Briggs, David, 2LT

Deceased
 
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Last Rank
Second Lieutenant
Last Service Branch
Infantry
Last Primary MOS
1542-Infantry Unit Commander
Last MOS Group
Infantry
Primary Unit
1946-1953, 1542, US Army Reserve Command (USARC)
Service Years
1943 - 1953
Infantry
Second Lieutenant
Three Service Stripes
Two Overseas Service Bars

 Last Photo   Personal Details 

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Home State
California
California
Year of Birth
1924
 
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This Remembrance Profile was originally created by SGT Robert Briggs - Deceased
 
Contact Info
Last Address
Los Angles
Date of Passing
Aug 19, 1983
 

 Official Badges 

Belgian Fourragere Netherlands Orange Lanyard Honorably Discharged WW II Meritorious Unit Commendation

French Fourragere


 Unofficial Badges 




 Military Associations and Other Affiliations
American Legion
  1974, American Legion - Assoc. Page


 Additional Information
Last Known Activity:

Lt. David Leslie Briggs


 


David L. Briggs was the son of Walter David Briggs and Florence Marie Briggs of Claremont, California he was born on August 18, 1924 in Los Angles, California. He enlisted in the Army on March 4, 1943 in Los Angles at 18 years of age.


 


He went through training and was with an Anti-tank Unit in Camp Van Dorn, Mississippi until he received orders to ship out in June of 1944 after a 2 week furlough. He was in Company F, 144th Infantry APO 15426 when he shipped out for Europe on August 24, 1944 aboard the Queen Mary. The crossing was smooth with out any excitement. After landing in England he was put on a train and whipped straight across the Country to another port to a boat that awaited them for shipment to France. He landed on a beach September 9, 1944 in France (Omaha) he was impressed at the number of ships unloading cargo and the beach was like an ant hill with people and trucks all running about. They were marched up a hill to a replacement pool with there large packs and duffel bags where soon trucks came to pick them up and he was on his way. Two hours later they arrived some where not far from St. Lo to another replacement depot. There they waited until a call was put in asking for so many men, this went on all across France. Finally they were all sent out to separate Units, two or three here and some there. He was sent to K Company 137th Infantry Regiment of the 35th Infantry Division he was a Private First Class at this time.


 


He was in the field and the CO asked for radio operators he had some experience so he volunteered the company did not have a radio sergeant he had been wounded several days before after several days PFC David L. Briggs was given the job as radio sergeant and promoted to acting Buck Sergeant (AJ) He did that job for awhile until the old radio sergeant returned to the Unit. He then requested to go on the line and get some action and was made assistant squad leader and fought as that up until the time he was wounded in October 1944, shrapnel wound from artillery. Upon returning to the Unit his previous position was taken so he was sent to another Platoon as an assistant squad leader this is the middle part of November 1944 he was awarded the Purple Heart. He was also awarded the Combat Infantry Badge on 1 December 1944 General Orders # 12 at the same time as Col. William S. Murray.


 


The day after returning to the Unit he was called to the Command Post to see the Commanding Officer who stated he had a good position for him if he could make the grade. He was then sent to the 3rd Battalion Command Post to talk to a certain Captain who asked him if he would be interested in the job of S-3 Sergeant which he accepted.


 


Acting Sergeant David L. Briggs remained in this position until March 7, 1945 when he was offered the chance to go to Officers Candidate School if he could pass the tests. On March 10, 1945 he reported for his first day as an OCS candidate to OCS Class 8 outside of Paris, France with the 335th Reinforcement Company APO 545. Upon Graduation on 16 May 1945 after a 24 hour pass to Paris he returned to the 137th Infantry Regiment as a newly Commissioned 2nd Lieutenant where he was assigned to D Company 1st Battalion Heavy Weapons Platoon as Platoon Leader and Company Supply Officer. He was assigned an area to administer with his platoon in Germany during the Occupation.  On July 9th 1945 his Unit was sent to Holland for an Honor ceremony and Parade, following that the 137th Infantry Regiment was sent to Brussels, Belgium to be an Honor Guard and Security for President Truman at Camp B-60 and the Airfield B-58 in Grimbergen, Belgium on July 15, 1945 Followed by another Awards Ceremony and parade at Chandler Base Section Brussels on July 20, 1945. On August 8, 1945 the Unit reported to Camp Lucky Strike to await orders to Return to the United States, those orders were received on the 22nd  and the Unit sailed home on the SS Cristobal. On August 31, 1945 The ship docked in Boston Harbor and David received a 45 day R&R pass.


 


Returning to the Unit in Mid October 1945 at Camp Brecken Ridge, Kentucky Lt. Briggs was charged with operations of the mess halls with German PW’s working them and meeting the returning troops at the train station and getting them put in billets for out processing or transfer to other Units. He was one of the last Officers to leave Camp Brecken Ridge after deactivation. Lt Briggs was then assigned to the 5th Regiment of the 5th Infantry Division unassigned Officers Pool 35th at Camp Campbell where he took part in the Victory Parade in Chicago in 1946. On November 20, 1946 he was assigned to the 605th Organized Reserve Composite Group Nevada/California where he remained until 1953 when he resigned his commission.


