Sunday, February 6, 2022

A History of Battery A, 214th Field Artillery Regiment

By Maj. William Carraway

Historian, Georgia Army National Guard

 

 An M109A6 Paladin Self-Propelled Howitzer assigned to the Georgia Army National Guard’s Battery A, 1st Battalion, 214th Field Artillery sends a 155 mm 
projectile down range during annual training at Fort Stewart, Ga. March 15, 2016. Photo by Capt. William Carraway


Battery A, 214th Field Artillery Regiment was organized and federally recognized in Hartwell, Ga. as Battery C, 950th Antiaircraft Artillery Battalion (Automatic Weapons, Mobile).[1] It was the 110th unit of the Georgia Army National Guard to be organized as part of the post-World War II reestablishment of the National Guard. The battery’s first 18 Soldiers were sworn in as charter members of the unit in the Hart County Courthouse which served as the temporary headquarters for the unit until the Hartwell Armory was completed in 1962.[2]

 

The original 18 members of the Batterh C, 950th AAA are sworn in at the Hart County Court House. Georgia National Guard Archives. 

On May 1, 1956, the 950th AAA was reorganized and equipped with 75 mm guns whereupon Battery C was reorganized as Battery D.[3] As part of a major reorganization of the Georgia Army National Guard July 1, 1959, the unit was reorganized as Battery B, 4th Gun Battalion (Skysweeper) 214th Artillery.[4] In May 1962, the unit was redesignated Battery B, 1st Howitzer Battalion, 214th FAR and equipped with 105 mm howitzers.[5]

Sweeping the Fort Stewart skies from their emplaced position deep within the armor and antiaircraft training center, this battery of Guardsmen from Hartwell's
Battery B, 4th Gun Battalion point the muzzle of their 75 mm "Skysweeper" towards the approaching aircraft in a practice field exercise. The Guardsmen,
part of the 108th Artillery Brigade, trained at Fort Stewart from June 26 to July 10, 1960. Georgia National Guard Archives.

 A major reorganization of the Ga. ARNG April 16, 1963[6] created the 648th Maintenance Battalion. The Hartwell unit was redesignated Company B of the newly created 648th MB. This designation lasted less than five years as the inactivation of the 48th Armor Division Jan. 1, 1968 prompted another state-wide reorganization. The Hartwell company was redesignated 2nd and 3rd Engineer Platoons of Company C, 105th Engineer Battalion.[7] Redesignation as Detachment 1, Company C, 148th Support Battalion followed Dec 1, 1973.[8] The unit received its current designation as Battery A 1-214th FAR Dec.1, 1976.[9]  Through most of its existence, Battery A, 1-214th has called Hartwell home; however, the unit was temporarily assigned to Winder from 2011 to 2014.[10]

 

On March 15, 2003, the 1-214th FAR was activated for service in support of Operation Noble Eagle. Soldiers of Battery A also participated in the 1-214th ONE mission in 2004 and supported a company-size element of 1-214th Soldiers that mobilized to Iraq in 2006 in support of the 34th Infantry Brigade.[11]

The 1-214th FAR was assigned to the 648th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade upon its activation in 2009; however, in 2010, the 1-214th FAR was transferred back to the 78th Troop Command.[12] The following year Battery A relocated to Winder, Ga. In 2013, the 1-214th returned to the 648th MEB.[13]

Battery A deployed with the 214th FAR to Afghanistan in 2013 and returned to the United States the following year. In 2014, the Ga. ARNG completed a one-million-dollar renovation of the Hartwell Armory.

Soldiers of Battery A participated in Exercise African Lion 2021 in Morocco. Battery A has also supplied personnel to support the United States Customs and Border Patrol mission on the Southwest border.

An M109A6 Paladin howitzer assigned to the Hartwell-based Alpha Battery, 1-214th FAR moves to a loading dock May 10, 2021, in Jacksonville, Florida.
The self-propelled howitzer was one of over 200 Georgia Army National Guard vehicles that deployed to Morocco for participation in
exercise African Lion 21. Photo by Capt. Bryant Wine.

