of Kansas, Missouri, and Nebraska of the
Seventh Corps Area, and assigned to the
VII Corps. In the postwar reorganization of the Army's infantry divisions, they only had two regiments of horse-drawn 75 mm guns, with truck-drawn 155 mm howitzers initially assigned as
corps and
army artillery because of the belief that they were too tactically immobile. As early as 1922, the Nebraska National Guard found it impossible to organize the VII Corps' 127th Field Artillery Regiment because of a lack of funding and armory space. When suitable modifications were made to the 155 mm howitzer as part of the Army's motorization of field artillery in the early 1930s to allow for high-speed truck traction, 155 mm howitzer regiments were returned to divisions; the 142nd Field Artillery Regiment, a partially-organized General Headquarters Reserve (GHQR) 75 mm gun unit from Arkansas, was converted to 155 mm howitzers and assigned to the 35th Division on 13 July 1931 in lieu of the 127th Field Artillery. In the 1920s and 1930s, constituent units of the division performed routine training within their respective states as well as various activities policing labor troubles and effecting disaster relief. Arkansas units trained at Camp Pike (later renamed
Camp Joseph T. Robinson), Arkansas,
Fort Riley, Kansas, near
Junction City, or at Fort Sill; Kansas units trained at Fort Riley; Missouri units at Camp Clark, near
Nevada, Missouri; Nebraska units at
Camp Ashland, near
Ashland, Nebraska. Because of continued disputes between the states allotted for the division, the 35th Division commander and his staff were not organized and federally recognized until 1932-1933. Beginning in the summer of 1933, the division staff assembled at Fort Riley for consolidated staff training and did so for the next two years. In the fall of 1935, the staff participated in the Fourth Army
command post exercise at
Fort Lewis,
Washington, and went to camp at Ashland, Nebraska, the following summer. Due to limited funding, all the units of the 35th Division did not gather together in one place for training until the Seventh Corps Area concentration of the
Fourth Army maneuvers at Fort Riley, in 1937. In 1938, 180
Organized Reserve officers of the
89th and
102nd Divisions were also provided with training by the division. The division also concentrated at
Camp Ripley,
Minnesota, during the Fourth Army maneuvers in 1940.
Peacetime activities Special Troops, 35th Division • 35th Signal Company for communications duty in conjunction with a coal miners' strike in
Columbus, Kansas, 17 June-6 August 1935
35th Division Quartermaster Train Source: • Elements for flood relief duty along the Republican River in south-central Nebraska, 1–4 June 1935 • Entire train for martial law in conjunction with a streetcar workers' strike in
Omaha, Nebraska, 15–21 June 1935
69th Infantry Brigade • Brigade headquarters for command and control in conjunction with a streetcar workers' strike in Omaha, 15–21 June 1935
70th Infantry Brigade Source: • Headquarters company for riot control duty during a railroad workers' strike in
Poplar Bluff, Missouri, July 1922 • Headquarters and headquarters company for riot control duty during a riot at the Missouri State Penitentiary in
Jefferson City, 25–27 March 1930
110th Medical Regiment • Elements for riot control duty during a workers' strike at a
Nebraska City meat packing plant, January–February 1922 • Elements for martial law in conjunction with a streetcar workers' strike in Omaha, 15–21 June 1935 • Elements for flood relief duty along the Republican River in south-central Nebraska, 1–4 June 1935
130th Field Artillery Regiment Source: • 1st Battalion for riot control duty during a coal miners' strike in Pittsburg, 14 December 1921 – 26 February 1922 • Several batteries for tornado relief duty in
Hutchinson, 13–15 January 1923, and Horton, 18–19 June 1923 • 1st Battalion for flood relief duty in Hutchinson, July 1929
134th Infantry Regiment Source: • Five companies for riot control duty during a workers' strike at a Nebraska City meat packing plant, January–February 1922 • Portion of one company for tornado relief duty at
Hastings, Nebraska, 9–12 May 1930 • Two companies for riot control duty during a water rights dispute along the north fork of the
Platte River in
Scotts Bluff County, Nebraska, 28 August-3 September 1935 • Entire regiment, less band, for martial law in conjunction with a streetcar workers' strike in Omaha, 15–21 June 1935
137th Infantry Regiment Source: • 1st and 3rd Battalions for riot control duty during a coal miners' strike in
Pittsburg, Kansas, 14 December 1921 – 26 February 1922 • Tornado relief duty in
Augusta, Kansas, 13–16 July 1924 • 2nd Battalion for road patrols and bridge blocks during a
prison breakout in
Lansing, Kansas, 19–20 January 1934 • Regimental headquarters and 3rd Battalion for riot control duty during a copper miners' disturbance in
