North Carolina Army National Guard Explained
The North Carolina Army National Guard (NCARNG) is North Carolina's principal military force. The force is equipped by the federal government and jointly maintained subject to the call of either.[1] The professional head of the North Carolina Army National Guard is the Adjutant General.
History
The North Carolina National Guard, or Carolina militia as it was originally known, was born from the Carolina Charter of 1663. The charter gave to the Proprietors the right "to Leavy Mufter and Trayne all sortes of men of what Conditon or wherefoever borne in the said Province for the tyme being".[2]
Structure
The North Carolina Army National Guard is organized into six major commands. These units come under supervision of the Adjutant General in time of peace, and automatically become part of his command when they are first ordered into active service in the active military services of the United States in case of emergency:[3]
- 30th Armored Brigade (Old Hickory)[4]
- 449th Combat Aviation Brigade[5] (449th TAB)
- 130th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade[6]
- 105th Military Police Battalion (HQ at Asheville)
- 105th Engineer Battalion (HQ at Raeford)
- 429th Engineer Detachment (Concrete)
- 505th Engineer Battalion (HQ at Gastonia)
- 109th Military Police Battalion (HQ at Kinston)
- Headquarters Sustainment Company (HQ at Charlotte)
- 295th Signal Support Company (HQ at Mooresville)
- 578th FEST (HQ at Charlotte)
- MCPOD (HQ at Charlotte)
- 113th Sustainment Brigade[7]
- Headquarters and Headquarters Company (HQ at Greensboro)
- 113th Special Troops Battalion (HQ at Asheboro)
- 630th Combat Sustainment Support Battalion (HQ at Lenoir)
- 60th Troop Command[8]
- Recruiting and Retention Command (HQ at Raleigh)
- 382d Public Affairs Detachment (HQ at Raleigh)
- 130th Military History Detachment (HQ at Raleigh)
- 440th Army Band (HQ at Raleigh)
- Medical Detachment (HQ at Stem)
- 5th Battalion, 113th Field Artillery (HQ at Louisburg)
- 42d Civil Support Detachment (HQ at Greenville)
- 403d Rigger Support Team
- 430th Ordnance Company (EOD) (HQ at Washington)[9]
- Company B, 3rd Battalion, 20th Special Forces Group (HQ at Roanoke Rapids)
- Company B, 1st Battalion, 20th Special Forces Group (HQ at Albemarle)
- Special Operations Detachment-X-JSOC
- 139th Regiment[10]
Regimental affiliations
Regiments of the North Carolina Army National Guard are listed in order of precedence according to the U.S. Army Regimental System -- Army National Guard where seniority does not always bring priority:[11] [12]
See also
References
Bibliography
- Web site: Our Organization . North Carolina. National Guard. . 2015 . North Carolina National Guard . United States. National Guard Bureau . July 28, 2015.
- Book: United States. Department of the Army . United States Department of the Army . 1953 . The Army Lineage Book . II: Infantry . Washington . GPO.
- United States. Department of the Army . United States Department of the Army . October 11, 1993 . U.S. Army Regimental System — Army National Guard. . National Guard Regulation (AR) 600-82 . . Washington . July 27, 2015.
- Encyclopedia: Woolf . Henry Bosley . Webster's New Collegiate Dictionary . National Guard . 1976 . . Springfield, Mass. . 0-87779-338-7 . registration .
Further reading
- Book: Doubler, Michael D. . 2001 . I Am The Guard: A History of the Army National Guard, 1636-2000 . Department of the Army Pamhlet No. 130-1 . Washington . . 0-16-066449-7.
- Book: Gobbel, Luther Lafayette . 1919 . Historical Papers . Militia in North Carolina in Colonial and Revolutionary Times . https://archive.org/details/historicalpapers13trin/page/35/mode/1up . XIII . Durham, N. C. . Trinity College Historical Society . 35–61 . 1046044741 . Internet Archive.
- Book: Hill, Jim Dan . 1964 . The Minute Man in Peace and War: A History of the National Guard . Harrisburg, Penn. . . 63-22141.
- North Carolina. Militia. . North Carolina National Guard . 1851 . Muster Rolls of the Soldiers of the War of 1812: Detached from the Militia of North Carolina, in 1812 and 1814. . Ch. C. Raboteau . Raleigh . Internet Archive.
External links
Notes and References
- Woolf, 1976, p. 765.
- Book: Powell, William Stevens . 1954 . The Carolina Charter of 1663: How It Came to North Carolina and Its Place in History, with Biographical Sketches of the Proprietors . Raleigh . . 34 . Internet Archive.
- NCNG, Our Organization.
- Web site: 30th Armored Brigade Combat Team. North Carolina National Guard. November 13, 2019.
- Web site: 449th Theater Aviation Brigade (TAB). North Carolina National Guard. November 13, 2019.
- Web site: 130th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade (MEB). North Carolina National Guard. November 13, 2019.
- Web site: 113th Sustainment Brigade (SB). North Carolina National Guard. November 13, 2019.
- Web site: 60th Troop Command (TC). North Carolina National Guard. November 13, 2019.
- Web site: After soldier's death, Army Guard investigates training, equipment provided to deploying EOD unit. 10 December 2018.
- Web site: 139th Regional Training Institute (RTI). North Carolina National Guard. November 13, 2019.
- The Army Lineage Book, 1953, pp. 340–347.
- USARS-ARNG, 1993, p. 6.