Ranger History
The history of the
American Ranger is a long and colorful one and is a saga of
courage, daring, and outstanding leadership. It is a story of
men whose skills in the art of fighting have seldom been
surpassed...
THE EARLY RANGERS
The history of the U.S. Ranger
did not begin with Robert Rogers in the 1750s. Units
specifically designated as Rangers and using Ranger tactics were
employed on the American frontier as early as 1670. The Rangers
of Captain Benjamin Church brought the Indian Conflict known as
"King Phillip's War" to a successful conclusion in
1675.
Rangers were organized in 1756 by
Major Robert Rogers, a native of New Hampshire, who recruited
nine companies of American colonists to fight for the British
during the French and Indian War. Ranger techniques and methods
of operation were an inherent characteristic of the American
frontiersmen; however, Major Rogers was the first to capitalize
on them and incorporate them into the fighting doctrine of a
permanently organized fighting force.
In the French and Indian War
(1754-1763), the famous Robert Rogers developed the Ranger
concept to an extent never known before. A Soldier from boyhood,
Rogers had a magnetic personality. Operating in the days when
commanders personally recruited their men, he was articulate and
persuasive, and knew his trade. He published a list of 28 common
sense rules, and a set of standing orders stressing operational
readiness, security, and tactics.
REVOLUTIONARY WAR
On June 14, 1775, with war on the
horizon, the Continental Congress resolved that "six
companies of expert riflemen be immediately raised in
Pennsylvania, two in Maryland, and two in Virginia." In
1777, this force of hardy frontiersmen provided the leadership
and experiences necessary to form, under Dan Morgan, the
organization George Washington called "The Corps of
Rangers." According to British General John Burgoyne,
Morgan's men were "...the most famous corps of the
Continental Army, all of them crack shots."
Also active during the
Revolutionary War were Thomas Knowlton's Connecticut Rangers.
This force of less than 150 hand-picked men was used primarily
for reconnaissance. Knowlton was killed leading his men in
action at Harlem Heights.
CIVIL WAR
The best known Rangers of the
Civil War period were commanded by the Confederate Colonel John
S. Mosby. Mosby's Rangers operated behind Union lines south of
the Potomac. From a three-man scout unit in 1862, Mosby's force
grew to an operation of eight companies of Rangers by 1865. He
believed that by the use of aggressive action and surprise
assaults, he would compel the Union forces to guard a hundred
points at one time. Then, by skillful reconnaissance, he could
locate one of the weakest points and attack it, assured of
victory. On his raids, Mosby employed small members, usually 20
to 50 men. With nine men, he once attacked and routed an entire
Union regiment in its bivouac.
Equally skillful were the Rangers
under the command of Colonel Turner Ashby, a Virginian widely
known for his daring. The Rangers of Ashby and Mosby did great
service for the Confederacy. Specialists in scouting, harassing,
and raiding, they were a constant threat and kept large numbers
of Union troops occupied.
Rangers who fought for the United
States during the Civil War should also be mentioned. Although
often overlooked in historical accounts, Mean's Rangers captured
Confederate General Longstreet's ammunition train, and even
succeeded in engaging and capturing a portion of Colonel Mosby's
force.
WORLD WAR TWO
RANGER BATTALIONS
1st 2nd 3rd 4th
5th 6th
With America's entry into the
Second World War, Rangers came forth to add to the pages of
history. Major General Lucian K. Truscott, U.S. Army Liaison
with the British General Staff, submitted proposals to General
George Marshall that "we undertake immediately an American
unit along the lines of the British Commandos" on May 26,
1942. A cable from the War Department quickly followed to
Truscott and Major General Russell P. Hartle, commanding all
Army Forces in Northern Ireland, authorizing the activation of
the First U.S. Army Ranger Battalion. The name RANGER was
selected by General Truscott "because the name Commandos
rightfully belonged to the British, and we sought a name more
typically American. It was therefore fit that the organization
that was destined to be the first of the American Ground Forces
to battle Germans on the European continent should be called
Rangers in compliment to those in American history who
exemplified the high standards of courage, initiative,
determination and ruggedness, fighting ability and
achievement."