Baxter Springs, Kansas, 8–27 June 1934, and during a coal miners' strike in Columbus, Kansas, 17 June-6 August 1935
138th Infantry Regiment Source: • Riot control duty at railroad workers' strikes in
Moberly,
Macon, and Poplar Bluff, Missouri, 13 July-23 November 1922, and during a workers' strike in
New Madrid, Missouri, May 1923 • Flood relief duty along the
Mississippi River at
Charleston,
Sikeston, and Poplar Bluff, Missouri, 16 April-12 May 1927 and January 1937, and along the
St. Francis River, June 1928, and every spring from 1932 to 1933 and 1935–1938
142nd Field Artillery Regiment • Entire regiment for flood relief duty in
Forrest City, Camp Barton, and
Jonesboro, Arkansas, January–February 1937
161st Field Artillery Regiment Source: • Three batteries for road patrols and bridge blocks during a prison breakout in
Lansing, 19–20 January 1934 • 2nd Battalion for riot control duty during a coal miners' strike in Columbus, Kansas, 17–25 June 1935 • 1st Battalion for riot control duty during a coal miners' strike in Columbus, Kansas, 28 June-6 August 1935
Commanders • Major General Charles I. Martin (Kansas) - 7 June 1932–January 1935 • Brigadier General Amos Thomas (Nebraska) (interim) - January 1935–13 September 1935 • Major General Herbert J. Paul (Nebraska) - 13 September 1935 – 6 November 1937 • Major General Edward M. Stayton (Missouri) - 7 November 1937 – 2 September 1938 • Major General Ralph E. Truman (Missouri) - 28 October 1938 – 17 October 1941 • Major General William H. Simpson (Regular Army) - 17 October 1941–May 1942
Order of battle, 1924 Source: Italics indicates that the given unit was unorganized or inactive •
Headquarters, 35th Division •
Division Headquarters Detachment •
Headquarters, Special Troops (Missouri National Guard) •
Headquarters Detachment, Special Troops (Missouri National Guard) •
Medical Department Detachment, Special Troops (Missouri National Guard) • Headquarters Company (
Warrensburg, Missouri) •
35th Military Police Company (Kansas National Guard) • 35th Signal Company (
Kansas City, Kansas) •
110th Ordnance Company (Medium) (Kansas National Guard) • 35th Tank Company (Light) (
St. Joseph, Missouri) •
Motorcycle Company No. 110 (Kansas National Guard) • 69th Infantry Brigade (
Topeka, Kansas) • 134th Infantry Regiment (
Omaha, Nebraska) • 137th Infantry Regiment (
Horton, Kansas) • 70th Infantry Brigade (
Jefferson City, Missouri) • 138th Infantry Regiment (
St. Louis, Missouri) • 140th Infantry Regiment (
Caruthersville, Missouri) • 60th Field Artillery Brigade (Topeka, Kansas) • 130th Field Artillery Regiment (Topeka, Kansas) • 161st Field Artillery Regiment (Topeka, Kansas) •
110th Ammunition Train (Kansas National Guard) • 110th Engineer Regiment (Kansas City, Missouri) • 110th Medical Regiment (
Lincoln, Nebraska) • 35th Division Train, Quartermaster Corps (Lincoln, Nebraska) • 35th Division Air Service (St. Louis, Missouri)
Order of battle, 1939 Source: • Headquarters, 35th Division (
Kansas City, Missouri) • Division commander (Kansas City, Missouri) • Division Headquarters Detachment (Warrensburg, Missouri) • Headquarters, Special Troops (St. Joseph, Missouri) • Headquarters Detachment, Special Troops (St. Joseph, Missouri) • Medical Department Detachment (St. Joseph, Missouri) • Headquarters Company, 35th Division (Warrensburg, Missouri) • 35th Military Police Company (
Garden City, Kansas) • 35th Signal Company (Kansas City, Kansas) • 35th Tank Company (St. Joseph, Missouri) •
110th Ordnance Company (Kansas National Guard) • Headquarters, 69th Infantry Brigade (Omaha, Nebraska) • Headquarters Company, 69th Infantry Brigade (Topeka, Kansas) • 134th Infantry Regiment (Omaha, Nebraska) • 137th Infantry Regiment (Horton, Kansas) • Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 70th Infantry Brigade (
Jefferson City, Missouri) • 138th Infantry Regiment (St. Louis, Missouri) • 140th Infantry Regiment (Caruthersville, Missouri) • Headquarters and Headquarters Battery, 60th Field Artillery Brigade (Topeka, Kansas) • 130th Field Artillery Regiment (75 mm) (Topeka, Kansas) • 142nd Field Artillery Regiment (155 mm) (
El Dorado, Arkansas) • 161st Field Artillery Regiment (75 mm) (Topeka, Kansas) •
110th Ammunition Train (Kansas National Guard) • 110th Engineer Regiment (Kansas City, Missouri) • 110th Medical Regiment (Lincoln, Nebraska) • 110th Quartermaster Regiment (Lincoln, Nebraska) • 35th Division Aviation (
110th Observation Squadron) (attached) (St. Louis, Missouri) With the conversion of National Guard cavalry divisions to other types of units in 1940, Kansas' 114th Cavalry Regiment was converted and redesignated as the 127th Field Artillery Regiment and assigned to the 35th Division, and the 142nd Field Artillery Regiment was relieved from the division on 1 October 1940. ==World War II==