59th Ordnance Brigade


The 59th Ordnance Brigade is a military unit of the United States Army. The unit is currently stood up as the U.S. Army Ordnance School's training brigade. In its previous iteration, the brigade had more than 6,500 soldiers. It was responsible for storage, delivering, maintaining, Nuclear and Chemical Control Orders, and supervising the weapons of mass destruction for U.S. Forces and Forces of the Allied NATO-Countries, except France.

Heraldry

Shoulder Sleeve Insignia

Units:
The 71st Ordnance Battalion was activated in Germany in 1955. 1959 it was reformed into the Advanced Weapons Support Command. On 24 March 1962 it was renamed as the Special Ammunition Support Command. In October 1972 the name was changed to the Special Ammunition Support Brigade. The Special Ammunition Support Brigade was them reformed into the 59th Ordnance Brigade.
In June 1992 the 59th Ordnance Brigade was deactivated after it had removed all U.S. Army nuclear and Chemical Weapons from Europe including Italy, Greece and Turkey as SETAF.
The 59th Ordnance Brigade was reactivated in 1994 at Redstone Arsenal, Alabama and replaced the School Brigade that administratively served the Ordnance Missile and Munitions Center and School. The brigade moved to Fort Lee, Virginia in 2011 and the school was merged into the United States Army Ordnance Corps and School.

