| 26th | Top United States Army divisions during World War II |
| 7th | Top military divisions by number: 21st to 30th |
| 30th Infantry Division | |
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![]() 30th Infantry Division shoulder sleeve insignia |
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| Active | 1917-1918 1940-1945 1974 Division changed to 30th Heavy Brigade Combat Team (United States) |
| Country | United States |
| Branch | Army National Guard |
| Nickname | Old Hickory. Was called Roosevelt's SS by some German Army units that encountered the 30ID on the battlefield.[citation needed] |
| Engagements | World War I World War II |
The 30th Infantry Division was a unit of the Army National Guard in World War I and World War II. It was nicknamed the "Old Hickory" division, in honor of President Andrew Jackson.
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The division was originally activated as the 9th Division (drawing units from NC, SC, and TN) under a 1917 force plan, but changed designation after the outbreak of World War I.[1] It was formally activated under its new title in October 1917, as a National Guard Division from North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and Tennessee.
Its organization included the 117th, 118th, 119th, 120th Infantry Regiments, the 113th, 114th, 115th Artillery Battalions, the 113th, 114th, 115th Machine Gun Companies, and the 105th Engineers Battalion. The major operations it took part in were the Ypres-Lys, and the Somme offensive. Its total casualties were 8,415. Its KIAs were 1,237, and WIAs 7,178.
| U.S. Infantry Divisions (1939–present) | |
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| 29th Infantry Division | 31st Infantry Division |
The 30th Infantry Division arrived in England, 22 February 1944, and trained until June. It landed at Omaha Beach, Normandy, 11 June 1944, secured the Vire-et-Taute Canal, crossed the Vire River, 7 July, and, beginning on 25 July spearheaded the St. Lo break-through. The day after the division relieved the 1st Infantry Division near Mortain on 6 August, the German drive to Avranches began. Fighting in place with all available personnel, the 30th frustrated enemy plans and broke the enemy spearhead (Operation Luttich) in a week of violent struggle, 7-12 August. The division drove east through Belgium, crossing the Meuse River at Vise and Liège, 10 September. Elements entered the Netherlands on the 12th, and Maastricht fell the next day. Taking up positions along the Wurm River, the 30th launched its attack on the Siegfried Line, 2 October 1944, and succeeded in contacting the 1st Division, 16 October, and encircling Aachen.
After a rest period, the division eliminated an enemy salient northeast of Aachen, 16 November, pushed to the Inde River at Altdorf, 28 November, then moved to rest areas. On 17 December the division rushed south to the Malmedy-Stavelot area to help block the powerful enemy drive in the Battle of the Ardennes. It launched a counteroffensive on 13 January 1945 and reached a point 2 miles south of St. Vith, 26 January, before leaving the Battle of the Bulge and moving to an assembly area near Lierneux, 27 January, and to another near Aachen to prepare for the Roer offensive. The Roer River was crossed, 23 February 1945, near Julich.
The 30th moved back for training and rehabilitation, 3 March, and on 24 March made its assault crossing of the Rhine. It pursued the enemy across Germany, mopping up enemy pockets of resistance, took Hamelin, 7 April, Braunschweig on the 12th, and helped reduce Magdeburg on the 17th. The Russians were contacted at Grunewald on the Elbe River. After a short occupation period, the 30th began moving for home, arriving 19 August 1945.
Following the war, the 30th Division was once again reactivated as a National Guard formation in 1947, split between three states.[2] In 1954, the Division became an entirely North Carolina Army National Guard manned formation, as Tennessee's portion became the 30th Armoured Division, which was maintained with the Alabama Army National Guard. In 1968 the Division was designated as the 30th Infantry Division (Mechanized). On January 4, 1974 the Division was again deactivated, and the brigade in North Carolina become the 30th Infantry Brigade (Mechanized) (Separate).
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