By Major William Carraway
Historian, Georgia Army National Guard
The
878th Engineer Battalion was organized and federally recognized May
28, 1968; however, the Richmond Hussars, whose lineage is perpetuated by
Headquarters Company of the 878th, has a much longer history.
Early History[1]
On
December 16, 1786, a troop of horse, designated the Augusta Dragoons, was
organized at Augusta and attached to the 1st Battalion, 2nd
Regiment Georgia Militia. This troop was reorganized in June 1819 as the
Richmond Hussars and attached to the 10th Regiment, Georgia Militia.
In February 1836, the Richmond Hussars entered federal service as infantry for
service in the Second Creek War where they participated in the Florida
Campaign.
On
March 3, 1856, the Independent Volunteer Battalion of Augusta was formed to
consist of six volunteer companies, including the Clinch Rifles, Oglethorpe
Rifles, and Richmond Hussars. During the American Civil War, the Hussars served
as Company A and Company I of Cobb’s Legion. The Hussars served in many of the
major engagements of the eastern theater and earned campaign credit for
Virginia 1861, the Peninsula, Sharpsburg, Fredericksburg, Gettysburg,
Wilderness, and North Carolina 1865 before surrendering at Greensboro, N.C. April
26, 1865.[2]
![]() |
The Georgia Cavalry at Camp Cotton, El Paso, Texas in 1916. Photo by 2nd Lt. Vivian Roberts. |
In 1873, the Richmond Hussars were reborn as a unit of the Georgia State Troops and served until 1891 when they were redesignated as Troop A, 1st Battalion Cavalry. This unit was subsequently redesignated Troop K of the 1st Cavalry and served on the Mexican Border from 1916 to 1917 as Troop K, 2nd Squadron of Cavalry.[3]
The World Wars
Returning
from the border, the Troop was redesignated as Company C, 106th
Field Signal Battalion, a unit of the 31st Division, and sent to
Camp Wheeler for mobilization training. The 31st Division mobilized
to France in October 1918, but was skeletonized upon arriving, and its units
did not see active combat service. The Georgia Guard units of the 31st
Division returned to the United States and were inactivated in 1919.
![]() |
Insignia of the 214th CA. |
On October 2, 1939, the 214th Coast Artillery Regiment was constituted in the Georgia National Guard. Company A, 214th CAR was organized in Augusta and carried forward the lineage of the Richmond Hussars. The 214th CAR mobilized to Guadalcanal in 1943, and on October 11, 1943, the Richmond Hussars were redesignated as Company A, 528th Antiaircraft Artillery Gun Battalion. The company served in the Pacific Theater throughout the war earning campaign streamers for Guadalcanal, New Guinea, Northern Solomons and the Ryukyus. The unit returned to the United States and was released from active service in 1945.[4]
Post War Reorganization
![]() |
Soldiers of the 250th AAB in 1953. Georgia National Guard Archives. |
Rifles to form the 250th Antiaircraft Artillery Battalion, an element of the 108th Antiaircraft Artillery Brigade.[5] The Richmond Hussars, as Headquarters Battery, was federally recognized May 28, 1947. On August 14, 1950, just days after North Korean forces crossed into South Korea, more than 1,000 Georgia Guardsmen of the 108th AAA were activated for federal service[6]. Batteries of the 108th were stationed around cities and industrial areas from Wisconsin to Pennsylvania as a counter to possible Soviet missile and bombing attacks. The guns of the 108th AAA remained on station through the spring of 1952 before receiving the order to rotate home.
