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VFW 1527 Red Arrow Post
The
32nd
Infantry
Division
was
an
infantry
division
of
the
United
States
Army
National
Guard
that
fought
primarily
during
World
War
I
and
World
War
II.
It
was
formed
with
units
from
the
states
of
Wisconsin
and
Michigan.
With
roots
as
the
Iron
Brigade
in
the
American
Civil
War,
the
division's
ancestral
units
came
to
be
referred
to
as
the
Iron
Jaw
Division.
During
tough
combat
in
France
in
World
War
I,
it
soon
acquired
from
the
French
the
nickname
Les
Terribles,
referring
to
its
fortitude
in
advancing
over
terrain
previous
units
could
not.[1]
It
was
the
first
allied
division
to
pierce
the
German
Hindenburg
Line
of
defense,[1]
and
the
32nd
then
adopted
its
shoulder
patch;
a
line
shot
through
with
a
red
arrow, to signify its tenacity in piercing the enemy line. It then became known as the Red Arrow Division.[2]
During
World
War
II,
the
division
was
credited
with
many
"firsts".
It
was
the
first
United
States
division
to
deploy
as
an
entire
unit
overseas
and
among
the
first[3]
of
seven
U.S.
Army
and
U.S.
Marine
units
to
engage
in
offensive
ground
combat
operations
during
1942.
The
division
was
among
the
first
divisions
to
engage
the
enemy
and
were
still
fighting
after
the
official
Japanese
surrender.
The
32nd
logged
a
total
of
654
days
of
combat
during
World
War
II,
more
than
any
other
United
States
Army
division.[2][4]
The
unit
was
inactivated
in
1946
after
occupation
duty
in Japan.
During
1961,
the
division
was
called
up
for
a
one
year
tour
of
service
in
the
state
of
Washington
during
the
Berlin
Crisis.
In
1967,
the
32nd
Infantry
Division
(now
made
up
completely
of
units
from
Wisconsin)
was
inactivated
and
partially
reorganized
as
the
32nd
Infantry
Brigade,
the
largest unit of the Wisconsin Army National Guard.
(Information curtsey of Wikipedia)
Tenant Organizations of VFW 1527 Red Arrow Post