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145th FIELD ARTILLERY

Constituted B March 1B94 in the Utah National Guard as Light Battery A, Utah Artillery Organized 26 March 1B94 at Salt Lake City

Expanded into Batteries A and B, Utah Volunteer Artillery, and mustered into Federal service 9 May 189B at Fort Douglas; mustered out of Federal service 16 August 1899 at the Presidio of San Francisco, California, and reverted to State control

Reorganized 20 August 1900 in the Utah National Guard as Company G, 1st Utah Infantry at Salt Lake City

Reorganized and re-designated 17 September 1900 as the 1st Battery, Field Artillery; subsequently designated as Battery A

Mustered into Federal service 26 June 1916 at Fort Douglas; mustered out of Federal service 22 December 1916 at Fort Douglas

Consolidated with the 1st Cavalry (Utah) June -July 1917 and reorganized as the 1st Field Artillery

Drafted into Federal service 5 August 1917 at Fort Douglas

Re-designated 3 October 1917 as the 145th Field Artillery and assigned to the 40th Division

Demobilized 21 -29 January 1􀅪19 at Logan

Reconstituted (less cavalry elements) 11 October 1921 in the Utah National Guard as the 145th Field Artillery and assigned to the 40th Division

Organized and federally recognized 13 July 1923 with Headquarters at Salt Lake City

Inducted into Federal service 3 March 1941 at Salt Lake City Relieved 18 February 1942 from assignment to the 40th Division

Regiment broken up in 1942 and elements disbanded or reorganized and re-designated as follows:

Headquarters and Headquarters Battery disbanded 6 June 1942

1st Battalion reorganized and re-designated 24 March 1942 as the 213th Field Artillery Battalion and assigned to the 40th Infantry Division

2d Battalion reorganized and re-designated 6 June 1942 as the 145th Field Artillery Battalion After 1942 the above units underwent changes as follows:

Headquarters and Headquarters Battery reconstituted 25 August 1945 (Headquarters Battery re-designated 25 June 1946 as Headquarters and Headquarters Battery, 145th Field Artillery Group -hereafter separate lineage)

213th Field Artillery Battalion inactivated 7 April 1946 at Camp Stoneman, California

Relieved 25 June 1946 from assignment to the 40th Infantry Division

Reorganized and re-designated 11 December 1946 in the Utah National Guard as the 204th Field Artillery Battalion and federally recognized with Headquarters at Logan

Ordered into active Federal service 19 August 1950 at Logan (204th Field Artillery Battalion [NGUS] organized and federally recognized 11 December 1952 with Headquarters at Logan)

Released from active Federal service 18 March 1955 and reverted to State control: Federal recognition concurrently, withdrawn from the 204th Field Artillery Battalion (NGUS)

145th Field Artillery Battalion inactivated 26 January 1946 in Korea

Reorganized and federally recognized_6 January 1947 with Headquarters at Provo

Ordered into active Federal service 3 September 1950 at Provo

(145th Field Artillery Battalion [NGUS] organized and federally recognized 3 March 1953 with Headquarters at Provo)

Released from active Federal service 18 March 1955: Federal recognition concurrently, withdrawn from the 145th Field Artillery Battalion (NGUS)

Headquarters, 145th Field Artillery, and the 145th and 204th Field Artillery Battalions consolidated, reorganized, and re-designated 1 July 1959 as the 145th Artillery, a parent regiment under the Combat Arms Regimental System, to consist of the 1st and 2d Howitzer Battalions

Reorganized 30 April 1964 to consist of the 1st Howitzer Battalion and 2d Battalion

Reorganized 1 December 1967 to consist of the 1st Battalion

Re-designated 1 May 1972 as the 145th Field Artillery

CAMPAIGN PARTICIPATION CREDIT

War with Spain Manila

Philippine Insurrection Manila Malolos San Isidro

World War I Streamer without inscription

World War II Eastern Mandates Bismarck Archip0laqo Western Pacific Leyte Luzon (with arrowhead; Southern Philicp1nes Ryukyus

Korean War Second Korean winter Korea, summer-fall 1952 Third Korean winter Korea, summer 1953

Battery A (Brigham City) and Battery C (Smithfield), 1st Battalion each additionally entitled to:

Korean War First UN counteroffensive CCF spring offensive UN summer-fall offensive

DECORATIONS Philippine Presidential Unit Citation, Streamer embroidered 17 OCTOBER 1944 TO 4 JULY 1945

Battery A (Brigham City), 1st Battalion additionally entitled to: Presidential Unit Citation (Navy), Streamer embroidered HWACHON RESERVOIR Navy Unit Commendation, Streamer embroidered PANMUNJUN Republic of Korea Presidential Unit Citation, Streamer embroidered UIJONGBU CORRIDOR Republic of Korea Presidential Unit Citation, Streamer embroidered KOREA 1950 -1952

Battery C (Smithfield), 1st Battalion additionally entitled to: Republic of Korea Presidential Unit Citation, Streamer embroidered UIJONGBU CORRIDOR Republic of Korea Presidential Unit Citation, Streamer embroidered KOREA 1950 - 1952