Military Railway Service (United States)
The Military Railway Service was created in the 1920s as a reserve force for the Quartermaster Division of the United States Army. It had existed twice before: first it was set up by President Abraham Lincoln during the American Civil War, and then a second time during World War I. In the original documentation for the service, all Class I railroad companies were to create a battalion for the war effort. In doing so, 11 Grand Divisions were formed and 46 operating battalions were assigned; however, five were never activated.
History
Each railway operating battalion was established with four companies. The HQ company was the headquarters and was used for signaling, dispatching, and supplying their section of the railway. The A company was set up to handle the maintenance of tracks themselves, the B company handled the maintenance of the rolling stock through the stations, and the C company was set up with roughly 50 men to operate the trains in their area. As for the Grand Division it was established with multiple operating battalions and then a shop battalion and a base depot company. The shop battalion was only to work on the engines themselves. During the war, there were two types of shop battalions. The main type at the start was the steam engine battalion; however there were a few diesel shop battalions.[1]
In the European Theater of Operations (ETO), the 1st and 2nd Military Railway Service (MRS) was used to control supply by rail in this theater. The 1st was assigned to the Mediterranean with Italy, North Africa, and Southern France as its main areas of operations. The 2nd was assigned Northern France to Germany. By 1942, the first units started to be shipped out. Besides units for the Persian Gulf Command and North Africa, the 761st Operating for England and for Alaska the 770th Operating was shipped out. Another MRS was established to handle the supplies sent to Russia through Iran (Persia). The 3rd MRS was set up using the 702nd with the 711th Operating, 730th Operating, 754th Shop, and 762nd Diesel Shop battalions as its core units. Initial Command was under the 702nd Grand Division but by April 1944 it was replaced by the 3rd MRS. The 702nd and initial 3rd MRS commander was Col Paul Yount, but in May 1944 he was sent east to assist the China Burma India Theater and Col. Frank S. Besson, Jr., was tasked to take over the 3rd MRS.[2]
The 1st MRS was led by Brig General Carl R. Gray, Jr., an executive from the Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis & Omaha Railroad, who was the son of Carl R. Gray, Sr., the former president of multiple railways in the United States, including the Union Pacific. The battalions under his command included the 701st, 703rd, 704th, 713th, 715th, 719th, 727th, 753rd, 759th, and the 760th.
List of Railway Grand Divisions and their sponsors
Unit | Sponsor | Date of Activation |
---|---|---|
701st | New York Central Railroad | 01/11/1943 |
702nd | Union Pacific Railroad | 10/15/1942 |
703rd | Atlantic Coast Line Railroad | 08/01/1943 |
704th | Great Northern Railway | 11/30/1942 |
705th | Southern Pacific Lines | 05/19/1943 |
706th | Pennsylvania Railroad | 08/06/1943 |
707th | Southern Railway | 06/10/1943 |
708th | Baltimore and Ohio Railroad | 04/06/1943 |
709th | Association of American Railroads | 03/15/1944 |
710th | Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway | 12/14/1943 |
774th | None (Organized in Italy) | 1944 |
List of Railway Operating Battalions
Unit | Sponsor | Date of Activation |
---|---|---|
711th | None (Training Battalion) | 05/01/1941 |
712th | Reading Railroad | 10/25/1942 |
713th | Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway | 04/15/1942 |
714th | Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis and Omaha Railway | 10/31/1942 |
715th | Illinois Central Railroad | 10/31/1942 |
716th | Southern Pacific Lines | 12/21/1943 |
717th | Pennsylvania Railroad | 12/01/1943 |
718th | Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis Railway | 12/14/1943 |
719th | Texas and New Orleans Railroad | 09/01/1943 |
720th | Chicago and North Western Railway | 08/26/1943 |
721st | New York Central Railroad | 04/14/1943 |
722nd | Seaboard Air Line Railroad | 12/14/1943 |
723rd | Union Pacific Railroad | 12/28/1943 |
724th | Pennsylvania Railroad | 12/28/1943 |
725th | Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad | 02/17/1943 |
726th | Wabash Railroad | 06/26/1943 |
727th | Southern Railway | 03/15/1942 |
728th | Louisville and Nashville Railroad | 01/11/1943 |
729th | New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad | 01/11/1943 |
730th | Pennsylvania Railroad | 05/15/1942 |
731st | Union Pacific Railroad | Did not Activate |
732nd | Great Northern Railway | 01/12/1944 |
733rd | Central of Georgia Railway | 11/23/1943 |
734th | Texas and New Orleans Railroad | 02/23/1944 |
735th | ARR/Erie Railroad | 02/10/1944 |
736th | New York Central | Did not Activate |
737th | New York Central | 09/30/1944 |
738th | Chicago Great Western Railway | Did not Activate |
739th | Lehigh Valley Railroad | Did not Activate |
740th | Chesapeake and Ohio Railway | 12/14/1943 |
741st | Gulf, Mobile and Ohio Railroad | 01/12/1944 |
742nd | Pennsylvania Railroad | Did not Activate |
743rd | Illinois Central Railroad | 01/12/1944 |
744th | Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad | 12/21/1943 |
745th | Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad | 05/19/1943 |
746th | Missouri–Kansas–Texas Railroad | 05/04/1944 |
747th | Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway | Did not Activate |
748th | Texas and Pacific Railway | 05/12/1943 |
749th | New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad | 02/23/1943 |
750th | St. Louis – San Francisco Railway | 03/21/1944 |
751st | Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad | Did not Activate |
752nd | Boston and Maine Railroad | 05/04/1944 |
759th | Missouri Pacific Railroad | 09/01/1942 |
761st | Railway Transportation Company | 07/22/1942 |
770th | None | 08/09/1942 |
790th | None | 07/08/1943 |
791st | No sponsorship (activated at Andimeshk, Iran) | 07/01/1943 |
List of Railway Shop Battalions
Unit | Sponsor | Date of Activation |
---|---|---|
753d | Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis Railway | 04/15/1942 |
754th | Southern Pacific Lines | 10/25/1942 |
755th | Norfolk & Western Railway | 11/30/1942 |
756th | Pennsylvania Railroad | 01/11/1943 |
757th | Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad | 06/10/1943 |
758th | Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway | 04/06/1943 |
760th | No sponsorship | 06/16/1942 |
762d | No sponsorship | 10/15/1942 |
763d | Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad; Lehigh Valley Railroad | 07/27/1943 |
764th | Boston & Maine Railroad | 10/25/1943 |
765th | Erie Railroad | 05/01/1944 |
766th | Association of American Railroads | 07/17/1944 |
Note: The 760th and 762d were RSB (Diesel); all others were RSB (Steam).
References
- ↑ Headquarters, Southern Lines of Communication, European Theater of Operations, U.S. Army (February 1945). "American "Rails" in Eight Countries" (PDF).
- ↑ Ragsdale, Herbert Bernard. "A Railroader Goes To War".
- 1 2 "Railway Grand Divisions". Retrieved February 10, 2012.