| 366th Infantry Regiment | |
|---|---|
366th Infantry Regiment coat of arms |
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| Active | 1917–1945 |
| Country | |
| Branch | United States Army Reserve |
| Type | Infantry |
| Size | Regiment |
| Garrison/HQ | Fort Devens, Massachusetts |
| Motto | "Labor Conquers All Things." |
| Engagements | World War I, World War II |
| Battle honours | Meuse-Argonne Offensive, Rome-Arno Campaign |
| Commanders | |
| Colonel of the Regiment |
Edmund R. Andrews, West Hamilton, Howard D. Queen, Alonzo Ferguson |
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| U.S. Infantry Regiments | |
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| 365th Infantry Regiment | 367th Infantry Regiment |
The 366th Infantry Regiment was an all African American (segregated) unit of the United States Army that served with distinction in both World War I and World War II. The unit was unique because it was one of the few Negro (Buffalo Soldiers) units with all its own officers and personnel; the U.S. military did not desegregate until after World War II, and in most of the segregated units, all of the officers were white. During World War II, the unit saw combat in Italy as part of the 92nd Infantry Division (colored), 5th Army.
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Contents
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The 366th Infantry was constituted 16 August 1917 in the National Army as the 366th Infantry and assigned to the 92nd Division and organized at Camp Dodge, Iowa, in November 1917.
In WWI the regiment served overseas as a part of the 92nd Division, National Army and earned credit for battle participation as follows:
The 366th Infantry was demobilized 25 March 1919 at Fort Oglethorpe, Georgia, and reconstituted 16 December 1940 in the Regular Army.
It was activated 10 February 1941 at Fort Devens, Massachusetts and assigned to the Eastern Defense Command on 30 April 1942.
Colonel Howard Donovan Queen was the commanding officer (CO) at the time of embarkation in March 1944. Although the 366th Infantry had been at "Combat Readiness", after a prolonged period which was devoted only to guard duty, Queen felt that they needed at least three months for preparation to be "Combat Ready". Queen wrote a significant request for withdrawal from Active Command and included his guarded reservations in regard to his deeply held tenets. In spite of this it was decided in November 1944 to attach the 366th Infantry to the 92nd Division.
Prior to the attachment of the 366th Infantry, the 92nd Division saw action at the Battle of Monte Cassino, and were in the vanguard of the 5th Army's liberation of Rome as one of the first units to reach the city, two days before the Normandy Invasion. (As a gesture of thanks, they received a papal blessing at a special ceremony in Saint Peter's Square.)
The 366th Infantry Regiment was awarded two campaign streamers for the Colors; the first for Meuse-Argonne Lorraine (September 1918 to November 1918), and the second for Rome-Arno (January 1944 to September 1944).
The Regimental Shield incorporated the Cross of Lorraine. The Regimental Motto was, "Labor Conquers All Things."
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