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The Leon-Journal Reporter Leon, Iowa Thursday, October 4,
1917
THE RAINBOW DIVISION Many Persons Have
Wondered Why It Was Thus Named— President Wilson Suggested It.
Sergeant Major John W. Ball, a well known Des Moines
newspaper man, who is with the 168th Infantry, has written from
Camp Albert Mills, at Hempstead, N. Y., telling something in
regard to how the Rainbow Division came to be known by this name,
and we have heard a number of Leon people ask the question, but
no one was able to give an answer to the question. Sergeant Ball
writes:
Why was the Forty-second division, the National
Guard organization honored with the first call to service in
France, named the Rainbow Division?
That is a question
which has puzzled many since the men were called out.
An
answer came yesterday when Secretary of War, Newton D. Baker, and
Chief of the General Staff Major General Tasker H. Bliss visited
Camp Mills to review the soldiers preparing for the trenches
overseas. For my information on the subject, I am indebted to
Lieut. Col. Matthew A. Tinley, of the One Hundred and
Sixty-eighth (Iowa) regiment.
The idea of a National Guard
Division comprising practically every section of the country had
its origin with President Wilson, it develops. He submitted it to
Secretary Baker who told the general staff to make plans for
organizing such a division for immediate service abroad. In the
general staff, it received further endorsement.
When
finally the plans were completed they were laid before Secretary
Baker for his approval. Twenty-six and the District of Columbia
were represented and the territory from which the men were drawn
was marked in a sort of semi-circle on a map on which every state
was set in a different color.
The secretary of war
studied the map a moment and then remarked: “It forms a regular
bow, doesn’t it?”
Some one amplified the secretary’s
remark by pointing at the multi-colored map and remarking: “Yes,
a rainbow. The emblem of hope for this country.”
The
division was named. _ _ _ _
NEXT CONTINGENT TO DEPOT
BRIGADE.
Iowa Men Reporting to Camp Dodge To Be
Specifically Assigned.
The majority of Iowa’s selective
men who were called to the colors for duty with the Eighty-eighth
division of the national guard at Camp Dodge in the third and
fourth increments will go to the two provisional regiments of the
163rd depot brigade.
This course, it is believed, will be
pursued as soon as Iowa’s two regiments—the 350th Infantry and
339th artillery—have been brought to war strength by the
assignment of selective men still to report.
The depot
brigade is a supply organization in which men are trained to fill
up the ranks of brigades at the front depleted by casualties.
The strength of the 350th infantry comprising recruits from
the southern counties of Iowa now is 2,327 men. The war strength
of the 339th field artillery comprising men from the three
northern tiers of counties in the state is 1,225. The war
strength of this regiment is about 1,600 men.
With the
arrival of recruits called to the colors with the third increment
it is believed these regiments soon will be brought to war
strength by the assignment of additional men.
When this
has been done the majority of those recruits remaining will go to
the depot brigade in the regiment commanded by Col. H. J. Price.
Those who are not assigned to the depot brigade will be the
men who show special qualifications for some particular branch of
the service, such as the machine gun battalion, the engineers or
the signal corps battalion. These units still are below war
strength and will require men of good physique or who have had
special training.
It is estimated that approximately 1,750
men are needed to bring the 350th Infantry and the 339th field
artillery at Camp Dodge to war strength. In this event there
will be about 6,000 selected men from Iowa go into the depot
brigade from the balance of the selected men to report from the
state.
The depot brigade is a new unit in the organization
of American military forces. Its principal duty, officers say, is
to train men for all branches of the service.
The brigade
as an organization probably never will be on the battle front
proper although the men who are trained in the brigade will be
sent directly into the front line trenches as well as elsewhere.
~Transcribed by Linda Ziemann, Iowa Old Press Editor |
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