Ohio National Guard News

vintage image of terrain in France with group shot of visiting Solidiers superimposed.

Story and photos Sgt. First Class Joshua Mann, Ohio Army National Guard Historian

Soldiers on brigde with river in background.

Soldiers from the 37th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, Ohio Army National Guard stand with the 37th IBCT flag at the base of the Ohio Bridge Aug. 4, 2018, in Eyne, Belgium. The bridge was constructed following World War I to honor the crossing of the 37th Division over the Scheldt (Escaut) River Nov 1-2, 1918. Army National Guard Soldiers were in France and Belgium Aug. 3-9, taking part in the U.S. Army World War I Centennial Commemoration.

Soldiers from the 37th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, Ohio Army National Guard stand in front of the Hospice de Montfaucon Aug. 6, 2018, in Montfaucon, France. The hospice was built by the state of Ohio in the 1920s to commemorate the achievements of the 37th Division during World War I.

Soldier places patch into plaque on bridge above river.

Command Sgt. Maj. Jeff Schuster, command sergeant major of the 37th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, places a shoulder sleeve insignia of the 37th IBCT in a hole on the dedication plaque of the Ohio Bridge Aug. 4, 2018, in Eyne, Belgium. The bridge was constructed following World War I to honor the crossing of the 37th Division over the Scheldt (Escaut) River Nov 1-2, 1918.

Soldiers standing around guide holding book.

Soldiers from the 37th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, Ohio Army National Guard look at a photograph in a book pointed out by Charles Bowery Jr., executive director of the U.S. Army Center of Military History, Aug. 6, 2018, near Iviory, France. Near this location, 2nd Lt. Albert Baesel of Company B, 148th Infantry, 37th Division, earned the Medal of Honor Sept. 27, 1918.

Soldier stands alone among sea of crosses.

Command Sgt. Maj. Jeff Schuster, command sergeant major of the 37th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, Ohio Army National Guard, walks through the headstones at the Meuse-Argonne American Cemetery Aug. 6, 2018, near Romagne, France. The Mesue-Argonne Cemetery is the largest American cemetery in Europe, with over 14,000 American service members buried or memorialized there.


MONTFAUCON, France (09/26/18) — As the U.S. Army commemorates the centennial of the Meuse-Argonne campaign this week, Soldiers from the 37th Infantry Brigade Combat Team are reflecting on their visit to France and Belgium this past summer to learn about and pay tribute to the 37th Division’s role in World War I.

The eight Buckeye Brigade Soldiers, including Col. Cory Lusk and Command Sgt. Maj. Jeff Schuster, the 37th Infantry Brigade Combat Team’s commander and command sergeant major, joined about 50 other Army National Guard and Army Reserve Soldiers Aug. 3-9 in northern France and Belgium as part of the Army’s Road to Armistice event.

“The history and lineage of the unit is always something that’s stressed to be important. But the specifics of the individual campaigns, the difficulties that these Soldiers faced and the adversities that they overcame were not a reality for me, personally, until I got a chance to visit the battle sites and walk the fields they fought across,” said Staff Sgt. Ryan Davis of Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 37th IBCT.

The event began in Belgium, where the Soldiers visited Flanders Field American Cemetery and were asked by the superintendent to conduct the morning flag raising ceremony. From there, the group followed the route the 37th Division traveled in November 1918, which ended in Eyne, Belgium at the Escault (Scheldt) River, where the 37th crossed under fire on Nov. 2. The Soldiers visited the Ohio Bridge, which was built after the war by the Belgians as a tribute to the Buckeye Division’s heroic deeds. The gratitude of the French and Belgians is something Davis said still holds true today.

“They were very excited to have us there. The people that were directly associated with American cemeteries and war memorials specifically, went above and beyond to try and connect with us and just really share with us the significance of all that the allied forces have done for them and how important that is to them still one hundred years later.”

The Soldiers then returned to France, where they were led on a tour of the 37th’s sector in the Meuse-Argonne Campaign by Charles Bowery, executive director of the U.S. Army Center of Military History. While there, the group visited the Meuse-Argonne American Cemetery, which contains a total of 14,246 graves; the largest number of American dead in Europe.

“The cemetery at the Meuse-Argonne was probably the most impactful because of the volume of graves that are there,” Davis said. “It really made the reality of the loss of human life involved in World War I something that was tangible and comprehensible for me.”

Davis said since returning to his unit he has had greater opportunities to share the impact with fellow Soldiers and relay the importance of wearing the 37th insignia on his uniform.

“For me, the unit patch was more of an organizational identifier, it was an administrative embellishment on my uniform. After that trip it’s a source of pride. To look down and to know what was accomplished in World War I and to know the history, to know the sacrifice, to look down on my sleeve and see that, it’s a sense of pride, it’s a sense of belonging. It’s something to be proud of.”

See full album on flickr


  share on facebook