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              2nd Armored DivisionHell on Wheels
 Looking for more information from military/civilian 
                personnel assigned to or associated with the U.S. Army 
                in Germany from 1945 to 1989. If you have any 
                stories or thoughts on the subject, please contact me
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          | Occupation 
            History |   
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          | (Source: A 
            History of the Second United States Armored Division, 1940 to 1946, 
            Lt Col E. A. Trahan, Editor. Published by Albert Love Enterprises, 
            1946) |  
          | A revised history of the 2nd Armd Div during the Occupation period with maps is being worked on! |   
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          | Hell on Wheels - Some of the issues published while in  
            Berlin |   
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          | ISSUES IN 
            COLLECTION |   
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                | DATE | ISSUE | HQS |  |   
                |  | Vol. 
                  1, No. 1-5 |  | missing |   
                | Jun 
                  13, 1945 | Vol. 
                  1, No. 6 | Wolfenbüttel |  |   
                | Jun 
                  20, 1945 | Vol. 
                  1, No. 7 | Wolfenbüttel |  |   
                | Jun 
                  27, 1945 | Vol. 
                  1, No. 8 | Wolfenbüttel |  |   
                | Jul 
                  11, 1945 | Vol. 
                  1, No. 9 |  | missing |   
                | Jul 
                  18, 1945 | Vol. 
                  1, No. 10 | Berlin |  |   
                | Jul 
                  25, 1945 | Vol. 
                  1, No. 11 | Berlin |  |   
                | Aug 
                  1, 1945 | Vol. 
                  1, No. 12 | Berlin |  |   
                | Aug 
                  8, 1945 | Vol. 
                  1, No. 13 | Berlin |  |   
                | Aug 
                  16, 1945 | Vol. 
                  1, No. 14 | Bad 
                  Orb |  |   
                | Aug 
                  23, 1945 | Vol. 
                  1, No. 15 | Bad 
                  Orb |  |   
                |  | Vol. 
                  1, No. 16-20 | Bad 
                  Orb | missing |   
                | Oct 
                  4, 1945 | Vol. 
                  1, No. 21 | Bad 
                  Orb |  |   
                | Oct 
                  11, 1945 | Vol. 
                  1, No. 22 | Bad 
                  Orb |  |   
                | Oct 
                  18, 1945 | Vol. 
                  1, No. 23 | Bad 
                  Orb |  |   
                |  | Vol. 
                  1, No. 24-29 | Bad 
                  Orb | missing |   
                | Dec 
                  12, 1945 | Vol. 
                  1, No. 30 | Bad 
                  Orb | FINAL ISSUE! |  |   
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          | Occupation |   
          | (Source: "A 
            Condensed History of Hell on Wheels, 2nd Armored Division", by 
            Maj Gen Briard P. Johnson. Published by the 2nd Armored Division Association 
            in 1980.) |   
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                |  |  | Early 
                  in May (of 1945) the Division assembled south of Wolfenbüttel 
                  where VE-Day was quietly celebrated. Here the Division was occupied 
                  with training, athletics and a dismounted review for visiting 
                  Russians. 3,000 Hell on Wheelers having the longest service 
                  left for home by the end of June. On 19 June the Division moved 
                  70 miles to assemble in the Bernburg-Köthen area 
                  to prepare for the entry into Berlin, 100 miles northeast. 
 Starting on 3 July, the Division was held up by Russian bridge 
                  work at the Elbe. Marching east in the rain that night, the 
                  Division crossed the river at Torgau early the 4th entering 
                  Berlin late that afternoon as the first American occupation 
                  troops in the city. The five weeks in Berlin were busy. The 
                  demands of maintenance and normal garrison duties were squeezed 
                  into periods between outposting the American zone of the city, 
