14th Marine Regiment (United States)

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14th Marine Regiment

14th Marines insignia
Active 26 Nov 1918 - 19 June 1919
1 June 1943 - 20 Nov 1945
1 Feb 1966 - present
Country United States
Branch USMC
Type Artillery
Role Provide fires in support of 4th Marine Division
Part of 4th Marine Division
Marine Forces Reserve
Garrison/HQ Fort Worth, Texas
Engagements World War II
* Battle of Kwajalein
* Battle of Saipan
* Battle of Tinian
* Battle of Iwo Jima
Operation Desert Storm
Operation Iraqi Freedom
Commanders
Current
commander
Colonel John A. Koenig

The 14th Marine Regiment (14th Marines) is a reserve artillery regiment of the United States Marine Corps comprising four firing battalions and a headquarters battalion. The regiment is based in Fort Worth, Texas however its units are dispersed among 19 different sites in 13 states. Its primary weapon system is the M198 Howitzer with a maximum effective range of 30km however two of its battalions will be converted to fire the HIMARS weapon system.

Contents

[edit] Mission

14th Marine Regiment provides the Marine Air Ground Task Force (MAGTF) with a Force Artillery Headquarters in order to command, control, and coordinate Force Artillery delivered fires. On order, 14th Marines assumes the civil military operations mission for the MAGTF with focus on coordinating and achieving unity of effort among all forces and non-military organizations participating in stability operations in the MAGTF’s battle space. [1]

[edit] Current units

4/14 has been redesignated as the Anti-Terror Bn for the 4th Marine Division. It is the only remaining AT Bn in the Marine Corps. Located in Bessemer, Alabama, are the H&S Co, Support Co and E Co. Other companies/Dets are located in Rochester, NY, Chicopee, MA, Tallahassee, FL, Reno, NV, Lafayette, LA.

Missions that the AT Bn has engaged in have been security operations and details in Iraq and the Horn of Africa at Camp Lemonier.

[edit] History

[edit] World War I

The 14th Marine Regiment was activated at Marine Corps Base Quantico, Virginia, on November 26, 1918. It was created to replace the 10th Marine Regiment, an artillery unit, that was being sent to Indian Head Proving Grounds in Maryland to transition to new tractor-mounted 7-inch naval guns. The 14th Marines had a headquarters detachment and ten artillery companies divided into three battalions. Each company was alloted four officers, twenty-four non-commissioned officers, and seventy-five privates. About one-third of their number comprised a cadre of trained artillerymen left behind by the 10th Regiment, the remainder were newly minted Marines fresh from recruit training or part of the pool of men available for overseas deployment.

Throughout this initial tenure, the regiment remained at MCB Quantico and was armed with carriage-mounted Navy 3-inch landing guns. These guns had been developed by the Naval Weaopns Factory at the turn of the century. Unfortunately, these guns and their ammunition were not compatable with contemporary U.S. Army field guns. Training days consisted of three intervals. Mornings were devoted to normal military duties and intfantry drill, afternoons were used for gun drills and technical training, in the evenings junior enlisted men cared for the more than one hundred horses and mules assigned to the regiment.

As part of the massive demobilization of the American military following the signing of the treaties ending World War I, the 14th Marine Regiment was deactivated in June 1919 and would remain inactive until the Second World War.[2]

[edit] World War II

[edit] 1950s - 1990s

[edit] Global War on Terror

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ 14th Marines Regiment Mission. Retrieved on 2006-09-17.
  2. ^ Brown(1990) pp. 1-3

[edit] References

This article incorporates text in the public domain from the United States Marine Corps.
Bibliograbhy
  • Ronald J. Brown, A Brief History of the 14th Marines (Washington, DC: Hist&MusDiv, HQMC, 1990)
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