Borthwick, William, SP 4

Military Police
 
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Life Member
 
 Photo In Uniform   Service Details
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Current Service Status
USA Veteran
Current/Last Rank
Specialist 4
Current/Last Service Branch
Military Police Corps
Current/Last Primary MOS
95B20-Military Police
Current/Last MOS Group
Military Police
Primary Unit
1973-1974, 95B20, 1st Military Police Company, 1st Infantry Division
Previously Held MOS
95B10-Military Police
Service Years
1971 - 1974
Official/Unofficial US Army Certificates
1st Infantry Division Certificate
Cold War Certificate
Reforger Certificate
Military Police Corps
Specialist 4
One Service Stripe
Two Overseas Service Bars

 Official Badges 

French Fourragere


 Unofficial Badges 




 Military Associations and Other Affiliations
Society of 1st Infantry Division Army Together We Served504th Military Police Battalion AssociationPost 433, Sayville Post
  2007, Society of 1st Infantry Division - Assoc. Page
  2009, Army Together We Served
  2014, 504th Military Police Battalion Association
  2014, Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States (VFW), Post 433, Sayville Post (Member) (Sayville, New York) - Chap. Page


 Additional Information
What are you doing now:

Station Commander Robert Moses State Park
Suffolk Zone Patrol Supervisor

   Other Comments:

Retired November 2013

   

   1972-1972, 95B20, 504th Military Police Battalion

Specialist 4
From Month/Year
April / 1972
To Month/Year
June / 1972
Unit
504th Military Police Battalion Unit Page
Rank
Specialist 4
MOS
95B20-Military Police
Base, Fort or City
DaNang
State/Country
Vietnam, South (Vietnam)
 
 
 Patch
 504th Military Police Battalion Details

504th Military Police Battalion
The 504th Military Police Battalion, the “Dragon Fighters,” was first constituted on 29 July 1921 in the Organized Reserves as the 304th Military Police Battalion. It was organized in April 1922 in Tennessee. The unit was inactivated on 1 January 1938 in Tennessee and concurrently withdrawn from the Organized Reserves and lotted the to the Regular Army.  On 1 June 1940, the unit was re-designated as the 504th Military Police Battalion. The unit was then activated at Fort Sam Houston, Texas on 15 May 1942, the day the Battalion subsequently celebrated as its birthday. Company D, 504th Military Police Battalion was subsequently inactivated on 20 June 1942 at Fort Sam Houston, Texas.

The 504th Miltary Police Battalion had no sooner formed when it began training for its first major challenge. For two years, the Battalion prepared for its baptism by fire. In February 1943, the 504th Military Police Battalion was alterted for deployment to Europe, and on 18 March 1943, landed on the beaches of North Africa as part of the first Allied force of World War II to fight against Rommel’s Africa Korps.

As the battle widened, the Battalion spread over some 400,000 square miles of desert. As the Africa Korp gradually fell against the combined American-British advance, the 504th Military Police Battalion assumed control of huge numbers of German prisoners. However, the Battalion’s attention was quickly turned to the north as the Allied force prepared for their first landing on the European continent to strike against the “soft underbelly” of the Third Reich.

On 10 July 1943, elements of the 504th joined 800,000 Allied soldiers as part of Operation “Avalanche,” the Allied landing at Salerno. Soldiers of the Battalion had now been combat tested in nearly every type of operation for which the military police were then trained. Later actions of the 504th Military Police Battalion during World War II included the August 1944 landing in Southern France to support the earlier D-Day invasion of Normandy and its movement across 500 miles in Europe in one month as part of the Seventh Army.

Following the Allied victory over the European Axis powers, the Battalion was assigned to the Third Army Headquarters in Munich, Germany. In 26 months of fighting, the 504th Military Police Battalion had emerged from World War II as the most decorated military police battalion of the conflict by earning 9 battle stars and 4 bronze arrowheads for amphibious landings. After assisting the Allied occupation, the Battalion was inactivated on 20 January 1947 in Germany.

On 2 October 1950, the 504th Military Police Battalion was reactivated at Camp Gordon, Georgia and for the next 12 years, remained a combat ready military police force that was called many times to deploy throughout the world.

In October 1962, the Battalion was re-stationed to Fort Lewis, Washington. Its time at Fort Lewis was soon to be interrupted by the Nation’s invovement in Vietnam. In August 1965, the Battalion landed in Qui Nhon, Republic of Vietnam, and over the next 7 years, soldiers of the 504th Military Police Battalion engaged in the seemingly endless struggle against the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese Army. The Battalion was involved in countless operations during this period carrying it from one end of Vietnam to the other, until its redeployment to the Presidio of San Francisco, California, in 1972.

Upon its return from Vietnam, Companies A, B, and C were inactivated on 31 July 1972, at the Presidio of San Francisco, California. The Battalion’s Headquarters and Headquarters Detachment was re-stationed at Fort Lewis, Washington in June 1984. On 22 February 1988, the Battalion was authorized the special distinctive designation “Dragon Fighters.”

The 504th Military Police Battalion’s contributions included pre-planning phases of Operation Just Cause, with the Battalion deployed to Panama from August 1989 through December 1989. Also, the Battalion was responsible for the train-up, readiness, and deployment of 2 reserve companies supporting Operation Desert Storm. Additionally, the Battalion deployed to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, from November 1991 to February 1992, in support of Joint Task Force Guantanamo. As the first Army unit in Cuba, the Battalion quickly establised security and provided outstanding humanitarian relief efforts to all Haitian migrants as part of Operation Safe Harbor.