 


[1] “Btry C, 950th Bn, Activated in Hartwell. The Georgia Guardsman. Jan-Feb 1956, 4

[2] “Four New Armories Dedicated 27-28 Nov in Marietta, Calhoun, Lavonia and Hartwell.” The Georgia Guardsman. Sept-Dec 1962, 2.

[3] NG-AROTO 325.4 April 12, 1956.

[4] RA 73-59 June 10, 1959.

[5] RA 47-62 April 16, 1962

[6] RA 57-63 March 21, 1963

[7] RA 7-167 Dec. 14, 1967

[8] RA 153-73 Nov. 23, 1973

[9] RA 236-76 8 Nov. 1956

[10] Ga. ARNG PO 181-017 1 Sept. 2011 and NGB OA 436-14 Nov. 18, 2014.

[11] Georgia Department of Defense. The Georgia Department of Defense Annual Report, 2006.

[12] Georgia Department of Defense. The Georgia Department of Defense Annual Report, 2010, 15.

[13] Georgia Department of Defense. The Georgia Department of Defense Annual Report, 2013, 15.

 

Friday, February 4, 2022

The 348th Brigade Support Battalion

By Maj. William Carraway

Historian, Georgia Army National Guard.

Soldiers of the 348th Brigade Support Battalion  at Fort Stewart in 2011. Right: Unit insignia of the 348th BSB. Georgia National Guard Archives.

On February 4, 2011, the US Army Institute of Heraldry approved the distinctive unit insignia of the Georgia Army National Guard's 348th Brigade Support Battalion.

 

Symbolism

The colors and images depicted in the 348th BSB unit insignia have distinct symbolism. Blue is the color of loyalty and trust. Black represents consistency and confidence. Scarlet represents service and sacrifice and is one of the colors traditionally used by Support. Gold symbolizes high ideals and excellence. The griffin embodies diligence and courage. The sword it holds signifies justice and military readiness. The gauntlet highlights the qualities of leadership and strength while the lightning bolts in its grasp represent swiftness and power. The unit motto translates to “Deliver the Strike.”

Background

The 348th BSB was organized Sept. 1, 2009, with Headquarters and Company A based in Forsyth County and Company B in Hinesville.[1] Federal recognition was granted to Headquarters and Company A June 3, 2010, while Company B carried on the lineage and honors of Detachment 1, Company B, 148th BSB.[2] Headquarters and Company A relocated to Ellenwood, Ga in September 2013.[3]

Georgia Army National Guard Sgt. Martika Carter, a water treatment specialist with Company A, 348th Brigade Support Battalion trains Soldiers on
water quality testing while operating her unit’s tactical water purification system during annual training at Fort Stewart, Ga. April 20, 2016.
Photo by Capt. Charles Emmons.


Company A served as the distribution company providing transportation and supply support. Water treatment specialists of Company A successfully fielded a Tactical Water Purification System capable of purifying 1,500 gallons of fresh water per hour.[4] 

Pfc. Michael Murphy, an allied trades specialist
with Company B, 348th Brigade Support Battalion
operates a plasma cutter during a metal fabrication
project at Fort Stewart in April 2016
.
Company B served as the BSB’s maintenance company providing field-level maintenance support to the 648th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade and its supported units. Within the maintenance company, an allied trades section was capable of welding and fabricating custom field work.[5]

The 348th held its first annual training at Fort Stewart in 2010[6] and provided support to the Georgia and Florida National Guard XCTC rotation the following year.[7] In 2013, Soldiers of the 348th supported the 648th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade and 2nd Infantry Division during the largest exercise conducted on the Korean Peninsula since the Korean War.[8] Mobilizing to Camp Dodge Iowa in 2014, personnel of the 348th trained alongside the 148th BSB during a Warfighter exercise. Soldiers of the 348th again supported the 648th MEB overseas during Operation Saber Guardian 2017 in Mihaesti, Romania.[9] In 2018, the 348th provided logistical support to the 48th Infantry Brigade Combat Team during its rotation at the Joint Readiness Center at Fort Polk, La.[10]

