U.S. VII Corps
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| U.S. VII Army | |
|---|---|
![]() VII Corps Shoulder Insignia | |
| Active | 1918 19 August - 1992 |
| Country | United States |
| Branch | Regular Army |
| Type | Field Army |
- For the VII Corps of the Union Army during the American Civil War, see VII Corps (ACW).
Contents |
[edit] History
The VII Army Corps of the United States Army was one of the two principal corps of the army in Europe during the Cold War, along with V Corps. It was subordinate to the Seventh Army, or USAREUR, throughout most of its existence and based outside of Stuttgart, West Germany.
Its first entry into Europe took place on D Day in 1944, as one of the two assault corps for US First Army during Operation Overlord. Subsequently, the unit participated in many battles during the advance across France and Germany until the surrender of the Third Reich.
Throughout the Cold War, the corps guarded part of NATO's front with the Warsaw Pact. After Saddam Hussein's troops invaded Kuwait in 1990, the corps was deployed to Saudi Arabia as part of the second major wave of deployments of American forces. Its presence took US forces in theatre from a force capable of defending Saudi Arabia to a force capable of ejecting Iraqi troops from Kuwait.
In the Gulf War, VII Corps was probably the most powerful formation of its type ever to take to the battlefield. Normally, a corps commands three divisions when at full strength, along with other units such as artillery of various types, corps-level engineers and support units. However, VII Corps had far more firepower under its command.
Its principal full strength fighting formations were U.S. 1st Armored Division, U.S. 3rd Infantry Division and U.S. 1st Infantry Division. In addition, the Corps had U.S. 2d Cavalry Regiment to act as a scouting force, and two further heavy divisions; US 1st Cavalry Division and British 1st Armoured Division, as well as the 11th Aviation Regiment. Although both 1st Cavalry Division and 1st Armoured Division both had only two maneuver brigades, they were still immensely powerful formations in their own right.
VII Corps cut a swathe through Iraqi forces. It advanced with XVIII Airborne Corps on its left wing and Arab forces on its right wing. It pulverized all Iraqi forces that tried to stand and fight and destroyed a good proportion of Iraq's Republican Guard divisions. A ceasefire was called before the destruction of the Republican Guard units could be completed.
After the fighting was over, VII Corps returned to Germany. It was disbanded as part of the post-Cold War American defense spending cuts.
[edit] Allied Chain of Command and Order of Battle
- Supreme Allied Commander
- Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower
- 21st Army Group
- Gen. Sir Bernard L. Montgomery
- First Army
- Lt. Gen. Omar N. Bradley
- VII Corps
- Maj. Gen. J. Lawton Collins
- UNIT COMMANDERS
- 4th Infantry Division, Maj.Gen. Raymond O. Barton
- 8th Infantry Col. James A. Van Fleet
- 12th Infantry Col. Rusell P. Reeder (11 June)
- Lt. Col. Hervey Tribolet
- 22d Infantry Col. Hervey A. Tribolet
- Col. Robert T. Foster (26 June)
- 9th Infantry Division, Maj.Gen. Manton S. Eddy
- 39th Infantry Col. Harry A. Flint
- 47th Infantry Col. George W. Smythe
- 60th Infantry Col. Frederick J. de Rohan
- 79th Infantry Division, Maj.Gen. Ira T. Wyche
- 313th Infantry Col. Sterling A. Wood
- 314th Infantry Col. Warren A. Robinson
- 315th Infantry Col. Porter P. Wiggins
- Col. Bernard B. McMahon (24 June)
- 82d Airborne Division, Maj.Gen. Matthew B. Ridgeway
- 505th Parachute Infantry Col. William E. Ekman
- 507 Parachute Infantry Col. George V. Millett, Jr.
- Col. E.D. Raff (15 June)
- 508th Parachute Infantry Col. Roy E. Lindquist
- 325th Glider Infantry Col. Harry L. Lewis
- 90th Infantry Division, Brig.Gen. Jay MacKelvie
- 357th Infantry Col. Philip D. Ginder
- Col. John W. Sheehy (13 June)
- Lt. Col. Charles M. Schwab (15 June)
- Col. George B. Barth (17 June)
- 358th Infantry Col. James V. Thompson
- Col. Richard C. Partridge (16 June)
- 359th Infantry Col. Clark K. Fales
- 357th Infantry Col. Philip D. Ginder
- 101st Airborne Division, Maj.Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor
- 501st Parachute Infantry Col. Howard R. Johnson
- 502d Parachute Infantry Col. George V. H. Moseley, Jr. (WIA 6 June)
- Lt. Col. John H. Michaelis (6 June)
- 506th Parachute Infantry Col. Robert F. Sink
- 327th Glider Infantry Col. George S. Wear
- Col. Joseph H. Harper (10 June)
- 4th Cavalry Group (Mechanized), Col. Joseph M. Tully
- 4th Cavalry Squadron Lt. Col. E. C. Dunn
- 24th Cavalry Squadron Lt. Col. F. H. Gaston, Jr.
- 6th Armored Group, Col. Francis F. Fainter
- 70th Tank Battalion Lt. Col. John C. Welborn
- 746th Tank Battalion Lt. Col. C. G. Hupfer
[edit] Battle Casualties Sustained by VII Corps, 6 June-1 July 1944
- Unit::::::::::::::::::::Total:::::::Killed:::::Wounded:::Missing:::Captured
- All Units:::::::::::::::22,119::::2,811::::13,564::::::5,665::::::79
- 4th Inf Division::::::::::5,452::::::844:::::::3,814::::::::788::::::::6
- 9th Inf Division::::::::::5,438::::::301:::::::2,061::::::::76:::::::::0
- 79th Inf Division::::::::2,438::::::240:::::::1,896::::::::240::::::::0
- 90th Inf Division::::::::2,376::::::386:::::::1,979::::::::34::::::::::0
- 82d A/B Div.::::::::4,480::::::457:::::::1,440::::::::2,571:::::12
- 101st A/B Div.:::::4,480::::::546:::::::2,217::::::::1,907::::::0
- Corps Troops::::::304:::::::::37::::::::157:::::::::::49:::::::::::61
- Source, VII Corps, G-1 Reports, June 1944


