1st Medical Brigade (United States) explained

Unit Name:1st Medical Brigade
Dates:
3 August 1917 – 12 November 1945
10 June 1950 – 24 March 1962
3 January 1968 – present
Country:US
Branch:Regular Army
Garrison:Fort Cavazos
Nickname:Silver Knights
Motto:Fortitude and Compassion
March:1st Medical Regiment March[1] [2]
Battles:World War I
World War II
Operation Desert Storm
Operation Enduring Freedom
Operation Iraqi Freedom
Notable Commanders:MG Paul R. Hawley
MG George F. Lull
MG Glenn J. Collins
MG Robert D. Tenhet
Current Commander:Colonel Tracy Michael
Anniversaries:28 May, the day the 1st Sanitary Train, 1st Division, AEF began combat operations during the battle of Cantigny, France
Identification Symbol Label:Distinctive unit insignia

The 1st Medical Brigade is a medical brigade of the United States Army. It is located at Fort Cavazos, Texas, providing health care and medical services to the Fort Cavazos community, and continuing training in its combat support mission.

History

World War I

The 1st Sanitary Train, as originally organized, was composed of two battalions—one motorized and one animal drawn. The companies of the battalions had all been raised well before the start of the war, and were assembled as an organization upon arrival in France. Each battalion was composed of two field hospital companies and two ambulance companies. The first elements of the train—composed of ambulance company 6 (later renumbered 13) and field hospital company 6 (later renumbered 13) began movement to Hoboken, New Jersey, where they embarked for Europe on 14 June 1917, arriving in the port of St. Nazaire on 26 June. On 13 August, field hospital companies 2 and 12 and ambulance companies 2 and 12 landed on 1 and 3 September in Liverpool, England, and later moved to La Harve. On 1 December field hospital company 3 departed Fort Bliss, Texas and ambulance company 3 departed Fort Oglethorpe, Georgia, sailed from Hoboken on 5 December, and arrived at St. Nazaire on 22 December, among the last elements of the 1st Division to arrive in France. The 1st Sanitary Train was assembled, finally, in the Gondrecourt training area, where the division trained for combat operations.[3]

The table of organization for a sanitary train called for a total of 927 officers and men. Each ambulance company had 12 ambulances; the animal drawn companies each had 70 mules to pull their ambulances, as well as 24 riding horses. Each field hospital company could hold 236 patients, although it was authorized no nurses; the animal drawn field hospital companies also had 30 mules and 22 riding horses each. In column, the sanitary train stretched for 1,160 yards—more than half a mile.[4]

Sommerville Sector

Ambulance Company 13 of the 1st Sanitary Train was the only American ambulance company operational in the Sommerville sector and furnished litter bearers for duty in the trenches, evacuating patients to Field Hospital 13 (like the ambulance company, an organic unit of the 1st Sanitary Train) and from it to Base Hospital 18 at Bazoilles-sur-Meuse, and to Camp Hospital 1 at Gondrecourt. It did not establish a dressing station, as patients were moved direct by litters and by vehicles from the battalion aid stations to the field hospital. Because of road conditions near the front, the ambulance company's collecting point was some distance in the rear of the aid stations, so the wounded were carried through the trenches to the battalion aid stations and then back an additional 3 km to the collecting point at Bathelemont.[5]

Field Hospital 13 was the only field hospital established for the 1st Division in the Somerville sector. Half of it, including X-ray and other necessary equipment, was located in a residence and two pavilions at Einville; the other half was in part of a hospital at Dombasle. As the base and camp hospitals to which this hospital was to evacuate were 81 km to the rear by road, patients were retained with the portion of Field Hospital 13 at Einville.[5]

Ansauville Sector

The division surgeon's office, headquarters of the sanitary train, and headquarters of the train's field hospital and ambulance sections were at Menil-la-Tour.[6] Medical Department personnel established an aid station at each regimental headquarters and battalion aid stations in battalion areas. The most advanced battalion aid stations were located in dugouts at Seicheprey. Because the village was under direct enemy observation and was shelled frequently, patients had to be evacuated at night, when ambulances could travel the road from Beaumont. Evacuation to the regimental aid stations often required that patients be carried a kilometer or more through trenches which often were knee deep in mud and water. Patients were usually suffering from disease, although a moderate number of men suffering from shell wounds, and on occasion a fairly large number of chemical casualties.[7]

