Andrew Shores at Fort Riley

FORT RILEY — The oldest division in the United States Army recognized its hundredth birthday at a Victory with Honors ceremony on post Thursday morning.

The festivities began at 6:30 a.m., when all ten thousand units on post gathered on Custer Hill for a four mile run led by Brigadier General Patrick D. Frank. The ceremony was held on the front lawn of the Infantry Headquarters at 10.

“The most basic of the army standards is the essence of the Big Red One: duty first, and victory,” said Frank in his address.

Brigadier General Patrick D. Frank addressed an audience at the First Infantry Division Headquarters on Thursday morning. Frank said the history of the division makes him proud to be the commanding general. (Staff photo by Andrew Shores)

Soldiers dressed in uniforms from conflicts over the last one hundred years to provide a living history of the army’s oldest division. As a narrator talked about the “Fighting First” division’s success in battle, the uniformed soldiers cased battle streamers representing the regiments who served before them.

The First Infantry Division was organized on June 8 under the command of Brigadier General William L. Sibert, from Army units then in service on the U.S.-Mexico border.  On the morning of Oct. 23, a First Division artillery unit fired the first American shell of the war toward German lines.

Soldiers from the Big Red One were also among the first Americans in North Africa and Italy in World War 2. In 1965, the division was the first on the ground in Vietnam.

The division has been stationed at Fort Riley several times after World War Two, and most recently returned just over a decade ago. Frank said it is an honor wearing the Big Red One uniform every morning, knowing the history of the soldiers who came before him.

“That type of pride… knowing we’ve got soldiers out there in harm’s way – that’s what impacts all ten thousand soldiers who were in the run this morning,” Frank said. “You can really see the pride come out of them, from P-T in the morning to unit formation at night.”

The division has nearly six thousand units serving across the globe in Korea, Iraq, Kuwait, and Afghanistan.

Fort Riley will continue the hundredth anniversary of the First Infantry Division in mid-August during Victory Week.

 

 

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