After much deliberation, General
Hartle decided that his own aid-de-camp Captain William Orlando
Darby, a graduate of West Point with amphibious training was the
ideal choice. This decision was highly approved by General
Truscott who rated Darby as "outstanding in appearance,
possessed of a most attractive personality....and filled with
enthusiasm."
Promoted to Major, Darby
performed a near miracle in organizing the unit within a few
weeks after receiving his challenging assignment. Thousands of
applicants from the 1st Armored Division and the 34th Infantry
Division and other units in Northern Ireland were interviewed by
his hand-picked officers, and after a strenuous weeding-out
program at Carrickfergus, the First Ranger Battalion was
officially activated there on June 19, 1942.
But more rugged and realistic
training with live ammunition was in store for the Rangers at
the famed Commando Training Center at Achnacarry, Scotland.
Coached, prodded and challenged by the battle-seasoned Commando
instructors, commanded by Colonel Charles Vaughan, the Rangers
learned the rudiments of Commando warfare. Five hundred of the
six hundred volunteers that Darby brought with him to Achnacarry
survived the Commando training with flying colors, although one
Ranger was killed and several wounded by live fire.
Meanwhile 44 enlisted men and
five officers took part in the Dieppe Raid sprinkled among the
Canadians and the British Commandos�the first American ground
Soldiers to see action against the Germans in occupied Europe.
Three Rangers were killed, several captured and all won the
commendation and esteem of the Commandos. Under the inspired
leadership of Darby, promoted to Lieutenant Colonel, the 1st
Ranger Battalion spearheaded the North African Invasion at the
Port of Arzew, Algeria by a silent night landing, silenced two
gun batteries and opened the way for the First Infantry Division
to capture Oran. Later in Tunisia the 1st Battalion executed the
first Ranger behind-the-lines night raid at Sened, killing a
large number of defenders and taking 10 prisoners with only one
Ranger killed and 10 wounded. On March 31, 1943 the 1st Ranger
Battalion led General Patton's drive to capture the heights of
El Guettar with a 12-mile night march across mountainous
terrain, surprising the enemy positions from the rear. By dawn
the Rangers swooped down on the surprised Italians, cleared the
El Guettar Pass and captured two hundred prisoners. For this
action the Battalion won its first Presidential Citation and
Darby won his first DSC.
After Tunisia, the 3rd and 4th
Ranger Battalions with the 1st Battalion as cadre were activated
and trained by Darby for the invasion of Sicily at Nemours,
Algeria in April 1943. Major Herman Dammer assumed command of
the 3rd, Major Roy Murray the 4th, and Darby remained CO of the
1st but in effect was in command of what became known as the
Darby Rangers force. The three Ranger units spearheaded the
Seventh Army landing at Gela and Licata and played a key role in
the Sicilian campaign that culminated in the capture of Messina.
The three Battalions were the
first Fifth Army troops to land during the Italian Invasion near
Salerno. They quickly seized the strategic heights on both sides
of Chinuzi Pass and fought off eight German counterattacks,
winning two Distinguished Unit Citations. It was here that
Colonel Darby commanded a force of over 10,000 troops, elements
of the 36th Division, several companies of the 82nd Airborne
Division and artillery elements, and it was here that the Fifth
Army advance against Naples was launched with the British 10th
Corps.
All three Ranger units later
fought in the bitter winter mountain fighting near San Pietro,
Venafro and Cassino. Then after a short period of rest,
reorganizing and recruiting new volunteers, the three Ranger
Battalions, reinforced with the 509 Parachute Battalion, the
83rd Chemical Warfare, 4.2 Mortar Battalion and 36th Combat
Engineers, were designated as the 6615 Ranger Force under the
command of Darby who was finally promoted to Colonel. This Force
spearheaded the surprise night landings at the Port of Anzio,
captured two gun batteries, seized the city and struck out to
enlarge the beachhead before dawn�a classic Ranger operation.
