|     The 
                  3rd Battalion, 64th Armor descended from the 78th 
                  Tank Battalion; activated on 13 January 1941 at Fort 
                  Knox, Kentucky.     The Battalion 
                    was redesignated as the 758th Tank Battalion and was 
                    the first tank unit composed entirely of black soldiers.      One of these 
                    soldiers designed the unit crest, which is still worn 
                    by soldiers of the battalion – the rampant head 
                    of a black African elephant symbolizing the soldiers’ 
                    pride in their heritage and their unit’s mission 
                    of mobile, spearheading, armored warfare. The two 
                    white tusks were reminiscent of the two white officers 
                    which commanded the unit.     The 758th 
                    served with distinction in the Italian campaign of 
                    World War II, where it earned the first three of the 
                    many campaign streamers on the battalion colors.      The battalion 
                    next saw action in Korea, where it fought under the 
                    colors of the 64th Heavy Tank Battalion.     There it 
                    participated in a total of eight separate campaigns 
                    and fought from the intervention of the Chinese Communist 
                    Forces in November 1950 until the Cease-Fire in 1953.     Following 
                    the Korean War, the 64th Heavy Tank Battalion was 
                    reorganized as the 64th Armor Regiment, a parent regiment 
                    under the Combined Arms Regimental System.     The 3d Battalion, 
                    64th Armor was born at this time, and with its three 
                    sister battalions, helped to preserve freedom’s 
                    frontier in the Federal Republic of Germany. Stationed 
                    in Schweinfurt, it remained there 30 years until the 
                    inactivation ceremony of 17 December 1993. It was 
                    the first armored unit to receive the M-1 Abrams tank.     During its 
                    tenure in Germany, companies of the Rampage Battalion 
                    performed numerous REFORGERs (Return of Forces to 
                    Germany), Winter Warriors, border missions and were 
                    selected as the United States' representatives for 
                    NATO’s Armor Competition, the Canadian 
                      Army Trophy (CAT) in 1983, 1985, and 1987.  The battalion deactivated on 17 December 
                    1993. |