Infantry regimental aid stations were first established Beaumont and Mandres, but on 1 March the station Mandres moved to Bouconville. The aid stations at Beaumont and Bouconville were in basements of partially destroyed buildings and were made provided additional protection from indirect fire using logs, sandbags, and stone. The road between Beaumont and Mandres was especially dangerous, as it was shelled day and night, causing many casualties. The regimental aid station of the 16th Infantry at Mandres had at first functioned also as a dressing station, but on 1 March 1918, this service was taken over by Ambulance Company 2, until they, in turn, were relieved by Ambulance Company 3 on 27 March. The station treated chemical casualties as well as other cases and to a limited degree acted as a triage point. It was on the axial road and occupied a building whose walls had been protected by thick sandbags, but occasionally when receiving indirect fire it utilized a dugout which it had constructed nearby.Ambulance Company 13 operated ambulances from Menil-la-Tour and provided litter bearers to forward units until relieved by Ambulance Company 12 on 21 March 1918. That ambulance company, augmented by vehicles from other companies, maintained headquarters and an ambulance park at Menil-la-Tour, dispatching ambulances to the dressing station at Mandres and to forward units. Other ambulances were attached to unit aid stations at important points in rear areas of the sector.[8]

Evacuation Ambulance Company 1 from the Services of Supply maintained two ambulances at Field Hospital 13 for evacuation to Sebastopol, where twenty ambulances were available for use during periods of heavy casualties.[8]

The different ambulance circuits, in forward and rear areas, were established for dealing with battle casualties, with a third circuit for the routine sick. The front circuit was maintained by Ford ambulances working forward from Mandres and returning to deliver patients to the dressing station there. Pertaining to it were emergency ambulances stationed at Beaumont, Rambucourt, and Bouconville, and at times at Seicheprey, with reserve at Mandres. The advance point to which ambulances could go by daylight was on the Beaumont-Bouconville road paralleling the front line and 2 km from it. At night ambulances could be sent forward to Xivray-Marvoisin and Seicheprey, 1 km from the front line. When circumstances warranted the risk, ambulances stationed at Seicheprey could evacuate from Seicheprey by day, but not as a routine measure. The rear circuit of heavy G. M. C. ambulances began at Mandres, where patients were carried to a fixed evacuation hospital. In order to cut down transportation, patients who could stand the longer trip to Toul or to Sebastopol were sent directly from Mandres and were not required to stop at the triage at Menil-la-Tour. Patients were distributed from Mandres as follows: (1) Seriously wounded and sick who could not stand long ambulance transportation, to Menil-la-Tour; (2) chemical agent casualties to Menil-la-Tour; (3) surgical cases to Sebastopol; (4) and sick and contagious diseases to Toul. A few ambulances for this circuit were maintained at Mandres, with reserve at Menil-la-Tour. At times of expected periods of high casualties, the ambulance park was advanced to Hamonville, and ambulances and trucks were dispatched to Mandres as needed.[9]

In quiet times a routine circuit of ambulances was maintained, daily calls being made at all aid stations within the division area that could be reached for the collection of sick and slightly wounded to be triaged at Menil-la-Tour, allowing placement of ambulances posted at outlying aid stations for emergency use.[10]

Field Hospital 13 became operational on 17 January 1918 at Menil-la-Tour, in barracks taken over from a French field hospital and equipped for the care of 200 patients. This served at first as a divisional hospital and, after hospitals in the rear began functioning as a triage, for the reception of chemical casualties and some ill patients until relieved about 31 March by a field hospital of the 26th Division. The location was poorly suited for a hospital because of its proximity to a large supply dump and railhead subject to indirect fire. Several attacks occurred and missiles impacted within a hundred yards of the hospital, but no artillery fire was ever received.[10]

Patients began to be received immediately after arrival of the 1st Division in the sector. Seven wounded were admitted on 21 January, and sixty-two chemical casualties on the 26th, the first chemical casualties in the division. Of the 674 patients received by Field Hospital 13, 323—nearly half of all patients treated—were due to chemical agents.[10]