 


Second Lieutenant David L. Briggs received the following Awards and Medals;


 


Combat Infantry Badge


Bronze Star


Purple Heart


American Campaign Medal


Europe-Africa-Middle East Campaign Medal with 3 Bronze Star devices


Army of Occupation Medal with Germany Bar


World War Two Victory Medal


Presidential Unit Citation 137th Inf Regiment


Valorous Unit Citation


Honorable Discharge Lapel Pin


2 Overseas Bars


   

   1946-1946, 1542, 5th Infantry Division

Second Lieutenant
From Month/Year
- / 1946
To Month/Year
- / 1946
Unit
5th Infantry Division Unit Page
Rank
Second Lieutenant
MOS
1542-Infantry Unit Commander
Base, Fort or City
Camp Cambell
State/Country
Kentucky
 
 
 Patch
 5th Infantry Division Details

5th Infantry Division
Type
Support
 
Parent Unit
Infantry Divisions
Strength
Division
Created/Owned By
Not Specified
   

Last Updated: Jan 3, 2009
   
Memories For This Unit

Other Memories
2nd INFANTRY REGIMENT

The last Active Army Unit that 2nd Lt. David L. Briggs served with was the 2nd Infantry, Camp Campbell, KY., in 1946. Here is a little about the 2nd Infantry?s History.
Coat of Arms
Motto: Noli Me Tangere (Do Not Touch Me)
Symbolism: Service in the Civil War is shown by the blue cross from the Confederate flag and the red cross pattée, the badge of the 18th Division, V Corps, in which the Regiment served during the greater part of that war. Service in the Mexican War is shown by the cactus; in the War with Spain by the five-bastioned fort, the badge of the V Corps in Cuba. The arrows and quiver show the Indian campaigns of the Regiment, and the bolo is for service in the Philippine Insurrection.

The lion in the crest represents the Canadian campaigns in the War of 1812.

Lineage
1808: Constituted 12 April as the 6th Infantry, Regular Army and organized May-July in Pennsylvania, New York, and New Jersey.
1815: Consolidated May-October with the 16th, 22nd, 23rd, and 32nd Infantry to form the 2nd Infantry.
1861: Constituted 3 May as the 1st Battalion, 16th Infantry, Regular Army and organized 21 August at Camp Slemmer, IL
1866: Reorganized and redesignated 21 September as 16th Infantry.
1869: Consolidated 18 April with 16th Infantry to form 2nd Infantry.
1918: Assigned 27 July to 19th Division.
1919: Relieved 14 February from assignment to 19th Division.
1923: Assigned 24 March to 6th Division.
1939: Relieved 16 October from assignment to 6th Division and reassigned to 5th Division.
1946: Inactivated 20 September at Camp Campbell, KY. (This is where 2nd Lt. David L. Briggs was
assigned after Inactivation of the 137th Infantry Regiment).
1947: Reactivated 15 July at Ft. Jackson, SC.
1950: Inactivated 30 April at Ft. Jackson, SC.
1951: Reactivated 1 March at Indiantown Gap Military Reservation, PA.
1953: Inactivated 1 September at Indiantown Gap.
1954: Reactivated 25 May at Munich, Germany.
1957: Relieved 1 June from assignment to 5th Infantry Division and reorganized as a parent Regiment
under Combat Arms Regimental System.

CAMPAIGN PARTICIPATION

War of 1812:
Canada, Chippewa, Lundy?s Lane, and Alabama 1814.
Mexican War:
Vera Cruz, Cerro Gordo, Contreras, Churubusco, Molino Del Rey, and Chapultepic.
Indian Wars:
Miami, Seminoles, Nez Perces, Bannocks, Pine Ridge, California 1850, 1851 and 1852.
Civil War:
Bull Run, Peninsula, Shiloh, Manassas, Antietam, Fredericksburg, Murfreesborough, Chancellorsville, Gettysburg, Chickamauga, Chattanooga, Wilderness, Atlanta, Spotsylvania, Cold Harbor, Petersburg, Missouri 1861, Mississippi 1862, Virginia 1862, Kentucky 1862, Virginia 1863, Tennessee 1863, and Georgia 1864.
War with Spain:
Santiago.
Philippine Insurrection:
Without inscription.
World War II:
Normandy, Northern France, Rhineland, Ardennes-Alsace, and Central Europe.

   
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4 Members Also There at Same Time
5th Infantry Division

Brown, Albert Eger, MG, (1912-1949) USA 0002 Major General
Midkiff, Oscar, 1SG, (1944-1968) IN 745 Sergeant
Gillentine, Earl, PFC, (1943-1946) MP 677 Private First Class
Doe, Jens Anderson, MG, (1914-1949) Major General

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