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108th Infantry Regiment
108 Infantry coa
coat of arms
Active 1907
Country USA
Allegiance New York
Branch New York Army National Guard
Size Regiment
Motto(s) "Virtue non-Verbis" (By Valor Not Words)
Insignia
DUI 108th Infantry DUI


The 108th Infantry Regiment is a regiment of the New York Army National Guard. It was first formed in 1898 and has been in continuous existence since 1907. As National Guardsmen, Soldiers of the 108th Infantry can be called upon to serve the state and Federal governments. The 108th has served in the Spanish-American War, the Mexican Border War, World War I, World War II, Iraq, and Afghanistan.

Spanish-American War[]

The 108th Infantry Regiment was originally called the 3rd New York Volunteer Infantry. When the Spanish-American War broke out in April 1898, a new regiment was organized from twelve separate National Guard companies from the 4th Brigade. The 3rd New York, headquartered in Rochester, mustered into service on 17 May 1898. They were involved in drilling, provost, and camp duty in Virginia and Pennsylvania. The brief war with Spain ended before the regiment could be sent into action, and the Guardsmen were mustered out of Federal service by companies between 30 November and 10 December 1898. Thirty-three members of the 3rd New York died of disease during its short service, with several more dying afterward of typhoid fever contracted while on active duty.[1] The state historian called the 3rd New York Regiment “unquestionably one of the best that New York sent into the service,” noting that not a single member had to be disciplined in its first three months of duty.[2]

Composition of the 3rd New York Volunteer Infantry, 2 May 1898[]

Headquarters — Rochester

1st Battalion

  • Co. L (formerly 30th Separate Co.): Elmira
  • Co. I (43rd): Olean
  • Co. K (47th): Hornellsville
  • Co. D (48th): Oswego

2nd Battalion

  • Co. M (2nd): Auburn
  • Co. A (8th): Rochester
  • Co. B (34th): Geneva
  • Co. C (41st): Syracuse

3rd Battalion

  • Co. H (1st): Rochester
  • Co. G (25th): Tonawanda
  • Co. F (29th): Medina
  • Co. E (42nd): Niagara Falls[3]

1898–1917[]

After the war the 3rd New York was dissolved and the companies returned to the peacetime National Guard duties of drilling and supporting the state and local authorities. The regiment was reformed on 30 March 1907. In April 1913 the 3rd served in Buffalo during rioting caused by a streetcar workers’ strike.[4] It was also deployed for guard duty at Pharr, Texas on the Mexican border in 1916 during the U.S. Army's expedition against the guerilla commander Pancho Villa.[5]

By 31 May 1918 the whole regiment had arrived in France. The 27th Division (minus division artillery) was attached to British forces for training and issued British rifles and machine guns. The Division ended up fighting alongside the British and Australians for its entire combat service. The Regimental Scout Officer of the 108th noted that "we were supposed to leave behind the customs and traditions of the U.S. Army, in which we had been so carefully brought up, in order that we might study and adapt ourselves to those of our Allies, the British, with whom our lot had been cast for the duration of the war."[6] This included living on the British Tommy's relatively scanty rations.[7]

The 27th Division initially served in the trenches around Ypres alongside the British from July to September 1918. In September, the New Yorkers joined the British Fourth Army in the infamous Somme region, facing the Germans' formidable Hindenburg Line. The 54th Brigade attacked as part of the Hundred Days Offensive on 29 September. German artillery, poison gas, and machine guns took a heavy toll as the Americans struggled through barbed wire and shell holes to reach the Hindenburg Line. The 108th penetrated the German defenses at Quennemont Farm, although they were stalled by severe casualties and an enemy counterattack, and Australian units were sent in to complete the assault. Many leaderless Americans joined in the Australian attack without orders.[8] This engagement is officially called the Battle of St. Quentin Canal. Private First Class Frank Gaffney of Company G later received a Medal of Honor for his heroism.[9] The 108th joined in the pursuit of the retreating Germans, engaging them at Jonc de Mer Ridge, the Selle River, and Catillon.[10] The 500 survivors still on duty were pulled out of the line to rest on 21 October, three weeks before the Armistice ended the fighting.[11]

The 108th Infantry suffered 1,763 casualties—including 331 dead—in three months of combat out of 3,056 men in the ranks.[12] Most of these casualties occurred in the Hindenburg Line attack. Reasons for the heavy losses included a lack of experienced leadership and the eagerness of the Doughboys, who often made frontal assaults on enemy machine gun nests. Additionally, Allied artillery did not "soften up" the Germans with a preparatory bombardment before the attack, for fear of hitting Americans lying wounded from an earlier assault.[13] Nevertheless, as 27th Division commander Major General John F. O'Ryan remarked: "That the 108th Infantry ... should have broken through the maze of wire that existed and in the face of machine guns firing from every trench and nest, lodged one battalion in the main position, now seems an extraordinary feat."[14]