Field Hospital 12, after being held in reserve, became operational on 23 January at Sebastopol in large, permanent, stone barracks. It functioned as an evacuation and surgical hospital until relieved on 4 February by Evacuation Hospital 1, which then assumed responsibility for care of the seriously wounded. The field hospital personnel had been previously augmented by details from Ambulance Companies 3 and 13. Field Hospital 12 moved 6 February to a large stone barracks—Caserne la Marche—at Toul, where it established a 400-bed hospital for the divisional sick. Since the barracks were large and readily adapted for use as a hospital, the field hospitals here supplemented their normal equipment with the addition of large quantities of supplies suitable for the proper maintenance of a semi-permanent hospital.Field Hospital 2 arrived at Toul on 18 February and established an annex to Field Hospital 12 for the care of contagious cases. It operated until 2 April, when the annex was turned over to a hospital of the 26th Division.[11]

Field Hospitals 12 and 13 evacuated by train from Toul to base hospitals in the rear those cases which did not require surgical attention at Evacuation Hospital 1. This continued until about 3 April, when the facilities were turned over to hospitals of the 26th Division. In this sector Field Hospital 13 received 889 patients (not including those triaged directly to other hospitals) and Field Hospitals 12 and 2 received a combined total of 2,482 patients. As Evacuation Hospital 1 received most of the wounded, their patients were primarily those that were ill, and chemical casualties.[12]

The sick rate of the division was three times that for battle casualties. More than two-thirds of those cases were minor, and most of the patients were returned to duty in a short time directly from the field hospitals. The prevailing diseases in the division in the sector were respiratory or intestinal. Sporadic cases of cerebrospinal meningitis, diphtheria, scarlet fever, mumps, and measles occurred, but no epidemic developed. A camp for venereal cases was established southeast of Raulecourt, and patients who were able to do so were put to work as laborers on road construction and similar heavy work.[12]

The medical supply unit of the division, with a large stock, was maintained at Demange-aux-Eaux in the division rear. An advance medical supply depot was operated by Field Hospital 13 at Menil-la-Tour for issue to all organizations in advance areas. An advance subdepot was maintained at the dressing station at Mandres, for the distribution of supplies by ambulance or runners to front-line aid stations.[12]

The 1st Division was relieved 1–3 April 1918, by the 26th Division and proceeded to the neighborhood of Chaumont-en-Vexin, where headquarters were established 8 April. For the next 10 days the division was trained in open warfare, activities consisting chiefly of brigade and division maneuvers. Regiments evacuated the disabled directly into the French hospitals at Gisors.[12]

Cantigny Sector

The offensive launched by the Germans on 21 March 1918 placed the Allies in a desperate situation. The lack of complete cooperation among the Allies on the Western Front had been appreciated, and the question of preparation to meet the crisis had already received attention of the supreme war council. Reserves were not available and on 28 March, the 1st Division was placed at the disposal of the allied high command, starting movement toward the battle front on 17 April. On 25 April it took over the Cantigny sector 4.9 km west of Montdidier, relieving French troops and becoming a part of the French First Army. During the first six weeks that the division remained in this line the sector was very active; the remaining period was active. Battery positions were made untenable by high-explosive and chemical shells. Air raids were frequent and severe.[13]

On 27 May 1918, the Germans attacked Chateau-Thierry, and when the French appreciated how serious and how successful the attack was they began to withdraw both their air squadrons and supporting artillery from the Cantigny sector. On the 28th the 1st Division made the first sustained American offensive of the war and captured the village of Cantigny—a date later chosen by the 1st Medical Regiment as its Organization Day. Because of determined German efforts to retake the salient, losses were greater after the attack than during it. Beauvais, where a Red Cross hospital was located 38.4 km to the rear, suffered very severely. Hospitals were not immune from attack, and operation of the evacuation system, particularly at night, was very difficult.[14]

Meuse-Argonne

After the Armistice was signed, the 1st Sanitary train marched with the rest of the 1st Division to the Coblenz Bridgehead as part of the US Third Army, which served as part of the Army of Occupation.[15]

Supporting the Medical Field Service School

In support of the 1929 class of the Officer Basic Course at the Medical Field Service School, the regiment accompanied the students—all officers—on their field training exercise, this year conducted on the battlefield at Gettysburg. Students worked problems involving terrain exercises, while the 1st Medical Regiment then demonstrated the approved school solution.[16]

By 1930, the regiment was well integrated into the activities of the school. The regiment was maintained at "full peacetime strength," which equated to the regimental headquarters, a service company, a hospital company, a collecting company, a veterinary company, and two ambulance companies—one motorized and one animal drawn. In addition to serving as the demonstration unit for the school, most of the officers and noncommissioned officers who taught there were drawn from the ranks of the regiment, and senior officers in the regiment frequently moved into department directors in the school after completing their time in the regiment. The Medical Equipment Laboratory, charged with studying and developing equipment and transportation for medical department troops and installations frequently turned to the regiment for assistance in testing equipment in the field, particularly for battalion aid stations and equipment used by the medical regiments of the divisions.[16]