As the organic support battalion to the 648th MEB, the 348th was in high demand for overseas training missions and provided personnel and equipment to multiple emergency responses at home. Vehicles and personnel of the 348th assisted in the response to two winter storms in January and February 2014. The 348th also supported the citizens of Georgia following Hurricane’s Matthew, Irma, and Dorian. During Vigilant Guard 2017, a hurricane response exercise, the 348th demonstrated its water filtration capability to first responders by providing clean water to the Augusta Fire Department as part of simulated response scenario.

The Ellenwood, Ga. headquarters of the 348th Brigade Support Battalion in June 2018. Photo by Maj. William Carraway.


The 348th BSB was inactivated during a ceremony at the Clay National Guard Center August 22, 2020. The lineage and honors of Headquarters and Company A passed on to Headquarters Company, 648th MEB while the lineage and honors of Company B were carried on by the Hinesville-based 1788th Quartermaster Company.[11]

 

Lieutenant Colonel Charles Newton and Command Sgt. Major William Scaggs case the colors of the 348th Brigade Support Battalion during the unit’s
inactivation ceremony at the Clay National Guard Center in Marietta, Ga. Aug. 22, 2020. To the right, Capt. April Johnson and 1st Sgt. Eric Yates case the colors of
Headquarters Company, 348th BSB. Photo by Maj. William Carraway



[1] OA 250-09 May 3, 2010.

[2] OA 217-10 July 15, 2010.

[3] OA 191-13 Sept. 13, 2013.

[4] William Carraway. Something Cool to Drink.” The Georgia Guardsman. May 2016, 3-4.

[5] William Carraway. “348th BSB Conducts Annual Training.” The Georgia Guardsman. Summer 2015, 17.

[6] Georgia Department of Defense 2010 Annual Report, 15.

[7] Georgia Department of Defense 2011 Annual Report 15.

[8] Georgia Department of Defense 2013 Annual Report, 15.

[9] Georgia Department of Defense 2017 Annual Report, 18.

[10] Charles Emmons. “Georgia Guard Trains at JRTC. The Georgia Guardsman. Q2 2018, 12-14.

[11] OA 215-20 Nov 13, 2020.

Tuesday, January 18, 2022

The Georgia National Guard’s 138th Chemical Company: A Brief History

By Maj. William Carraway

Historian, Georgia Army National Guard

Left: the 138th Chemical Company Guidon with streamer from the 2014 Sibert competition. Right: Sergeant Brady Hudson, a chemical specialist with
the 138th Chemical Company is applauded by Col. Vernon Atkinson, commander of the Marietta-based 201st Regional Support Group, for his performance in
Georgia's Best Warrior Competition Jan 11, 2014. Hudson, a Conyers resident, was the top-finishing NCO from the 201st RSG. Photo by Spc. Darnel Morgan. 


The 138th Chemical Company provides chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear surveillance and decontamination for the 265th Chemical Battalion, part of the 201st Regional Support Group and its Region IV Homeland Response Force Mission. Authorized to organize Sept. 1, 2006.[1] In Decatur, Ga., the unit relocated to Kennesaw where it was federally recognized Jan. 18, 2008.[2]

Georgia Army Guard Soldiers of the Marietta-based 138th Chemical Company – part of Joint Task Force 781, 78th Homeland Response Force, spent
Jan. 7, 2011 learning how to use and maintain the new self-contained breathing apparatus used during evacuation, search and extraction missions.
Photo by Sgt. 1st Class Roy Henry.


