By Major William Carraway
Historian, Georgia Army National Guard
Imagery of the 178th MP Company in 2016 and its predecessor unit in 1916. Georgia National Guard Archives.
Early History
The Monroe, Georgia-based 178th
Military Police Company has a long history and tradition of service. The
earliest Georgia National Guard unit from Monroe was the Walton Guards which
was established in 1874 in honor of the Walton Guards which had served in the
American Civil War. This unit was redesignated Company H, 2nd
Georgia Infantry Regiment in 1907, and in 1916 was mobilized with the regiment
to the Mexican Border.[1]
Company H was stationed at Camp Cotton in El Paso, Texas, where its Soldiers
conducted patrols of the border until March 1917 when the 2nd
Georgia redeployed to Georgia. Remaining in federal service, the unit was
redesignated Company H, 121st Infantry Regiment October 1, 1917.
Mobilized to France in 1918, the Walton Guards arrived too late to participate
in combat operations.
The Walton Guards in 1902, Capt. Cliff Walker, commanding. Georgia National Guard Archives.
Inter War
The Monroe unit was reorganized as
the Howitzer Company of the 121st Infantry Regiment May 12, 1925, under
the command of Capt. Augustus E. Williamson. [2]
Williamson had enlisted in the Walton Guards and served with them on the Texas
border in 1916. Nominated for the Distinguished Service Cross while serving as
a noncommissioned officer with the Georgia National Guard’s 151st
Machine Gun Battalion in World War I, Williamson commanded the Howitzer Company
for seven years during which the Monroe unit received numerous accolades.[3]
Promoted to lieutenant colonel in 1932, Williamson was appointed property and distribution
officer, forerunner of today’s United States Property and Fiscal Officer, for
the Georgia National Guard. His brother, Donald Williamson, succeeded him and
led the Howitzer Company until October 1, 1939, when it was reorganized as
Battery B, 214th Coast Artillery Regiment.[4]
Williamson stayed on as commanding officer as did junior officers, 1st
Lt. George Hearn and 2nd Lt. Ralph Caldwell.[5]
World War II
On Nov. 25, 1940, the Monroe unit
was inducted into federal service. Deployed to theInsignia of the 214th CAR.
Georgia National Guard Archives.
Pacific Theater, the unit
was reorganized and redesignated Nov. 10, 1943, as Battery B, 528th
Antiaircraft Artillery Automatic Weapons Battalion. After combat service in the
Guadalcanal and New Guinea campaigns the unit returned to the United States and
was inactivated December 28, 1945, at Camp Stoneman, Calif.[6]
Cold War
With the post-World War II reorganization
of the Georgia National Guard, the unit was redesignated as Battery B, 950th
Antiaircraft Automatic Weapons Battalion. Reorganization and federal
recognition followed May 29, 1947, and on October 1, 1953, the unit was
redesignated Battery B, 950th Antiaircraft Artillery Battalion.[7]
The Monroe-based 950th AAAWB at Camp Stewart, Ga. in July, 1952. Georgia National Guard Archives.
In 1959 the unit was consolidated
with the Medical Detachment, 950th Antiaircraft Artillery Battalion
and the 48th Replacement Company and redesignated Battery A, 3rd
Automatic Weapons Battalion, 214th Artillery.[8]
As part of the April 16, 1963
reorganization of the 48th Armored Division, the unit was converted
and redesignated as Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 4th
Battalion, 121st Infantry Regiment.[9]
With the inactivation of the 48th AD January 1, 1968, the unit was
converted and redesignated as the 178th Military Police Company, a
unit of the 170th MP Battalion.[10]
In July 1968, the Georgia National Guard conducted an airlift
exercise involving more than 400 Soldiers of the 170th and 176th MP Battalions.
Seven Georgia Air National Guard C-124 Globemaster aircraft flew the Soldiers
and 35 military vehicles from Fort Stewart to Dobbins Air Force Base July 9,
1968. Arriving at Dobbins, the MPs conducted riot control training designed to
simulate a response to civil unrest.[11]
Military Police participate in an airlift exercise July 9, 1968. Georgia National Guard Archives.
On November 10, 1968, the Monroe armory of the 178th
MP was dedicated in honor of Maj. Gen. George Hearn who served 14 years in the
Monroe unit.[12] Hearn, who had enlisted
as a private in the Walton Guards, was appointed to serve as Georgia’s Adjutant
General in 1954. He served two non-consecutive terms as adjutant general for a
total of 15 years and retired in 1971 having served the longest of Georgia’s
Adjutants General.