The Ohio river floods, 1937

In January and February 1937, the Ohio and Mississippi rivers flooded over 12,700 square miles in twelve states. As part of the Federal response, The 1st Medical Regiment's Company G (Hospital), under the command of Captain Alvin L. Gorby (who would later command the regiment, and who retired as a major general) arrived by train on 30 January. The company included six medical corps officers and 93 enlisted men, with another 21 enlisted and ten ambulances from the regiment's Company E (Motor Ambulance), who were sent to Fort Benjamin Harrison, Indiana to provide support in that area. Inspecting a school building which had been used as an improvised hospital for the prior week by local volunteers, he found it an excellent facility with a modern structure, indoor plumbing, and a cafeteria. Moving his soldiers into rooms on the top floor, he quickly established hospital operations, reorganizing what he found on arrival was an "appalling lack of organization." When the water pressure proved to be inadequate, he had his troops dig latrines on the school grounds and had water for other purposes trucked in.[17]

Once that hospital was up and running, the company assumed responsibility for a typhoid inoculation station, then repaired and reorganized a second school which was being used as a segregated facility for black patients. During the 13 days the company operated in Louisville, they provided more than 5,000 inoculations and provided over 2,000 patient-days of care in the two improvised hospitals they were running. This relief operation would be the Army's last major domestic relief operation before the start of the World War II.[17]

The Last Reunion of the Blue and Grey, 1938

[18]

Supporting NATO

During most of September 1950 the 1st Medical Group participated in a major exercise called "Rainbow." Following spring 1950 a command post exercise named "Shamrock," this exercise saw most of the US medical units in Germany deploy their headquarters elements to the field, as well as sending as many operational elements as could be spared. Although medical play within the Communications Zone was simulated, soldiers role playing as patients were moved between the units in the field in Germany. In all, 40% of all Medical Corps and 20% of all Nurse Corps officers in Germany participated, with most units, according to published reports, rated as "Excellent" in their performance.[19]

The French Communications Zone

Fort Sam Houston

One of the responsibilities of the 1st Medical Group and its subordinate units at Fort Sam Houston, Texas, was to serve as a test-bed for the Medical Equipment Test and Evaluation Division of the United States Army Medical Materiel Agency. Established in 1964 and based at Fort Sam Houston, the test and evaluation division was responsible for testing new medical products and equipment for suitability for the Army's use. Much as they had done at Carlisle Barracks decades earlier, the 1st Medical Group's units at Fort Sam Houston, including a MUST equipped combat support hospital and an air ambulance company, provided a readily available platform for testing equipment under field conditions.[20]

Subordinate units

World War II

1 February 1945

1 March 1945

23 March 1945

1 May 1945

Cold War

Frankfurt, 10 June 1950

1st Medical Group

Southwest Asia

Operation Desert Shield

Operation Desert Storm

Current

Units of the 1st Medical Brigade:[26]

