Double Deuce: Keeping the Watch
This image by Cal Obson of the Mexico-United States border in Agua Prieta, Sonora/Douglas, Arizona captures the old international boundary some 110 years ago today, 22 December 1915.
Pvt. M.R. Pankratrte of Company A, 22nd US Infantry Regiment, stands guard with his M1903 Springfield at hand while Pvt. Montes Simon, of the 3rd Company, 20th Batallion de Siniloy (Batallón de Sinaloa), Mexican Army, has a Mauser with plenty of ammo, and what looks to be a big S&W on his belt.
The old “Double Deuce” was originally founded in May 1861 as a battalion of the 13th Regulars before earning its own regimental status during the great reorganization of 1869. Famously including a company of Seminole Negro Scouts during the Indian Wars who earned four MoHs, the 22nd saw much service across the frontier in the Old West, shipped to Cuba in the war of ’98, fought across the Philippines from 1900-05, helped San Francisco during the great earthquake of ’06, then shipped to Alaska for two years to help establish order and communications amid the Klondike gold rush.
In garrison at the Presidio, the 22nd was sent to the Border during the tense Mexican Revolution and Civil War then, in April 1917 was about to sail for the Philippines again when the U.S. entered the Great War and was rushed to New York City and Washington, D.C. to guard docks and infrastructure during the conflict, missing out on going “Over There.”
The 22nd only made it to France on 6 June 1944, landing on Utah Beach with the 4th Infantry Division, before being assigned to the 2nd Armored Division, the 83rd Infantry, and back to the 4th, breaking through the Siegfried Line and finishing the war in Germany. The regiment suffered an incredible 1,653 killed and 7,706 wounded in less than a year of fighting.
It later served with the 4th Infantry again in Vietnam (earning a Presidential Unit Citation) and, with a battalion sent to the 10th Mountain, has since seen service in Somalia, Haiti, Bosnia, Afghanistan, and Iraq. Today, the Fort Drum-based 2nd of the 22nd is the regiment’s only active battalion, and, naturally, is known as the Triple Deuce.
The regiment’s motto: Deeds, not Words.



































