164th Air Defense Artillery Brigade (United States) explained

Unit Name:164th Air Defense Artillery Brigade
Country:United States
Type:Air defense artillery
Branch:Florida Army National Guard
Dates:2004 – present
Size:Brigade
Garrison:Orlando, Florida
Current Commander:COL Adam M. Curry
Identification Symbol Label:Distinctive unit insignia

The 164th Air Defense Artillery Brigade is an air defense artillery brigade of the United States Army as part of the Florida Army National Guard.

The unit is headquartered in Orlando, Florida on the site of the former McCoy Air Force Base and is composed of two air defense artillery battalions and one field artillery battalion located at 12 National Guard armories across Central Florida.

Units

Peacetime mission command:

Commanders

Commander From To
BG Stephen "Steve" Villacorta1 September 200231 August 2007*
BG James "Don" Tyre1 September 200730 April 2009
BG Francis "Frank" Laudano III1 May 200913 October 2012
COL Matthew "Matt" Hearon14 October 20126 August 2015
COL Grant C. Slayden7 August 20152 August 2018
COL Sean T. Boyette3 August 201810 September 2022
COL Adam M. Curry11 September 2022Present

Recent Activities

The unit has supported the homeland defense mission through seven deployments commanding a multi-component task force responsible for securing the airspace in and around the National Capital Region.[1] The latest deployment is Task Force Apollo.[2]

In 2016, the brigade headquarters participated in Warfighter 16–3, a corps-level exercise in Fort Carson, Colorado, that allowed the unit to practice its warfighting functions, integrate as a fully functioning staff, and achieve its training objectives of planning and executing a theater-level air defense mission.[3]

In response to Hurricane Matthew, the brigade was activated in its entirety, with 1,139 Soldiers assigned to 14 counties from 6–10 October 2016. Brigade Soldiers staffed 21 shelter in 5 counties for 3,304 displaced persons; distributed 34,824 bottles of water, 17,364 MREs, and 377 tarps at 6 Point of Distribution Sites; and conducted one security mission.[4]

Later in 2016, the brigade headquarters participated in Yama Sakura 71, a theater-level exercise on Kyushu, Japan to enhance the U.S. and Japan's combat readiness and interoperability, strengthen bilateral relationships, and demonstrate U.S. resolve to support the security interests of allies and partners in the Indo-Asia-Pacific region.[5]

In response to Hurricane Irma, the brigade was activated in its entirety and augmented with almost 400 Airmen, as well as Emergency Assistance Compact (EMAC) forces from the Georgia National Guard (both Army and Air), the New Jersey Army National Guard, and the United States Army Reserve, performing missions in 27 counties from 7–23 September 2017. Brigade Soldiers rescued hundreds of persons from rising water; staffed 79 shelters for 10,260 displaced persons; distributed 1,914,864 bottles of water, 1,013,808 MREs, and 366 tons of ice at 40 Point of Distribution Sites; and conducted six security missions.[6] The University of Central Florida housed many brigade units in their stadium and practice field house, made available because of a canceled football game.[7]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Joint Task Force Archangel departs to NCR.
  2. Web site: 164th Air Defense Artillery Brigade's Task Force Apollo departure ceremony B-Roll.
  3. Web site: 164th Air Defense Artillery Brigade . 12 May 2017 . 12 May 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170512014714/http://fl.ng.mil/commands/Pages/164th-Air-Defense-Artillery-Brigade.aspx . dead .
  4. After Action Report
  5. Web site: Japan, U.S. Forces unite in Yama Sakura 71.
  6. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MEFvsUJwOWQ and After Action Report
  7. Web site: UCFSports - UCF shows appreciation to National Guard troops. 12 September 2017 .