Former Commanders

class=unsortableImage !class=unsortableRank !Name BranchBegin Date End Date class=unsortableNotes
SortnameBailey K. Ashford MCAshford's primary duty was as the Division Surgeon.
SortnameCharles Carroll Demmer[27] MCA new Table of Organization authorized separate positions for the commander of the 1st Sanitary Train and the 1st Division Surgeon; Ashford remained the Division Surgeon.
SortnameHarry G. Ford MC
SortnameJames I. Mabee MC
SortnameEdwin B. Maynard Jr. MCMajor Maynard received the Silver Star for gallantry in action on 18–21 July 1918 for recovering wounded from the battlefield while assigned to the 1st Sanitary Train
SortnameHerbert C. Wolley MC
SortnameJoseph E. Bastion MCPromoted to Brigadier General 23 June 1943; Served as Commanding General, Percy Jones General Hospital, Battle Creek, Michigan.[28]
SortnameHenry S. Beckford MC
SortnameWood S. Woolford MCServed with the Army Air Forces in World War II and transferred to the United States Air Force upon its formation, retiring as a colonel.
! align=center !!Reorganized and Redesignated 1st Medical Regiment
SortnameFrank A. Pyles MC[29]
SortnameWilliam C. Russell MC
SortnameJohn J. Carden MC
SortnameJoseph E. Bastion MCMajor Bastion had previously commanded the 1st Sanitary Train in France. Promoted to Brigadier General 23 June 1943; Served as Commanding General, Percy Jones General Hospital, Battle Creek, Michigan.
SortnameGarfield L. McKinney MC
SortnameRobert P. Williams MCPromoted to Brigadier General 27 May 1949.
SortnameJohn M. Willis MCCommand Surgeon, United States Army Pacific Ocean Areas;[30] Namesake of Willis Hall, United States Army Medical Department Center and School, Fort Sam Houston, Texas
SortnameFrank S. Matlack MC
SortnameLarry B. McAfee MCPromoted to Brigadier General 1 March 1941. Executive Officer to the Surgeon General; Assistant Surgeon General; Commanding General, Bruns General Hospital, Santa Fe, New Mexico
SortnameFrank S. Matlack MC
SortnameJacob L. Hartman VCPromoted to Brigadier General 3 March 1953; Chief, Army Veterinary Corps
SortnameFrank S. Matlack MC
SortnameLanphear W. Webb Jr. MC
SortnameHoward T. Wickert MC
SortnameGeorge F. Lull MCPromoted to Brigadier General 11 March 1943; Promoted to Major General 24 September 1943. Deputy Army Surgeon General
SortnameMCPromoted to Brigadier General 10 September 1942; Promoted to Major General 27 February 1944. Chief Surgeon, European Theater of Operations; Acting Medical Director, Veterans Administration under Omar Bradley.
SortnameAlvin L. Gorby MCPromoted to Brigadier General 11 September 1951; Promoted to Major General 7 May 1954.Second Army Surgeon; Senior Medical Advisor, Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense (Health Affairs); Deputy Commander, Walter Reed Army Medical Center; Chief Surgeon, US Army Europe; Commanding General, Valley Forge General Hospital.
SortnameRobert P. Williams MCPromoted to Brigadier General 27 May 1949.
SortnameWilson C. von Kessler MC
SortnamePaul R. E. Sheppard MC
SortnameJohn B. Minna MC
SortnamePaul H. Martin MC
SortnameHarry H. Towler MC
SortnameEaton W. Bennett MC
SortnameRobert B. Skinner MCPromoted to Brigadier General 31 October 1959; commander, 9th Hospital Center, USAREUR; commander, Fitzsimmons General Hospital.
SortnameBenjamin Woro MC
SortnameCharles W. Mason MC
SortnameGlenn J. Collins MCPromoted to Brigadier General 25 October 1965; Promoted to Major General 1 August 1968. As a brigadier general, Collins would command the 44th Medical Brigade in the Republic of Vietnam. As a major general, he would command the Walter Reed Army Medical Center and serve as Deputy Army Surgeon General.[31]
! align=center !!Reorganized and Redesignated 1st Medical Group
SortnameLester P. Viegel MCColonel Viegel transferred to the United States Air Force upon its creation and died while still on active duty in 1959.[32]
SortnameHarry L. Gans MACCaptain Gans served as the Headquarters Detachment commander and assumed command of the Group when all the other headquarters officers were released. He would again command the Group in 1971–1972, making his first and last assignments as a commissioned officer in the 1st Medical Group.
! align=center !Inactivated
SortnameJohn Lemoin Crawford MCPromoted to brigadier general, Army of the United States 25 June 1968, commanded 9th Hospital Center in Germany and Madigan General Hospital, Fort Lewis, Washington[33] [34]
SortnameAlbert H. Robinson MC
SortnameEdwin H. Czapla MS
SortnameJohn A. Mikuluk MS
SortnameJoseph T. Caples MC
SortnameNorman Lepper MC
SortnameJoseph K. Bayne MCAlso served as Command Surgeon, Theater Support Command (TASCOM), Verdun, France[35]
SortnameSamuel M. Allen MC
SortnameAndrew F. Scheele MCAlso served as commander of the 42nd Field Hospital, Verdun, France. Scheele was a veteran of both Pearl Harbor and the Normandy landings.[36]
SortnameJohn H. Taber MC
! align=center !Inactivated
SortnameJohn E. Burns MS
SortnameWilliam E. Schlarb MS
SortnameRaymond P. Bosworth MS
SortnameHarry L. Gans MSCOL Gans also briefly commanded the Group in 1945, as a captain, during its inactivation.
SortnameWill J. Cummings MS
SortnameGeorge R. Lynch MS
SortnameHomer B. Moran MS
SortnameEdward R. Pedersen MS
SortnameJohn R. Sperandio MS Namesake of the John R. Sperandio Medical Plans, Operations, Training, Security, and Intelligence Professional Short Course, sponsored by the Office of the Army Surgeon General.
SortnameJohn S. Timberlake III MS
SortnameHenry J. Waters MSColonel Waters originated the nickname "Silver Knights."[37]
SortnameJames R. Sawyer MS
SortnameEldon H. Ideus MS[38]
SortnameDavid C. Jackson MS
SortnameRobert D. Deaderick MS[39]
SortnameFrank Novier MS
SortnameEmil F. Meis MS
SortnameJohnny L. West MS
! align=center !!Reorganized and Redesignated 1st Medical Brigade
SortnameJoseph C. Hightower MS[40]
SortnameTerry Walters MCColonel Waters graduated the United States Military Academy in the first class of female graduates.[41]
SortnameJames Rice MS[42]
SortnameRobert D. Tenhet MSLater promoted to major general and served as Deputy Army Surgeon General.
SortnameLee Roupe MS[43]
SortnameBruce W. McVeigh MS[44]
SortnameBertram C. Providence MCPromoted to brigadier general on 2 November 2014.[45]
SortnameAllen J. Darden Sr. MS[46]
SortnameAnthony R. Nesbitt MS[47]
SortnameRobert F. Howe II MS[48]
SortnameRoger Giraud MS

