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"The
Pickles"
3d Battalion, 3d Armor
3d Armored Division
13 Jan
1941 - 17 Feb 1987
(Re-flagged as
4-8 Cavalry 17 February 1987 )
The Mark IV "Pickle" Tank crowned the 33d Armor Regiment Crest
as the unique insignia of the 3d Battalion earning us the
nickname "The Pickles". The Mark IV was the original branch
insignia for the Armor Corps of the United States Army. Our
sister battalion, 2nd Battalion of the 33d Armor sported a
Tiger atop their crest and the nickname "Tigers". The Pickles
and Tigers were proud neighbors at the Rock and members of the
largest combat brigade in Europe. The Pickles were known as the
"Sunday Punch" of the 3rd Armored Division and it was elements
of the 33d Regiment that were the first US unit to enter the
Third Reich in force. The 33d Armored was also the first unit
to capture a German town when troopers of a Taskforce Lovelady
under Col Lovelady (2/33 Armor) captured Roetgen. The 33d
Armor spearheaded the 3rd Armored Division which in turn
spearheaded the First Army.
Pickle Legend tells that the
people of Belgium were introduced to the 'Men of War" when Col
Sam Hogan led elements of the Pickles flying a Texas Flag to
their assistance during the Battle of the Bulge. When Col Hogan
was asked what the flags were flying from his tanks, he informed
our allies that the flag was "the symbol of the last free
Americans!" Colonel Sam Hogan was a colorful commander
and commanded the 3d Battalion, 33d Armor throughout the
Second World War. The Third Battalion fought valiantly during
the Battle of the Bulge and the Ardennes and it's subsequent
push through the Siegfried Line.
"The
33rd Armored Regiment, Sunday punch of Brigadier General Truman
E. Boudinot's Combat Command "B', was the second half of that
massive tank battering ram which made the 3rd Armored Division
famous. Its Shermans were the first allied fighting machines to
reach the Third Reich and to capture a German town. Commanded by
Colonel John C. Welborn, veteran of North Africa and Sicily, the
33rd "Men Of War" emerged from the European conflict with a
brilliant reputation for fighting ability.
The 33rd was an original "Spearhead" unit. It was activated at
Camp Beauregard, Louisiana, on April 15, 1941, by a cadre of 92
officers and 524 enlisted men from the 68th Armored Regiment
(Light) of the 2nd Armored Division. The new organization was
designated the 3rd Armored Regiment (Light), until May 12, 1941,
when it became the 33rd Armored Regiment (Light). Lt. Colonel
Robert W. Strong was the first commanding officer, and the unit
trained on a small number of the old "Mae West" light tanks.
Early in January 1942, the 33rd received a number of medium
tanks from the disbanded 40th Armored Regiment. The new table of
organization, then put into affect, added more striking power
and modernized the entire unit.
The 33rd Armored Regiment trained with the rest of the 3rd
Armored Division at Camp Polk, Louisiana; Desert Center,
California; Camp Pickett, Virginia; and Indiantown Gap,
Pennsylvania. Early in September 1943, the regiment sailed for
Europe on the John Errickson. Upon arrival in Great Britain, the
men were stationed at Warminster, Wiltshire, England. During
nine months of pre-invasion training, they maneuvered
extensively over Salisbury Plain, engaged in practice landing
operations up and down the British coast, and received special
courses of instruction in various subjects.
Colonel Dorrance S. Roysden led the 33rd in its baptism of fire
on bloody Haut Vents, Hill 91, in Normandy. In spite of serious
losses, the combat team took the hill, was driven off, and came
back to hold the ground a day later. In their first combat, here
at Hauf Vents, at Pont Hebert, and Belle Lande, the men of the
33rd Armored Regiment, fighting alongside other units of Combat
Command "B", helped to turn back a vicious counter attack by
Germany's elite Panzer Lehr. Division. During this period,
Colonel Roysden assumed command of CC "B" and Lt. Colonel L. L.
Doan became regimental commander. Later, when Brig. General
Boudinot became CC "B" commander, Colonel Roysden reverted to
regimental C. 0., and Colonel Doan assumed command of the 32nd
Armored Regiment.
Colonel Roysden was transferred to SHAEF on August 31, 1944. Lt.
Colonel Littleton A. Roberts then assumed command, but reverted
to executive officer under Colonel John Welborn, two days later.
Colonel Welborn led the regiment during the remainder of the
European war.
The 1st Battalion of the 33rd Armored Regiment was led by eight
different officers during the western campaigns. They were: Lt.
Colonel Rosewell H. King, Lt. Colonel Herbert M. Mills, Major
Kenneth T. McGeorge, Major William S. Walker, Major Charles W.
Watson, Lt. Colonel Elwyn W. Blanchard, Major Ralph M. Rogers,
and Major George T. Stallings, respectively. Of these, Colonel
King, who was wounded in action on August 29, Lt. Colonel Mills,
killed in action on November 18, Major Kenneth McGeorge, wounded
in action on January 8, 1945, and Lt. Colonel Blanchard, who at
various times commanded a battalion of the 32nd Armored Regiment
as well as that of the 33rd, were most notable for length of
service.
