- Coleman Kaserne
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Coleman Kaserne (original German names: Gelnhausen Kaserne then Panzerjäger Kaserne) was a United States Army base located in the German city of Gelnhausen, located in the state of Hessen. Coleman Kaserne should not be confused with the U.S. Army "Coleman Barracks" which is located in Mannheim. Kaserne is a German word for barracks.
Built for the Wehrmacht, construction of the base was started in 1933 and completed in 1936. It was the garrison of the Wehrmacht's 9th Anti-Tank Battalion (Panzer-Abwehrabteilung 9, abbreviated as PzAbwAbt 9). As part of the German 9th Infantry Division, PzAbwAbt 9 departed for the Western Front in September 1939 (ultimately, the unit was assigned to the war against the Soviet Union); it never returned to Gelnhausen. The Kaserne was captured by the U.S. Army in 1945. In the late 1940s the kaserne was simply called Gelnhausen Kaserne. In 1947 a segregated unit, the 547th Engineer Construction Battalion, was stationed at Gelnhausen Kaserne. In 1948 the 547th was redesignated as an Engineer Combat Battalion, and was assigned to the U.S. Constabulary. The 547th relocated from Gelnhausen to Darmstadt in August, 1951. Also, Gelnhausen Kaserne was temporary home for Headquarters, 14th Armored Cavalry Regiment of the U.S. Constabulary in the late 1940's. Coleman Kaserne received its name when the 4th ID occupied the Kaserne in 1951. The kaserne was named Coleman Kaserne for a 4th Infantry Division soldier who had been killed in action during World War II.
Occupied by the 4th Infantry Division (4th ID) from 1951 to 1956, the 3rd Armored Division (3rd AD) from Fort Knox, Kentucky, moved into the Coleman Kaserne on 30 June 1956, replacing the 4th ID, which rotated to Fort Lewis, Washington. Coleman Kaserne was ultimately home to the 3rd AD's 2nd Brigade. 2nd Brigade was created in the 1963 ROAD conversion (ROAD: Reorganization Objective Army Division, an Army initiative to reorganize the structure of their divisions); this essentially renamed 3rd AD's previous command at the base, "Combat Command B". Initial ROAD-authorized battalions at Coleman Kaserne were 1st Battalion, 33rd Armor; 1st and 2nd Battalions, 48th Infantry (Mechanized) (the 1st Bn is currently a Basic Training Unit at Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri); and the 2nd Battalion, 6th Field Artillery.
Following 3rd AD inactivation in 1992, the part of the Coleman Kaserne complex known as Coleman Village became a bedroom community for the 414th Base Support Battalion (BSB). Coleman Village then became quarters for married personnel and their families assigned to the 1st Armored Division's 1st Squadron of the 1st Cavalry Regiment aka "The Blackhawk Squadron", located at Armstrong Barracks in Büdingen. Shortly thereafter, however, Coleman Kaserne was returned to the German authorities and was temporarily used to house refugees seeking asylum.
Sources
- 3rd Armored Division Yearbook 1963
- Spearhead Newspaper, May 21, 1973, published by the 3rd Armored Division, Frankfurt, Germany
External links
- Site by Bob Decker, assigned to 3rd AD at Gelnhausen in mid-1960s
- Gelnhausen and Fulda Gap
- Charles Thompson's photos of the kaserne, late 1940s
- Photos from when 4ID was stationed at Coleman Kaserne
- Coleman Kaserne photos from Walter Elkins's site
- Coleman Kaserne photos from Wolfgang Scherp's site, period 1956-60
Categories:- United States Army posts
- Barracks in Germany
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