Historic Units
- 103rd Armor Regiment (United States)
- 103rd Engineer Battalion (United States)
The 103rd Engineer Battalion is one of only nineteen Army National Guard units with campaign credit for the War of 1812. There are also two other Pennsylvania Army National Guard units with campaign credit for the War of 1812, the 111th Infantry and the HC/337th Engineer Battalion.
- 104th Cavalry Regiment (United States)
- 104 Aviation Regiment (United States)
- 109th Infantry Regiment (United States)
- 110th Infantry Regiment (United States)
- 111th Infantry Regiment (United States)
The 111th Infantry is one of only nineteen Army National Guard units with campaign credit for the War of 1812. There are also two other Pennsylvania Army National Guard units with campaign credit for the War of 1812, the 103rd Engineer Battalion and the HC/337th Engineer Battalion.
- 112th Infantry Regiment (United States)
- 107th Field Artillery Regiment (United States)
- 108th Field Artillery Regiment (United States)
- 109th Field Artillery Regiment (United States)
- 166th Field Artillery Regiment (United States)
- 229th Field Artillery Regiment (United States)
- 213th Coast Artillery (United States) (AA)
- 337th Engineer Battalion (United States)
The Headquarters Company/337th Engineer Battalion is one of only nineteen Army National Guard units with campaign credit for the War of 1812. There are also two other Pennsylvania Army National Guard units with campaign credit for the War of 1812, the 103rd Engineer Battalion and the 111th Infantry.
Read more about this topic: Pennsylvania Army National Guard
Famous quotes containing the words historic and/or units:
“Never is a historic deed already completed when it is done but always only when it is handed down to posterity. What we call history by no means represents the sum total of all significant deeds.... World history ... only comprises that tiny lighted sector which chanced to be placed in the spotlight by poetic or scholarly depictions.”
—Stefan Zweig (18811942)
“Even in harmonious families there is this double life: the group life, which is the one we can observe in our neighbours household, and, underneath, anothersecret and passionate and intensewhich is the real life that stamps the faces and gives character to the voices of our friends. Always in his mind each member of these social units is escaping, running away, trying to break the net which circumstances and his own affections have woven about him.”
—Willa Cather (18731947)