The 1st Battalion was accorded the great honor of receiving a
Distinguished Unit Citation for its heroic action at
Scherpenseel and Hastenrath, Germany, late in November. Lt.
Colonel Mills was killed in this action. For extraordinary
heroism, he was posthumously awarded the Distinguished Service
Cross.
The 2nd and 3rd battalions were more fortunate in the matter of
preserving their commanding officers than was the 1st. Lt.
Colonel William B. Lovelady led the 2nd Battalion through all
five European campaigns. It was his task force which first
reached Germany on September 12, 1944, and took Roetgen, first
German town to fall to an invader, and later occupied by men of
the 83rd Armored Reconnaissance Battalion. The 2nd Battalion of
the 33rd saw much action during the Ardennes, the Rhineland and
the central Europe campaigns. Task Force Lovelady was a
workhorse unit of the regiment.
Equally colorful and effective was the 3rd Battalion, commanded
by Lt. Colonel Samuel Hogan. Colonel Hogan made history by
leading one of the division's multiple spearhead columns
through Belgium flying a Texas lone-star flag on his tank. To
curious inquiries from the populace, Hogan replied that the
banner was that of the "Free Americans 1" The 3rd Battalion was
well represented at Marcouray, Belgium, during the bitter
Ardennes fighting, when Task Force Hogan was cut off and
surrounded by enemy troops in that town. After refusing a
surrender ultimatum and fighting until gasoline and ammunition
had been expended, the famous "400" proceeded to destroy their
vehicles and infiltrate out through German lines. Led by
reconnaissance men, the "400" did escape the trap by way of a
daring 14 hour march through enemy siege forces.
The 33rd Armored Regiment earned in furious combat the right to
its moniker, "Men Of War," Spearheading the powerful drives of
Combat Command "B"A the regiment saw heavy fighting in all five
western campaigns. The regiment took part in the closing of the
Argentan-Falaise gap, the drive across France and Belgium to the
Siegfried Line, and had the honor of being the first allied unit
to enter Germany in force. In the Ardennes fighting and the
Rhineland battles, the 33rd was again well represented, and in
the final drives to isolate the Ruhr and to reach the Elbe River
at Dessau, Colonel Welborn's troops were constantly in the van
of Combat Command "B"
" (Directly
quoted from: http://home.earthlink.net/~3adspearhead/33ARH.html)
Although the 3d Bn, 33d Armor
is no longer active in the United States Army, one of our sister
units, the 33d Cavalry Regiment stills bears the proud
motto "Men of War" and serves the nation as part of the post
Cold War Army. The 3d of the 33d and the 2nd of the 33d Armor called the "The Rock" ,
Ayers Kaserne, Germany, as its home from 1963 through 1985.
1976 saw the arrival of the Congoleese advance party and the
enhancement of the "Men of War" with the addition of this
non-sanctioned special operations unit. The transition time 1985
- 1986 saw the 3/33rd moved to Coleman Kaserne,
Gelnhausen, Germany and joining the Second "Iron" Brigade of the
3rd Armored Division. In 1987, the Pickles were reflagged as
the 4th Battalion "Fore Mustangs", 8th Cavalry Regiment. The
First Platoon, Delta Company, 4th of the Eighth Cavalry won the
CAT trophy in 1987 and the 4th of the 8th Spearheaded the 3rd
Armored Division invasion of Iraq during the Gulf War and earned
a Valorous Unit Award for the period 27 Dec 1990 - 18 May
1991. Additionally former "Pickles" earned an Army Superior
Award for the period 16 Feb to 19 Jun 1987.
Members of the 4/8 Cav were
exposed March 10 -13 by the Khamisiyah Pit Demolition as were my
brothers from my other former unit, the 2/67 Armor "Iron
Dukes". Coincidentally, the 4/8th Cav and 2/67th Arm were both
deactivated following their meritorious participation in the
Gulf War. The Third Armored "Spearhead" Division and the Second
Armored "Hell on Wheels - Patton's Own" Division were both
deactivated after 50 years of distinguished service to the
nation. Elements of the 2nd Armored and 3rd Armored are now
proud members of the Corps de Congoleese and the "Pickles" are
now the "Spearhead" unit of the 13th Corps de Congoleese.
The "Men of War" had always a
fond place in their heart for the Air Assault and Combined Arms
Team and one battalion of the 33rd Armored Regiment lives on
today as the 1st of 33rd Cavalry Air Assault at Fort Cambell,
Kentucky. The 1/33rd Cav is a part of the famous 3rd "Rakkasan"
Brigade of the 101st "Screaming Eagles" Airborne Division Air
Assault. Although the name has been changed, the motto "Men of
War" and it's lineage remain the same.
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