On July 1, 2011, the 138th relocated from Kennesaw to Dobbins Air Force Reserve Base in Marietta.[3] In 2014, the 138th was established in its present location on Dobbins ARB.[4]

Three years later, the 138th received the Maj. Gen. William L. Sibert Award which recognizes the best Chemical Company in the National Guard.[5]

“They were strong in each category judged compared to all the other units,” said Thomas Crow, a personnel development analyst for the U.S. Army CBRN School. “In fact, it was not even close. The 138th Chemical Company stood head and shoulders above the competition.” Factoring in the judges’ decision was the involvement of the 138th in volunteering activities, training excellence and support to winter storms. The judges also cited the performance of Sgt. Brady Hudson, a chemical specialist with the 138th who represented the 201st RSG in the state Best Warrior competition.

Guardsmen from the Marietta-based 138th Chemical Company perform line decontamination of simulated victims during search and extraction
certification training at Fort Stewart, Ga. March 3, 2018. The victims were extracted from a simulated collapsed building. Photo by Staff Sgt. R.J. Lannom Jr.


The 138th has participated in training exercises and real-world domestic response missions ranging from Exercise Vigilant Guard in 2015 to the ongoing response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Members of the 138th constituted the first infection control team in the Georgia National Guard in March 2020 and were among the first Georgia Guardsmen mobilized to protect public safety in Atlanta following civil unrest in May 2020. Members of the 138th Chemical Corps are presently deployed overseas supporting missions in the Pacific Command area of operations.

Georgia National Guard Staff Sgt. Jecory Lambert, a chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear specialists with the Marietta-based 138th Chemical
Company, 265th Chemical Battalion, 201st Regional Support Group, directs visitors to receive COVID-19 vaccines April 13, 2021
at a vaccination site in Savannah, Ga. Photo by Cpl. Isaiah Matthews.



[1] OA 128-04 June 9, 2004.

[2] OA 59-08 Apr. 3, 2008.

[3][3] OA 217-11 July 17, 2011.

[4] OA 232-14 April 29, 2014.

[5] Will Cox. “138th Chemical Company Receives Sibert Award.” The Georgia Guardsman. July 2014, 10.

Friday, January 14, 2022

Sion B. Hawkins: Georgia’s 25th Adjutant General

By Maj. William Carraway

Historian, Ga. Army National Guard

 

Lieutenant Sion Hawkins in World War I.
Georgia National Guard Archives. 
Sion Boone Hawkins assumed office as the 25th Adjutant General of Georgia January 14, 1941. The 53-year-old lieutenant colonel of the Atlanta-based 179th Field Artillery Regiment was appointed by Governor-Elect Eugene Talmadge January 5 to succeed Brig. Gen. Marion Williamson.

Hawkins was born Aug. 19, 1887 to Eugene and Mary Hawkins of Americus Georgia. Hawkins’ father was a prominent attorney and longtime mayor of Americus.[1]

Hawkins began his career in the Georgia National Guard in 1904[2] when he enlisted as a private. Hawkins rose steadily through the enlisted ranks while attending college. He graduated from the University of Georgia in 1908 and went to work as a bookkeeper for a cotton company in Americus while maintaining his membership in the National Guard.[3] Following the declaration of war against Germany April 6, 1917, Hawkins entered officer training camp and was commissioned a 2nd lieutenant August 14.

Hawkins entered federal service Aug. 15, 1917 and was assigned to the 321st Machine Gun Battalion, 82nd Infantry Division. Promoted to 1st lieutenant February 6, Hawkins served overseas from May 2, 1918 and participated in the engagements of Lorraine, St. Mihiel and The Meuse Argonne. Returning to the United States in May 1919, he was discharged from federal service June 14.[4]

Lieutenant Colonel Sion Hawkins, 1939.
Following the post-World War I reorganization of the National Guard, Hawkins rejoined
the Georgia National Guard as a major assigned to the inspector general’s department. By 1927 he was assigned as major of the 122nd Infantry Regiment.[5] Promoted to lieutenant colonel in 1933, Hawkins served as the executive officer of the 122nd Infantry Regiment from 1933 until the regiment was converted to form the 179th Field Artillery Regiment in 1939.
[6]

Upon appointment by Governor Talmadge, Hawkins was promoted to brigadier general. During his tenure as adjutant general Hawkins also served as acting director of selective service. With his dual appointment, Hawkins not only oversaw the operations of the Georgia State Guard but advised state boards and employers on balancing the need for military manpower and critical civilian occupations.[7]

Hawkins served as Georgia’s Adjutant General until Jan. 12, 1943 when newly elected governor Ellis Arnell appointed Brig. Gen. Clark Howell to succeed him.

