History Lives at the 3rd Infantry Division Museum!

  • Aviation Gallery

    Aviation Gallery

  • Korean War Gallery

    Korean War Gallery

  • World War I Gallery

    World War I Gallery

  • World War II Gallery

    World War II Gallery

  • World War II Gallery

    World War II Gallery

The history of the 3rd Infantry Division is rich and deep. Read more about this installation and the Soldiers that have served it.

The Beginnings

While the earliest peoples on Fort Stewart were the Native Americans, who settled the Western Hemisphere about 15,000 years ago, Great Britain established the Georgia colony as a buffer between her Carolina colonies to the north and her enemy the Spanish in Florida to the south. Oglethorpe established the first European settlement in the Fort Stewart area with the 1733 construction of Fort Argyle, in present day Bryan County on the west bank of the Ogeechee River. Its purpose was to raise the alarm in case Spanish or hostile Indians should move to attack the fledgling settlement of Savannah. It is ironic that the first European settlement of the Fort Stewart area was, in fact, a military fortification.

 A garrison of Rangers and militia garrisoned the fort intermittently until its final abandonment in about 1770. In the mean time, there were few colonists willing to settle the wilderness of the Fort Stewart area, although by 1768 there was a small settlement at Taylors Creek. The Hunter Army Airfield area also had settlements on the Little Ogeechee River, possibly as early as the 1750s.

 By the late 1930s a few thousand people lived in the Fort Stewart area in about sixty towns and communities, some as large as four hundred people. Developing communities included Willie, Clyde, Long Branch, Pleasant Grove, and others.

 Hunter Army Airfield remained a rural area a few miles south of Savannah. The city constructed the first Savannah municipal airport there and undertook improvements on it throughout the 1930s.

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WWII

Events in Europe in 1939-1940 would forever alter the character of the area. In 1939 Hitler invaded Poland. As World War II raged, the US government began greatly increasing military strength and expanded the number of installations.

 The Federal government needed an anti-aircraft training camp and established the Camp Stewart Military Reservation for this purpose in 1940-41. The ranges required for anti-aircraft weapons and the numbers of Soldiers scheduled to train at Camp Stewart necessitated the government's purchasing or condemning more than 279,000 acres of land in Bryan, Evans, Liberty, Long and Tattnall counties in Southeast Georgia.

On 1 July 1940 the first 5,000 acres were bought and subsequent purchases followed. Eventually the reservation would include over 280,000 acres and stretch over five counties. The large expanse of property was required for the firing ranges and impact areas which an anti-aircraft artillery training center would need for live fire training.

In November of 1940 the Anti-Aircraft Artillery Training Center was officially designated as Camp Stewart, in honor of General Daniel Stewart, a native of Liberty County who had fought with Francis Marion during the Revolution and became one of the county’s military heroes. An announcement of the new post’s name was made in Jan. 1941.

During the early months, training was done on wooden mock-ups since real anti-aircraft guns were in short supply. Live firing exercises were conducted on the beaches of St. Augustine and Amelia Island, Fl. since the necessary ranges and impact areas had not been completed at Camp Stewart. This live fire training over the ocean continued until Sept. 1941 while at Camp Stewart practice firing and searchlight training progressed.

In Fall of 1941 the Carolina maneuvers were held and all the anti-aircraft units from Camp Stewart anticipated. As these maneuvers drew to a close, a feeling of restless anticipation pervaded the ranks of the National Guard soldiers who were looking toward their impending release from active duty after completion of their year of training. But the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7th ended these dreams. Now the U.S. was in the war and Camp Stewart set about accomplishing the mission it was intended for.

The National Guard units departed and new units came in for training. Facilities were expanded and improved. Anti-aircraft artillery training was upgraded and soon a detachment of Women’s Air Service Pilots (WASP’s) arrived at the air facility on post, Liberty Field, to fly planes to tow targets for the live fire exercises. Eventually radio-controlled airplane targets came into use as a more effective and safer means of live-fire practice.

As the war progressed, Camp Stewart’s training programs continued expanding to keep pace with the needs placed upon it. Units were shipped out promptly upon completion of their training and new units received in their place. The camp provided well-trained soldiers for duty in Europe, the Mediterranean, North Africa, and the Pacific theaters.

By late 1943 Camp Stewart assumed a new responsibility as one of many holding areas designated in this country for German and Italian prisoners of war who had fallen into Allied hands during fighting in North Africa. These men were held in two separate prisoner-of-war facilities on post and used as a labor force for base operations, construction projects, and for area farmers.

