89th Cavalry Regiment
The 89th Cavalry Regiment is a Regiment of the United States Army first established in 1940.
History
1st Squadron History1st Squadron, 89th Cavalry Regiment deployed to Germany in 1944. The unit saw little action during the War, but still had notable moments. 1st Squadron was patrolling near a town named Scherpensee
The next time that the 1st Squadron, 89th Cavalry Regiment had a notable deployment was in 2006 to Iraq. During this fifteen-month deployment, soldiers of the 1st Squadron killed and captured over 200 high-value targets. 1st Squadron also seized 57 major weapons caches, which helped its fight against the Iraqi insurgency. 1st Squadron, 89th Cavalry Regiment returned to Iraq in 2009. This deployment included training the Iraqi Police, incapacitating HVTs, and raiding known insurgence hideouts and weapon caches.
3rd Squadron History
The 3rd Squadron, 89th Cavalry Regiment also draws its heritage from the 899th Tank Destroyer Battalion. After arriving in Casablanca January 26, 1943, they received M10 tank destroyers. They left and joined British forces in the Gafsa-El Guettar sector, Tunisia, on 16 March 1943. After briefly deploying to the Naples region of Italy they were almost immediately rerouted to the United Kingdom in preparation of Operation Overlord. The liaison party went first with the 82nd Airborne gliding in to facilitate post landing coordination. The 899th went ashore at Utah Beach. They fought in support of the main effort to seize Cherbourg often protecting the infantries flank as American forces pressed the attack from Azeville, Le Bisson, Ozeville and finally Cherbourg in June. After this the unit supported the Cobra breakout in late July, advanced through Mayenne and entered Belgium 2 September. They supported the 9th Infantry Division operations in vicinity of Monschau and Hofen, Germany, fought in Rötgen/Hürtgen Forest region in October and elements deployed in first days of Battle of the Bulge to stop German advance.
3rd Squadron continued to face tough fights in the areas of Beaufort and St. Vith in December 1944. The unit was not lacking in heroism during this time with two Medal of Honor recipients one being the aforementioned Herschel Floyd Briles and the other is Horace Marvin Thorne. CPL Thorne received the Medal of Honor posthumously for the following:
He was the leader of a combat patrol on 21 December 1944, near Grufflingen, Belgium, with the mission of driving German forces from dug-in positions in a heavily wooded area. As he advanced his light machine gun, a German Mark III tank emerged from the enemy position and was quickly immobilized by fire from American light tanks supporting the patrol. Two of the enemy tankmen attempted to abandon their vehicle but were killed by Cpl. Thorne's shots before they could jump to the ground. To complete the destruction of the tank and its crew, Cpl. Thorne left his covered position and crept forward alone through intense machine-gun fire until close enough to toss two grenades into the tank's open turret, killing two more Germans. He returned across the same fire-beaten zone as heavy mortar fire began falling in the area, seized his machine gun, and, without help, dragged it to the knocked-out tank and set it up on the vehicle's rear deck. He fired short rapid bursts into the enemy positions from his advantageous but exposed location, killing or wounding eight. Two enemy machine-gun crews abandoned their positions and retreated in confusion. His gun jammed; but rather than leave his self-chosen post he attempted to clear the stoppage; enemy small-arms fire, concentrated on the tank, killed him instantly. Cpl. Thorne, displaying heroic initiative and intrepid fighting qualities, inflicted costly casualties on the enemy and insured the success of his patrol's mission by the sacrifice of his life.
The Squadron as the 899th would continue to fight through Europe upgrading from M10 to M36 tank destroyers along the way. The 899th supported the attack to capture Roer River dams in February, 1945, crossed Roer River 28 February and advanced to the Rhine near Bad Godesberg. The first elements crossed into Remagen bridgehead on 8 March and joined the attack on Ruhr Pocket in April moving east into Harz Mountains. The unit then moved to the Mulde River for link-up with Soviet forces completing link-up on 27 April 1945. Having fought valiantly through Europe they began occupation duty in Bernburg 3 May 1945.
Elements of the 899th still recovering from heavy casualties occupied rear areas in France. While in France they performed Military Police duties.
Many activations and deactivations restricted the unit from deploying again until 2006 in Iraq. The most recent deployment was in 2015 in Afghanistan. They are still active to this day and serve in our country's modern day combat zones.
