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75th Innovation Command

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75th Innovation Command (75IC)
75th Innovation Command
shoulder sleeve insignia
Active1943 – 1945
1952 – 1957
1993 – present
Country United States
Branch United States Army
TypeFuture force development for the Army Reserve
SizeCommand
HeadquartersHouston, Texas
Motto(s)Make Ready
EngagementsWorld War II
DecorationsMeritorious Unit Commendation
Commanders
CommanderMG Michelle A. Link
Deputy CommanderBG Heather A. Reuter
Notable
commanders
MG Ray E. Porter
Insignia
Distinctive unit insignia

The 75th Innovation Command (75th IC) is a separate command of the United States Army Reserve.[1]

The 75th IC was activated as the 75th Infantry Division in World War II. Inactivated in 1945, it was reactivated in 1952 at Houston, Texas, from the assets of the disbanded 22nd Armored Division of the United States Army Organized Reserves. It was active as an Infantry Division from 1952 to 1957, when it was reorganized and redesignated as the 75th Maneuver Area Command (MAC), and given responsibility for planning and conducting Field Training Exercises (FTX) and Command Post Exercises (CPX) for all Reserve Component units west of the Mississippi River. In 1993, the 75th MAC was redesignated as the 75th Division (Training Support) in the Army Reserve, which in later years became designated the 75th Training Command. In January 2003, numerous units of the 75th were mobilized to train other Army Reserve and Army National Guard units deploying overseas in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom/Operation Enduring Freedom (OIF/OEF). In January 2018, the 75th was reorganized into the 75th Innovation Command with its training divisions reassigned to the 84th Training Command.[2]

Lineage

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  • Constituted 24 December 1942, in the Army of the United States as Headquarters, 75th Infantry Division.
  • Activated 15 April 1943, at Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri.
  • Moved to Louisiana Maneuver Area on 24 January 1944, where it participated in the 4th Army # 6 Louisiana maneuvers.
  • Transferred to Camp Breckinridge, Kentucky on 7 April 1944.
  • Staged at Camp Shanks, New York, on 7 November 1944.
  • Deployed from New York Port of Embarkation on 14 November 1944.
  • Arrived in England on 22 November 1944. Some troops spent time training at Seabank Hotel in Porthcawl, Wales.[3]
  • Assigned 9 December 1944, to the Ninth Army, which was part of the 12th Army Group.
  • Further assigned 11 December 1944, to the XVI Corps.
  • Landed in France on 13 December 1944.
  • Crossed over into the Netherlands on 18 December 1944.
  • Further assigned 22 December 1944, to the VII Corps, First Army (attached to the British 21st Army Group), 12th Army Group.
  • Further assigned 29 December 1944 to the XVIII (Abn) Corps.
  • Further assigned 2 January 1945 to the VII Corps.
  • Further assigned 7 January 1945 to the XVIII (Abn) Corps.
  • Further assigned 25 January 1945 to the 6th Army Group.
  • Further assigned 30 January 1945 to the XXI Corps, Seventh Army, 6th Army Group, but attached for operations to the First French Army, 6th Army Group.
  • Further assigned 11 February 1945 to the Seventh Army, 6th Army Group.
  • Further assigned 14 February 1945 to the 12th Army Group.
  • Further assigned 17 February 1945 to the Ninth Army, 12th Army Group, but attached to the British Second Army for operations and the British VIII Corps for administration. Entered Belgium.
  • Withdrew to the Netherlands on 18 February 1945.
  • Finally assigned 1 March 1945 to the XVI Corps, Ninth Army, 12th Army Group.
  • Entered Germany on 10 March 1945.
  • Was located at Werdohl, Germany, on 14 August 1945
  • Returned to Continental US at Hampton Roads Port of Embarkation on 14 November 1945, and proceeded to Camp Patrick Henry, Virginia.
  • Inactivated 14 November 1945, at Camp Patrick Henry, Virginia.
  • Allotted 21 February 1952, to the Organized Reserve Corps.
  • Activated 1 March 1952, at Houston, Texas.
  • (Organized Reserve Corps redesignated 9 July 1952 as the Army Reserve).
  • Redesignated 15 February 1957 as the 75th Maneuver Area Command (MAC) at Houston, Texas.
  • Redesignated 1 October 1993 as Headquarters, 75th Division (Exercise) at Houston, Texas.
  • Reorganized and redesignated 17 October 1999 as Headquarters, 75th Division (Training Support).
  • Redesignated 2 November 2007 as 75th Battle Command Training Division (BCTD)
  • Redesignated 1 October 2011 as 75th Training Division (Mission Command), later 75th Training Command (Mission Command)
  • Redesignated January 2018 as 75th Innovation Command[1]

