US Army Infantry Divisions 194243
By (Author) John Sayen
Consultant editor Dr Duncan Anderson
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Osprey Publishing
8th February 2006
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Second World War
Modern warfare
Land forces and warfare
940.541273
Paperback
96
Width 184mm, Height 248mm, Spine 8mm
The US Army infantry division was an intricate system of men and equipment welded together by doctrine and organization into an entity that could fight, maneuver, communicate within itself as well as with outside entities, and regenerate itself through a supply and replacement system. This book examines the organizational development, mobilization, deployment and combat actions of World War II US Army infantry divisions up until the end of 1943. Among the units covered are the separate infantry regiments and battalions of the "standard" type, showing how the Army's new "triangular" infantry division (based on three infantry regiments) evolved from the earlier "square" division (based on four).
"Hands down, great little reference title of this subject for the money, for the student or military enthusiast equally... This book provides a lot of invaluable information in a small amount of space, in an easy to read format, loads of really cool diagrams, charts and spec. tables, all tied together to give the reader a good understanding of the operations of the U.S. army Infantry Divisions of this era. Definitely recommended!" --Mark R. Smith, Historicus Forma (February 2006)
John J Sayen Jr retired in August 2003 from 30 years active and reserve service with the United States Marine Corps. During that time he served with artillery, armour and military intelligence. He is presently engaged as a contract civilian analyst for the Marine Corps. He graduated from the Citadel in 1974. He has published a military-historical magazine, The Tactical Notebook. This is his first book for Osprey. He lives in Virginia, USA.