Beside its initial purposes as an anti-aircraft artillery training center, Camp Stewart also served as a Cook and Bakers School and as a staging area for a number of Army postal units. By Spring 1944 the camp was bulging at its seams as more than 55,000 soldiers occupied the facility during the build-up for the D-Day invasion. However, almost overnight, the post was virtually emptied as these units shipped out for England. With the D-Day invasion and Allied control of the air over Europe, the need for anti-aircraft units diminished and in response the anti-aircraft training at Camp Stewart was phased out. By Jan. 1945 only the prisoner-of-war camp was still functioning.

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Korean War

With the end of the war, Camp Stewart came to life briefly as a separation center for redeployed soldiers, but on 30 Sept. 1945 the post was inactivated. Only 2 officers, 10 enlisted men, and 50 civilian employees maintained the facilities and the GA National Guard did the only training during summer months. It seemed as if Camp Stewart had served its purpose.

However, once again, world affairs affected the life of Camp Stewart. With the outbreak of hostilities in Korea in June 1950, the U.S. once again found itself with the need to update training and prepare new soldiers to meet the crisis in Korea. Camp Stewart was reopened on 9 August 1950, its facilities repaired and  troops brought in for training. On 28 Dec. 1950 Camp Stewart was redesignated as the 3rd Army Anti-Aircraft Artillery Training Center. Intensive training of soldiers destined for service in Korea began. Since control of the air in Korea wasn’t seriously challenged by the Communist forces, in late 1953 Camp Stewart’s role changed from solely anti-aircraft training to include armor and tank firing as well.

When the Korean conflict eventually cooled down, it was recognized that our country would be required to maintain a ready and able military force to deal with any potential threat to the Free World. Camp Stewart would have a role to play in that mission. The decision was made that the post would no longer be viewed as a temporary installation. On 21 March 1956 it was redesignated as Fort Stewart. Its role would continue to evolve in response to specific needs and world events.

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Cuban Missile Crisis

In 1959 Fort Stewart was redesignated as an Armor and Artillery Firing Center, since its old anti-aircraft ranges and impact areas were better suited for this purpose than for the new age of missiles. By 1961 there was a feeling that Fort Stewart may have served its usefulness and there was movement afoot to deactivate the post again. However, the age of missiles brought with it new threats and a new place for Fort Stewart.

In late 1962 the U. S. was shocked to discover Russian offensive missiles being placed in Cuba. This revelation eventually lead the world to the brink of war as the two super-powers stood toe-to-toe, each refusing to back away. The U.S. demanded the removal of these missiles and Russia refused to comply. In response to this threat the U.S. military began a rapid mobilization for possible use against Cuba. The 1st Armored Division was ordered to Fort Stewart for staging and in the short span of two weeks the population of the post rose from 3,500 personnel to over 30,000.

The country prepared for the worst, but in the end a compromise was reached, and the crisis passed. Shortly after, word was received at Fort Stewart that a VIP would be visiting the post and that the post conference room wasn’t worthy of a person of this stature. Thus, preparations were rapidly made to convert this conference room into a more suitable one. The command group at Fort Stewart quickly discerned that this VIP would be none other than our nation’s President, John F. Kennedy. He arrived at Hunter Field on 26 Nov. 1962, flew to Donovan Parade Field at Fort Stewart, where he reviewed the entire 1st Armored Division. From there he was taken to the new conference room where he was briefed on armed forces readiness to respond to the Cuban missile crisis, then visited troops in nearby training areas.

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Vietnam War

After the Cuban missile crisis had passed, the Cold War situation kept Fort Stewart in an active training role. During the late 1960’s another developing situation would bring about yet another change in Fort Stewart’s mission. With tensions growing in the divided country of Viet Nam, the U.S. found itself becoming increasingly involved in that conflict.

The Vietnamese terrain and the type of war being fought there demanded an increased aviation capability through the use of helicopters and light, fixed wing aircraft. This brought about a need for more aviators. In response to this need, an element of the U.S. Army Aviation School at Fort Rucker, Alabama was transferred to Fort Stewart in 1966. Helicopter pilot training and helicopter gunnery courses became Fort Stewart’s new mission. In an ironic twist, now instead of training soldiers to shoot down aircraft, they were training soldiers to fly them.

When the Air Force closed their base at Hunter Field in Savannah in 1967, the Army promptly assumed control and in conjunction with the flight training being conducted at Fort Stewart, the U.S. Army Flight Training Center came into being. The helicopter pilot training was rapidly accelerated and pilots were trained and soon sent to duty all over the world, with a large percentage seeing active duty in Viet Nam.

