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SC STATE GUARD HISTORY
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Settlement
In being since 1670, the SC State Guard has
its foundation in the First Provincial Militia formed at the founding of
Charles Towne (Charleston) on Albemarle Point in 1670. The South
Carolina State Guard was one of the first military organizations in
America and is older that the US Army. With South Carolina being a
British colony until the American Revolution, the SC Provincial Militia
served and fought under British command. Elements of SC Provincial
Militia raided into Spanish Florida, and saw action in the Yamassee War,
the Tuscarora War, the Cherokee Wars and the French and Indian War.
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South Carolina Militia, 1706
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The American
Revolution
Early on the morning
of September 15, 1775, Charles Town residents awoke to find the South
Carolina Militia holding Fort Johnson, which had been a British
stronghold the day before. The Militia, acting upon the orders of the
S.C. Committee of Safety, had crossed the harbor during the night and
captured the contingent of British soldiers in the fort. South Carolina
had committed itself to the American Revolution. Colonel Moultrie,
commander of the force, took down the British flag and chose to raise a
new flag with the indigo blue uniform of the First and Second Regiments
as the background color. He then selected the Regiment's silver crescent
worn of the front of their caps to be placed upon the blue. After
Moultrie's historic defense of a palmetto log fort known as Fort
Sullivan, the palmetto tree was added to that earlier banner, thereby
creating the South Carolina state flag as we know it today.
That same year, the First South Carolina Regiment was organized by
volunteers. Members of this unit and subsequent units fought at the
Revolutionary War on their own soil at the battles of battles of
Charleston, Kings Mountain, Camden, Ninety-Six, Cowpens, and The Battle
of the Great Cane Break in Greenville County, and many other
battlefields. The King’s Mountain (1780) and Cowpens (1781) victories
were considered to be major turning points in America’s fight for
independence. Over 214 skirmishes and battles
were fought in every corner of state. None of the colonies suffered more
military actions during the war than South Carolina. South Carolinians
were led on the battlefield by such men as Thomas "The Gamecock" Sumter, Francis
"The Swamp Fox" Marion, Andrew Pickens, Christopher Gadsden, and Pierce
Butler.
The Patriots continued to win
ground, and the British surrendered in July 1782. However, fighting continued
in South Carolina until Charles Towne was liberated in December. After
almost eight years of grueling war, peace was finally declared on April
19, 1783. The Militias were disbanded and sent home. |