On the night of January 30, 1944,
the 1st and 3rd Battalions infiltrated five miles behind the
German Lines while the 4th Battalion fought to clear the road
toward Cisterna, a key 5th Army objective. But preparing for a
massive counterattack, the Germans had reinforced their lines
the night before, and both the 1st and 3rd were surrounded and
greatly outnumbered. The beleaguered Rangers fought bravely,
inflicting many casualties but ammunition and time ran out, and
all along the beachhead front supporting troops could not break
through the strong German positions. Among the killed in action
was the 3rd Battalion CO, Major Alvah Miller, and the 1st
Battalion CO, Major John Dobson, was wounded. The tragic loss of
the 1st and 3rd Battalions combined with the heavy casualties
the 4th Battalion sustained, however, was not entirely in vain,
for later intelligence revealed that the Ranger-led attack on
Cisterna had helped spike the planned German counterattack and
thwarted Hitler's order to "Push the Allies into the
sea."
But other Ranger units proudly
carried on and enhanced the Ranger standards and traditions in
the European Theater Operations. The 2nd Ranger Battalion,
activated on April 1, 1943, at Camp Forrest, Tennessee trained
and led by Lieutenant Colonel James Earl Rudder, carried out the
most desperate and dangerous mission of the entire Omaha Beach
landings - in Normandy, June 6, 1944. General Bradley said of
Colonel Rudder, "Never has any commander been given a more
desperate mission."
Three companies, D, E, and F
assaulted the perpendicular cliffs of Point Du Hoc under intense
machine-gun, mortar and artillery fire and destroyed a large gun
battery that would have wreaked havoc on the Allied fleets
offshore. For two days and nights they fought without relief
until the 5th Ranger Battalion linked up with them. Later with
the 5th Battalion, the 2nd played a key role in the attacks
against the German fortifications around Brest in the La Coquet
Peninsular. This unit fought through the bitter Central Europe
campaign and won commendations for its heroic actions in the
battle of Hill 400. The 2nd Ranger Battalion earned the
Distinguished Unit Citation and the Croix de Guerre and was
inactivated at Camp Patrick Henry on October 23, 1945.
The Fifth Ranger Battalion
activated September 1, 1943 at Camp Forrest, commanded by
Lieutenant Colonel Max Schneider, former executive officer of
the 4th Ranger Battalion, was part of the provisional Ranger
Assault Force commanded by Colonel Rudder. It landed on Omaha
Beach with three companies of the 2nd Battaloin, A, B and C,
where elements of the 116th Regiment of the 29th Inf. Division
were pinned down by murderous cross fire and mortars from the
heights above. It was there that the situation was so critical
that General Omar Bradley was seriously considering redirecting
reinforcements to other areas of the beachhead. And it was then
and there that General Norman D. Cota, Assistant Division
Commander of the 29th Division, gave the now famous order that
has become the Motto of the 75th Ranger Regiment: "Rangers,
Lead The Way!"
The Fifth Battalion Rangers broke
across the sea wall and barbed wire entanglements, and up the
pillbox-rimmed heights under intense enemy machine-gun and
mortar fire and with A and B Companies of the 2nd Battalion and
some elements of the 116th Infantry Regiment, advanced four
miles to the key town of Vierville, thus opening the breach for
supporting troops to follow-up and expand the beachhead.
Meanwhile C Company of the 2nd Battalion, due to rough seas,
landed west of the Vierville draw and suffered 50 percent
casualties during the landing, but still scaled a 90-foot cliff
using ropes and bayonets to knock out a formidable enemy
position that was sweeping the beach with deadly fire.
The Fifth Battalion with elements
of the 116th Regiment finally linked up with the beleaguered 2nd
Battalion on D+3, although Lieutenant Charles Parker of A
Company, 5th Battalion, had penetrated deep behind enemy lines
on D Day and reached the 2nd Battalion with 20 prisoners. Later,
with the 2nd Battalion the unit distinguished itself in the
hard-fought battle of Brest. Under the leadership of Lieutenant
Colonel Richard Sullivan the Fifth Ranger Battalion took part in
the Battle of the Bulge, Huertgen Forest and other tough battles
throughout central Europe, winning two Distinguished Unit
Citations and the French Croix de Guerre. The outfit was
deactivated October 2 at Camp Miles Standish, Mass.