In 1969 President Nixon planned to reduce American involvement in Viet Nam by training the Vietnamese military to take over the war. In conjunction with this, helicopter flight training for Vietnamese pilots began at the Training Center in 1970 and continued until 1972.

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3rd Infantry Division History

3rd Infantry Division History
 
 
World War I
 
On 21 November 1917, the Third Division was activated and commanded by Major General Joseph T. Dickman.  After four months of training under harsh weather conditions at Camp Greene, North Carolina, the division deployed to France as part of the American Expeditionary Force.  The Third Division’s first test in combat came when the Germans launched their third spring offensive assault on Chateau-Thierry.  Under the command of the French 10th Colonial Infantry Division, the division prevented the Germans from capturing the city and continuing their march towards Paris.  It was during the “Second Battle of the Marne” on 15 July 1918, that the Third Division showed the world how Americans fight.  Over the next three days, the 38th Infantry Regiment encountered sporadic attacks without allowing the German 10th and 36th Infantry Divisions to break through the division’s sector, thus preventing the German Army’s passage across the Marne River through Surmelin Valley.  At war’s end, the Third “Marne” Division fought on the front line for 99 days and earned its first two Medal of Honor recipients, along with six campaign clasps (Aisne, Champagne-Marne, Aisne-Marne, Saint-Mihiel, Meuse-Argonne, and the Defensive Sector). Eight months after the war ended and their occupation in Germany completed, the division began to return home.  In late 1939, twenty-two years after being activated, the division went through a major overhaul that saw old units inactivated and new units activated into the division, and two years later it was redesigned as the Third Infantry Division.
 
World War II
 
After the attack on Pearl Harbor, the division relocated to Fort Ord, California, several months later was transferred to Camp Pickett, Virgina.  In the autumn of 1942, the division shipped out from Norfolk, Virginia, as part of the invasion force in North Africa.  During World War II, the division was the only U.S. division to engage the German Third Reich on every front of the European Theater. Beginning with North Africa, then Sicily, onto and up the boot of Italy, through Southern France, over to Germany, and finally into Austria.  As the war came to an end in Europe, the Third Infantry Division was considered one of the most experienced combat divisions in Europe.  Through all of this, the division served over 30 months in theater with 536 days in combat, conducted four amphibious assault landings, earned ten battle streamers, a Presidential Unit Citation and the French Croix de Guerre with palm (both for Colmar Pocket).  During the war, the division earned forty-four Medal of Honor recipients (the most of any division during war), including one 5-foot, 5-inch, 110-pound Soldier from tiny Texas town, Audie Leon Murphy, who would go on to be the most decorated American Soldier of World War II.  After the surrender, the division remained in Germany as an occupation force headquarters at Bad Wildungen until August 1946. 
 
Korean War
 
The Third infantry Division returned from Germany and arrived at Fort Benning to begin its inactivation by the Army.  With the unexpected invasion of South Korea by the North Korean People’s Army in June 1950, the division’s inactivation was canceled.  The division was requested for service in Korea, because of its extensive combat experience during WWII.  By the time the division arrived in Korea in November 1950, both the Chines Communist and North Korean Armies has combined forces and were pushing the Allies off the Korean Peninsula.  The 3rd Infantry Division Arrived at the port of Hungnam, and the division’s Task Force Dog fought inland to clear a passage and hold a fragile perimeter in the hills above the city for the retiring X Corps.  From 30 November until 24 December, division conducted the most colossal beachhead evacuation in American military history – 100,000 troops and 125,000 South Korean refugees.  Then, as truce talks drew to a close in 1953, small unit actions were taking place along the Main Line of Resistance (MLR), as opposing forces attempted to seize tactically advantageous positions.  One of these positions was Outpost Harry, a strategic outpost in the Cheorwon Valley that protected the MLR and Kumwha Valley.  For eight nights in June, the Chinese Communist Army made determined attempts to overrun 15th Infantry Regiment and a tank platoon but were repelled every day.  During the “Forgotten War,” the Marne Division earned thirteen Medal of Honor recipients, eight campaign streamers, two Republic of Korea Presidential Unit Citations, and the Greek gold medal for Bravery. 
 
