Everything about Iii Corps United States totally explained
The
III Corps (
Third Corps) —nicknamed the
Phantom Corps,
America's Hammer, and the
Counterattack Corps— is a
corps of the
United States Army. The III Corps is the official
counteroffensive force of the U.S. Army, and it's currently headquartered at
Fort Hood,
Texas.
The formation was originally dubbed the
III Armored Corps until 1943, when it was changed to simply
III Corps. To this day it's still unofficially known as the "Armored Corps".
Command Group
History
World War I
The III (Phantom) Corps was organized on
March 30,
1918, at
Langres,
France. It was activated on
May 16,
1918, at
Mussy-sur-Seine and participated in the
Aisne-Marne,
Champagne,
Oise-Aisne,
Lorraine, and
Meuse-Argonne campaigns. Its World War I commanders included Major General
John L. Hines. Following the end of the war, the corps was demobilized at
Neuwied,
Germany, on
July 1,
1919.
Interwar Period
On
August 15,
1927, the corps was reconstituted in the Regular Army as
XXII Army Corps, and was redesignated as III Army Corps on
October 13,
1927.
World War II
During World War II the Corps was deployed to The European Theater of Operations and earned the name "Phantom Corps" by hitting the enemy when least expected. The corps was recalled to active duty on
December 18,
1940, at the
Presidio of Monterey, CA, and remained to participate in the defense of the west coast following the Japanese attack on
Pearl Harbor.
In early 1942, the corps moved to
Fort McPherson, GA, for training. After a short period, the corps returned to Monterey and on
August 19,
1942, was designated a separate corps. During the next two years, III Corps would train thousands of troops for combat, including 33 division-sized units, and participate in four corps-level maneuvers.
On
August 23,
1944, the corps departed California for
Camp Miles Standish near Boston, and subsequently deployed for the European Theater of Operations on
September 5,
1944. Upon arrival at
Cherbourg, France, the corps was assigned to the Ninth Army and given the code name "CENTURY" which it retained throughout the war. Corps Headquarters was established at
Carteret, in
Normandy, and for six weeks, the corps received and processed all the troops of the 12th Army Group arriving over the Normandy beaches during that period. The corps also participated in the famed "
Red Ball Express" by organizing 45 provisional truck companies to carry fuel and ammunition for the units pursuing the Germans across France.
The corps was assigned to the Third Army on
October 10,
1944, and moved to
Etain, near
Verdun, just in time to participate in the fight for
Metz and the
Battle of the Bulge. III Corps' first combat came during the battle for
Fort Jeanne d'Arc, the last of the great Metz forts, which fell on
December 13,
1944. Later that same month, III Corps was moved north to assist in the relief of
Bastogne. During the first 10 days of action, III Corps liberated more than 100 towns, including Bastogne. This operation was key in halting the German offensive and the eventual drive to the
Rhine River.
During the first four months of 1945, III Corps moved quickly to the offensive. On February 25, now as part of First Army, units established a bridgehead over the
Roer River, which, in turn, led to the capture of the
Ludendorff Bridge at
Remagen, on the
Rhine River, on March 7. On March 24, the
Edersee Dam was captured intact and the corps continued the attack to seize the
Ruhr Pocket on
April 5,
1945. In late April, III Corps reformed and launched a drive through
Bavaria towards
Austria. On
May 2,
1945, III Corps was ordered to halt at the
Inn River on the Austrian border.
At the end of the war, III Corps had added campaign streamers for
Northern France,
Rhineland,
Ardennes-Alsace, and
Central Europe, had taken more than 226,102 prisoners and had seized more than of German territory. The corps had also participated in most of the critical actions from Normandy to the German-Austrian border. Its wartime commanders included Major General
John Millikin and Major General
James A. Van Fleet.
After 13 months of occupation duty in Germany, the corps returned to Camp Polk, LA, and inactivated on
October 10,
1946.
Korean War
On March 15, 1951, during the height of the Korean War, III Corps was again called to active duty at
Camp Roberts, California. In April 1954, III Corps moved to Fort Hood, TX, where it participated in a number of important exercises, either as director headquarters or as a player unit. The main purpose of these operations was the testing of new doctrines, organizations, and equipment. On May 5, 1959, the corps was again inactivated.
Berlin Crisis
The Berlin crisis brought III Corps back to active duty for the fourth time on September 1, 1961. Units participated in an intensive training program and were operationally ready by December 1961. In February 1962, the Department of the Army designated III Corps as a unit of the U.S. Strategic Army Corps and in September 1965, assigned III Corps to the U.S. Strategic Army Forces.
Vietnam War
During the Vietnam era, the corps supervised the training and deployment of more than 137 units and detachments to Southeast Asia, including the
I and
II Field Force staffs. The corps also trained more than 40,000 individual replacements for units in Vietnam. As the war in Southeast Asia ended, the corps received many units and individual soldiers for reassignment or inactivation. It was also during this period that III Corps units participated in a number of key tests and evaluations that would help determine Army organization and equipment for the next 30 years.
Post Vietnam Era
In July 1973, III Corps became part of the newly established
Forces Command (FORSCOM) and its training, testing, and evaluation mission began to grow. For the remainder of the decade, III Corps would take part in a number of
Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC) tests of organizations and tactical concepts, and play a key role in the fielding of new equipment. III Corps units would also participate in major exercises such as REFORGER (Return of Forces to Germany) and disaster relief operations in the United States and Central America.