The Sixth Ranger Battalion,
commanded by Colonel Henry (Hank) Mucci, was the first American
force to return to the Philippines with the mission of
destroying coastal defense guns, radio and radar stations on the
islands of Dinegat, Suluan offshore Leyte. This was the first
mission for the 6th Battalion that was activated at Port
Moresby, New Guinea in September 1944. Landing three days in
advance of the main Sixth Army Invasion Force on October 17 and
18, 1944, they swiftly killed and captured some of the Japanese
defenders and destroyed all enemy communications.
The unit took part in the
landings of U.S. forces in Luzon, and several behind the lines
patrols, penetrations and small unit raids, that served to prime
the Rangers for what to become universally known as the greatest
and most daring raid in American military history. On January
30, 1944, C Company, supported by a platoon from F Company,
struck 30 miles behind enemy lines and rescued five hundred
emaciated and sickly POWs, survivors of the Bataan Death March.
Carrying many of the prisoners on their backs, the Rangers,
aided by Filipino guerrillas, killed over two hundred of the
garrison, evaded two Japanese regiments, and reached the safety
of American lines the following day. Intelligence reports had
indicated the Japanese were planning to kill the prisoners as
they withdrew toward Manila. Good recon work by the Alamo Scouts
also contributed to the success of the Cabanatuan Raid led by
Colonel Mucci.
The unit later commanded by
Colonel Robert Garrett played and important role in the capture
of Manila and Appari, and was preparing to spearhead the
invasion of Japan when news flashed the war with that nation was
ended. It received the Presidential Unit Citation and the
Philippine Presidential Citation. It was inactivated on December
30, 1945 in the Philippines.
MERRILL'S
MARAUDERS
5307 COMPOSITE
UNIT CBI THEATER WW II
Merrill's Marauders, a Ranger
type outfit, came into existence as a result of the Quebec
Conference of August 1943. During this conference, President
Franklin D. Roosevelt, Prime Minister Winston Churchill of
England, and other allied leaders conceived the idea of having
an American ground unit spearhead the Chinese Army with a Long
Range Penetration Mission behind enemy lines in Burma. Its goal
would be the destruction of Japanese communications and supply
lines and generally to play havoc with enemy forces while an
attempt was made to reopen the Burma Road.
A Presidential call for
volunteers for "A Dangerous and Hazardous Mission" was
issued, and approximately 2,900 American Soldiers responded to
the call. Officially designated as the 5307th Composite Unit
(Provisional) code name "GALAHAD" the unit later
became popularly known as MERRILL'S MARAUDERS, named after its
leader, Brigadier General Frank Merrill. Organized into combat
teams, two to each battalion, the Marauder volunteers came from
a variety of theaters of operation. Some came from stateside
cadres; some from the jungles of Panama and Trinidad; and the
remainder were battle-scarred veterans of Guadalcanal, New
Georgia, and New Guinea campaigns. In India some Signal Corps
and Air Corps personnel were added, as well as pack troops with
mules.
After preliminary training
operations undertaken in great secrecy in the jungles of India,
about 600 men were detached as a rear echelon headquarters to
remain in India to handle the soon-to-be vital air-drop link
between the six Marauder combat teams (400 to a team) and the
Air Transport Command. Color-coded Red, White, Blue, Green,
Orange and Khaki, the remaining 2,400 Marauders began their
March up the Ledo Road and over the outlying ranges of the
Himalayan Mountains into Burma. The Marauders, with no tanks or
heavy artillery to support them, walked over 1,000 miles
throughout extremely dense and almost impenetrable jungles and
came out with glory. In five major and 30 minor engagements,
they defeated the veteran Soldiers of the Japanese 18th Division
(conquerors of Singapore and Malaya) who vastly outnumbered
them. Always moving to the rear of the main forces of the
Japanese, they completely disrupted enemy supply and
communication lines, and climaxed their behind-the-lines
operations with the capture of Myitkina Airfield, the only
all-weather airfield in Burma.