World War II

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Units

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  • Headquarters, 75th Infantry Division
  • 289th Infantry Regiment
  • 290th Infantry Regiment
  • 291st Infantry Regiment
  • Headquarters and Headquarters Battery, 75th Infantry Division Artillery
    • 730th Field Artillery Battalion (155 mm)
    • 897th Field Artillery Battalion (105 mm)
    • 898th Field Artillery Battalion (105 mm)
    • 899th Field Artillery Battalion (105 mm)
  • 275th Engineer Combat Battalion
  • 375th Medical Battalion
  • 75th Cavalry Reconnaissance Troop (Mechanized)
  • Headquarters, Special Troops, 75th Infantry Division
    • Headquarters Company, 75th Infantry Division
    • 775th Ordnance Light Maintenance Company
    • 75th Quartermaster Company
    • 575th Signal Company
    • Military Police Platoon
    • Band
  • 75th Counterintelligence Corps Detachment

Combat chronicle

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Soldiers of the 290th Infantry Regiment in the Ardennes during the Battle of the Bulge (Amonines, Belgium 4 January 1945)

These combat chronicles, current as of October 1948, are drawn from The Army Almanac: A Book of Facts Concerning the Army of the United States.[4]

The 75th Infantry Division arrived in Britain, 22 November 1944; headquarters having arrived on 2 November 1944. After a brief training program, the division landed at Le Havre and Rouen, 13 December, and bivouacked at Yvetot on the 14th. When the Von Rundstedt offensive broke in the Ardennes, the 75th was rushed to the front and entered defensive combat, 23 December 1944, alongside the Ourthe River, advanced to the Aisne River, and entered Grandmenil, 5 January 1945. The division relieved the 82d Airborne Division along the Salm River, 8 January, and strengthened its defensive positions until 17 January when it attacked, taking Vielsalm and other towns in the area.

Men of the 75th Division trudge through the snow toward the Salm River, near Arbrefontaine, Belgium, to relieve the 82nd Airborne Division.

Shifting to the Seventh Army area in AlsaceLorraine, the 75th crossed the Colmar Canal, 1 February, and took part in the liberation of Colmar and in the fighting between the Rhine River and the Vosges Mountains. It crossed the Marne-Rhine Canal and reached the Rhine, 7 February. After a brief rest at Lunéville, it returned to combat, relieving the 6th British Airborne Division on a 24-mile (39 km) defensive front along the Meuse (Maas), near Roermond, in the Netherlands, on 21 February. From 13 to 23 March, the 75th patrolled a sector along the west bank of the Rhine from Wesel to Homburg, and probed enemy defenses at night.

On 24 March, elements crossed the Rhine in the wake of the 30th and 79th Divisions. Pursuit of the enemy continued as the 75th cleared the Haard Forest, 1 April, crossed the Dortmund-Ems Canal on the 4th, and cleared the approaches to Dortmund, which fell to the 95th Division, 13 April. Around the same time, troops of the division liberated Stalag VI-A, a POW camp where thousands of Soviet and Polish prisoners of war had died of malnutrition and disease. After taking Herdecke, 13 April, the division moved to Braumbauer for rest and rehabilitation, then took over security and military government duties in Westphalia. The father of Randy Pausch was wounded and received a Bronze Star during this time, as related in The Last Lecture.

Casualties

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  • Total battle casualties: 4,324[5]
  • Killed in action: 817[5]
  • Wounded in action: 3,314[5]
  • Missing in action: 77[5]
  • Prisoner of war: 116[5]

Honors

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Campaign participation credit

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  • World War II:
  1. Rhineland;
  2. Ardennes-Alsace;
  3. Central Europe

Unit awards

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Individual awards

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Commanders

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  1. MG Willard S. Paul (April – August 1943)
  2. MG Fay B. Prickett (August 1943 – January 1945)
  3. MG Ray E. Porter (January – June 1945)
  4. MG Arthur Arnim White (June – November 1945)
  5. BG Charles R. Doran (October 1945 to inactivation)
  6. BG Whitfield Jack (March 1952 to May 1955) (as 75th Infantry Division (Reserve))
  7. MG Whitfield Jack (May 1955 to February 1957)
  8. MG Whitfield Jack (February 1957 to January 1960) (as 75th Maneuver Area Command)
  9. MG George P. Munson, Jr. (November 1960 to May 1965)
  10. MG Felix A. Davis (May 1965 to May 1975)
  11. MG Kenneth A. Kuykendal (May 1975 to May 1979)
  12. MG Robert E. Crosser (May 1979 to August 1981)
  13. MG Harry A. Conrad (August 1981 to August 1984)
  14. MG Guilford J. Wilson, Jr. (October 1984 to April 1989)
  15. MG Dionel E. Aviles (April 1989 to April 1993)
  16. MG Claude J. Roberts (April 1993 to December 1996) (as 75th Division (Exercise))
  17. MG Darrell W. McDaniel (January 1997 to December 2000) (as 75th Division (Training Support))
  18. MG Perry V. Dalby (December 2000 to May 2004)
  19. MG Steven P. Best (May 2004 to August 2008) (as 75th Training Division (Battle Command))
  20. MG Eldon P. Regua (August 2008 to July 2011)
  21. MG Jimmie Jaye Wells (July 2011 to May 2014)[6] (as 75th Training Command (Mission Command))
  22. MG James V. "Boe" Young (May 2014 to May 2019)
  23. MG Rich C. Staats (May 2019 to July 2021)
  24. MG Martin F. Klein (August 2021 to June 2024)
  25. MG Michelle A. Link (June 2024 to Present)