                  patrols, practice reviews and honor guards and security for 
                  the Potsdam Conference. Standing reviews with all combat vehicles 
                  lined hub to hub along the "Outer Ring" and dismounted 
                  reviews were conducted. During these ceremonies President Truman, 
                  (Prime Minister) Churchill, Generals Marshall, Eisenhower, Bradley 
                  and Patton were honored. General Patton's visit was his last 
                  contact with his old division.
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          | Relieved by 82nd 
            Airborne Division, the Division started its long march to the Hanau-Bad 
            Orb-Schlüchtern occupational area. The Division remained 
            there until almost Christmas (1945), performing occupational duties, 
            training and athletics. Personnel shuffles were constant as groups 
            of veterans left for home and were replaced by new men requiring indoctrination 
            in Hell of Wheels traditions and standards. This paid off as morale 
            and discipline remained high in contrast to disturbances and clamor 
            in many units impatient to go home. During the last few weeks departures 
            were not replaced and all equipment except trucks and jeeps were turned 
            in. Moving in the retained trucks and at much reduced strength, the 
            Division left on December 20th on the three-day march to the Marseille, 
            France port area. 
 Christmas was celebrated in the muddy Calais staging area. While awaiting 
            transports all remaining equipment except individual arms were turned 
            in and personnel were rotated between Calais and the Army rest centers 
            along the Riviera coast. After a month waiting for transports, the 
            remnants of the Division sailed for New York and on to Camp Kilmer, 
            New Jersey for dispersal.
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          | Cold War History |  
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          |  2nd Armd Div HQ Building, Foch Caserne, Bad Kreuznach, mid- 1950s
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          |  Front facade of the 2nd Armd Div HQ Building, Foch Caserne, early 1950s
 (BIG PICTURE video)
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          |  Main gate at Foch Caserne, Bad Kreuznach, soon after the 2nd Armored Division
 arrived in Germany, 1951 (James Alexander)
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          |  2nd Armored Division, Bad Kreuznach,  1954 (YouTube)
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          |  Location of 2nd Armd Div units and stations, 1956 (Walter Elkins) Click on the graphic to view a higher res version of the map
 If you have additional information/corrections, contact the webmaster - see email link at top of page
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          | July 1951 - 1957 |  
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              |  |  | (By late 1950 there were strong indications that the USSR might move against Western Europe. The 2nd Armored Division, located at Fort Hood, Texas, was alerted for movement to Europe as part of the Troop Augmentation program. In June 1951, most training was halted to prepare for the move to Germany.) 
 Packing and crating completed and now with the combat commands organized tactically, the Division moved by rail to the New Orleans Port of Embarkation. CC "B", the first increment of the Division to leave, paraded in New Orleans on 4 July, boarded transports that evening and sailed early the 5th for Germany, arriving at Bremerhaven 10 days later. It was followed at intervals of a few days by the other increments.
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          | GERMANY On arrival at Bremerhaven the Division transferred directly to troop 
            trains for the move to Camp Y-79 near Mannheim for staging. 
            From Y-79 units moved by truck to the various new stations. Tanks, 
            artillery and heavy equipment were drawn from depots and other equipment 
            unpacked. By mid-August all units had resumed training, this time 
            in preparation for fall maneuvers and the new mission of defense of 
            Western Europe as part of NATO forces.
 
