christof139 -> RE: Could be a hornet's nest I'm sticking my hand into... (3/2/2007 7:19:53 PM)
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The 339th Fighter Squadron, WITP, a numerical relative of the 39th Infantry Regiment, Paddy's Gang, the Fighting Falcons. The 39th AAA or FAA or FDA or ADA or whatever it was, I forget, is another numerical relative, they had Vulcans on tracks (M113s). The 39th Cavalry Platoon (Hovercraft). The 339th 'Polar Bear" Infantry Regiment from the Detroit area is another, as is the 39th NY Volunteer Infantry Regiment, the Garibaldi Guard or Polish Legion etc. We have some Confederate relatives also. Here are some links: http://www.oldreliable.org/39th_infantry/39th_inf.html http://9thinfantrydivision.freewebspace.com/about.html 39th Regiment, 9th Infantry Division During World War II the regiment fought as part of the 9th Infantry Division. The Fighting Falcons of the 39th became the first unit of United States combat troops to set foot on foreign soil when they stormed the beaches of Algiers in November 1942. During fighting in Sicily, Italy, the regiment came under the command of the legendary Colonel Harry A. "Paddy" Flint who gave the regiment its triple A- Bar Nothing slogan: Anything, Anywhere, Anytime - Bar Nothing (We said 'Bar None' to keep it short.). The regiment took great pride in the AAA-O slogan, displaying it on their helmets and vehicles, even in combat. When questioned about the soundness of the practice, Colonel Flint confidently declared, "The enemy who sees our regiment in combat, if they live through the battle, will know to run the next time they see us coming." Later in the war, the 39th landed at Utah Beach and fought through France. The Fighting Falcons joined the 47th Infantry Regiment in capturing Roetgen, the first German town to fall in World War II. The 39th fought valiantly through the Battle of the Bulge, helped secure the Remagen bridgehead and roared across Germany as the allied forces finished off the last of the German resistance. When the dust settled following VE day, the 39th Regiment held campaign streamers from some of the bloodiest and most hard fought battles of the war - Algeria, Tunisia, Sicily, Normandy, Northern France, The Rhineland, Ardennes-Alsace, and Central Europe. It was cited twice by the Belgians for valorous actions and awarded the Belgian Fouragerre. It also received two French Croix de Guerre with Palm, the French Fouragerre, and three Presidential Unit Citations. All members and former members of the 39th Infantry Regiment are entitled to wear these awards from foreign governments. Bar None!!! http://www.jackson.army.mil/239/history.htm http://user.pa.net/~cjheiser/ct9/339f1.htm 339th Inf. Regt. of the 85th ID, the Custer Division of Michigan. The 32nd Red Arrow, Les terribles, Inf. Div. was also from Michigan and Wisconsin. http://pages.prodigy.net/mvgrobbel/photos/polar_bear_2001.htm 339th Inf. Regt. Polar Bear Memorial in White Chapel Cemetery, Troy, Michigan http://www.enter.net/~rocketeer/13thhist6.html 339th Fighter Squadron http://home.earthlink.net/~roales/vacation5.htm 339th Fighter Squadron http://ourworld.cs.com/The339thftrgrp/index.html 339th Fighter Group http://tinyurl.com/yta9g7 http://39thgavolinfrgt.homestead.com/39thHomepage.html http://www.researchonline.net/nccw/unit121.htm http://www.tngennet.org/civilwar/csainf/csa39m.html Christof139, AAA-0
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