For their accomplishments in
Burma, the Marauders were awarded the Distinguished Unit
Citation in July 1944. However, in November 1966, this was
redesignated as the PRESIDENTIAL UNIT CITATION which is awarded
by the President in the name of Congress.
The unit was consolidated with
the 475th Infantry on August 10, 1944. On June 21, 1954, the
475th was redesignated the 75th Infantry. It is from the
redesignation of Merrill's Marauders into the 75th Infantry
Regiment that the modern-day 75th Ranger Regiment traces its
current unit designation.
RANGER
INFANTRY COMPANIES (AIRBORNE) OF THE KOREAN WAR
The outbreak of hostilities in
Korea in June of 1950 again signaled the need for Rangers.
Colonel John Gibson Van Houten was selected by the Army Chief of
Staff to head the Ranger training program at Fort Benning, Ga.
On September 15, 1950, Colonel
Van Houten reported to the Chief of Staff, Office of the Chief
of Army Field Forces, Fort Monroe, Va. He was informed that
training of Ranger-type units was to begin at Fort Benning at
the earliest possible date. The target date was October 1, 1950
with a tentative training period of six weeks.
The implementing orders called
for formation of a headquarters detachment and four Ranger
infantry companies (airborne). Requests went out for volunteers
who were willing to accept "extremely hazardous" duty
in the combat zone in the Far East.
In the 82nd Airborne Division,
the results of the call for volunteers was astounding. Some
estimates were as high as 5,000 men (experienced regular Army
paratroopers). The ruthless sorting out process began. Where
possible, selection of the men was accomplished by the officers
who would command the companies, similar to colonial days when
Robert Rogers was recruiting.
Orders were issued and those
selected shipped to Fort Benning, Ga. The First group arrived on
September 20, 1950. Training began on Monday, October 9, 1950,
with three companies of airborne qualified personnel. On October
9, 1950 another company began training. These were former
members of the 505th Airborne Infantry Regiment and the 80th
Anti-aircraft Artillery Battalion of the 82nd Airborne Division.
Initially designated the 4th Ranger Company, they would soon be
redesigned the 2nd Ranger Infantry Company (Airborne), the only
Department of the Army authorized, all-black Ranger unit in the
history of the United States.
All volunteers were professional
Soldiers with many skills who often taught each other. Some of
the men had fought with the original Ranger Battalions, the
First Special Service Force, or the Office of Strategic Services
during World War II. Many of the instructors were drawn from
this same group. The faces of this select group may have
appeared youthful, but these men were highly trained and
experienced in Ranger operations during World War II.
The training was extremely
rigorous. Training consisted of amphibious and airborne
(including low-level night jumps) operations, demolitions,
sabotage, close combat, and the use of foreign maps. All
American small arms, as well as those used by the enemy, were
mastered. Communications, as well as the control of artillery,
naval, and aerial fires, were stressed. Much of the training was
at night.
The 1st Ranger Infantry Company
(Airborne) departed from Fort Benning, Ga. on November 15, 1950,
and arrived in Korea on December 17, 1950, where it was attached
to the 2nd Infantry Division. It was soon followed by the 2nd
and 4th Ranger Companies, who arrived on December 29, 1950. The
2nd Ranger Company was attached to the 7th Infantry Division.
The 4th Ranger Company served both Headquarters, Eighth U.S.
Army, and the 1st Cavalry Division.
Throughout the winter of 1950 and
the spring of 1951, the Rangers went into battle. They were
nomadic warriors, attached first to one regiment and then
another. They performed "out-front" work: scouting,
patrolling, raids, ambushes, spearheading assaults, and as
counterattack forces to regain lost positions.
Attached on the basis of one
112-man company per 18,000 man infantry division, the Rangers
compiled an incredible record. Nowhere in American military
history is the volunteer spirit better expressed. They were
volunteers for the Army, for airborne training, for the Rangers
and for combat.