III Corps played an increasingly important role in the decade of the 1980s. Corps units were on the leading edge of the Army's modernization effort with the introduction of new organizations and equipment like the M1 Abrams tank, M2/3 Bradley Fighting Vehicle, AH64 Apache helicopter, Multiple Launch Rocket System (MLRS), and Mobile Subscriber Equipment (MSE). III Corps' primary mission continues to focus on Europe and the training of forces for deployment. The corps participated in numerous field and command post exercises such as Road Runner '87 that involved more than 10,000 soldiers in a ten-county, Central Texas area. In 1987, III Corps also conducted the largest deployment of forces to Germany since World War II. This demonstrated the corps' ability to perform one of its primary wartime missions. III Corps also plays an important part in the training and support of active and reserve component units. This support involves training guidance, resources, and the maintenance of relationships that extend to wartime affiliations.
Rick Hillier, appointed Canadian Deputy Commanding General of III Corps in 1998, would become Canada's
Chief of the Defence Staff in 2005.
Current Composition
1st Cavalry Division
4th Infantry Division
3d Armored Cavalry Regiment
III Corps Artillery at Fort Sill Oklahoma
- HHB III CA.
- 231ST TARGET ACQUISITION DETACHMENT.
- B-62nd Engineers)
- 17TH FA BRIGADE
- 75th Field Artillery Brigade
- 1-17th FA M-109A6,
- 6-27 FA MLRS,
- 1-77 FA MLRS
- 2-18 FA MLRS
- 6-32 FA MLRS
- 3-13FA MLRS
- 212th Field Artillery Brigade (Deactivating 15 January 2007)
- 214th Field Artillery Brigade
- 2-5 FA M-109A6
- 2-4 FA MLRS, 1-14 FA MLRS)
- 19th Maintenance Battalion: (HHD, 226th Maintenance, 588th Maintenance, 15th Transportation)
- 541st Combat Sustainment Support Battalion: (HHC, 1st Maintenance Company), located at Fort Riley
- 21st Cavalry Brigade,
- 937th Engineer Group,
- 3rd Signal Brigade
- 89th Military Police Brigade,
- 504th Battlefield Surveillance Brigade,
- 13th SUSCOM (E),
- 3rd Personnel Group,
- 13th Finance Group.
- 36th Engineer Brigade
Lineage
Organized 16 May 1918 in the Regular Army in France as Headquarters and Headquarters Troop, III Army Corps.
Demobilized 9 August 1919 at Camp Sherman, Ohio.
Reconstituted 27 June 1944 in the Regular Army as Headquarters and Headquarters Company, III Corps; concurrently consolidated with Headquarters and Headquarters Company, III Corps (active) (see ANNEX), and consolidated unit designated as Headquarters and Headquarters Company, III Corps.
Inactivated 10 October 1946 at Camp Polk, Louisiana.
Activated 15 March 1951 at Camp Roberts, California.
Inactivated 5 May 1959 at Fort Hood, Texas.
Activated 1 September 1961 at Fort Hood, Texas.
Reorganized and redesignated 24 September 1965 as Headquarters, III Corps; Headquarters Company, III Corps, concurrently constituted and activated at Fort Hood, Texas.
ANNEX
Constituted 15 August 1927 in the Regular Army as Headquarters and Headquarters Company, XXII Corps.
Redesignated 13 October 1927 as Headquarters and Headquarters Company, III Corps.
Activated 18 December 1940 at the Presidio of Monterey, California.
Redesignated 1 January 1941 as Headquarters and Headquarters Company, III Army Corps.
Redesignated 19 August 1942 as Headquarters and Headquarters Company, III Corps.
Honors
Campaign Participation Credit
World War I
Aisne-Marne
Oise-Aisne
Meuse-Argonne
Champagne 1918
Lorraine 1918
World War II
Northern France
Rhineland
Ardennes-Alsace
Central Europe
Decorations
None
Bibliography
Allen, Robert S. Lucky Forward: The History of Patton's Third U.S. Army. New York: Vanguard Press, 1947.
American Battle Monuments Commission. American Armies and Battlefields in Europe. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1938. Reprint. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1992.
Cole, Hugh M. The Ardennes: Battle of the Bulge. United States Army in World War II. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1965.
. The Lorraine Campaign. United States Army in World War II. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1950.
First United States Army Report of Operations, 23 February-8 May 1945. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1946.
Forty, George. Patton's Third Army at War. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1978.
Historical Section, Army War College. Order of Battle of the United States Land Forces in the World War; American Expeditionary Forces; General Headquarters, Armies, Army Corps, Services of Supply, and Separate Forces. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1937. Reprint. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1988.
Le Mon, Warren J. "Tank Maneuver Country." Army Information Digest 21 (January 1966):45-5 1.
MacDonald, Charles B. The Last Offensive. United States Army in World War II. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1973.
McNamara, James C., et al. The Phantom Corps. Shreveport: General Printing Co., 1945.
Montgomery, John H., Jr. "The Remagen Bridgehead." Military Review 29 (July 1949):3-7.
"A Salute to the Army Corps." Army Information Digest 17 (September 1962):26-31.
Van Fleet, James A. "III Corps Operations." Army and Navy Journal 83 (7 December 1945):53ff.
Wallace, Brenton G. Patton and His Third Army. Harrisburg: Military Service Publishing Company, 1946. Further Information
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