Overview

In June 1976 the Brigade's units were situated at many locations in Western Germany and The Netherlands:
UnitLocationRemark
Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 59th Ordnance BrigadeHusterhöh-Kaserne, Pirmasens
United States Army Permissive Action Link DetachmentHusterhöh-Kaserne, Pirmasens
563rd Ordnance Company Camp Pieri, WiesbadenReassigned to 3rd Ordnance Battalion
579th Ordnance Company Nelson Baracks, Neu-UlmReassigned to 3rd Ordnance Battalion
165th Signal CompanyHusterhöh-Kaserne, Pirmasens
41st Ordnance Company KaiserslauternReassigned to 3rd Ordnance Battalion
22nd Aviation DetachmentHusterhöh-Kaserne, Pirmasens
3rd United States Army Ordnance Battalion
HHC, 3rd Ordnance BattalionHusterhöh-Kaserne, PirmasensPreviously 1977 to 1991 Special Troops Battalion, Theater Support Battalion
9th Ordnance Company Miesau Army DepotReassigned to 3rd Ordnance Battalion from 72nd
164th Military Police Company Miesau Ammunition DepotReassigned to 3rd Ordnance Battalion from 72nd
330th Ordnance Company Site 59 Clausen, Admin HQ Muenchweiller KaserneOperation Steel Box and Operation Golden Python
110th Military Police Company Site 59 Clausen, Admin HQ Muenchweiller KaserneOperation Steel Box and Operation Golden Python
41st Ordnance Company Rhine Ordnance Barracks KaiserslauternReassigned to 3rd Ordnance Battalion
41st Ord Det Fischbach Army DepotReassigned to 3rd Ordnance Battalion
563rd Ordnance Company Camp Pieri, WiesbadenReassigned to 3rd Ordnance Battalion
579th Ordnance Company Nelson Baracks, Neu-UlmReassigned to 3rd Ordnance Battalion
4th Ordnance Company Army Depot, MiesauReassigned to 3rd Ordnance Battalion
72nd United States Army Ordnance Battalion
HHD, 72nd Ordnance BattalionArmy Depot, Miesau
4th Ordnance Company Army Depot, MiesauReassigned to 3rd Ordnance Battalion
6th Military Police Company NATO 111, Muenster-Dieburg Kaserne
9th Ordnance Company Army Depot, MiesauReassigned to 3rd Ordnance Battalion
164th Military Police Company NATO 104, Ammunition Depot, MiesauReassigned to 3rd Ordnance Battalion
545th Ordnance Company NATO 111, Muenster-Dieburg Kaserne
619th Ordnance Company Ammunition Depot, Kriegsfeld
558th Military Police Company Ammunition Depot, Kriegsfeld
197th United States Army Ordnance Battalion
HHD, 197th Ordnance BattalionFischbach-Kaserne, Fischbach
64th Ordnance Company Fischbach Kaserne, FischbachAlternate to the Theater Support Mission of 9th Ordnance Company
165th Military Police Company Fischbach Kaserne, Fischbach
525th Ordnance Company Ordnance Area, Siegelsbach
556th Military Police Company Ordnance Area, Siegelsbach
5th United States Army Artillery Group
HHD, 5th United States Artillery GroupStöckerbusch-Kaserne, Büren
27th Ordnance Company Stöckerbusch-Kaserne, Büren
4th United States Army Field Artillery Detachment Werl
33rd United States Army Field Artillery Detachment Dellbrück
43rd Air Defense Detachment Düren-Drove
66th Air Defense Detachment Soest-Büecke
85th United States Army Field Artillery Detachment Geilenkirchen
507th Air Defense Detachment Hinsbeck
294th Artillery Group
HHD, 294th United States Army Artillery GroupFlensburg
99th Ordnance Detachment Flensburg
13th United States Army Field Artillery Detachment Liliencron-Kaserne, KellinghusenSAS Kellinghusen
75th United States Army Field Artillery Detachment Flensburg
512th United States Army Artillery Group
HHD, 512th United States Army Artillery GroupGünzburg
510th Ordnance Company Günzburg
2nd United States Army Field Artillery Detachment Pfullendorf
24th United States Army Field Artillery Detachment Landsberg
36th United States Army Field Artillery Detachment Hemau
74th United States Army Field Artillery Detachment Airfield, Lechfeld
84th United States Army Field Artillery Detachment Großengstingen
552nd United States Army Artillery Group
HHD, 552nd United States Army Artillery GroupMühlenberg-Kaserne, Sögel
162nd Ordnance Company Mühlenberg-Kaserne, Sögel
1st United States Army Field Artillery Detachment Schill-Kaserne, WeselBrigade *TACOPS* Champion 1988
8th United States Army Field Artillery Detachment Steenwijk, Netherlands
23rd United States Army Field Artillery Detachment 't Harde, Netherlands
25th United States Army Field Artillery Detachment Barme
32nd United States Army Field Artillery Detachment Nienburg
35th Air Defense Detachment Hohenkirchen
42nd Air Defense Detachment Barnsdorf
51st Air Defense Detachment Adelheide
557th United States Army Artillery Group
HHD, 557th United States Army Artillery GroupAartalkaserne, HerbornStationed here 1965-1992.
96th Ordnance Company Aartalkaserne, HerbornStationed here from 1965-1992. The storage site was situated at Bellersdorf. The storage site was surrounded by a pine forest and isolated.
3rd United States Army Field Artillery Detachment Salm-Kaserne, Philippsburg
7th United States Army Field Artillery Detachment Harthberg Kaserne, Treysa
30th United States Army Field Artillery Detachment Steuben Kaserne, Giessen
52nd Air Defense Detachment Lippe
83rd United States Army Field Artillery Detachment Montabaur
501st Air Defense Detachment Kilianstädten
570th United States Army Artillery Group '''
HHD, 570th United States Army Artillery GroupMünster-Handorf, NRW
583rd Ordnance Company Münster-Handorf, NRW
15th United States Army Field Artillery Detachment Paderborn
22nd United States Army Field Artillery Detachment Dempsey Baracks, Sennelager
69th United States Army Field Artillery Detachment Hemer
81st United States Army Field Artillery Detachment Dülmen
509th Air Defense Detachment Vörden