The Rangers went into battle by
air, land and water. The 1st Ranger Infantry Company (Airborne)
opened with an extraordinary example of land navigation, then
executed a daring night raid nine miles behind enemy lines
destroying an enemy complex. The enemy installation was later
identified by a prisoner as the Headquarters of the 12th North
Korean Division. Caught by surprise and unaware of the size of
the American force, two North Korean Regiments hastily withdrew
from the area. The 1st Company as in the middle of the major
battle of Chipyong-Ni and the "May Massacre." It was
awarded two Distinguished Unit Citations. The 2nd and 4th Ranger
Companies made a combat jump at Munsan-Ni where Life Magazine
reported patrols operating North of the 38th parallel. The 2nd
Ranger Company plugged a critical gap left by a retreating
allied force. The 4th Ranger Company executed a daring
over-water raid at the Hwachon Dam. The 3rd Ranger Company
(attached to the 3rd Infantry Division) had the motto "Die
Bastard, Die!" The 5th Ranger Company, fighting as an
attachment to the 25th Infantry Division, performed brilliantly
during the Chinese "5th Phase Offensive." Gathering up
every Soldier he could find, the Ranger company commander held
the line with Ranger Sergeants commanding line infantry units.
In the Eastern sector, the Rangers were the first unit to cross
the 38th parallel on the second drive North.
The 8th Ranger Infantry Company
(Airborne) was attached to the 24th Infantry Division. They were
known as the "Devils." A 33-man platoon from the 8th
Ranger Company fought a between-the-lines battle with two
Chinese reconnaissance companies. Seventy Chinese were killed.
The Rangers suffered two dead and three wounded, all of whom
were brought back to friendly lines.
VIETNAM WAR
RANGERS
The 75th Ranger Regiment is
linked directly and historically to the 13 Infantry Companies of
the 75th that were active in Vietnam from February 1, 1969 until
August 15, 1972. The longest sustained combat history for an
American Ranger unit in more than three hundred years of U.S.
Army Ranger History. The 75th Infantry Regiment was activated in
Okinawa during 1954 and traced its lineage to the 475th Infantry
Regiment, thence to the 5307th Composite Provisional Unit,
popularly known as Merrill's Marauders. Historically, company I
(Ranger) 75th Infantry, 1st Infantry Division and Company G,
(Ranger) 75th Infantry, 23rd Infantry Division (Americal)
produced the first two U.S. Army Rangers to be awarded the Medal
of Honor as a member of and while serving in a combat Ranger
company.
Specialist Four Robert D. Law was awarded the first
Medal of Honor with I\75 while on long range patrol in Tinh Phoc
Province RVN. He was from Texas. Staff Sergeant Robert J. Pruden
was awarded the second Medal of Honor with G\75 while on
reconnaissance mission in Quang Ni Province RVN. He was from
Minnesota. In addition to the two Medal of Honor recipients
above, Staff Sergeant Lazlo Rabel was awarded the Medal of Honor
while serving with the 74th Infantry Detachment (LRP), a
predecessor to Company N, (Ranger) 75th Infantry, 173rd Airborne
Brigade while on a long range patrol Binh Dinh Province, RVN. He
was from Pennsylvania.
Conversion of the Long Range
Patrol Companies of the 20th, 50th, 51st, 52nd, 58th, 71st,
78th, and 79th Infantry Detachment and Company D, 151st Infantry
Long Range Patrol of the Indiana National Guard, to Ranger
Companies of the 75th Infantry began on February 1, 1969. Only
Company D, 151st retained their unit identity and did not become
a 75th Ranger Company, however, they did become a Ranger Company
and continued the mission in Vietnam. Companies C, D, E, F, G,
H, I, K, L, M, N, O and P (Ranger) 75th Infantry conducted
Ranger missions for three years and seven months every day of
the year while in Vietnam.
Like the original unit from whence
their lineage as Neo Marauders was drawn, 75th Rangers came from
Infantry, Artillery, Engineers, Signal, Medical, Military
Police, Food Service, Parachute Riggers and other Army units.