 General Eisenhower visited the Division at its new stations shortly 
            after training was resumed. Utilizing local training areas, small 
            unit and crew drills, road movement and night operations were carried 
            out concurrently with command post exercises. The September maneuver, 
            Exercise "Jupiter," involved a crossing of the Rhine and 
            attack from the bridgehead. Despite the short period of training between 
            arrival and maneuver, the Division performed well. "Jupiter" 
            was soon followed by Exercise "Combine." Part of the Division 
            was employed across the Rhine, while CC "B" went into the 
            field in the Mainz area to defend bridges and probable drop zones 
            outside the city. At this time the Soviets gave indication of a possible 
            attack with the Rhine bridges a highly probable objective.
 
 The Division was now dispersed to scattered stations as follows:
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                      | UNITS |  | HOME STATION |   
                      | Combat 
                        Command (CC) "A" comprised of 57th MTB, 
                        12th and 41st AIBs and 3rd AFA. |  | Worms |   
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                      | CC 
                        "B" with 66th and 67th MTBs, 42nd AIB, 14th 
                        AFA, Co B, 17th Engr Bn and Co B, 124th Ord Bn. |  | Mainz |   
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                      | CC 
                        "R" with 29th MTB and 43rd AIB. |  | Baumholder |   
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                      | Division 
                        Artillery with 16th AFA were at Baumholder, while 
                        78th AFA and 94th AAA BN were at Wackernheim. |  | Wackernheim |   
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                      | Division 
                        Headquarters, Div. Trains Headquarters, 48th 
                        Med Bn, 124th Ord Bn (-), 2nd QM Bn, 502nd MP Co, Ranger 
                        Co and 142nd Signal Co. |  | Bad Kreuznach |   
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                      | 82nd 
                        Rcn Bn was at Baumholder until the new barracks at Dexheim, 
                        10 miles south of Mainz, were completed in the fall. At 
                        that time the battalion came under CC "B". |  | Dexheim |  |  |   
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          | Following maneuvers 
            troops settled down to perfect battalion and combat command tactics 
            which had not been possible before leaving Fort Hood. Battalions of 
            CC "A", CC "B" and Div Arty rotated to Baumholder 
            for combat exercises and firing, for periods of three to four weeks 
            throughout the year. In home kasernes units conducted platoon and 
            company exercises and small arms training in local training areas. 
 During the first winter all tank companies were sent, one or two at 
            a time, for firing at the British Army tank ranges at Belsen. During 
            the second year some units moved to the Wildflecken training area, 
            east of the Rhine for field training. On most moves to Baumholder 
            and other distant areas tanks and full tracked vehicles moved by rail, 
            units becoming extremely adept in the important task of loading and 
            detraining.
 
 Spit and polish were not overlooked. Weekly inspections of varied 
            types and garrison parades at home stations broke the periods of field 
            training and assured high standards of maintenance and discipline. 
            The Division took part in several large reviews, 
            the first marking the departure from Europe of General Eisenhower 
            prior to his nomination for President.
 
 In the spring of 1953, the Division as part of a two-sided, four division 
            maneuver, moved closer to the East Zone borders south of Kassel to 
            attack toward Frankfurt. Penetrating the "enemy" rapidly 
            and deeply into the rear areas, the rampaging 2nd Armored brought 
            the maneuever to an early end. It had reached the peak of readiness.
 
 Parts of the Division participated in other maneuvers in Southern 
            Germany and Austria. In another 1953 exercise, the Division reinforced 
            by 14th Armored Cavalry Regiment and separate tank and armored infantry 
            battalions engaged in a two-sided exercise involving a crossing of 
            the Nahe River and attack north to secure passes through the Hunsrück 
            Hills.
 
 One organizational action of note occurred in 1952 when the Division 
            became fully integrated. While at Fort Hood partial integration had 
            been affected. 29th MT Bn, 16th AFA Bn and the bridge company of 17th 
            Engr Bn were black units. In 1952 when complete integration was ordered, 
            all units made up packages of personnel by military specialty. Packets 
            picked at random from black and white units and similar packets exchanged 
            between black and white units. A uniform percentage of about 10 percent 
            throughout the division resulted with no problems.
 
 Another personnel problem was the fact that the 12,000 men who joined 
            the Division at Fort Hood in 1951, representing the greater part of 
            its strength, were recruited or inducted at about the same time. To 
            avoid a mass exodus with loss of effectiveness until new men could 
            be trained and absorbed, many of these men were transferred over a 
            period of several months and replaced by men having a uniform spread 
            of expiration of services dates. Both this action and the integration 
            were accomplished without adversely affecting combat readiness of 
            the Division.
 
