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Military unit From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The United States Army's 3rd Cavalry Division was created from the perceived need for additional cavalry units in the interwar period.
3rd Cavalry Division | |
---|---|
Active | 1927–1940 |
Country | United States |
Branch | Regular Army |
Type | Cavalry Division |
The 3rd Cavalry Division was largely a "paper" formation existing from 1927 to 1940. Its units never assembled in a single location or conducted large scale training. It was constituted in the Regular Army but most of the support elements were "Regular Army Inactive" (RAI) units manned with Organized Reserve personnel. The 3rd Cavalry Division never deployed overseas. The Division was disbanded on 10 October 1940.[1]
The 3rd Cavalry Division was constituted in the Regular Army on 15 August 1927, allotted to the Fourth, Sixth, Seventh, and Eighth Corps Areas, and assigned to the Second Army. The division was reassigned to the General Headquarters Reserve (GHQR) as a result of the US Army reorganization of 1933. The 3rd Cavalry Division's designated mobilization station was Fort Des Moines, Iowa, where many of the division’s units were organized with Reserve officers as RAI units and where most of them conducted their annual summer training camps. The 3rd Cavalry Division consisted largely of RAI units; the only active elements of the division in the 1920s and 1930s consisted of the cavalry regiments. Unlike the 2nd Cavalry Division, the 3rd Cavalry Division’s active units were not concentrated in one or two areas, but were spread from coast to coast, but like the 2nd Cavalry Division, however, RAI units of the 3rd Cavalry Division were predominantly located in the Seventh Corps Area with most being initially concentrated in the Kansas City metropolitan area. These units conducted their summer training at Fort Riley, Kansas and were under the peacetime control of the Headquarters, 66th Cavalry Division, for administrative and training purposes. In 1933, several of the division’s RAI units were transferred to the Third Corps Area, but by the late 1930s, most of the division’s RAI units were relocated to Des Moines.
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