Cold War
 
As tensions between the Warsaw Pact Nations and NATO increased in the 1950s, the battle-hardened 3rd Infantry Division was re-stationed in Germany from 1958 until 1996 as the first line of defense against Soviet Union aggression in Europe.  In 1961, when East Germany built the Berlin Wall, it was the division that moved through East Germany to confirm their right to supply West Berlin.  The next armed confrontation between democracy and communism occurred in Vietnam.  While other Army divisions went into the steaming jungles, the Marne Division stood watch in Europe.  With the fall of the Berlin Wall and our victory in the Cold War, the end of an era was upon us as new threats emerged in both the Middle East and Europe. 
Operation Desert Shield/Desert Storm
 
In 1990, Iraq occupied Kuwait.  The tiny ally in strategic Middle East was held hostage by a brutal dictator.  Once again, the division came to the defense of those who were unable to defend themselves.  In 1991, 3rd Brigade of the 3rd Infantry Division was called to action in Operations Desert Shield/Desert Storm as the lead element of 1st Armored Division, rapidly destroying all opposition.  As part of the United Nations in the Balkans in 1994, the division assumed a significant role in a multinational peacekeeping force in Macedonia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, and Kosovo over the next eight years.  Then in 1996, after thirty-eight years of service on the frontlines in Europe, the division returned to the United States. 
 
Operation Iraqi Freedom
 
The division replaced the 24th Infantry Division at Fort Stewart and Fort Benning, where it served as the “Iron Fist” of the XVIII Airborne Corps.  On 11 September 2001, war came to America as Al-Qaeda terrorists attacked the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.  On 21 March 2003, the division began combat operations that stunned the world with its incredible lightning ground assault from Kuwait to Baghdad (four hundred miles in twenty-one days) during Operation Iraqi Freedom.  Once again, the division showed the world its might as M1 Abrams Tanks and Bradley Fighting Vehicles from 2BCT stormed Baghdad International Airport and streets of Baghdad (both Thunder Runs).  It was at Baghdad International Airport that SFC Paul R. Smith was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor for his actions against an overwhelming force of Republican Guard Soldiers (the first MoH recipient of GWOT).  The division would return to Iraq in 2005 and over the next year, took command of the Multi-National Division-Baghdad, which was responsible for the city’s safety.  The challenging work that the division did in Baghdad and in the North created secure conditions for the election and installation of Iraq’s first democratically elected national government.  Then in 2007, the division deployed to Iraq for fifteen months as part of President Bush’s “surge” of troop levels.  During this period, the division conducted twelve major combat operations jointly with the Iraqi Forces, the sons of Iraq, and other Coalition forces.  During Operation New Dawn in 2009, the division became the only division to serve four combat tours in Iraq. 
Less than a year later, the mission objective in Iraq shifted from combat operations to stability and advisement.  At the same time, in late 2009, the division’s attention turned from Iraq to Afghanistan, with the 3rd Combat Aviation Brigade becoming the first brigade in Afghanistan, followed by elements within the division in 2010. Elements of the division would return to Afghanistan in 2012, 2013, 2015, and 2017.  1ABCT deployed to Europe in support of Operation Atlantic Resolve for two years beginning in 2016, then two nine-month rotations to Korea in late 2018 and late 2020, and then in early 2022, rotated to Europe as a show of force against Putin’s invasion of Ukraine.  2LIB deployed several times to Africa, and in 2017, the brigade transferred back to ABCT and deployed to Europe in support of operation Atlantic Resolve in 2020.  Then in 2021, the Medal of Honor was posthumously bestowed upon SFC Alwyn Cashe for his heroic action after his Bradley Fighting Vehicle hit an improvised explosive device (IED) and the subsequent retrieval of six Soldiers and an Iraqi interpreter from the burning vehicle.   
 
 Present
 
Over the last year elements from Division HQ, 2ABCT, 3CAB, DIVARTY, and 3DSB successfully deployed to Europe in support of our NATO Allies and partners. 1ABCT validated their readiness at NTC as they prepare to deploy to Europe to defend NATO’s eastern flank. The 3ID continues to execute tough, realistic training, ready for any future mission
   

 3ID Patch.jpg

THE PATCH: The Third Infantry Division shoulder patch is a square field of blue containing three diagonal white stripes with an Army green border. The blue field symbolizes the loyalty of those who placed their lives on the altar of self-sacrifice in defending the American ideals of liberty and democracy.  The three white stripes of the insignia are symbolic of the three major operations in which the Division participated during World War I through the signing of the Armistice. They were the Aisne-Marne, St. Mihiel, and the Meuse-Argonne. The idea for the insignia originated with Brigadier General Preston Brown, who commanded the Division during the Meuse-Argonne Offensive.

