Building a Culture: How Generals Ridgway and Gavin Rebuilt the 82nd Airborne for D-Day – Col (Ret) Keith Nightingale

It was a little more than 81 years ago when the 82d received its last troops from Sicily/Italy.  It was a shell of its former self and had to rebuild quickly for the Normandy invasion. New units, New people, New challenges.  Success in this endeavor rested on the two dominant personalities of the Division-Ridgway and Gavin.  Both of a very different temperament but of the same core values.

I had the privilege of extensive discussions with Generals Ridgway and Gavin as well as many other Originals-Piper, Vandervoort, Alexander, Murphy, Sullivan and others. It is the summary of all of these that I wrote the piece below.  Culture counts, and we see that Culture still extant in our Ranger and Airborne units.

I had the privilege of extensive discussions with Generals Ridgway and Gavin as well as many other Originals-Piper, Vandervoort, Alexander, Murphy, Sullivan and others. It is the summary of all of these that I wrote the piece below.  Culture counts and we see that Culture still extant in our Ranger and Airborne units.

Building a Culture

Between January and May of 1944, in preparation for D-Day, the two key leaders of the 82d Airborne built the culture we both expect and assume today. On reflection, it was an extraordinary achievement not well recognized.

The Division that came back from Sicily and Salerno to Leicester, England was not the same as had deployed. Nor was its ethos and competency.

The 82d arrived in the UK with a seriously depleted 505 PIR and a reasonably intact 325 GIR.  The 504th PIR, arguably the best fighting PIR, was left behind to assist Mark Clark in the rugged Apennine Mountains. The Division had received no replacements since their North Africa deployment and the 325 GIR had not performed particularly well in Sicily.

Upon arriving in Leicester, Col Gavin had relinquished command of the 505 to LTC Herb Batchelor and was promoted to Deputy CG.  He and MG Ridgway had been Bigot Briefed on the D Day objectives for the Division as well as being notified that the 507th and 508th PIR’s had been assigned to the Division for the invasion. It would be their task to integrate both with the 505 and 325 in less than six months to build a high performing cohesive force for the invasion.

Replacements began to arrive and were integrated. BG Gavin opened a jump school to take advantage of non-Airborne personnel in Infantry units that wished to transfer to the 82d. This was not popular among the losing units but SHAEF supported it due to the severe loss of manpower the Division had suffered in Sicily.