Lineage

Constituted 3 August 1917 in the Regular Army as Headquarters, 1st Sanitary Train, assigned to the 1st Expeditionary Division and organized at New York, New York. (1st Expeditionary Division redesignated 6 July 1918 as 1st Division.)[49]

Redesignated 10 February 1921 as Headquarters, 1st Medical Regiment.[49]

Relieved from the 1st Division, consolidated with Service Company, 1st Medical Regiment (organized during June 1925 at Carlisle Barracks, Pennsylvania by consolidation of Headquarters Detachment, Medical Laboratory Section, and Medical Supply Section, 1st Medical Regiment.[49]

Reorganized and redesignated 8 October 1939 as Headquarters, Headquarters and Service Company, 1st Medical Regiment (Corps).[49]

Redesignated 16 December 1940 Headquarters, Headquarters and Service Company, 1st Medical Regiment (Army).

Reorganized and redesignated 1 September 1943 as Headquarters and Headquarters Detachment, 1st Medical Group.

Inactivated 12 November 1945 in Fort Benning, Georgia

Activated 10 June 1950 in Frankfurt, Federal Republic of Germany

Inactivated 24 March 1962 in Verdun, France.

Activated 3 January 1968 at Fort Sam Houston, Texas.

Reorganized and redesignated 6 June 2000 as Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 1st Medical Brigade

Honors

Campaign participation credit

  1. Lorraine
    1. Montdidier-Noyon Picardy
      1. Aisne-Marne Saint-Mihiel Meuse-Argonne
  1. Rhineland
  2. Central Europe
  1. Defense of Saudi Arabia;
  2. Liberation and Defense of Kuwait

Decorations

  1. Southwest Asia 1990–1991[50]
  2. Southwest Asia 2003[51]
  3. Southwest Asia 2006[52]
  4. Southwest Asia 2010[53]
  5. Afghanistan 2012[54]

Insignia

Shoulder sleeve insignia

On a white rectangle arced at top and bottom with a 1/8 inch (.32 cm) yellow border, 2 inches (5.08 cm) in width and 3 inches (7.62 cm) in height overall, a maroon cross throughout bearing a yellow rod entwined by a green snake with a red eye.

Maroon and white are the colors used by the Army Medical Department units; gold is for excellence. The staff of Aesculapius and the maroon cross, symbolize the medical arts and allude to the mission of the Brigade.

The shoulder sleeve insignia was authorized effective 6 June 2000. (TIOH Dwg. No. A-1-844)[55]

Distinctive unit insignia

A maroon shield bearing within a wreath of silver oak leaves the helmet of an esquire charged with the shoulder sleeve insignia of the First Division, a shield with the figure "1." All above a silver scroll bearing the inscription "FORTITUDE AND COMPASSION" in black letters.

Maroon and white (silver) are the colors used for the Army Medical Service. The red numeral "1" on an olive drab shield is the shoulder sleeve insignia of the 1st Division as authorized 31 October 1918, and with which the unit served in World War I. The helmet indicates the military character of the organization.

