Metropolitan Light Infantry Explained

Unit Name:Company A, 146th Signal Battalion
Dates:1887–
Country:United States
Branch:Florida Army National Guard
Type:Signal (formerly Infantry and Quartermaster)
Size:Company
Garrison:Jacksonville, Florida
Nickname:"Metropolitan Light Infantry"
"Jacksonville Rifles"
Battles:World War I
World War II
Iraq War

Company A, 146th Signal Battalion is a unit of the Florida Army National Guard, stationed in Jacksonville, Florida. The company dates back to 1887 with the founding of the "Metropolitan Light Infantry". For its first 68 years the unit served as an infantry company and deployed as Company F, 124th Infantry during World War II. After WWII the unit reorganized again as infantry, then as a quartermaster company for eight years, and since February 1963 the Metropolitan Light Infantry has been a signal company.

Founding and Spanish–American War service

The Metropolitan Light Infantry company was established on June 7, 1887 in Jacksonville, Florida. In 1893 it was redesignated Company C, 1st Battalion of Florida State Troops under the command of Captain L. H. Mattair. The company under command of Captain James Y. Wilson mustered for service during the Spanish–American War in Jacksonville and took a train at 9 o'clock P.M. on May 13, 1898 to Tampa, arriving the following morning. There they went to Fort Brooke and reorganized as Company F "Jacksonville Rifles", 1st Florida Infantry, mustering into Federal service on May 23.[1] Four days later they marched two miles to Palmetto Beach where they made camp. On July 21 the company took a train to Fernandina arriving on the 22nd. On August 22, the company broke their camp and camped in the streets of Fernandina awaiting their train to Huntsville, Alabama the next morning. They arrived at Huntsville and encamped one mile outside of the city. The company mustered out of Federal service on January 24, 1899 in Huntsville and returned to Florida.[2] In 1903, the Rifles were the first company to win the Florida State Troops' Taliaferro Trophy for marksmanship, a tall and valuable silver cup donated by Florida Senator James Taliaferro.[3]

World War I Service

The unit was mustered into federal service with the First Florida which was redesignated 124th Infantry and mobilized at Camp Wheeler, Georgia. The 124th Infantry deployed to France in July 1918 and was split up to fill other units. After the war, the unit was redesignated as Company F, 154th Infantry in 1921, and then again redesignated Company F, 124th Infantry in 1924.

Interwar Years and World War II

Company F, 124th Infantry mobilized with its parent regiment on November 25, 1940 and trained at Camp Blanding, FL and then Fort Benning, GA. The unit inherits the campaign history and honors of Company F, 2nd Battalion, 124th Infantry which served in New Guinea and Mindanao in the Southern Philippines. Company F and the 124th Infantry were inactivated December 16, 1945 at Camp Stoneman, California

Post World War II

The unit reorganized after WWII as Company F, 124th Infantry under Captain Edward R. Carmody. The unit converted in 1955, under the command of First Lieutenant William B. Smith, as Company B (Field Service), 48th Armored Quartermaster Battalion, part of the 48th Armored Division. On February 15, 1963 Company B and the Headquarters & Headquarters Detachment, 48th Quartermaster Battalion consolidated and converted to its present-day unit, Company C, 146th Signal Battalion.

The Signal Company

In May 1972, Company C moved from the old armory at 851 Market Street to 9900 Normandy Blvd, Jacksonville.[4]

Company C, along with the rest of the 146th Signal Battalion was mobilized and deployed to Iraq from November 23, 2008 to September 19, 2009 where the unit performed tactical and strategic communication network setup, which it earned an Army Meritorious Unit Citation for.

Unit designations

Decorations

RibbonAwardStreamer embroideredOrder No.
Presidential Unit Citation (Army)NEW GUINEA 12 JULY – 1 AUGUST 1944War Department General Order 38-46[11]
Philippine Presidential Unit Citation17 OCTOBER 1944 TO 4 JULY 1945Department of the Army General Order 47-50
Meritorious Unit CommendationIRAQ 23 NOVEMBER 2008 TO 19 SEPTEMBER 2009Permanent Orders 351-10, 15 August 2007[12]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Hawk, Robert. Florida's Army, Militia/State Troops/National Guard 1565–1985. Pineapple Press: Englewood, FL. 1986. p. 113.
  2. Soldiers of Florida in the Seminole Indian-Civil and Spanish–American Wars. Live Oak, Florida: Democrat Print. p. 354. Found at: https://archive.org/details/soldiersofflorid00flor
  3. Report of the Adjutant General of the State of Florida for the Year 1903. Tallahassee, FL: I. B. Hilson, State Printer. 1905. p. 10.
  4. National Guard Authorization Order, NGB-ARO-O 207-02-FL, Reorganization Authority No. 76-73, Change of Station of 146 Signal Battalion FL ARNG, dated 25 May 1973.
  5. Historical Annual of the State of Florida, Army and Navy Publishing Company: Baton Rouge, LA. 1939. p. 104.
  6. National Guard Organization Authority, NG-AROTO 325.4 - Fla, dated 17 OCT 1955.
  7. National Guard Organization Authority, NG-AROTO 325.4 - Fla, dated 17 OCT 1955.
  8. National Guard Organization Authority, NG-AROTO 325.4 - Florida, Reorganization Number 33-59, dated 23 MAR 1959.
  9. National Guard Organization Authority, NG-AROTO 1002-01 - Fla, Reorganization Number 19-63, dated 23 JAN 1963, p 10.
  10. National Guard Organization Authority, NG-ARO-O 207-02-FL, Reorganization Number 444-75, dated 1 AUG 75
  11. Dept of the Army Pamphlet, Unit Citation and Campaign Participation Credit Register, July 1961, p. 174. Retrieved from: http://www.apd.army.mil/epubs/DR_pubs/DR_a/pdf/web/p672_1.pdf
  12. Permanent Order 351-10, U.S. Army Human Resources Command, dated 17 DEC 2009. Retrieved from: https://www.history.army.mil/html/forcestruc/HRC/2009/351-10_20091217_HRCMD.pdf