The Monroe Armory was dedicated November 10, 1968, in honor of Maj. Gen. George Hearn. Georgia National Guard Archives.
In August 1969, the 178th and 190th MP
Companies provided security and traffic control for the American Legion parade
in Atlanta.[13] For the MPs, it was the
first hands-on experience at large crowd control operations.
In the early years of their existence, units of the 170th
and 176th MP Battalions conducted civil response training at Hard
Labor Creek State Park. The weekend of January 17-18, 1970, brought the 178th
MP Company to the park where more than 100 Monroe-based MPs took to the woods
for riot control exercises in full gear.[14]
Annual training at Fort Stewart in
1986 provided the first exposure of the 178th MP Company to the
Multiple Integrated Laser Engagement System.[15]
Later that year, Soldiers of the 178th were part of an effort to
ensure public safety for marchers in Forsyth County. In 1988, military police
were put on standby to augment security at the Democrat convention in Atlanta. Then,
in 1990, the 178th joined
hundreds of Georgia Guard Soldiers in providing security during tense
demonstrations in which white supremacists and civil rights advocates faced off
at the state capitol and Martin Luther King Center in Atlanta.[16]
Despite escalating tensions, the demonstrations ended peacefully.
Twenty volunteers from the 178th
MP Company mobilized with the 190th MP Company in September 1990 as
part of Operation Desert Shield.[17]
The MPs were among the first Georgia Guardsmen deployed overseas where they
were stationed in Saudi Arabia.
Specialist Andy Koundourakis, Georgia National Guard Soldier of the Year for 1991 (center) with 1st Sgt. Cliff Peters of the 178th MP Company.
Photo courtesy of the 178th MP Co.
Throughout its existence, the 178th
MP Company has been recognized for collective and individual achievement. Captain
Timothy Britt, commander of the 178th MP Company, was the 1991 recipient
of the William Few Award,[18]
and in 1991 Spc. Andy Koundourakis of the 178th was the Georgia
National Guard Soldier of the year. In 1992, Sgt. Koundourakis was designated noncommissioned officer of the year.[19]
Koundourakis followed up these feats in 1994 by achieving a new Winston P. Wilson
match record for assembly and disassembly of the M-60 machine gun during the
competition at Little Rock, Ark. Koundourakis broke the record with a time of
3:34 while blindfolded.[20]
The 178th MP Co. assists law enforcement in Bainbridge, Ga. in July 1994 following Tropical Storm Alberto. Georgia National Guard Archives.
In July 1994, Tropical Storm
Alberto caused widespread flooding across South Georgia. The 178th
MP Company was dispatched to Bainbridge, Ga. where floodwaters crested on July
15. Two days later, the 178th were redeployed to assist the people
of Albany. Throughout their mission, the MPs stood 12-hour shifts in 90-degree
heat and humidity.[21]
During the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta,
the 178th, along with the 190th MP Company and Company H,
121st LRS, constituted Team Hotel, the task force charged with
security of the Olympic Village. Assisting civil law enforcement, Team Hotel
ensured the safety of more than 15,000 athletes and their family members.[22]
Soldiers of the 178th Military Police Company provided security during the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta. Photo courtesy of the 178th MP Co.
The 178th MP Company with
182 personnel was ordered to active federal service in support of Operation
Noble Eagle February 11, 2002.[23]
The 178th provided MP support to Guantanamo Bay Naval Base and
augmented security at installations in Georgia. The 178th was released from active-duty
December 17, 2002,[24]
but was again ordered to active federal service February 23, 2003[25]
for 12-month deployment in support of ONE.[26]
On November 19, 2008, the 178th
MP Co. was ordered to active federal service in support of Operation Iraqi
Freedom. The unit returned home and was released from federal service December
23, 2009.
The 178th MP Company in Haiti in 2011. Photo courtesy of the 178th MP Co.
2011 was a busy year for the 178th.
In January the 178th assisted stranded motorists following winter
storms.[27]
The 178th fielded the M-1117 Armored Security Vehicle,[28]
and in June, Monroe MPs conducted an overseas training event in Haiti to
provide humanitarian assistance.