The distinctive unit insignia was originally approved for the 1st Medical Regiment on 19 December 1923.
It was redesignated and amended to include a motto for the 1st Medical Group on 20 March 1968.
The insignia was amended to correct the symbolism on 26 April 1968.
It was redesignated for the 1st Medical Brigade effective 6 June 2000.[55]

References

Sources

External links

Official website http://www.hood.army.mil/1stMed/S3.aspx
From the Roer to the Elbe with the 1st Medical Group: Medical Support of the Deliberate River Crossing http://history.amedd.army.mil/booksdocs/wwii/fromroertoelbe/default.htm

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Army Medical Department Regiment. 18 March 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160310164156/http://ameddregiment.amedd.army.mil/music.html. 10 March 2016. dead.
  2. Web site: Army Medical Department Regiment. 18 March 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160610162306/http://ameddregiment.amedd.army.mil/music/regimental.html/. 10 June 2016. dead.
  3. Web site: Order of Battle of the United States Land Forces in the World War, Volume 2. 21 March 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160321084046/http://www.history.army.mil/html/books/023/23-2/index.html. 21 March 2016. dead.
  4. Web site: Trains – Infantry division – Sanitary. 21 March 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20161224060731/http://history.amedd.army.mil/booksdocs/wwi/fieldoperations/appendtble36.pdf. 24 December 2016. dead.
  5. http://history.amedd.army.mil/booksdocs/wwi/fieldoperations/chapter9.html The United States Army Medical Department in the World War, Volume VIII: Field Operations, Washington, DC: USGPO 1925, pages 291–292.
  6. http://history.amedd.army.mil/booksdocs/wwi/fieldoperations/chapter9.html The United States Army Medical Department in the World War, Volume VIII: Field Operations, Washington, DC: USGPO 1925, page 292.
  7. http://history.amedd.army.mil/booksdocs/wwi/fieldoperations/chapter9.html The United States Army Medical Department in the World War, Volume VIII: Field Operations, Washington, DC: USGPO 1925, pages 292–293.
  8. http://history.amedd.army.mil/booksdocs/wwi/fieldoperations/chapter9.html The United States Army Medical Department in the World War, Volume VIII: Field Operations, Washington, DC: USGPO 1925, page 293.
  9. http://history.amedd.army.mil/booksdocs/wwi/fieldoperations/chapter9.html The United States Army Medical Department in the World War, Volume VIII: Field Operations, Washington, DC: USGPO 1925, pages 293–294.
  10. http://history.amedd.army.mil/booksdocs/wwi/fieldoperations/chapter9.html The United States Army Medical Department in the World War, Volume VIII: Field Operations, Washington, DC: USGPO 1925, page 294.
  11. http://history.amedd.army.mil/booksdocs/wwi/fieldoperations/chapter9.html The United States Army Medical Department in the World War, Volume VIII: Field Operations, Washington, DC: USGPO 1925, pages 294–295.
  12. http://history.amedd.army.mil/booksdocs/wwi/fieldoperations/chapter9.html The United States Army Medical Department in the World War, Volume VIII: Field Operations, Washington, DC: USGPO 1925, page 295.
  13. http://history.amedd.army.mil/booksdocs/wwi/fieldoperations/chapter9.html The United States Army Medical Department in the World War, Volume VIII: Field Operations, Washington, DC: USGPO 1925, pages 295–296.
  14. http://history.amedd.army.mil/booksdocs/wwi/fieldoperations/chapter9.html The United States Army Medical Department in the World War, Volume VIII: Field Operations, Washington, DC: USGPO 1925, pages 296–297.
  15. Web site: Conduct of training in the 1st Medical Regiment.
  16. Web site: Medical Field Service School.
  17. Web site: Army flood relief in the Ohio River flood area: An account of the activities of Company G, 1st Medical Regiment.
  18. Web site: Blue and Gray reunion at Gettysburg, Pa, June 29 – July 6, 1938. 23 March 2016. 5 April 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160405001010/http://cdm15290.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/singleitem/collection/p15290coll6/id/535/rec/12/. dead.
  19. Web site: Medical service's part in exercise rainbow.
  20. Web site: HSC Mercury, April 1976.
