This article is about the 31st Medical Group of the United States Army. For the 31st Medical Group of the United States Air Force, see 31st_Fighter_Wing § Component_units.
The 31st Medical Group was a US Army medical group, which provided echelon III medical support. Originally organized as the 31st Medical Regiment, the group fought in World War II Europe, and then spent much of the next fifty years providing support to the Seventh Army, primarily to the VII Corps.
Lineage and Honors
Lineage
Constituted 1 October 1933 as the 31st Medical Regiment and allotted to the Regular Army[1]
Headquarters and Headquarters and Service Company reorganized and redesignated as Headquarters and Headquarters Detachment, 31st Medical Group, 10 September 1943 (other elements of the regiment, hereafter separate lineages)[2]
A Silver color metal and enamel device 1 1/32 inches (2.62 cm) in height overall consisting of a shield blazoned: Sanguine, a bend Argent. Attached below the shield a Maroon scroll inscribed OURS TO SAVE in Silver letters[3]
Symbolism
The shield is maroon with the bend white in the colors of the Medical Department[3]
Background
The distinctive unit insignia was originally approved for the 31st Medical Regiment on 4 March 1941. It was redesignated for the 31st Medical Group on 18 July 1966.[3]
History
The 31st Medical Regiment was constituted in the Regular Army on 1 October 1933, allotted to the I Corps Area, and assigned to the First Army. The regiment was organized sometime before September 1934 with Organized Reserve personnel as a "Regular Army, Inactive (RAI) unit with its headquarters at Boston, Massachusetts. The regiment was withdrawn from the I Corps Area on 5 June 1936, moved to an inactive status, and allotted to the II Corps Area.[1]
The regiment was again organized on 16 December 1936 with Organized Reserve personnel as an RAI unit with its headquarters at Syracuse, New York by transfer of personnel from the 362d Medical Regiment. The 31st Medical Regiment conducted summer training most summers at Carlisle Barracks, Pennsylvania with the 1st Medical Regiment, but in 1940 it spent its summer training processing personnel for Citizens' Military Training Camp training at Fort Dix, New Jersey.[1]
The regiment was inactivated on 17 September 1941 when its reserve personnel were reassigned to other units.[1]
Initial elements of the 31st Medical Group began flowing onto Utah Beach on D+2, 8 June 1944, and the group headquarters detachment landed on D+12, 18 June 1944, where it provided command and control for medical units of the First Army in support of the V Corps, as in World War II, echelon III/role III health service support was provided by the field army, and corps serves as tactical headquarters only.[4]
The 31st Medical group was assigned to the Ninth United States Army once that army became operational in France. There, it served alongside the 1st, 30th, and 64th Medical Groups in providing Echelon III support to the soldiers of the Ninth Army.[5] There, the groups supported the Ninth Army in its drive through the Rhine and Ruhr valleys, through the Battle of the Bulge, and the advance to the Elbe river.name="kas1"/>
Cold War
The 31st Medical Group was reactivated in Germany on 15 August 1951.
In 1965, as part of a redesign of how field armies provided logistics support, a functional support command was established under the Seventh Army, and under it, the [[7th Medical Brigade was activated on 21 June 1965. The 30th, 31st, and 62nd Medical Groups were all attached to the brigade, as well as a medical depot and the 421st Medical Company (Air Ambulance). The 30th and 31st Medical Groups were arrayed east of the Rhine River ins support of the two U.S. corps, and the 62nd Medical Group--until its return to the United States as part of Operation REFORGER in 1968--was responsible for the area to the west of the Rhine.
With the inactivation of the 7th Medical Brigade on 21 July 1973, the 30th and 31st Medical Groups became direct reporting units to the 7th Medical Command.
The 31st Medical Group was inactivated on 16 April 1975.
^ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyClay, Steven E. (2010). U.S. Army Order of Battle, 1919-1941, Volume 4. The Services: Quartermaster, Medical, Military Police, Signal Corps, Chemical Warfare, and Miscellaneous Organizations, 1919-41. Fort Leavenworth, KS: Combat Studies Institute Press. p. 2,220. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
^Conquer: The Story of the Ninth Army. Washington, D.C.: Infantry Journal Press. 1947. p. 371.
^ abc"Commentary, November 1962". Medical Bulletin of the U.S. Army, Europe, Vol. 19, no. 11, Nov. 1962, p. 242-244. Retrieved 29 January 2025.
^Edwards, David J. "68th Medical Group Army Medical Department Activities Report, 1969." National Archives II at College Park, Maryland: Record Group 112, Entry A1 1012, Box 91, Folder "USARV - 68th Medical Group" This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
^Moyar, John B. "68th Medical Group Army Medical Department Activities Report, 1970." National Archives II at College Park, Maryland: Record Group 472 Entry A1 891 Box 22 Folder "68th Medical Group 1970" This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
^ abc"Commentary, July 1968". Medical Bulletin of the U.S. Army, Europe, Vol. 25, no. 7, July 1968, p. 270-271. Retrieved 30 January 2025.
^ ab"Commentary, June 1968". Medical Bulletin of the U.S. Army, Europe, Vol. 25, no. 6, June 1966, p. 231. Retrieved 30 January 2025.