They were joined by former adversaries, the Viet Cong and North
Vietnamese Army Soldiers who became "Kit Carson
Scouts", and fought alongside the Rangers against their
former units and comrades. Unlike Rangers of other eras in the
20th century who trained in the United States or in friendly
nations overseas, LRP and Rangers in Vietnam were activated,
trained and fought in the same geographical areas in Vietnam.
Training was a combat mission for
volunteers. Volunteers were assigned, not accepted in the
various Ranger Companies, until, after a series of patrols, the
volunteer had passed the acid test of a Ranger, Combat, and was
accepted by his peers. Following the peer acceptance, the
volunteer was allowed to wear the black beret and wear the Red,
White and Black scroll shoulder sleeve insignia bearing his
Ranger Company identity. All Long Range Patrol Companies and
75th Ranger Companies were authorized Parachute pay.
Modus
Operandi for patrol insertion varied, however, the helicopter
was the primary means for insertion and exfiltration of enemy
rear areas. Other methods included foot, wheeled, tracked
vehicle, airboats, Navy Swift Boats, and stay behind missions
where the Rangers remained in place as a larger tactical unit
withdrew. False insertions by helicopter was a means of security
from ever present enemy trail watchers. General missions
consisted of locating the enemy bases and lines of
communication.
Special missions included wiretap, prisoner
snatch, Platoon and Company size Raid Missions and Bomb Damage
Assessment (BDA) following B-52 Arc-Light missions. Staffed
initially by graduates of the U.S. Army Ranger School (at the
outset of the war, later by volunteers, some of whom were
graduates of the in-country Ranger School, the Recondo School
and, line company cadres), Paratroopers, and Special Forces
trained men, the bulk of the Ranger volunteers came from the
Soldiers who had no chance to attend the schools, but carried
the fight to the enemy. These Rangers remained with their units
through some of the most difficult patrolling action(s) in Army
history, and frequently fought much larger enemy forces when
compromised on their reconnaissance missions.
Army Chief of Staff Creighton
Abrams, who observed the 75th Ranger operations in Vietnam as
Commander of all U.S. Forces there, selected the 75th Rangers as
the role model for the first U.S. Army Ranger units formed
during peacetime in the history of the U.S. Army.
ABRAM'S OWN
The outbreak of the 1973 Middle
East War prompted the Department of the Army to be concerned
about the need for a light mobile force that could be moved
quickly to any trouble spot in the world. In the fall of 1973,
General Creighton Abrams, Army Chief of Staff formulated the
idea of the reformation of the first battalion-sized Ranger
units since World War II. In January 1974, he sent a message to
the field directing formation of a Ranger Battalion. He selected
its missions and picked the first officers. He felt a tough,
disciplined and elite Ranger unit would set a standard for the
rest of the U.S. Army and that, as Rangers "graduated
" from Ranger units to Regular Army units, their influence
would improve the entire Army. See Abram�s Charter.
On January 25, 1974,
Headquarters, United States Army Forces Command, published
General Orders 127, directing the activation of the 1st
Battalion, 75th Infantry (Ranger), with an effective date of
January 31, 1974. In February, the worldwide selection was begun
and personnel assembled at Fort Benning, Ga., to undergo the
cadre training from March through June 1974. On July 1, 1974,
the 1st Battalion, 75th Infantry (Ranger), parachuted into Fort
Stewart, Ga.
DESERT ONE
The modern Ranger Battalions were
first called upon in 1980 as elements of 1st Battalion, 75th
Infantry (Ranger) to participate in the Iranian hostage rescue
attempts. The ground work of our Special Operations capability
of today was laid during training and preparation for this
operation. Rangers and other Special Operations Forces from
throughout the Department of Defense developed tactics,
techniques, and equipment from scratch, as no doctrine existed
anywhere in the world.
The 2nd Battalion, 75th Infantry
(Ranger) soon followed with activation on October 1, 1974. These
elite units eventually established headquarters at Hunter Army
Airfield, Ga., and Fort Lewis, Wash., respectively.
