27th Engineer Battalion (United States)


The 27th Engineer Battalion and its subordinate companies have often used the Fort Bragg/XVIII Airborne Corps standard of "Airborne!" for its motto.

History

The history of the 27th Engineer Battalion began on 16 January 1918 at Fort Myer, VA, as the 2d Battalion, 37th Engineer Regiment. The unit entered World War I on 10 July 1918, with its participation in the Saint-Mihiel and Meuse-Argonne campaigns. After the termination of hostilities, the unit was demobilized.
Twenty years later, World War II erupted, and on 14 July 1941, the 37th Engineer Regiment was reactivated at Camp Bowie, Texas. The regiment was broken up in March 1943 and its elements were then reorganized and redesignated. The lineage of the 27th Engineer Battalion springs from the 2d Battalion, redesignated as the 209th Engineer Combat Battalion. The 209th disembarked at Bombay, India on 23 October 1943, and immediately set to work on the Ledo Road.
Subsequently, the 209th participated in the India-Burma Campaign. While attached to the 5307th Composite Unit, it participated in the surprise attack to seize a critical Myitkyina airfield. The battalion sustained 71 killed in action and 179 wounded in action during the 70-day-long battle. The 209th was inactivated at the conclusion of World War II, and in 1947 was redesignated as the 27th Engineer Combat Battalion.
Activated once more in 1950–1951 briefly at Ft. Lewis, Washington, and then at Ft. Campbell, KY, the unit on 23 October 1960 earned the nickname "Tiger Battalion" through its rugged field maneuvers and training.
On 21 July 1966, the battalion entered the Vietnam War, serving honorably and effectively in 13 campaigns, received five Meritorious Unit Commendations and the Vietnam Civil Action Honor Medal, with 19 campaign streamers for actions in Vietnam. On 31 January 1972, the battalion returned to the United States and relocated to Fort Bragg, NC, where it became a non-divisional combat airborne engineer battalion.
Components of the battalion participated in operation "Bright Star 82" deploying to the port city of Berbera, Somalia, located on the central north coast of Somalia on the Gulf of Aden. Bright Star 82 included deployment of factions of the 82d Airborne Division to the Sinia Desert in Egypt. While in Somalia the 27th performed various infrastructure improvement projects for the Somali people.
In 1983, units of the battalion took part in the Invasion of Grenada. Cuban engineers blew craters in Grenada's airport runways. Engineers from the 27th repaired the runways, among other responsibilities.
On 23 August 1990, the battalion was again called upon, this time to Saudi Arabia, to support Operation Desert Shield. On 24 February 1991, the battalion, attached to the French 6th Light Armored Division, became the lead engineer battalion for XVIII Airborne Corps in its push up the western allied flank during Operation Desert Storm. On 27 March 1991, the 27th Engineer Battalion returned to its home at Fort Bragg, NC.
The battalion deployed again in August 1992 to Dade County, Florida, for Hurricane Andrew relief. The battalion remained in Florida as part of Task Force All-American until 26 September 1992. The most recent deployment was in response to Operation Uphold Democracy in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. The battalion deployed with the 20th Engineer Brigade from 22 September through 5 November 1994. The battalion worked with the 10th Mountain Division and established Base Camp Dragon and Castle.
The battalion colors bear a Presidential Unit Citation for action at Myitkyina Airfield, five Meritorious Unit Commendations for actions in Vietnam, one Meritorious Unit Commendation for actions in Southwest Asia, the Superior Unit award for AHAUS TAURA '90, the Vietnam Civil Action Honor Medal, and 19 campaign streamers.
In 1991, the Construction Platoon of HHC, 27th Engineer Battalion created a small memorial to its own Desert Storm veterans outdoors near the unit's mess hall in Smoke Bomb Hill, Fort Bragg, North Carolina.
As of October 1999, they had the last and only Airborne well-driller detachment/platoon left in the United States Army.
The 57th Engineer Company of the 27th is the only company in the United States Army that specializes in rough terrain airborne insertion.
In November 2001, the battalion deployed to Kosovo in support of Operations Joint Guardian. Since the beginning of the War on Terror, the 27th has participated in many actions and projects in Iraq and Afghanistan. In January 2003, Company C deployed to Afghanistan and became the first counter-mine company in the entire US Army since the Vietnam War. The company used both mechanical clearance equipment and modern mine detectors to clear hundreds of thousands of square meters of land mines and other explosive hazards. Soldiers of the battalion have received numerous decorations in both theaters to include Rashe Hall - Silver Star and Scott Smullen - Soldier's Medal as well as individual companies receiving unit citations. Company C received two Meritorious Unit Commendations for its actions in Afghanistan. The battalion was again deployed to Afghanistan in December 2009 where it was on route clearance duty, responsible for clearing roadside bombs and other improvised explosive devices that were planted by Taliban insurgents. The battalion was awarded the Meritorious Unit Commendation for their service.