Hawkins died December 15, 1948 at the age of 61. He is buried in Oak Grove Cemetery in Americus.[8]

 




[1] “Eugene A. Hawkins, Americus Lawyer, Dead of Apoplexy.” The Atlanta Constitution. Nov. 7, 1917, 20.

[2] Secretary of War, National Guard Register for 1939 (National Guard Bureau: Washington D.C. November 1, 1939), 301.

[3] Year: 1910; Census Place: Militia District 789, Sumter, Georgia; Roll: T624_213; Page: 5A; Enumeration District: 0109; FHL microfilm: 1374226

[4] Ancestry.com. Georgia, U.S., World War I Service Cards, 1917-1919 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2013
Original data: Georgia Adjutant General’s Office. World War I Statements of Service Cards. Georgia State Archives, Morrow, Georgia.

[5] The Secretary of War National Guard Register for 1927. (Washington D.C.: Government Printing Office 1927) 193.

[6] The Secretary of War National Guard Register for 1939. (Washington D.C.: Government Printing Office 1939) 301.

[7] “Hawkins Lists Skills Needing More Workers” Atlanta Constitution. July 13, 1942, 13.

[8] "Sion Boone Hawkins (1887-1948) - Find A Grave...," Find a Grave, accessed January 4, 2021, https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/25607604/sion-boone-hawkins)

Monday, January 10, 2022

Jan. 10, 1956: Georgia National Guard Responds to Water Crisis

By Maj. William Carraway

Historian, Georgia Army National Guard

 

Georgia National Guard Soldiers of the Columbus-based 560th Engineer Battalion begin filtering water from a temporary holding tank before
pumping the water to the Loganville Reservoir. Georgia National Guard Archives.

From 2020 to present day, the Georgia National Guard has assisted Civil Authorities with the coordinated response to the COVID-19 pandemic. But the National Guard has a long history of providing support to civil authorities in times of crisis.

In January 1956, following prolonged drought conditions the wells that supplied drinking water to Loganville, Ga. dried up. The city reservoir had less than 3,000 gallons available.[1] Faced with an immediate health crisis, Governor Marvin Griffin activated personnel of the Georgia National Guard to set up an emergency water system to supply the city.

Georgia Army National Guard Soldiers of the Atlanta-based 201st Ordnance Company load up pipe in response to a water crisis in Loganville.
Georgia National Guard Archives.


Departing Columbus at 5:00 a.m. under the leadership of Lt. Edward Reed, the engineers of the 560th Engineer Battalion travelled by military convoy to Loganville. Within five hours of arriving at the emergency water collection point, the Guardsmen dammed a stream, set up four 3,000-gallon filter tanks and set up six water pumps. Personnel from Atlanta’s 201st Ordnance Company installed nearly one mile of four-inch aluminum piping. At 4:00 p.m. the Guardsman were pumping water to supply the city reservoir at a rate of 6,000 gallons per hour to the relief of Mayor Clifford Cowsert of Loganville. By Thursday, the Guard-installed system had pumped nearly 54,000 gallons of water to supply the city’s water needs.[2]

 

Loganville Mayor Clifford Cowsert, Left, and Maj. Gen. George Hearn, Georgia’s Adjutant General,
 observe as Georgia National Guard Soldiers of the 560th Engineer Battalion
prepare to pump water from a stream to a temporary holding tank. Georgia National Guard Archives.

Georgia Army National Guard Soldiers of the Atlanta-based 201st Ordnance Company load up pipe in response to a water crisis in Loganville.