Light Infantry Company
South Carolina Militia, 1773-1776

SGT Jasper raises the SC Flag
over Ft. Moultrie June 28, 1776
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Early 1800's and The Mexican War
Individual members of the SC State
Guard volunteered for service again during the French threat of 1797,
The War of 1812 and the Seminole (1830) and Mexican Wars (1846). The
Palmetto Regiment
was raised for the Mexican War. The unit was the first over the wall in
the storming of Chapultepec while taking Mexico City. The Palmetto Flag
was the first flag planted on the citadel. The regiment also served
notably at Vera Cruz, Contreras, Churubusco and the campaign in the
Valley of Mexico. |
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The Civil War and
Reconstruction
South Carolina
seceded from the Union on December, 1860, and was followed quickly by
the remainder of the Southern States. Less than six months later, on
April 12 1861, General Pierre Gustave Toutant Beauregard opened fire on
Fort Sumter in Charleston Harbor. State units were quickly assembled
and provided most of the early troops for both Union and Confederate
armies. Soon after, in 1862, South Carolina formed six regiments of
troops for internal security. In 1863, most units were mustered into
Confederate service and saw action with both the Army of Northern
Virginia and the Army of Tennessee. At the end of
the war in April 1865, the volunteer soldiers returned home, many to
uncertain conditions, and most units were disbanded. South Carolina
had contributed approximately 60,000 of her sons to the Confederate
cause, and of those about 20,000 never returned home.
During
reconstruction, South Carolina Governor Orr attempted to create a
militia to suppress run-away crime in the state but was refused by the
Federal Government. Undaunted, South Carolina ratified a new state
Constitution on April 16, 1868, which contained an article which gave
the voters the right to elect their Adjutant General by popular vote.
(This process is still followed to this day with South Carolina being
the only state in the United States that elects it's Adjutant General.)
Because there was in fact no troops to lead, the title was officially
called the Adjutant and Inspector General.
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17th Regiment
South Carolina Volunteers
1861-1865 |
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The question of state
troops was finally resolved by the Dick Act of 1903, which
differentiated between the organized militia and the unorganized militia
by granting Federal recognition to the land forces of the organized
militia and designating them as the National Guard. It stipulated
that service was no longer than nine months and overseas assignments
were forbidden. In 1908, this legislation was amended, effectively
lifting sanctions on length and location of federal service. Further
changes came with the National Defense Act of June 3, 1916. The National
Guard was officially designated the nation’s second line of defense
giving it dual status as both a state and Federal force. Consequently,
National Guard soldiers were required to swear two oaths of allegiance,
one to their state the other to the federal government. |
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World War I
Soon after the start
of World War I, the National Guard was called into service. Extended
wartime duty of the National Guardsmen left most states with no militia
for traditional state missions. The Federal government made several
additional attempts to assist State Guard programs by passing the Home
Guard Act of 1917. Through this piece of legislation, arms, equipment,
and uniforms were furnished to the state militia by the federal
government, when available. The composition of World War I State Guard
units routinely consisted of retired or prior service personnel, many
former National Guardsmen, or those who for one reason or another were
ineligible for federal service. The reliability and efficiency of these
State Guard units varied, depending on location, local and state
government support.
States now had
effective and centralized state military forces that provided invaluable
assistance during the Spanish Influenza outbreak in 1918, supplying much
needed manpower, transportation, and medical assets for this emergency.
Approximately twenty seven states created State Guard units representing
an additional 79,000 soldiers for strictly state duty. While presence of
State Guard units provided a calming effect to the local populace, other
than labor strikes and associated local contingencies, no incidents
required large scale domestic military intervention by the State Guard.
After the war, as the nation turned its attention to prosperity and
internal affairs, State Guard units were mostly disbanded.
World War II
Upon America’s entry
into World War II, National Guard units were again called into federal
service in late 1940, with the first peacetime draft in American
history. State Governors raised concerns that they had been stripped of
their state forces. Congress responded by passing the State Guard Act on
October 21, 1940. It clarified the constitutionality of organizing State
Guard forces as replacements for the federalized National Guard and
permitted access to Federal supplies and equipment, when available.
State Guard possession and use of Federal small arms and related
equipment placed State Guards under scrutiny of the U.S. Army, thus
State Guard units were subject to periodic inspections. At first, these
inspections caused consternation between state forces and their Federal
inspectors. As the war progressed, these tensions subsided and the two
sides grew increasingly interactive and cooperative, as the nine Service
Area Commands within the United States incorporated State Guards into
their defense plans, and furnished training programs specifically
designed for these replacement National Guard units.
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Missions outlined for
World War II State Guard forces mirrored those of the National Guard and
included performing the peacetime duties such as response to natural and
manmade disasters. State Guards performed full time guard duty in
coastal regions and other vital areas, trained for combat to ensure
interoperability with federal troops in the event of an invasion and
performed internal security functions. In South Carolina, the state
legislature passed an act establishing the South Carolina Defense Force,
signed into law by Governor Burnet R. Maybank on March 21, 1941. The
uniform was initially Confederate Gray. This was changed to standard GI
Olive Drab by 1943. According to the Adjutant General's report of July
2, 1941, of the authorized strength of 518 officers and 6,035 enlisted
men, there were 191 officers and 3,060 enlisted men enrolled as of June
30th of that year. Among the officers was 2LT J. Strom
Thurmond of Company L (Edgefield), 3d Battalion, 1st Regiment.
The mission of the
SCDF, renamed the South Carolina State Guard (SCSG) in January 1944, was
to defend against invasion along the South Carolina coast and assist
local officials in providing internal security, including search and
rescue. |

South Carolina Defense Force, 1943 |
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While invasion by sea
was unlikely there was a fear that the Germans might land forces by
submarine and it was the job of the SCDF to hold until troops could be
brought in from Fort Jackson. Occasionally they were called out to
provide security for crashed aircraft or after natural or man made
disasters. As National Guard units returned to state service after World
War II, interest in State Guards effectively vanished. The last known
war time unit in South Carolina, Company E (Greenville), 2d Battalion,
2d Regiment, was mustered out on August 8, 1947. |
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The Cold War
General interest in
State Guard units (now known as State Defense Force, or SDF) waned from
1945 until early 1980. However, in Early 1980s, the U.S. Military
created a national defense doctrine called Total Force, which
dictated that all U.S. reserves, including National Guard, were to be
immediately deployable. To have a reliable state defense forces, between
1980 and 1989 over 20 State Guards were re-established, with South
Carolina reinstating its State Guard in 1981. In 1985, State Defense
Force Association of the United States was formed to promote the role of
state authorized and organized defense forces, state guards, or state
military reserves, and to foster and encourage cooperation between the
various state defense forces, the Department of Defense, the National
Guard, the active armed forces and their reserves, other government
agencies, and the general public. |
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Post September 11, 2001
In the aftermath of
the 9/11 attacks, several states utilized their SDFs for security and
the State Guard of South Carolina answered the call. Twenty-eight
members of the 2nd Brigade, South Carolina State Guard, worked at St.
Paul's Chapel in New York City during Thanksgiving week to relieve
volunteers so they could be with their families during the holidays.
They performed a wide range of tasks, from handling security to handing
out pillows and blankets to tired fire fighters and police officers
needing a break. It was the first time the SCSG had been deployed
outside of South Carolina since the Civil War.
Today, South Carolina
State Guard missions include meeting terror threats and domestic emergencies within the
state, assist civil authorities in the preservation of order, guard and
protect critical industrial installations and facilities, prevent or
suppress subversive activities, and cooperate with federal military
authorities. As National Guard units are mobilized for duty in the War
on Terror, the State Guards are charged with assuming control of state
armories and Federal property and when directed, assist in the
mobilization process. These assets include infrastructure site security,
emergency operations center operations, search and rescue capabilities,
medical, religious, legal, Weapons of Mass Destruction/Effects, and air
assets. |

South Carolina State Guard
2010 |
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