RAINBOW DIVISION -- WORLD WAR I
The 42nd
Infantry (Rainbow) Division's history began with America's
entry into World War One. Amidst the rush by America to
mobilize, individual states competed for the honor to be the
first to send their National Guard units to fight in the
trenches of Europe. To check the negative implications of this
competition and to minimize the impact the mobilization would
have upon any one state, the War Department created a division
composed of hand-picked National Guard units from 26 states
and the District of Colombia. As a result of this unified
effort, the 42nd Infantry Division was born August 5th, 1917,
at Camp Mills on Long Island, New York. Its four infantry
regiments were respectively 165th (formerly New York's 69th);
166th (formerly Ohio's 4th); 167th (formerly Alabama's 4th);
and 168th (formerly Iowa's 3rd). The field artillery, machine
gun, ambulance, hospital, and other units originated in other
states from the Atlantic to the Pacific.
The
'Rainbow Division' was the nickname given to the U.S. 42nd
Division. It was so-named because it was comprised -
deliberately - from National Guard Units from 26 states and
the District of Columbia. Colonel Douglas MacArthur, the new
division's Chief of Staff (and ultimately its commander),
remarked that "the 42nd Division
stretches like a Rainbow from one end of America to the other".
One of the
first American divisions to reach the battlefields of the
Western Front in November 1917, the Rainbow Division first saw
action fighting alongside the French in February 1918,
where it remained in almost constant contact with the enemy
for 174 days. The division played a notable role in six major
campaigns, including the Battle of Champagne in July 1918, in
addition to fighting at Chateau-Thierry, St. Mihiel, Verdun
and the Argonne. and incurred one out of every sixteen
casualties suffered by the American Army during the war. The
42nd Division's WWI service officially came to an end in May
of 1919.
With the
armistice the Rainbow Division was assigned German
occupation duties. Its service officially came to an end in
May 1919. The division was re-activated with America's
participation in the Second World War.
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