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U.S. 6th Cavalry Regiment

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6th Cavalry Regiment
Image:6CavRegtCOA.jpg
Active August 1861-
Country United States
Branch Regular Army
Type Cavalry
Nickname Figthing Sixth
Motto Ducit Amor Patriae {Led By Love of Country};

Silent Thunder

Colors Yellow
U.S. Cavalry Units
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Image:6CavRegtDUI.jpg The 6th Cavalry was organized in August, 1861, where it took to the fields as part of "the Army of the Potomac". the regiment took part in sixteen campaigns, among them Antietam, Gettysburg, the Wilderness Campaign and Appomattox. From 1865 to 1871 the Regiment was stationed in Texas {see Fifth Military District} and also took part in the Indian Wars. The "Fighting Sixth" took part in the battle for San Juan Hill along side of Teddy Roosevelt's "Rough Riders". The 6th Cavalry, which became part of Patton's Third Army, had one of the most outstanding combat records to come out of World War II. Starting in October of 1943 where it embarked on the "Queen Elizabeth" bound for northern Ireland.

In January of 1944 the 6th Cavalry Regiment was disbanded and reorganized into the 6th Cavalry Group and assigned to XV Corps. The unit spent the first part of 1944 in intense basic, small unit and special combat training. Finally in July of 1944 the unit set sail across the English Channel to land at Utah beach (St. Mereeglise, France). Through out WWII, the sixth was part of most of the major campaigns, some of which included,Task Force Polk, engagement in the Ardennes and the Battle of the Bulge. It was also responsible for the screening and protection of the corps in the Bastogne area, defending the Our River, breaching the Siegfried Line and the big job of crossing the Rhine and the drive to the east.

Toward the end of hostilities the Sixth was left with the detail of mopping up enemy stragglers to its final battle with the capture of Adrof & Mark Neukirchen. The Sixth Cavalry was awarded the Presidential Unit Citation (Army), for their valor during World War II. On 20 December 1948, the former 6th Cavalry Regiment was reorganized and redesignated as the 6th Armored Cavalry. The Regiment returned to the United States from Germany in 1957 during Operation Gyroscope, and was stationed at Fort Knox, Kentucky. Inactivated in 1963, the Regiment reactivated four years latter at Fort Meade, Maryland, where it served through 1971 when it was again inactivated.

In the summer of 1974, the Army decided to implement one of the recommendations of the Howze Board, and created an air cavalry combat brigade. The 2nd Brigade of the 1st Cavalry Division, Commanded by Colonel Charles D. Canedy, was redesignated as the 6th Cavalry Brigade (Air Combat). The 6th Cavalry Group. While at Hood, the brigade was a test bed for new concepts involving the employment of attack helicopters on the modern battlefield. In the fall of 1990 two of the brigade's subordinate units were deployed on Operation Desert Shield/Desert Storm.

In late 1995, the 1st and 4th Squadrons were again deactivated, leaving only the 3rd Squadron at Fort Hood.

In 2005 and 2006 Squadrons of the Regiment were again reorganized, as a part of Army Transformation. As the Army eliminated OH-58D Kiowa Warrior units designated as Attack Battalions from its rolls. As a result the Regiment currently consists of entirely OH-58D Kiowa Warrior units to include the following:

  • 1st Squadron, 6th Cavalry - 4th Infantry Division - Fort Carson, CO
  • 2nd Squadron, 6th Cavalry - 25th Infantry Division (Light) - Schofield Barracks, HI
  • 4th Squadron, 6th Cavalry - 2nd Infantry Division - Fort Lewis, WA
  • 6th Squadron, 6th Cavalry - 10th Mountain Division (LI) - Fort Drum, NY

[edit] External link

  • Summary of US 6th Cavalry Regiment movements from 1861 to 1890 [1]. Also see Fifth Military District for reports of soldiers of the 6th US Cavalry Regiment killed and wounded in incidents of 1867-1868
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