• Ordered into active military service: 15 June 1942 at Fort George G. Meade, Maryland • Overseas: 10 December 1944 • Campaigns:
Ardennes-Alsace,
Rhineland,
Central Europe • Days of combat: 107 • Distinguished Unit Citations: 2 • Awards: MH-2; DSC-13; DSM-1; SS-176; LM-5; SM-19; BSM-1,312; AM-58 • Commanders: Maj. Gen.
Emil F. Reinhardt (June–December 1942), Maj. Gen.
William R. Schmidt (December 1942 – July 1945), Brig. Gen.
Henry C. Evans (August 1945 to inactivation) • Inactivated: 31 August 1945 in Europe
Training and activation Order of battle • Headquarters, 76th Infantry Division •
304th Infantry Regiment •
385th Infantry Regiment • 417th Infantry Regiment • Headquarters and Headquarters Battery, 76th Infantry Division Artillery • 302nd Field Artillery Battalion (105 mm) • 355th Field Artillery Battalion (105 mm) • 364th Field Artillery Battalion (155 mm) • 901st Field Artillery Battalion (105 mm) • 301st Engineer Combat Battalion • 301st Medical Battalion • 76th Cavalry Reconnaissance Troop (Mechanized) • Headquarters, Special Troops, 76th Infantry Division • Headquarters Company, 76th Infantry Division • 776th Ordnance Light Maintenance Company • 76th Quartermaster Company • 76th Signal Company • Military Police Platoon • Band • 76th
Counterintelligence Corps Detachment 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. The 76th Infantry Division was ordered into active military service on 15 June 1942 around a cadre of officers and men from the
1st Infantry Division. After a period of service as a replacement division that held and processed men for assignment to other units or overseas from October 1942 to March 1943, intensive training began on 12 April 1943. This was followed by advanced training in July 1943 at
A.P. Hill Military Reservation near
Fredericksburg, Virginia. Winter training started in September 1943 at
Camp McCoy, Wisconsin. (Skis, snowshoes, toboggans, snow tractors, snow goggles, winter camouflage suits, Eskimo parkas, etc.) Simultaneously, an advanced training group moved in November 1943 to northern Michigan near
Watersmeet. Winter training experts from the Mountain Training Center at
Camp Hale, Colorado gave a special training program. Additional winter training began at
Ottawa National Forest near Watersmeet on 19 February 1944. During this training, temperatures dropped to . Four exercises were conducted during which the 385th Infantry Regiment (headquartered in
Pori, Michigan, opposed the division as an enemy force. (6 March 1945). On 12 March 1944, the division returned to Camp McCoy. 7,000 troops, mainly infantry, were taken from the 76th from April to September 1944 to build up forces for the impending invasion of France (D-Day); the division was replenished by men diverted from the
Army Specialized Training Program, aviation cadets, men from disbanded antiaircraft and tank destroyer units, and men who were allowed to volunteer for the infantry from other branches of the Army. In November 1944, trains headed to
Camp Myles Standish in
Taunton, Massachusetts for staging before transport to Europe. On Thanksgiving Day 1944, three transports sailed from
Boston Port of Embarkation to Europe. The
304th Infantry plus a division headquarters party sailed on the SS
Brazil. The 304th reached
Southampton, England on 4 December 1944. The 385th Infantry crossed the Atlantic on the SS
Sea Owl. The 385th reached Southampton on 4 December 1944 The 417th Infantry sailed on the
SS Marine Raven. The 417th docked at Plymouth 4 December 1944. The remainder of the division sailed from Boston on 10 December 1944 aboard the Coast Guard operated transport SS
Richardson. The SS
Richardson docked at the
Clyde River near Grenoch, Scotland on 12 December 1944. The remainder of the division headquarters sailed from New York on 4 December on the Dutch liner
New Amsterdam.
Combat chronicle The 76th Infantry Division arrived in England, 20 December 1944, where it received additional training. It landed at Le Havre, France, 12 January 1945, and proceeded to the Limesy concentration area. The Division moved to Beine east of Reims and then to Champlon, Belgium, 23 January, to prepare for combat. Relieving the 87th Division in defensive positions along the Sauer and Moselle Rivers in the vicinity of
Echternach, Luxembourg, 25 January, the 76th sent out patrols and crossed the Sauer, 7 February, and breached the Siegfried Line in a heavy assault. The advance continued across the Prum and Nims Rivers, 25–27 February. Katzenkopf fortress and
Irrel fell on 28 February and the attack pushed on toward
Trier, reaching the Moselle, 3 March. Driving across the Kyll River, the division took
Hosten, 3 March,
Speicher on 5 March and
Karl on 10 March; swung south and cleared the area north of the Moselle, crossing the river, 18 March, near
Mülheim an der Mosel. Moving to the Rhine, the 76th took over defenses from
Boppard to
St. Goar and crossed the Rhine at Boppard, 27 March. It drove east and took
Kamberg in a house-to-house struggle, 29 March. A new attack was launched 4 April and the Werra River was reached the next day. The attack continued in conjunction with the
6th Armored Division;
Langensalza fell and the Gera River was crossed, 11 April.
Zeitz was captured after a violent struggle, 14–15 April, and the 76th reached the Mulde River on 16 April, going into defensive positions to hold a bridgehead across the Mulde near
Chemnitz until VE-day.
Casualties •
Total battle casualties: 2,395 •
Killed in action: 433 •
Wounded in action: 1,811 •
Missing in action: 10 •
Prisoner of war: 141
Awards Medal of Honor: • Pvt.
William D. McGee (Posthumously) 304th Infantry • Pfc.
Herman C. Wallace (Posth.) 301st Engineer Combat Battalion
Distinguished Service Cross: •
Capt Robert H. Bertsch (Posth.) •
S/Sgt Fred H. Brown (Posth.) •
1st Lt Clyde W. Ehrhardt •
Pvt Michael J. Fortuna (Posth.) •
1st Lt Frank T. Gerard Jr. (Posth.) •
2nd Lt Myron A. Mears •
T/5 Edgar Pelletier •
S/Sgt Jacob M. Peter (Posth.) •
Sgt Vito C. Pumilia •
Pfc Leo W. Satterfield (Posth.) •
Pfc Warren H. Shorey (Posth.) •
S/Sgt Edward M. Transue •
S/Sgt Arthur D. Webber (Posth.)
Legion of Merit: • Col. George E. Bruner • Col. W. A. Choquette • Col. Meade J. Dugas • Brig. Gen. Henry C. Evans • Col. Chifford J. Mathews • Col.
William W. O'Connor • Maj. Gen. William R. Schmidt • Brig. Gen. Francis A. Woolfley • CWO Raymond J. Dutra
Assignments in ETO • 9 January 1945: 12th Army Group • 14 January 1945: Fifteenth Army, 12th Army Group • 19 January 1945: VIII Corps, Third Army, 12th Army Group • 25 January 1945: XII Corps • 3 April 1945:
XX Corps • 8 April 1945: VIII Corps • 22 April 1945: VIII Corps, First Army, 12th Army Group • 11 May 1945: VIII Corps, Ninth Army, 12th Army Group ==Cold War to 1996==