Soldiers of the 178th Military Police Company traveled to the country of Georgia in 2019 for exercise Agile Spirit. Georgia National Guard Archives.
The 178th would again be called to
assist following Winter Storms Pax and Leon in 2014 and provided personnel and
equipment in response to hurricanes Matthew Irma, Michael, and Dorian. Personnel
of the 178th mobilized to the country of Georgia for Exercise Agile Spirit 19
in the summer of 2019.
A convoy of vehicles from of the 178th Military Police Company enroute to Savannah following Hurricane Matthew October 8, 2016.
Photo by Staff Sgt. Michael Perry.
In March 2020, MPs from Monroe
were among the first Georgia Guardsmen called to active duty in support of
Georgia’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic. From May 2020 through 2021, the
178th MP Company supported law enforcement officials and augmented
security at key response to civil demonstrations, the contested 2020 election
and subsequent presidential inauguration.
A Soldier of the 178th Military Police Company observes a protest in Atlanta May 30, 2020. Photo by Maj. William Carraway.
Soldiers of the 178th mobilized
with the 170th Military Police Battalion to sites in Atlanta on January 27, 2023,
to support civil authorities and protect citizens and property after Governor
Brian Kemp declared a state of emergency in response to threats of violence
against the city of Atlanta. The Soldiers departed the Decatur Armory and
staged at the World Congress Center. Military police provided security at the capitol
and judiciary center. The Soldiers began returning to Decatur at 8:00 am Sunday
morning and had completed their mission by 4:30 pm.
On October 20, 2023, the 178th
MP Co. mobilized to Kuwait in support of Operation Spartan Shield. The Soldiers
returned from the Central Command area of operations August 6, 2024. Less than
two months after their return, Soldiers of the 178th MP Company were
activated in support of Hurricane Helene response operations where they
assisted law enforcement and humanitarian relief supply distribution.
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The 178th MP Company returned from deployment to Kuwait August 6, 2024. Photo courtesy of the 178th MP Co. |
[1] Official
Register of the National Guard of Georgia for 1917, Atlanta: Jan. 1, 1917,
88.
[3] Robert G.
Burton to Mrs. P. F. Burton October 18, 1918.
[4] Military
Department, State of Georgia, “General Order No. 14,” September 27, 1939.
[5] Military
Department, State of Georgia. Pictorial Review of the National Guard of the
State of Georgia. Atlanta: 1939, 56-57.
[6] The Center
for Military History. “Lineage and Honors, 178th Military Police
Company.”
[7] NG AROTO
325.4, April 12, 1956.
[8] RA 73-59,
June 10, 1959.
[9] RA 57-63,
March 21, 1963.
[10] RA 71-67,
December 14, 1967.
[12] “Major
General George J. Hearn Honored in Naming of Armory in Monroe Dedicated by
Governor,” The Georgia Guardsman, September December 1968, 2.
[13] “Army and
Air Guardsmen Support American Legion Parade,” The Georgia Guardsman, July
December 1969, 14.
[14] “State Park
Site No Picnic for 178th MP Co.,” The Georgia Guardsman, January
March 1970. 11.
[15] “Going MILES
at AT,” The Georgia Guardsman. August September 1986, 11.
[16] “Guard
Defends Rights Twice in 1990,” The Georgia Guardsman. Spring 1990, 1.
[17] “Guardsman’s
Letters Describe Desert Duty,” The Georgia Guardsman, Winter 1990, 15.
[18] “Awards and
Honors,” The Georgia Guardsman, Fall 1991, 16.
[19] Mattie Jones,
“178th has Georgia’s Top NCO,” The Georgia Guardsman, June
1992, 23.
[20] Eric Johnson,
“178th MP Breaks Record,” The Georgia Guardsman, March 1994,
16.
[21] “The Flood
of 94,” The Georgia Guardsman. September 1994, 5.
[22] Fred Baker
and Thomas Meeks, “Locked and Loaded. Team Hotel Protects Olympic Athletes,” The
Georgia Guardsman, Summer 1996, 19.
[23] DA PO 35-9.
[24] DA PO 345-1.
[25] DA PO 48-12.
[26] DA PO 68-23.
[27] “Patriot
Winter 2011,” The Georgia Guardsman, January 2011, 3-4.
[28] Roy Henry.
“Christmas Comes Early for MPs.” The Georgia Guardsman. June 2010, 2-3.
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