In March 1919 the 27th Division returned to New York and was mustered out of Federal service.[15] The 108th once again became the 3rd New York Infantry, although it was designated the 108th Infantry for a second time in October 1921.[16] In 1925 the 108th adopted a distinctive unit insignia featuring a fasces held by two lions.[17]

World War II[]

Composition in 1940[]

1st Battalion

  • Co. A: Watertown
  • Co. B: Geneva
  • Co. C: Syracuse
  • Co. D: Oswego

2nd Battalion

  • Cos. E, G, and H: Rochester
  • Co. F: Medina

3rd Battalion

  • Co. I: Auburn
  • Co. K: Hornell
  • Co. L: Elmira
  • Co. M: Ogdensburg[18]

The 27th Division became part of the garrison of Hawaii in April 1942. It was here that the 108th parted ways with the New York Division. An Army-wide reorganization cut divisions from four regiments to three, and the 108th Infantry was transferred to the 40th Infantry Division (California National Guard) on 1 September 1942. The 40th Division remained on Hawaii for fourteen more months.[18]

In January 1944 the division landed on the $3 island of Guadalcanal, which had been largely secured by U.S. forces a year earlier. That April they moved to Cape Gloucester on New Britain, with the 108th being stationed at Arawe in the south. This was a more active area where the regiments of the 40th conducted combat patrols, since there were still many Japanese troops on the island. As they did on Guadalcanal, however, the men of the 108th found that their most dangerous enemy on Cape Gloucester was not the Japanese Army but the harsh jungle climate.[19]

On 28 November the 40th Infantry Division was concentrated at Borgen Bay to prepare for the invasion of Luzon, the largest and most strategically important of the Philippine Islands.[20] The 108th Regiment was in reserve on S-Day—9 January 1945, when the Sixth Army landed at Lingayen Gulf.[21] Japanese resistance intensified as the GIs moved south toward Manila, and the 108th fought brutal battles for possession of Fort Stotsenburg, Clark Field, Hill 7, and Sacobia Ridge. The 43rd Infantry Division relieved the 40th on 2 March. Six days later the 108th was detached and sent to the island of Leyte to assist in mopping up defeated Japanese forces. The regiment's 2nd Battalion also cleared Masbate and other local islands.[22] On Leyte and Masbate the 108th lost an estimated 19 troops killed and 49 wounded.[23]

On 10 May the 108th joined in the battle for Mindanao. The regiment made an unopposed landing at Macajalar Bay and moved south to clear the Sayre Highway with the assistance of Filipino guerillas. From 15–18 May the 108th fought strongly-emplaced Japanese defenders at the Magima River canyon. The regiment linked up with the 31st Infantry Division coming up from the south on 23 May. Securing the Sayre Highway cost the 108th about 15 men killed and 100 wounded. (Non-combat casualties from battle fatigue, sickness, and heat exhaustion were probably heavier.) The troops then moved east to combat more Japanese resistance.[24] After six weeks of enduring thick jungle, heavy rains, knee-deep mud, and tall, razor-sharp grass—not to mention Japanese resistance—the 108th rejoined the 40th Division on Panay.[25]

With the war against Japan nearly over, the 108th Infantry was sent to garrison Korea on 29 June. Their homeward journey began on 15 March 1946, when they left Korea bound for San Francisco. The regiment arrived on 5 April and was deactivated two days later at Camp Stoneman. The National Guardsmen of the 108th Infantry had been some of the first U.S. troops to deploy after Pearl Harbor, and the 108th was one of the last Guard units to return to the continental United States. Its long, grueling service in the Pacific Theater earned the 108th Infantry four campaign streamers and the Philippine Presidential Unit Citation.[26] During the war, the 108th lost 190 men killed in action and one (Private Leroy Mest of Reading, Pennsylvania) missing in action. 59 were awarded the Silver Star.

Recent history[]

Only the 2nd Battalion of the 108th Infantry is still in existence. In recent years it has served in Iraq and Afghanistan.[27] On 1 May 2004, while providing security for a pipeline repair crew west of Balad, Iraq, soldiers of the battalion helped to rescue American truck driver Thomas Hamill, who had been held captive by insurgents since 9 April.[28] The battalion played an instrumental role in the Battle of Samarra in October 2004.[29] 2nd Battalion, 108th Infantry, headquartered in Utica, is part of the 27th Infantry Brigade Combat Team and has companies and detachments stationed in ten Upstate New York towns.[30]

Distinctive unit insignia[]

  • Description

A Gold color metal and enamel device 1 18 inches (2.9 cm) in height overall consisting of a shield blazoned: Azure, a fasces in pale, the rods Argent banded of the first, the axe Or, supported by two lions the dexter rampant guardant, the sinister rampant, both of the last. Attached below and to the sides of the shield a Blue scroll inscribed “VIRTUTE NON VERBIS” in Gold letters.

  • Symbolism

The shield is Infantry blue; in the center the fasces representing France and on either side and supporting it the lions of Great Britain and Belgium in gold. The motto translates to “By Valor, Not By Words.”