In 1959, the 250th was inactivated
and the Richmond Hussars became Headquarters Battery, 1st Gun Battalion, 214th
Field Artillery.[7]
In 1962, the unit was again reorganized as Headquarters Company, 5th Medium
Tank Battalion, 108th Armor Regiment[8]
and bore this distinction until 1968 when it received its present designation
as Headquarters Company, 878th Engineer Battalion.[9] The
878th was assigned to the Atlanta Based 265th Engineer
Group.[10]
Mobilizations and Deployments
In
February 1973, more than 19 inches of snow fell over central Georgia. The 878th
Engineer Battalion was called to state active duty to assist stranded motorists
and clear roads.[11]
In 1980, the 878th, then affiliated with the 92nd Engineer Battalion
at Fort Stewart, constructed the Boy Scout summer camp in Augusta.[12]
![]() |
Guardsmen of the 878th Engineer Battalion help clear the streets of Swainsboro February 10, 1973, following a record-breaking snowfall. Georgia National Guard Archives. |
In
1985, the 878th conducted annual training in Grenada where the engineers
renovated and repaired schools on the island and trained citizens in
construction techniques.[13] Personnel
of the 878th deployed to Somalia in 1986 to survey a bridge project.
Additional personnel travelled to Panama and participated in exercises Gallant
Knight, Caber Dragon, and Red Castle II.[14]
The following year, personnel travelled to Jordan and Egypt for Exercise Bright
Star.[15]
In 1988, 878th personnel returned to Jordan and served as command
and control for road construction projects in Amman.[16]
In
1989, a reorganization of the 878th increased the headquarters
company from 140 to 230 personnel. That same year, the 878th fielded
the Small Unit Excavating Equipment (SEE) vehicle and mobilized to Somalia and
Jordan.[17]
The
878th was mobilized in July 1994 following torrential rains of
Tropical Storm Alberto that caused wide-spread flooding throughout South
Georgia. The Engineers repaired washed out roads, cleared culverts, and removed
debris.[18]
![]() |
Soldiers of the Augusta-based 878th Engineer Battalion repair a washed-out road in Montezuma, Ga. in July 1994. Photo by Spc. Chris Pearson, 124th Mobile Public Affairs Detachment. |
In
1999, the 878th participated in Operation Caribbean Castle in the
Dominican Republic. This operation involved more than 500 engineers who
conducted three separate 15-day annual training periods from May to June. In
the course of the mobilizations, the engineers constructed three schools which
were desperately needed following the devastation on Hurricane Georges which
struck the island in 1998.[19]
In
the summer of 2002, the 878th Engineer Battalion was called upon to
use its engineering expertise to demolish abandoned buildings that posed a
health and safety risk in neighborhoods across the state as part of the governor’s
counter drug efforts.[20]
The projects took place in Atlanta, Swainsboro and Tallapoosa. The 878th
would again partner with the Counter Drug Task Force and city of Atlanta for
blighted building eradication in 2015.[21]
The
878th was ordered into active federal service April 1, 2003, at home
stations for service during Operation Iraqi Freedom. As part of Task Force
Baghdad, the 878th served for more than a year in and around the
Iraqi capital before returning the state control August 3, 2004.[22]
Subordinate units of the 878th Engineer Battalion were subsequently
called to mobilize in support of overseas contingency operations.
In
the summer of 2009, Soldiers of the 878th Engineer Battalion joined
more than 650 service members from the Army, Navy, and Marine Corps in
humanitarian efforts in Guyana. The 878th constructed a new clinic
to serve the people of Penitence, a suburb of Georgetown. Joining the
Headquarters Company in the effort were Soldiers from the 876th Engineer
Company and 175th Engineer Platoon. Soldiers of the battalion
rotated into Guyana for 75 days for annual training.[23]
On
September 1, 2007, the 878th was reorganized to consist of the Headquarters
Company and the Support Company (Company A concurrently reorganized and
redesignated as the Support Company; and Company C reorganized and redesignated
as the 810th Engineer Company).[24]
In
2009, the 878th was assigned to the 648th Maneuver
Enhancement Brigade. The 878th responded to South Georgia wildfires
in the summer of 2011[25]
and mobilized Soldiers to Hohenfels, Germany for annual training from May 19 to
June 25, 2011.[26]
![]() |
Georgia Guardsmen from the 878th Task Force Dynamite stand in formation in Afghanistan August 11, 2013. Georgia National Guard Archives. |
The
878th mobilized to Afghanistan in March 2013[27] under
the leadership of Lt. Col. Ed Granados and Command Sgt. Maj. Jeff Logan. The
878th, as Task Force Dynamite, trained Afghan National Army Soldiers
in explosives identification and eradication.[28]
The battalion returned in November.