Units

41st Ordnance Company

The 41st Ordnance Company was organized in May 1936 as Company C, 1st Battalion, 32nd Quartermaster Regiment.
It was redesignated as Company C, 70th Quartermaster Battalion in June 1940 and moved to Camp Gordon, Georgia, in May 1942. The company was converted and redesignated as the 3419th Ordnance Medium Maintenance Company in August 1942. The company was reorganized as the 3419th Ordnance Medium Automotive Maintenance Company in January 1943 and deployed to Europe participating in four campaigns during War World II. It was reorganized and redesignated as the 41st Ordnance Medium Automotive Maintenance Company in June 1947 and inactivated in Germany in September 1947.
The company was activated in Japan in March 1950 and deployed to Korea where it participated in one campaign. The unit was inactivated in Japan in November 1951.
The company was activated at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, in May 1952 and was redesignated as the 41st Ordnance Company in November 1952. The 41st was inactivated in Thailand in September 1966.
The 41st Ordnance Company was reactivated in September 1975 and garrisoned at Rhine Ordnance Barracks in Vogelweh, part of the Kaiserslautern military community and was assigned to the 72nd Ordnance Battalion, 59th Ordnance Brigade. The 41st provided general support on various missile systems. Their Dedicated Delivery Service program provided a direct exchange of defective missile parts. The 41st maintained two storage depots: in Weilerbach and in Fischbach where large reserves of Pershing, Hawk and Nike Hercules missile systems were stored and maintained
The company was reassigned to the reactivated 3rd Ordnance Battalion, 59th Ordnance Brigade in September 1977. The 3rd Ordnance Battalion was transferred to the 32nd Army Air Defense Command and the 41st Ordnance was transferred to Special Troops Battalion on 1 November 1982 then to the Theater Support Battalion. The 3rd Ordnance Battalion transferred back to the 59th Ordnance Brigade in June 1985 and regained the 41st Ordnance Company. The 3rd Ordnance Battalion was inactivated in October 1990 and the 41st was transferred to the 197th Ordnance Battalion.

82nd United States Army Missile Detachment

The 82nd United States Army Missile Detachment was activated in 1965 under the 512th United States Army Artillery Group, 59th Ordnance Brigade and was garrisoned at Lechfeld Air Base, West Germany. The detachment controlled the Pershing missile warheads of Missile Wing 1, German Air Force. The detachment merged with 74th United States Army Missile Detachment in 1971 to form the 74th United States Army Field Artillery Detachment.

85th United States Army Field Artillery Detachment

The 85th United States Army Field Artillery Detachment was activated in November 1966 at Fort Sill, Oklahoma and assigned to the 2nd Missile Battalion, 79th Artillery. The unit was reassigned to the 2nd Missile Battalion, 44th Artillery in November 1968. The unit then moved to Fliegerhorst Kaserne in NATO Air Base Geilenkirchen, West Germany in August 1969 and was assigned to the 5th United States Army Artillery Group in November. The detachment controlled the Pershing missile warheads of Missile Wing 2, German Air Force. The unit was reassigned to the 557th United States Army Artillery Group, 59th Ordnance Brigade in October 1979. The detachment was deactivated on 15 February 1991.

74th United States Army Field Artillery Detachment

The 74th United States Army Missile Detachment was formed in April 1965 under the 512th United States Army Artillery Group, 59th Ordnance Brigade and was garrisoned at Schwabstadl Kaserne in Schwabstadl, West Germany. The detachment controlled the Pershing missile warheads of Missile Wing 1, German Air Force. The detachment merged with the 82nd United States Army Missile Detachment to form the 74th United States Army Field Artillery Detachment in 1971.

579th Ordnance Company

The 579th Ordnance Company was activated and assigned to the 81st Ordnance Battalion on 24 June 1961 in Wiesbaden, commanded by Captain William H. Dodd. The Seventh United States Army Advance Weapons Guided Missile Company, located in Gonsenheim and the 367th Ordnance Detachment were deactivated on the same date and most of the personnel were transferred to the 579th; the 167th Ordnance Detachment was attached to the 579th. The mission of the 579th was to provide general support maintenance for all non-explosive components of "Y" missiles and all ordnance material of the ground guidance launching and handling equipment not allied with automotive or conventional mechanical equipment. In 1964 the 579th was transferred to the 19th Ordnance Battalion.
The 579th Ordnance Company under the 59th Ordnance Group was assigned the general support role for the Pershing in 1966. The company was garrisoned on Kleber Kaserne in Kaiserslautern. In January 1967, the company moved to Wartberg Kaserne in Pforzheim. The 579th then moved to Nelson Barracks in Neu-Ulm in a general support maintenance role. In 1977 the 3rd Ordnance Battalion was activated under the 59th Ordnance Brigade with the 579th as a subordinate unit. In 1982, the 579th was deactivated and reformed as Headquarters and Headquarters Company and D Company of the 55th Maintenance Battalion, 56th Field Artillery Brigade.
Members of the 579th wore the shoulder sleeve insignia of the Theater Army Support Command until 1974, then the United States Army Europe. They wore the distinctive unit insignia of the 59th Ordnance Brigade until 1977 when the unit switched to that of the 3rd Ordnance Battalion.
Commanders