  21. Web site: Figure 1. Task organization. 1st Medical Group. 1 February 1945. 15 March 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20161230113929/http://history.amedd.army.mil/booksdocs/wwii/fromroertoelbe/figures/figure1p23.pdf. 30 December 2016. dead.
  22. Web site: Figure 2. Task organization. 1st Medical Group. 1 March 1945. 15 March 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20170207111336/http://history.amedd.army.mil/booksdocs/wwii/fromroertoelbe/figures/figure2p31.pdf. 7 February 2017. dead.
  23. Web site: Figure 3. Task organization. 1st Medical Group. 24 March 1946. 15 March 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20161220135957/http://history.amedd.army.mil/booksdocs/wwii/fromroertoelbe/figures/figure3p44.pdf. 20 December 2016. dead.
  24. Web site: Figure 4. Task organization, 1st Medical Group, 1 May 1945. 15 March 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20161220141600/http://history.amedd.army.mil/booksdocs/wwii/fromroertoelbe/figures/figure4p55.pdf. 20 December 2016. dead.
  25. Web site: Declassified Images. 14 March 2016. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20121017205602/http://www.gulflink.osd.mil/declassimages/otsg/19961030/102996_sep96_decls6_0001.html. 17 October 2012.
  26. Web site: Fort Hood, Texas – 1st Medical Brigade.
  27. New York, U.S., Abstracts of World War I Military Service, 1917-1919 for Charles Carroll Demmer from New York State Archives, box 680 via Ancestry.com
  28. Official Register of the United States, USGPO, 1943
  29. Web site: U.S. Army Order of Battle 1919–1941. 31 December 2019 .
  30. Web site: APPENDIX A: Chief Surgeons of Important U.S. Oversea Commands . 31 December 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160312022941/http://history.amedd.army.mil/booksdocs/wwii/orgadmin/org_admin_wwii_appndxA.htm . 12 March 2016 . dead .
  31. Official Biography, Glen L. Collins, Army Medical Department History and Heritage Center, Fort Sam Houston, Texas/
  32. Web site: Office of Medical History.
  33. Web site: "Medical Unit to Train for Combat Roles" The Stars and Stripes (European Edition), 24 June 1950.
  34. Army Register, 1961, Volume 1, page 116.
  35. Web site: Commentary [Oct. 1960]].
  36. Web site: Commentary [Oct. 1960]].
  37. Web site: The Fort Hood Sentinel (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 9, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 23, 1987. The Portal to Texas History.
  38. Web site: The Fort Hood Sentinel (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 2, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 8, 1991. The Portal to Texas History.
  39. Web site: The Fort Hood Sentinel (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 49, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 12, 1993. The Portal to Texas History.
  40. Web site: 1st Medical Brigade has new commanding officer. Temple Daily Telegram.
  41. Web site: LTC Terry Waters: Brigade Surgeon in Somalia.
  42. Web site: Col. James Rice off to serve as director of Wounded Warrior. Killeen Daily Herald.
  43. Web site: McVeigh new leader of 1st Medical Brigade. Killeen Daily Herald.
  44. Web site: McVeigh new leader of 1st Medical Brigade. Killeen Daily Herald.
  45. Web site: 1st Medical Brigade greets new commander. Spc. Bradley Wancour (FORSCOM). 29 January 2013.
  46. Web site: 1st Med. Bde. to host Change of Command Ceremony, Jun 27. 18 March 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160603192141/http://www.forthoodpresscenter.com/go/doc/3439/2185113/. 3 June 2016. dead.
  47. Web site: 1st Med Welcomes New Commander, Jul 07.
  48. Web site: 1st Medical Brigade bids farewell to commander; highlights recent accomplishments. Fort Hood Herald. 7 September 2021.
  49. Web site: 1st Medical Brigade. 6 February 2020. 7 February 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200207024829/https://history.amedd.army.mil/unitpages/units/1st.html. dead.
  50. Web site: HRC Homepage. Hrc.army.mil. 19 June 2019.
  51. Web site: HRC Homepage. Hrc.army.mil. 19 June 2019.
  52. Web site: HRC Homepage. Hrc.army.mil. 19 June 2019.
  53. Web site: HRC Homepage. Hrc.army.mil. 19 June 2019.
  54. Web site: HRC Homepage. Hrc.army.mil. 19 June 2019.
  55. Web site: Combat Service Identification Badge. 26 August 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20160305142313/http://www.tioh.hqda.pentagon.mil/Catalog/HeraldryMulti.aspx?CategoryId=3773&grp=2&menu=Uniformed%20Services%2F. 5 March 2016. dead.