Just
months after returning from Afghanistan, Soldiers of the 878th were
activated in the wake of winter storms that swept the state in January and
February 2014. Later that year, Soldiers of the 878th traveled to
the Country of Georgia to the small mountain town of Sachkhere where they
renovated a local school.[29]
![]() |
Staff Sgt. Eric Horne of the 878th Engineer Battalion refuels a truck at the 878th Augusta armory during response operations to Winter Storm Pax February 14, 2014. Photo by Sgt. Michael Uribe. |
The
Augusta engineers have been repeatedly called to assist civil authorities
following hurricanes such as Joaquin, Irma, Michael, and Dorian. The 878th
participated in the state’s coordinated response to the COVID-19 pandemic and
in 2021, mobilized personnel and equipment to Louisiana following Hurricane
Ida.
![]() |
Soldiers of the 878th Engineer Battalion prepare to depart their Augusta Armory enroute to Hurricane Ida response operations September 1, 2021. Photo by Maj. William Carraway. |
Personnel of the 878th were activated August 7, 2024 in response to Tropical Storm Debby. Task Force 878 mobilized four route clearance teams and eight chainsaw teams to support debris clearance operations throughout Georgia Emergency Management Agency Region 8, which ranged from Echols County on the Florida border north to Screven County.
The
following month, Hurricane Helene slammed ashore devastating counties across
southeastern Georgia. The 878th was again called out in support of
debris clearing operations and relief supply distribution. When a pump at the
Augusta Utilities Raw Water Pumping Station fell offline after the storm,
Soldiers of the 878th were dispatched to provide emergency repairs
preventing water disruption for 160,000 citizens.
![]() |
Soldiers of the 878th Engineer Battalion conduct road clearing in in Augusta, Ga. September 29, 2024 following Hurricane Helene. Photo by Master Sgt. Caila Arahood. |
In addition to Headquarters
Company and Company A, the 878th Engineer Battalion consists of the 177th
Engineer Support Company, 848th Engineer Company, 863rd and 874th Engineer
Utility Detachments, 877th Engineer Company and the newly constituted 876th Engineer
Company. These engineer units themselves have a long history of overseas
mobilizations and domestic operations which continues through 2024.
[1] Gordon B.
Smith, “Richmond Hussars,” January 28, 1978.
[14] Annual Report, State of Georgia Department of Defense, 1986, 5.
[15]Annual Report, State of Georgia Department of Defense, 1987, 3.
[16] Annual Report, State of Georgia Department of Defense, 1988, 2.
[17] Annual
Report, State of Georgia Department of Defense, 1989, 4.
[18] Georgia
Guardsman Magazine, September 1994.
[22] The Center for Military History, “Lineage and Honors of the 878th Engineer Battalion.”
[23] Roy Henry. “Georgia Engineers in Guyana for Humanitarian Operation,” The Georgia Guardsman. Vol. No. 6, 10.
[24] The Center for Military History. “Lineage and Honors of the 878th Engineer Battalion.”
[25] Roy Henry.
“National Guard Called to Assist with South Georgia Wildfires,” The Georgia
Guardsman, July 2011, 17
[26] Alexander Grant. “Guard Engineers Conduct Annual Training in Southeast Germany,” The Georgia Guardsman, August 2011, 3-4.
[27] Roy Henry.
“Augusta to Guardsmen. ‘Til We Meet Again.’” The Georgia Guardsman, March 2013, 7.
[28] Michael Bignardi, "78th Demolition Operations Training," The Georgia Guardsman, May 2013, 4.
[29] Sean McCulley. “SPP Building for Brighter Futures.” The Georgia Guardsman, November 2014, 5-6.
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