Loganville Mayor Clifford Cowsert, Left, and Maj. Gen. George Hearn, Georgia’s Adjutant General, observe as Georgia National Guard Soldiers of the 560th Engineer Battalion prepare to begin pumping water from a stream to a temporary holding tank.

 

Georgia National Guard Soldiers of the Columbus-based 560th Engineer Battalion begin filtering water from a temporary holding tank before pumping the water to the Loganville Reservoir.

 



[1] “Guard Called in Loganville Water Crisis.” The Atlanta Constitution. January 12, 1956, 8.

[2] “NG Engineers, Ordnance Co Avert Water Shortage in Loganville. The Georgia Guardsman. Jan, Feb 1956, 2-3.

Saturday, January 1, 2022

A New Year on the Border

By Maj. William Carraway

Historian, Georgia Army National Guard

 

American Military Novelty cartoon marks a New Year on the border. Georgia National Guard Archives.

In October 1916, more than 3,600 Georgia National Guard Soldiers were dispatched to the Mexican border in response to cross-border unrest. Writing home from El Paso, Texas, Cpl. Robert Gober Burton of the Monroe-based Company H, 2nd Georgia Infantry Regiment recalled spending New Year’s Day 1917 in remote outpost duty along the border.

Georgia Army National Guard Soldiers of the 2nd Georgia Infantry Regiment man “Sentry Post Number 1” near El Paso, Texas in 1917.
Photo by 2nd Lt. Vivian Robertson.


January 5, 1917

My Dearest Mama,

Not having heard from you in several days I shall write. The regiment has gone for 15 days outpost duty and the mail has not been attended to as it should.

From all indications, we will not remain much longer on the border.[1] There is strong talk of bringing Pershing out of Mexico, and if he does, I fervently believe that we will be sent home. The sooner the better with me.

I had a real nice letter from Auntie[2] the other day. Was certainly glad to hear from her.

I am thinking of sending the muffler and laundry bag home as everything here is so dirty that I am afraid that I will spoil them. The muffler is surely nice, but I can’t wear it as it doesn’t suit very well with government clothes. Besides, we are furnished all the war clothes that we can wear. I have some under clothes much heavier than those I wore at home. We have a big overcoat that weighs about 15 pounds and a hood that goes over the head, so I keep very warm and comfortable.

Ed (Williamson)[3] and myself are getting along very nicely. I have had a slight cold, but it is well now. I used Vicks salve and it was soon broken up.

Write to me soon

As ever, your devoted son,

Gober                                                                                                      

 

Company H, 2nd Georgia Infantry Regiment at Camp Cotton, El Paso, Texas. Sergeant Ed Williamson stands far left with Burton standing to his left.
Georgia National Guard Archives.

 In September, the 2nd Georgia Infantry Regiment was redesignated the 121st Infantry Regiment. The 121st Continues in Georgia National Guard service today as part of the Macon-based 48th Infantry Brigade Combat Team. Monroe is now the home of the 178th Military Police Company, part of the 170th Military Police Battalion and the Marietta-based 201st Regional Support Group.



[1] Despite the rumor mill, the Georgians would not return home until March 1917.

[2] Auntie refers to Mary Eulalia Nunally, wife of William Hartwell Nunnally. Before he mobilized to Europe in October 1917, Burton’s aunt presented him with a pocket testament which ultimately saved his life by stopping a bullet July 30, 1918.

[3] Sergeant Augustus Williamson of Rock Mart, Ga. Williamson and Burton served together from June 1919 in Company H, 2nd Georgia Infantry Regiment. They mobilized to France with Company A, 151st Machine Gun Battalion. For valor in combat, Williamson was nominated for the Distinguished Service Cross. He was instrumental in the reorganization of the Walton Guards following World War I and served as its first commanding officer before being selected to serve as the United States Property and Disbursement Officer. He died May 20, 1976 and is buried in Rest Haven Cemetery in Monroe, Ga. not far from the headquarters of the unit he helped to reorganize. Today, the 178th Military Police Company carry on the tradition of National Guard service in Monroe.