373th Birthday

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National Guard Birthday Message from CNGB
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National Guard members display their unit patches
National Guard members display their unit patches proudly during this year’s Yama Sakura 57, a bilateral exercise hosted by the Japanese Ground Self Defense Force. This year, the National Guard proudly celebrates its 373rd birthday. The Guard has served the country with honor, not only on missions at home, but also abroad in support of multinational operations since the first muster Dec. 13, 1636. (Photo illustration by Sgt. Jerry De Avila, Georgia National Guard)
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National Guard members display their unit patches
Command Sgt. Maj. Victor Angry, acting sergeant major for the Army National Guard, and Spc. Nikolas Campbell, from the Office of the Director of the Army National Guard, cut the cake during celebrations of the National Guard's 373rd birthday at the Army National Guard Readiness Center in Arlington, Dec. 11, 2009. The Guard traces it's birthday back to the first formation of the North, South and East Regiments of the Massachusetts Bay Colony Militia on Dec. 13, 1636. (Photo by Sgt. First Class Jon Soucy, National Guard Bureau)
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National Guard celebrates 373rd birthday

Among world’s oldest military organizations

By Renee Hylton
National Guard Bureau

ARLINGTON, Va. (12/8/09) - The United States is a relatively young country, but four of the oldest military organizations in the world are in our country’s National Guard.

The National Guard is celebrating its 373rd birthday this year. On Dec. 13, 1636, the Massachusetts Bay Colony divided its citizen-soldiers, or militia, into the North, South and East Regiments.

The Massachusetts Bay Colony was seven years old in 1636. About 5,000 men, women, and children had made the two-month voyage to the New World, leaving the relative comfort and safety of England behind. 

In Massachusetts, they confronted a wilderness of dense forests, wild animals and suspicious Indians.

The colonists needed a military force for protection, but they had no money to hire a mercenary army, which was common practice in Europe at the time.

So, they turned to the English tradition of the militia – citizen-soldiers who gathered for military training and who could fight when needed.

In Massachusetts, all able-bodied men between the ages of 16 and 60, except ministers and judges, were required to join the militia.

By 1636, the militia of the Massachusetts Bay Colony was large enough to be divided into three separate regiments.

Today, the military lineage of these 1636 regiments is carried by the 101st Engineer Battalion, the 101st Field Artillery, the 181st Infantry, and the 182nd Cavalry, which are all still part of the Massachusetts Army National Guard.

These four units, in one form or another, have been in continuous service since 1636, and are the oldest units in the U.S. Army.

Not many military organizations can claim 373 years of unbroken history.

The Swiss Guards, who protect the Vatican, are older (1512), and so is London's Honorable Artillery Company (1537), a unit of citizen-soldiers that is the oldest in the British Army.  Amazingly, considering how much older Britain is than the United States, only one other regiment of the British Army, the Royal Scots (1633), predates our National Guard’s oldest units.

Much has changed in this country since 1636, but one thing has not: citizen-soldiers still gather to train and deploy as they have for 373 years.

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