Command Sergeants Major

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  1. CSM Roger M. Casteel (January 1970 to March 1973)
  2. CSM Wilfred H. Mathis, Jr. (April 1973 to July 1982)
  3. CSM Obie B. Johnson (July 1982 to January 1987)
  4. CSM Richard J. Danielson (January 1987 to April 1993)
  5. CSM Richard J. Danielson (April 1993 to June 1993)
  6. CSM Lawrence W. Holland (June 1993 to May 1996)
  7. CSM Philip R. Kraus (May 1996 to September 1999)
  8. CSM John Proffit (October 1999 to August 2001)
  9. CSM Jerry A. Blair (December 2001 to December 2005)
  10. CSM Thomas Boyce (December 2005 to November 2007)
  11. CSM Thomas Boyce (November 2007 to August 2008)
  12. CSM Paul Belanger (August 2008 to August 2011)
  13. CSM Luther Thomas (August 2011 to September 2011)
  14. CSM Luther Thomas (October 2011 to November 2012)
  15. CSM Ronnie Farmer (November 2012 to October 2016)
  16. CSM Richard T. Schoenberger (October 2016 to April 2019)
  17. CSM Krystal Florquist (April 2019 - June 2023)
  18. CSM Sherri L. Turner (June 2023 - present)

Current units

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Also now known as the U.S. Army Reserve Innovation Command (USARIC),[7] as of January 2018, this unit was designated as the 75th Innovation Command and all previously subordinate units outside of headquarters and headquarters company were assigned to the 84th Training Command.

Current Mission: "The 75th Innovation Command drives operational innovation, concepts, and capabilities to enhance the readiness and lethality of the Future Force by leveraging the unique skills, agility, and private sector connectivity of America's Army Reserve."[8] USARIC is designed to be in direct support of Army Futures Command. With a requirement for senior officers and NCOs to research and publish thought leadership, there are several publications across disciplines by its members.[9][10][11][12]

Current Commander and Command Sergeant Major are MG Martin F. Klein and CSM Kristal Florquist.[13] Current Deputy Commander is BG Robert E. Guidry.[14]

USARIC Headquarters and Headquarters Company – Houston, Texas[15]

Notable members

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General

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  • Shoulder patch: Khaki-bordered square with diagonal fields of blue, white, and red on which is superimposed a blue 7 and red 5.

References

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  1. ^ a b 75th Innovation Command, usar.army.mil, last accessed 1 April 2018
  2. ^ 75th Innovation Command, Unites Under 84th Training Command Mission Command, usar.army.mil, last accessed 1 April 2018
  3. ^ "About the Seabank Hotel". Seabank Hotel. Archived from the original on 9 August 2010. Retrieved 8 August 2010.
  4. ^ U.S. Government Printing Office, 1950, pp. 510–592
  5. ^ a b c d e Army Battle Casualties and Nonbattle Deaths, Final Report (Statistical and Accounting Branch, Office of the Adjutant General, 1 June 1953)
  6. ^ "Council Member Mike Sullivan's Newsletter" (PDF). City of Houston. August 2011. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 May 2012. Retrieved 18 July 2012.
  7. ^ "75th Innovation Command". DVIDS Hub. Retrieved 12 February 2021.
  8. ^ "75th Innovation Command Page - About Us". US Army Reserve. Retrieved 12 February 2021.
  9. ^ Madden, Michael; Westwood, Kirk. "Uncle Sam Needs STEM". www.realcleardefense.com.
  10. ^ Kim, Wonny. "An Unmanned, Tank-Killing Solution to the Problem of Multi-Domain Operations". mwi.usma.edu.
  11. ^ Kim, Wonny. "COVID-19, Communications, and Competition: We're Doing it Wrong". wmi.usma.edu.
  12. ^ "United States Army & Tactical Law Enforcement Urban Close Quarters Battle Capabilities Based Assessment". ncuo.net. Retrieved 21 February 2021.
  13. ^ "75th Innovation Command Page - Leaders". US Army Reserve. Retrieved 17 December 2021.
  14. ^ "General Officer Assignments". www.defense.gov. Retrieved 12 February 2021.
  15. ^ "75th IC Presentation" (PDF). www.massnationalguard.org. Retrieved 12 February 2021.
  16. ^ Huie, William Bradford (January 1956). "The Shocking Story of Approved Killing in Mississippi". Look Magazine. Archived from the original on 8 February 2017. Retrieved 11 March 2017.
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