Insignia

Distinctive Unit Insignia

  1. The shield is red for Engineers.
  2. The rock, taken from the Arms of Saint-Mihiel and the oak leaves emblematic of the Meuse-Argonne, indicate the service of the 37th Engineer Regiment in World War I, while the border indicates descent of the 209th Engineer Battalion from the 37th Engineer Regiment.
  3. The motto translates to "To Do All Things Well."
  1. The distinctive unit insignia was originally approved for the 27th Engineer Combat Battalion on 19 March 1951.
  2. Redesignated for the 27th Engineer Battalion on 15 July 1955.
  3. Redesignated for the 27th Engineer Battalion on 9 February 1972.

    Coat of Arms

Blazon

  1. The shield is red for Engineers.
  2. The rock, taken from the Arms of Saint-Mihiel and the oak leaves emblematic of the Meuse-Argonne, indicate the service of the 37th Engineer Regiment in World War I, while the border indicates descent of the 209th Engineer Battalion from the 37th Engineer Regiment.
  3. The motto translates to "To Do All Things Well."
  1. The coat of arms was originally approved for the 209th Engineer Battalion on 15 February 1945.
  2. It was redesignated for the 27th Engineer Combat Battalion on 19 March 1951.
  3. The insignia was redesignated for the 27th Engineer Battalion on 15 July 1955.
  4. The coat of arms was redesignated and amended to add a crest for the 27th Engineer Battalion on 23 November 1973.

    Lineage

  1. HHC became 1106th Engineer Combat Group, thence separate lineage.
  2. 1st Battalion became 37th Engineer Combat Battalion, thence separate Lineage.
  3. 2nd Battalion became as the 209th Engineer Combat Battalion.

Campaign participation credit

  1. Saint-Mihiel;
  2. Meuse-Argonne
  1. India-Burma;
  2. Central Burma
  1. Counteroffensive, Phase II;
  2. Counteroffensive, Phase III;
  3. Tet Counteroffensive;
  4. Counteroffensive, Phase IV;
  5. Counteroffensive, Phase V;
  6. Counteroffensive, Phase VI;
  7. Tet 69/Counteroffensive;
  8. Summer-Fall 1969;
  9. Winter-Spring 1970;
  10. Sanctuary Counteroffensive;
  11. Counteroffensive, Phase VII;
  12. Consolidation I;
  13. Consolidation II
  1. Defense of Saudi Arabia;
  2. Liberation
  3. Defense of Kuwait
  4. Operation Enduring Freedom

    Decorations

  1. MYITKYINA
  1. VIETNAM 1966–1967
  2. VIETNAM 1967–1968
  3. VIETNAM 1968–1969
  4. VIETNAM 1969
  5. VIETNAM 1970–1971
  6. SOUTHWEST ASIA
  7. AFGHANISTAN 2004
  8. AFGHANISTAN 2009–2010
  1. Hurricane Andrew Relief 1990
  1. VIETNAM 1967–1968
  2. VIETNAM 1970

    Known projects

Among other things, the Construction Platoon of HHC 27th ENG has built the following:
Potable water provided by purification platoons deployed to the hurricane Agnes ravaged Appalachians in 1972