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The division was depicted as arriving in England in June 1944, where it came under the control of [[XXXVII Corps (United States)|US XXXVII Corps]], initially the division was located around [[Birmingham]], [[Staffordshire]] prior to the division moving to [[Hatfield Peverel]] in [[Essex]] during July 1944. Depicted as one of the assault divisions in the Pas de Calais landings it would have landed to the left of the [[59th Infantry Division (United States)|US 59th Infantry Division]] and been followed by the [[25 Armored Division (United States)|US 25th Armored Divison]] of the [[XXXIII Corps (United States)|US XXXIII Corps]].<ref name="Hesketh">Hesketh. 1999. p.418</ref>
The division was depicted as arriving in England in June 1944, where it came under the control of [[XXXVII Corps (United States)|US XXXVII Corps]], initially the division was located around [[Birmingham]], [[Staffordshire]] prior to the division moving to [[Hatfield Peverel]] in [[Essex]] during July 1944. Depicted as one of the assault divisions in the Pas de Calais landings it would have landed to the left of the [[59th Infantry Division (United States)|US 59th Infantry Division]] and been followed by the [[25 Armored Division (United States)|US 25th Armored Divison]] of the [[XXXIII Corps (United States)|US XXXIII Corps]].<ref name="Hesketh">Hesketh. 1999. p.418</ref>


In the aftermath of Fortitude South II was depicted as moving to the region around [[Brighton]]-[[Burgess Hill]] in [[Hampshire]] during August of 1944 where it was notionally placed under the command of US XXXIII Corps. In October of 1944 the division moved to South Wales and was disposed of by announcing that it had been dispanded to provide replacements for other units.<ref name="Holt" />
In the aftermath of Fortitude South II was depicted as moving to the region around [[Brighton]]-[[Burgess Hill]] during August of 1944 where it was notionally placed under the command of US XXXIII Corps. In October of 1944 the division moved to South Wales and was disposed of by announcing that it had been dispanded to provide replacements for other units.<ref name="Holt" />


==Composition==
==Composition==

Revision as of 20:59, 24 September 2012

This article is about the WWII 'Phantom Division'. For the WWI division, see 38th Infantry Division (United States).
17th Infantry Division
17th Infantry Division shoulder sleeve insignia
Country United States
BranchUnited States Army
TypeInfantry
Rolediversion phantom formation

Template:Infobox US infantry

The US 17th Infantry Divison was a 'Phantom Division' created created in 1944 as part of Fortitude South II.[1]

World War II

The division was depicted as arriving in England in June 1944, where it came under the control of US XXXVII Corps, initially the division was located around Birmingham, Staffordshire prior to the division moving to Hatfield Peverel in Essex during July 1944. Depicted as one of the assault divisions in the Pas de Calais landings it would have landed to the left of the US 59th Infantry Division and been followed by the US 25th Armored Divison of the US XXXIII Corps.[2]

In the aftermath of Fortitude South II was depicted as moving to the region around Brighton-Burgess Hill during August of 1944 where it was notionally placed under the command of US XXXIII Corps. In October of 1944 the division moved to South Wales and was disposed of by announcing that it had been dispanded to provide replacements for other units.[1]

Composition

In addition to the usual divisional support units the 17th Infantry Divison was composed of:[1]

2933rd Infantry Regiment 336th Infantry Regiment 375th Infantry Regiment

References

  1. ^ a b c Holt (2005). p. 903. {{cite book}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  2. ^ Hesketh. 1999. p.418

Bibliography

  • Holt, Thaddeus. The Deceivers: Allied Military Deception in the Second World War. Phoenix. 2005. ISBN 0-75381-917-1
  • Hesketh, Roger. Fortitude: The D-Day Deception Campaign. St Ermin's Press. 1999 ISBN 0-316-85172-8