 The remaining years in Germany were as busy as the first two but, 
            without the problems of resettlement in Germany, integration and major 
            personnel adjustments. Maneuvers, field exercises and maintaining 
            combat readiness and the usual home station activities, including 
            monthly alerts, kept units on their toes. The Division had fulfilled 
            its mission as an important element of the NATO defense of Western 
            Europe for six years when it was returned to Fort Hood in 1957.
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          | 1952 |  
          |  Page 1, June 5 1952 issue of  HELL ON WHEELS (Click on the image to view a higher res version)
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          | 1953 |  
          | ORGANIZATION |  
          | (Source: STATION LIST, August 1953) |  
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                  | UNIT | CITY | COMMENTS |  
                  | Hq/Hq Co, 2nd Armd Div | Bad Kreuznach |  |  
                  | Med Det, Armd Div | Bad Kreuznach |  |  
                  | HHC, Combat Comd "A" | Sandhofen |  |  
                  | HHC, Combat Comd "B" | Mainz |  |  
                  | HHC, Reserve Comd | Baumholder |  |  
                  | 142nd Armd Sig Co | Bad Kreuznach |  |  
                  | 502nd MP Co | Bad Kreuznach |  |  
                  | 82nd Recon Bn | Baumholder |  |  
                  | 17th Armd Engr Bn | Dexheim |  |  
                  |  Co B | Mainz |  |  
                  |  |  |  |  
                  | 12th Armd Inf Bn | Worms |  |  
                  | 41st Armd Inf Bn | Sandhofen |  |  
                  | 42nd Armd Inf Bn | Mainz |  |  
                  | 43rd Armd Inf Bn | Baumholder |  |  
                  | 29th Tank Bn (120mm) | Baumholder |  |  
                  | 57th Tank Bn (90mm) | Sandhofen |  |  
                  | 66th Tank Bn (90mm) | Mainz |  |  
                  | 67th Tank Bn (90mm) | Mainz |  |  
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                  | Hq/Hq Btry,  Div Arty | Baumholder |  |  
                  | Med Det,  Div Arty | Bad Kreuznach |  |  
                  | 3rd Armd FA Bn (105mm How, SP) | Sandhofen |  |  
                  | 14th Armd FA Bn (105mm How, SP) | Mainz |  |  
                  | 16th Armd FA Bn (155mm How, SP) | Baumholder |  |  
                  | 78th Armd FA Bn (105mm How, SP) | Wackernheim |  |  
                  | 94th AAA AW Bn (SP) | Wackernheim |  |  
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                  | HHC, 2nd Armd Div Trains | Bad Kreuznach |  |  
                  | 2nd Armd Div Band | Bad Kreuznach |  |  
                  | 2nd Armd QM Bn | Bad Kreuznach |  |  
                  | 124th Armd Ord Bn | Bad Kreuznach |  |  
                  |  Co A | Sandhofen |  |  
                  |  Co B | Mainz |  |  
                  |  Co C | Baumholder |  |  
                  | 48th Armd Med Bn | Bad Kreuznach |  |  
                  | 502nd Repl Co | Bad Kreuznach |  |  |  
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          | November 1957 - February 1958 (Rotation back to the U.S.) |  
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          |  Under the watchful eye of a senior officer, CC "B" troops embark on the USNS BUCKNER, Nov 1957 |  
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          |  boards the USNS BUCKNER for its trip home to Texas 1957 600.jpg) Soldiers of CC "B," part of the 1st increment, board the USNS BUCKNER, as they rotate back to the U.S. after completeing their tour in Germany, Nov 1957
 (Click on the image to view a higher res version)
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          |  arrives at Brooklyn Army Terminal Nov 1957 600.jpg) The USNS BUCKNER arrives at the Brooklyn Army Terminal with the 1st increment of 2nd Armored Division, Nov 25, 1957
 (Click on the image to view a higher res version)
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                  Click on image to open the issue in PDF format in a separate window
                    |  July 1955 (Anniversary Issue) |  Nov 8, 1956 |  Nov 22, 1956
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          | 12th 
            Anniversary |   
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                |  |  | click 
                    on thumbnail to view larger image of the unit crests 
 
 Some 
                    of the images and information from the 12th Anniversary yearbook 
                    will be posted in the next few days
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          | 2nd Armored Division Troops |  
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          | Hq Co, 2nd Armd Div 
 502nd MP Company
 
 142nd Armd Sig Bn
 
 520th CIC Det
 
 82nd Recon Bn
 
 17th Armd Engr Bn
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          | Unit histories & additional information for the above Division Troop units will be posted as I continue my research. |  
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          | Related Links: 2nd 
            Armored "Hell on Wheels" Division - a great web 
            site dedicated to those who served in the 2nd Armd Div from Ft. Benning 
            in 1940 until the division was last inactivated at Ft. Hood in 1996.
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