Recent history
On 13 August 2006, the 1st Squadron, 89th Cavalry Regiment deployed with the 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division to South Baghdad in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom 06–08. During the 15-month deployment, the Squadron secured the main supply route into Baghdad, killed 12 insurgents, captured 198, and uncovered 57 caches, ensuring that thousands of munitions stayed out of enemy hands. During this deployment, the Squadron lost 4 soldiers to enemy action, all from Bravo Troop. The 1st Squadron, 89th Cavalry Regiment redeployed to Fort Drum, NY in November 2007 and began preparations for their next deployment.Training from 2007 to 2009 included two rotations to the Joint Readiness Training Center at Fort Polk, Louisiana as well as a month-long off-post training exercise at Yuma, Arizona where the Troopers honed their skills in Reconnaissance, Surveillance and Target Acquisition. Initially scheduled to deploy to Afghanistan in November 2009, the First Squadron, 89th Cavalry received orders to return to Iraq that October.
The 1st Squadron, 89th Cavalry Regiment deployed along with the 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division to Southeast Baghdad on 18 October 2009 in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom 09–10. During the deployment, The 1st Squadron, 89th Cavalry Regiment was partnered with the 3rd Brigade, 1st Iraqi Federal Police, following and supporting the Iraqi organization while the Iraqis maintained control of the area Southeast of Baghdad. Through a training Academy called Task Force Nassir, the Squadron trained Iraqi Federal Police NCOs, eventually training the Iraqis to run the academy themselves allowing complete control of Task Force Nassir to be handed over to the Iraqi Federal Police. Alpha Troop, through operation "Golden Warrant," captured several high value targets resulting in improved security for the local Iraqi civilian population. During Operation Eye Drop, Bravo Troop air assaulted onto land suspected to contain insurgents smuggling weapons and personnel into Baghdad. Charlie Troop conducted Sons of Iraq revitalizing training throughout the deployment, which trained more than 1,000 SOI in basic checkpoint operations, buddy aid, and vehicle search techniques. The combined efforts of the 1st Squadron, 89th Cavalry Regiment resulted in the continued steady decline of sectarian violence throughout the region and contributed to the security and stability of the area. In March 2010, the Squadron supported the free elections of Iraq. This election signified the first time in the region's 5,000 year history that one democratically elected government handed over power peacefully to another democratically elected government. In the closing weeks of the deployment, The 1st Squadron, 89th Cavalry Regiment secured 400 square kilometers of terrain in support of 2nd Brigade, 10th Mountain Division's retrograde throughout the Wolverine's operating environment. Initially ordered to Iraq for 12 Months, the Squadron completed their mission and was able to redeploy three months early in June 2010.
On June 7th, 2024 the unit held its inactivation ceremony at Memorial Park on Fort Drum in front of the 10th Mountain Division Headquarters, with Col. Mark Suich, the first commander of the 1st Squadron, 89th Cavalry Regiment presiding over the ceremony .
Lineage
Constituted 1 June 1940 in the Regular Army as the 10th Antitank Battalion.- Redesignated 99th Antitank Battalion, 11 June 1940.
- Redesignated 99th Infantry Battalion and activated at Fort Lewis Wa. 1 July 1940.
- Redesignated 99th Infantry Antitank Battalion, 24 July 1941.
- Redesignated 899th Tank Destroyer Battalion 15 December 1941.
- Inactivated 27 December 1945 at Camp Kilmer NJ.
- Redesignated 899th Tank Battalion, 23 July 1953
- Activated 17 January 1955 in Germany.
- Inactivated 1 May 1958 in Germany.
- Designated to 89th Cavalry Regiment on 30 March 2004.
- 89th Regiment slated for Inactivation by Dept. Of Army, as announced in February 2024,that U.S.-based Stryker and infantry brigade cavalry squadrons will be inactivated inline with force restructuring.
- March 30, 2004- 2nd Squadron, 71st Cavalry Regiment re-flagged to 1st Battalion, 89th Cavalry Regiment
- Known today as 1st Squadron, 89th Cavalry Regiment
- Inactivated June 7th, 2024 at Fort Drum, NY.
- July 15, 1942- 89th Cavalry Reconnaissance Group was activated at Camp Carson.
- 1944- 89th Cavalry Reconnaissance Group reactivated to 89th Cavalry Reconnaissance Squadron
- 2006- 89th Cavalry Reconnaissance Squadron reactivated to 3rd Squadron, 89th Cavalry Regiment
- Inactivated June 28th, 2024 at Fort Johnson, LA
Distinctive unit insignia
- Description
- Symbolism
- Background
Coat of arms
Blazon
- Shield
- Crest
Motto READY NOW.
Symbolism
- Shield
- Crest
- Background
Current configuration
- 1st Squadron, 89th Cavalry Regiment, 10th Mountain Division Inactivated At Fort Drum
- 3rd Squadron, 89th Cavalry Regiment, 10th Mountain Division Inactivated at Fort Johnson, LA
Campaign streamers
World War II- Tunisia
- Rome-Arno
- Normandy
- Northern France
- Rhineland
- Ardennes-Alsace
- Central Europe