120th Infantry Regiment (United States)

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120th Infantry Regiment
Commanders
Notable
commanders
John H. Manning
Insignia
Distinctive unit insignia

The 120th Infantry Regiment ("Third North Carolina"

United States Army National Guard
.

The unit is an organic element of the

. The 1st Battalion, 120th Infantry Regiment (1-120th IN) is headquartered in Wilmington, North Carolina.

The 2nd Battalion, 120th Infantry Regiment was most famous for its actions in the Battle of Mortain (German: Operation Lüttich), repelling a German advance and preserving an American breakout from 7–13 August 1944 as part of the 30th Infantry Division. The 2-120th's actions sustained the American initiative as Allied forces pushed through Northern France after the Normandy invasion.

History

World War I

The 3rd Regiment of Infantry was called into Federal service on 25 July 1917 after the

Camp Jackson, South Carolina on 17 April 1919, preceding the demobilization of the division headquarters there on 7 May.[2]

Interwar period

Armories of the regiment in 1940[4]

The 119th and 120th Infantry Regiments were consolidated and reorganized as the 1st Infantry Regiment of the North Carolina National Guard between 1919 and 1921, with headquarters Federally recognized at Raleigh on 2 May 1921. It was soon redesignated as the 120th Infantry Regiment to restore its World War I designation on 8 November of that year, becoming part of the reformed 30th Infantry Division.[2]

World War II

As a result of

Croix de Guerre with Palm for their actions in the Mortain counterattack, while the 1st Battalion received a DUC for the advance from Duffescheide to Euchen.[3] After the end of the war, the regiment was inactivated at Fort Jackson, South Carolina, on 24 November 1945.[2]

Cold War

Armories of the regiment in 1949[5]