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DISTINCTIVE UNIT INSIGNIA:  The rock, inscription, and wyvern refer to the two designations by which men of the Third Infantry Division are popularly known: “Marne Men” and “Blue and White Devils.” The rock represents the Division’s firm stand against the German offensive at the Marne River during World War I. It was there that it became known as the “Rock of the Marne” and there that the Commanding Officer, General Joseph Dickman, stated “Nous Resterons La” (We Will Stay There).  The wyvern, a heraldic form of the devil, bears the Division’s blue and white stripes on its wing in commemoration of the Division’s action at Anzio, Italy, during World War II where they were called “Blue and White Devils” by the enemy.

 

Rocky Lt Gray.jpg

 

MASCOT ROCKY THE BULLDOG: Created by Walt Disney in 1965 after the Division's commander requested a mascot to represent the "Dogface Soldier". The design symbolizes the division's grit, toughness, and fighting spirit. Rocky's name honors the division's World War I nickname, "Rock of the Marne". 

 3RD ID SONG: “Dogface Soldier” was written in 1942 by Cpl. Bert Gold and Lt. Ken Hart and adopted by General Truscott as the 3ID song. It became popular with the troops and gained wider recognition through the 1955 film To Hell and Back, which starred Audie Murphy.  The song's success in To Hell and Back led to the sale of over 300,000 copies, making it the most well-known song from the World War II era.

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Today

Gradually America’s involvement in Viet Nam dwindled and by mid-1972 the flight training aspect of Fort Stewart’s mission was terminated and both Hunter Field and Fort Stewart reverted to garrison status. The following year Hunter was closed entirely and Fort Stewart sat idle with the exception of the National Guard training which continued to be conducted at the installation.

It appeared as if Fort Stewart had once again reached the end of its usefulness and questions were raised about its status and future. The end of the Viet Nam conflict meant a new focus for the U.S. Army, and a new life for several of the Army’s historic units would mean new life for Fort Stewart.

On 1 July 1974 the 1st Battalion, 75th Infantry Regiment (Ranger), parachuted into Fort Stewart and was reactivated the following month. They were the first Army Ranger unit activated since WWII. Hunter Army Airfield was once again reopened to support the training and activities of the Rangers.

In Oct. of 1974 the Headquarters, 1st Brigade of the 24th Infantry Division was activated at Fort Stewart. This historic unit, which had seen active and arduous service in the Pacific during WWII and in the Korean War, had been inactive since 1970. The "Victory" Division, as it was known, was going to make Fort Stewart its home, and it was perhaps fitting that the "V" shaped layout of the main post itself. The 24th Infantry Division would make Fort Stewart uniquely its own.

With the reactivation of the 24th Infantry Division, the post entered a new phase in its history. Facilities were upgraded and new permanent structures replaced many of the old wooden buildings from the days of Camp Stewart. On 1 Oct. 1980 the 24th Infantry Division was designated a mechanized division and assigned as the heavy infantry division of the newly organized Rapid Deployment Force. This designation was the fruition of that potential first realized by those who served at the post during the Cuban missile crisis.

The 24th Infantry Division began intensive training over the expanse of piney woods and lowlands of the post, and conducted live fire exercises on many of the old Camp Stewart anti-aircraft ranges. Additional deployment training and exercises took Division units from GA’s wood-lands to the National Guard Training Center in California, as well as to other area of the world such as Egypt and Turkey. Their training was continuous. The mission of the Rapid Deployment Force was to be prepared to deploy to practically any point on the globe at a moment’s notice to deal with whatever threat might be discerned.

In August 1990, Iraq invaded and overran neighboring Kuwait and threatened to do the same to Saudi Arabia. The Port of Savannah worked around the clock to load and ship the Division’s heavy equipment, while aircraft shuttles from Hunter Field flew the Division’s personnel to Saudi Arabia. Within a month the entire Division had been reassembled in Saudi Arabia to face the possible invasion of that country by Iraqi forces. Fort Stewart saw a growing influx of National Guard and Reserve units who were being mobilized to support the operations in Saudi Arabia and to assume the tasks at the post which had formerly been accomplished by Division personnel. In many ways, Fort Stewart appeared to be almost a ghost town, as never before has the entire Division been deployed from the post at one time. Within eight months the crisis in the Persian Gulf had concluded and the 24th Infantry Division triumphantly returned to its home in coastal GA.

On 25 April 1996 the 3d Infantry Division was activated at Fort Stewart. This began a new chapter in the history of Fort Stewart.

Today, Fort Stewart is one of the Army's premier installations and has earned the Army Community of Excellence Award an unprecedented six times in 2004, 2005, 2006, 2009, 2012, and 2015.

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