  • Background

The distinctive unit insignia was originally approved for the 108th Infantry Regiment on 29 April 1925. It was amended to delete the motto on 1 October 1925. It was redesignated for the 108th Armored Infantry Battalion and amended to add the motto on 22 March 1957. The insignia was redesignated for the 108th Infantry Regiment on 19 March 1962.

Coat of arms[]

Blazon[]

  • Shield

Azure, a fasces in pale, the rods Argent banded of the first, the axe Or, supported by two lions the dexter rampant guardant, the sinister rampant, both of the last, armed and langued Gules.

  • Crest

That for the regiments and separate battalions of the New York Army National Guard: On a wreath Argent and Azure, the full rigged ship “Half Moon,” all Proper. Motto: "Virtue Non Verbis" (By Valor, Not By Words).

Symbolism[]

  • Shield

The shield is Infantry blue; in the center the fasces representing France and on either side and supporting it the lions of Great Britain and Belgium in gold.

  • Crest

The crest is that of the New York Army National Guard.

Background[]

The coat of arms was originally approved for the 108th Infantry Regiment on 30 June 1924. It was amended to correct and clarify the blazon of the shield on 1 October 1925. It was redesignated for the 108th Armored Infantry Battalion on 22 March 1957. The insignia was redesignated for the 108th Infantry Regiment and amended to correct the blazon of the crest to restore the colors of the wreath on 19 March 1962.

See also[]

References[]

  1. New York and the War with Spain: History of the Empire State Regiments (Albany: Argus Company, 1903), 83–127.
  2. New York and the War with Spain, 127.
  3. "3rd Regiment Infantry New York Volunteers Spanish-American War" (accessed 23 June 2011).
  4. A Short History and Illustrated Roster of the 108th Infantry United States Army (Philadelphia: Edward Stern and Co., 1918), unpaged.
  5. "New York Units at the Mexican Border, 1916–1917." (accessed 20 June 2011).
  6. J. F. Oakleaf, Notes on the Operations of the 108th Infantry Overseas (accessed 20 June 2011).
  7. Oakleaf, Notes on the Operations of the 108th Infantry Overseas
  8. "108th Infantry Regiment World War One;" K. W. Mitchinson, Battleground Europe: Epehy (London: Leo Cooper, 1998), 123–124.
  9. "Medal of Honor Recipients World War One" (accessed 20 June 2011).
  10. "Highest Praise for Soldiers of the 108th;" "The Word from the 108th was Good—It was holding," both in Geneva (New York) Daily Times, n.d. (late 1918).
  11. "108th Infantry Regiment World War One;" Oakleaf, Notes on the Operations of the 108th Infantry Overseas.
  12. "108th Infantry Regiment World War One;"
  13. Mitchinson, 123; Oakleaf, Notes on the Operations of the 108th Infantry Overseas.
  14. "Highest Praise for Soldiers of the 108th," Geneva (New York) Daily Times, n.d. (late 1918).
  15. "108th Infantry Regiment World War One."
  16. "108th Infantry Regiment World War Two," (accessed 20 June 2011).
  17. "108th Inf." (Accessed 21 June 2011).
  18. 18.0 18.1 "108th Infantry Regiment World War Two,"
  19. "California's Own" (accessed 21 June 2011)
  20. "California's Own" (accessed 21 June 2011).
  21. Robert Ross Smith, United States Army in World War II: The War in the Pacific: Triumph in the Philippines (Washington: Government Printing Office, 1963), 662.
  22. "The 40th Division in WWII";"108th Infantry Regiment World War Two," (both accessed 20 June 2011).
  23. Smith, United States Army in World War II, 439; M. Hamlin Cannon, Leyte: The Return to the Philippines (Washington: Office of the Chief of Military History, Department of the Army, 1954), 368.
  24. Smith, United States Army in World War II, 186, 641–643
  25. Smith, United States Army in World War II, 635–647; "108th Infantry Regiment World War Two" (accessed 21 June 2011).
  26. "108th Infantry Regiment World War Two" (accessed 21 June 2011). The streamers are for Bismark Archipelago, Leyte, Luzon, and Southern Philippines.
  27. "The 108th Infantry Regiment" (accessed 21 June 2011).
  28. Thomas Hamill and Paul T. Brown, Escape in Iraq: The Thomas Hamill Story, ed. Jay Langston (Accokeek, MI: Stoeger Pub., 2004), 245–246.
  29. Dr. Donald P. Wright and Colonel Timothy R. Reese, On Point II: Transition to the New Campaign: The United States Army in Operation Iraqi Freedom May 2003 – January 2005 (Ft. Leavenworth, KS: Combined Studies Institute Press, 2008), 343.
  30. "New York Military Facility Locator" (accessed 23 June 2011).

Bibliography[]

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  • Astor, Gerald. Crisis in the Pacific: The Battles for the Philippine Islands by the Men who Fought Them. Reprint. New York: Dell Publishing, 2002.
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