Want this question answered?
Ohio Guard may be a shortened form of Ohio National Guard. Under the Militia Act of 1903, the National Guard is identified as the organised militia, and are considered as such during periods of non-activation and state activation, but become federal soldiers when activated at the federal level. It may also be an informal name for Ohio's State Guard force, properly known as the Ohio Military Reserve. A State Guard force is an indigenous militia raised by a state governor, and which are not under the federal web which the National Guard is under. These units typically serve as auxiliaries to the National Guard, and are often oriented more towards CERT and disaster response than they are towards actual military/paramilitary activity. Not all states have raised such forces, and not all forces calling themselves "State Guards", "State Defence Forces", etc. are organised as legitimate State Guard Forces under the governor. See the related Wikipedia link at the bottom for more information on State Guard Forces. While I've found a number of private militias which exist in Ohio (at least on paper), I'm unable to find any reference to any such organisation calling itself the Ohio Guard.
Every state should have a "your state" Army (Air) National Guard OTAG-Office of the Adjudent General. Sample: Texas Army National Guard-OTAG, or Oregon Air National Guard, etc. Contact them.
If you are interested in working for the National Guard the best thing to is graduate high school then type up a good resume. Take your resume to the National Guard recruitment center in your area and enlist.
The year 1040? I do not believe there was a National Guard back then.
For information on joining the national guard visit http://www.nationalguard.com/guard-basics/faq/joining-the-guard. You can also find information at http://www.military.com/Recruiting/Content/0,13898,rcoe_guard,00.html
Possibly "Organized Militia" Corps? "O.M. Corps" is a common notation on grave markers of US Army veterans of World War I, but I cannot find a US Army manual or database defining it, except one 1925 US Army Manual defines O.M. as Organized Militia (an older name for the National Guard I believe).
no
You would have to find out which agency in the State of New Jersey has jurisdiction over the state's National Guard, and send a Freedom of Information Act request to them for that person's service records. The National Personnel Records Centre in St. Louis will only have information pertaining to any time they were under federal activation. This answer is given under the assumption that '1886' in your question was a typo. The National Guard was not organised until 1903.
Ask him. Sounds simple but are you in talking terms or are you really a parent of his.
Try the Imperial War Museum. Or any war related museum.
My dad was a member of the national guard and was on alert but never went over seas . He spent nine years in the reserve as communications cheif. I am trying to find out if he is intitled to a plaque on his grave saying he was a national guardsman.
The FatMan you are talking about is the MIRV. It's in the national guard depot, and to get in you will need to find all of the Kellar family chronicles.