GRENADA
The farsightedness of General
Abrams' decision, as well as the combat effectiveness of the
Ranger battalions, was proven during the United States'
deployment on October 25, 1983, to Grenada. The mission of the
Rangers was to protect the lives of American citizens and
restore democracy to the island. During this operation,
code-named "URGENT FURY," the 1st and 2d Ranger
Battalions conducted a daring low-level parachute assault (500
feet), seized the airfield at Point Salinas, rescued American
citizens at the True Blue Medical Campus, and conducted air
assault operations to eliminate pockets of resistance.
As a result of the demonstrated
effectiveness of the Ranger Battalions, the Department of the
Army announced in 1984, that if was increasing the size of the
active duty Ranger force to its highest level in 40 years, by
activating another Ranger Battalion and a Ranger Regimental
Headquarters. These new units, the Id Battalion, 75th Infantry
(Ranger), and Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 75th
Infantry (Ranger), received their colors on October 3, 1984, at
Fort Benning, Ga. The activation ceremonies were a step into the
future for the Ranger Regiment, and a link to the past, as they
were held concurrently with the first reunion of the Korean
War-era Rangers. Distinguished visitors and proud Rangers, both
active duty and retired, joined to hail the historic activation
of the Headquarters, 75th Ranger Regiment. On February 3, 1986,
World War II Battalions and Korean War Lineage and Honors were
consolidated and assigned by tradition to the 75th Ranger
Regiment. This marked the first time that an organization of
that size had been officially recognized as the parent
headquarters of the Ranger Battalions.
Not since World War II and
Colonel Darby's Ranger Force Headquarters, had the U.S. Army had
such a large Ranger force, with over 2,000 Soldiers being
assigned to Ranger units.
PANAMA
The entire Ranger Regiment
participated in OPERATION JUST CAUSE, in which U.S. forces
restored democracy to Panama. Rangers spearheaded the action by
conducting two important operations. The 1st Battalion,
reinforced by Company C, 3rd Battalion, and a Regimental Command
and Control Team, conducted an early morning parachute assault
onto Omar Torrijos International Airport and Tocumen Military
Airfield, to neutralize the Panamanian Defense Forces PDF 2nd
Rifle Company, and secure airfields for the arrival of the 82nd
Airborne Division.
The 2nd and 3rd Ranger Battalions and a
Regimental Command and Control Team, conducted a parachute
assault onto the airfield at Rio Hato, to neutralize the PDF 6th
and !Oh Rifle Companies and seize General Manuel Noriega's beach
house. Following the successful completion of these assaults,
Rangers conducted follow-on operations in support of Joint Task
Force (JTF) South. The Rangers captured 1,014 Enemy Prisoners of
War (EPW), and over 18,000 arms of various types. The Rangers
sustained five killed and 42 wounded.
DESERT STORM
Elements of Company B and 1st
Platoon, Company A, 1st Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment deployed
to Saudi Arabia from February 12, 1991 to April 15, 1991, in
support of OPERATION DESERT STORM. The Rangers conducted raids
and provided a quick reaction force in cooperation with Allied
forces; there were no Ranger casualties. The performance of
these Rangers significantly contributed to the overall success
of the operation, and upheld the proud Ranger traditions of the
past.
SOMALIA
From early 1993, to October 21,
1993, Company B and a Command and Control Element of 3rd
Battalion, 75th Ranger Regiment deployed to Somalia to assist
United Nations forces in bringing order to a desperately chaotic
and starving nation. Their mission was to capture key leaders in
order to end clan fighting in and around the City of Mogadishu.
On October 3, 1993, the Rangers conducted a daring daylight raid
in which several special operations helicopters were shot down.
For nearly 18 hours, the Rangers delivered devastating
firepower, killing an estimated 300 Somali's in what many have
called the fiercest ground combat since Vietnam.
Six Rangers
paid the supreme sacrifice in accomplishing their mission. Their
courage and selfless service epitomized the values espoused in
the Ranger Creed, and are indicative of the Ranger spirit of
yesterday, today, and tomorrow.
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unofficial document and does not represent information
endorsed by the United States Government, the United
States Special Operations Command or the United States
Army Special Operations Command. However, most
information is derived from those sources and has been
checked for accuracy. For comments, questions, and
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