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59th Infantry Division (United States)


FieldValue
unit_name59th Infantry Division
image59 INF DIV SSI.svg
image_size150
caption59th Infantry Division shoulder sleeve insignia
dates1944
countryUnited States
branch
typeInfantry
roleDeception (Operation Quicksilver)
sizeDivision

The US 59th Infantry Division was a 'Phantom Division' created in May 1944 as part of Fortitude South II. to cover the deployment of the US 35th Infantry Division to Normandy.

World War II

The division was presented to the Germans as having established its headquarters in the Harwich area after having been formed at Fort Custer in 1942 and undergone training in Tennessee, Minnesota and the Desert Training Center.

In Fortitude South II it formed part of US XXXVII Corps, US 14th Army and was depicted as one of the divisions that would carry out the first landings on the Pas de Calais beaches, landing at the central of the three notional landing beaches. During this period it carried out three simulated landing exercises with the notional Force F.

In the aftermath of Fortitude South II was depicted as moving to Rowlands Castle in Hampshire during August 1944 before leaving the United Kingdom via Southampton in September 1944.

Insignia

Most 'Phantom Division' insignia were designed by the Quartermaster Corps, however in the case of the 59th Infantry Division, its insignia, inspired by the Gadsden flag was created by American members of the Operation Fortitude staff.

In his reports to the Germans, Agent Tate described the insignia as "...a black snake on circular blue ground."

Composition

In addition to the usual divisional support units the 59th Infantry Division was composed of:

  • 94th Infantry Regiment
  • 139th Infantry Regiment
  • 171st Infantry Regiment

References

Footnotes

Bibliography

  • Holt, Thaddeus. The Deceivers: Allied Military Deception in the Second World War. Phoenix. 2005.
  • Hesketh, Roger. Fortitude: The D-Day Deception Campaign. St Ermin's Press. 1999

References

  1. Holt (2005). p. 905.
  2. Holt (2005). p. 907.
  3. Hesketh (1999). p. 418.
  4. Hesketh (1999). p. 474.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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