By the 1990s, the 504th Military Police Battalion was the most decorated military police battalion on active duty. The 504th Military Police Battalion was, at the time, a combat military police battalion with a Headquarters and Headquarters Detachment and 3 military police companies: the 66th Military Police Company, the 170th Military Police Company, and the 571st Military Police Company. The 504th also fulfilled the Law and Order mission for Fort Lewis and Yakima Training Center.

on 4 November 2001, Task Force 716th Military Police from Fort Campbell, Kentucky, gave way to Task Force 504th Military Police out of Fort Lewis, Washington, during a Task Force Falcon Military Police transfer of authority ceremony in Kosovo. Each task force was comprised of both active and reserve component elements, so having a year to prepare for this allowed them to bring all the units together as a team and train on a number of occasions. The Task Force 504th Military Police included the 66th Military Police Company, Fort Lewis, Washington; the 209th Military Police Company, Fort Polk, Louisiana; the 2175th Military Police Company of the Missouri National Guard; and Detachment 6, 391st Military Police Battalion, Columbus, Ohio, part of the US Army Reserves.  The military police trained to do peacetime, wartime, and all types of contingency operations. The military police mission was exactly suited for what happened in Kosovo, to include law enforcement operations, maneuverability support operations, keeping the lines of communication on the roads open, doing checkpoints, cordon and searches, and meeting with the local people.

In late 2004, the 1st Military Police Brigade (Provisional) at Fort Lewis, Washington was inactivated and reflagged as the 42nd Military Police Brigade. The 504th Military Police Battalion remained assigned to this unit and subsequently gained the 54th Military Police Company.
Type
Military Police
 
Parent Unit
Military Police Units
Strength
Army Battalion
Created/Owned By
MP Vitatoe, Christopher, CW3 81 
   

Last Updated: Aug 15, 2021
   
   
Yearbook
 
My Photos For This Unit
No Available Photos
41 Members Also There at Same Time
504th Military Police Battalion

Hagen, Raymond, SP 4, (1970-1973) MP 95B20 Specialist 4
Stocking, Richard, SP 4, (1971-1972) MP 95B20 Specialist 4
Clark, Mike, PV2, (1967-1972) MP 95B20 Private (E-2)
Martin, Lawrence, SGM, (1969-1993) MP 95B50 Sergeant Major
Branham, Joe, SSG, (1968-1976) MP 95B30 Staff Sergeant
Hall, Francis, SSG, (1964-1973) MP 95B40 Staff Sergeant
Hammond, Charles, SSG, (1966-1972) MP 95B10 Staff Sergeant
Hammond, Charles, SSG, (1966-1972) MP 95B10 Staff Sergeant
Moller, Lawrence, SSG, (1962-1982) MP 95B10 Staff Sergeant
Beard, George, SGT, (1970-1973) MP 95B10 Sergeant
Brock, James, SGT, (1969-1973) MP 95B10 Sergeant
Alexander, Dallas Chester, SP 4, (1971-1972) MP 95B10 Specialist 4
Cooper, Bernard, SP 4, (1970-1972) MP 95B10 Specialist 4
Heller, Warren, SP 4, (1970-1972) MP 95B30 Specialist 4
Jerchau, Daniel, SP 4, (1971-1972) MP 95B10 Specialist 4
Jones, Tom, SP 4, (1971-1974) MP 95B10 Specialist 4
Mcadams, Michael, SP 4, (1970-1973) MP 95B10 Specialist 4
McKita, John, SP 4, (1970-1972) MP 95B10 Specialist 4
McKita, John, SP 4, (1970-1972) MP 951.10 Specialist 4
Miller, Robert, SP 4, (1971-1973) MP 95B10 Specialist 4
Mitchell, Michael, SP 4, (1971-1973) MP 951.10 Specialist 4
Padgett, Russell, SP 4, (1971-1973) MP 95B10 Specialist 4
Esau, Charles, SGT, (1972-1975) MP 95B10 Private First Class
Gray, Charles, PFC, (1971-1973) MP 95B10 Private First Class
Little, Carlton, CSM, (1972-2005) MP 95B10 Private First Class
Price, Robert, PFC, (1971-1973) MP 951.10 Private First Class
Saunders, Elmo, PFC, (1971-1972) MP 95B10 Private First Class
Leinen, Henry, PV2, (1972-1973) MP 95B30 Private
Herrington, Wayne, LTC, (1964-1997) MP 31A Lieutenant Colonel
McLendon, Robert, MAJ, (1955-1976) MP 31A Major
Storm, Donald, SP 4, (1970-1972) OD 55D20 Specialist 4
Valdez, Michael, SP 4, (1972-1975) AG 75B10 Specialist 4
Rizzuto, Luke, SP 4, (1972-1973) MP Specialist 4
Boutte, Michael, SP 4, (1971-1977) UN Specialist 4
B Company

Anspach, Thomas, SP 4, (1971-1977) MP 95B20 Specialist 4
Anspach, Thomas, SP 4, (1971-1977) MP 95B10 Specialist 4
Armijo, Michael, SP 4, (1969-1972) AR 11E20 Specialist 4
C Company

Bayona, Frank, SP 4, (1968-1971) MP 95B10 Specialist 4
Hillman, Alvis, SP 4, (1971-1973) MP 951.10 Specialist 4
McKita, John, SP 4, (1970-1972) MP 95B10 Specialist 4
Gosman, Neal, SP 4, (1971-1973) MP 95B10 Private First Class
HHD

Grayson, Daniel, LTC, (1970-1999) MP 9110 Second Lieutenant
Burris, Charles, SP 4, (1970-1984) SC Specialist 4

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