About the 70th Infantry Division
The 70th Division
was activated as a component of the Army of the United States on June 15th,
1943, with headquarters at Camp Adair, Oregon. The Division had one change of
station to Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri, before embarking for the European
Theater in December 1944. The three infantry regiments began arriving in
Marseilles, France, on December 10th and were immediately organized into Task
Force Herren and assigned to the Seventh Army. Reaching the front on December
28th near Bischweiler on the west bank of the Rhine river, the task force
engaged German units attempting to drive south from Bitche as part of an attack
to cut off Seventh Army forces west of Severne Pass (Operation Nordwind).
The troops of
the 70th took on von Rundstedt's German forces and defeated them at
Phillipsbourg and at Wingen. Over 1,000 SS troops were killed by the division
elements at Wingen, and the Bitche salient was eliminated. The Task Force moved
to an area south of the heavily fortified German town of Saarbrucken in
mid-January and patrolled aggressively until the arrival of the rest of the
division on January 18th, 1945. The men of the 70th improved their defensive
positions and launched a series of combat raids along a line running from
Sarrguemines to Morsbach through mid-February and prepared for the drive into
Germany.
On February 17th, the
division attacked just below the Saar River and captured the high ground
overlooking Saarbrucken. The French town of Forbach was liberated, and the 70th
advanced to Stiring-Wendel where over 1,000 allied prisoners were freed in one
of the first of such actions along the Western Front. Continuing its advance,
the 70th made a night crossing of the Saar River on March 18th and captured
Saarbrucken after two days of fierce fighting. The Siegfried Line was pierced
north of the Saar and several cities were captured including the large town of
Volklingen. On March 21st, elements of the 70th Division and the Third Army
units met forming the Saar Pocket. The division then participated in the
destruction of enemy forces in the Saar Basin until the war ended on May 8th,
1945.
In October of 1945,
the division returned home after performing occupation duties in Germany with
command posts located in Frankfurt, Bad Kreuznach, Oranienstein, and Otterberg.
The men of the Trailblazer Division had fought in three campaigns and lost 3,919
men killed and wounded during 83 days of combat.
The shoulder patch of
the 70th Division was approved on June 15th, 1943. The axe head represents the
aim of the unit to overcome all obstacles in the path of the division. The white
mountain in the background suggests Mt. Hood which is near where the unit
organized, and the green fir tree suggests the region and ties between the 70th
and the 91st Divisions. The color red represents the blood of the early pioneers
who settled the area where the division was formed.
Site History
This site is an extension of the
70th Infantry Division Website. It has been created to house the documents, maps, photos and audio
files that were originally found there. This was done in an effort to decrease the
traffic. It has also given us more
space, 800megs to be exact. To access the many files available, please see
the menu on the left.
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