29th Infantry Division (Light)
29th Division, Army of the United States. Camp
McClellan, Ala.: Q.M. Printing Shop, ca.
1918.43 Ivs. PCarlMH
29th Division Artillery, Headquarters Battery.
Bremen, Germany: 1945. 101.
29th Division Association Blue and Grey 1946
Reunion, August 31-September 1-2, 1946.
N.p.: The Twenty-Niner, 1946.
The 29th Division in the Cotes de Mouse, October
1918. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Army Chemical
Corps Historical Office, 1959. 81. (U.S. Army
Chemical Corps Historical Studies, Gas
Warfare in World War I, Study No. 15)
DAMH
The 29th Infantry Division and Fort George C.
Meade. Hyattsville, Md.: Post Pub. Co., 1941.
29th Let's Go! [Paris: 1945.]. 31. (G. 1. Stories
Booklet) PCarlMH
7957 Summer Encampment of the 29th Blue and
Grey Infantry Division. Philadelphia: Dorville
Corp., ca. 1957.
The Blue and Grey Division. Historical Record of
the Twenty-Ninth Division, Quartermaster
Corps Activities, 1917-1919. American
Expeditionary Forces. APO 765: ca. 1945.37
Ivs. PCarlMH
German Documents to Accompany Operations
the 29th Division. Fort Monroe, Va.: Coast
Artillery School, 1923. PCarlMH
Homecoming Celebration Commemorating, the
Day when Virginia Sons of the 29th and 80th
Divisions Returned from the World War.
Richmond, Va.: National State and City Bank,
1919. 16. PCarlMH
A Pictorial History of the 29th Division. N.p.: ca.
1965.135.
Source Book, Operations of the 29th Division,
East of the Meuse River, October 8th to 30th,
1919. Fort Monroe, Va.: 1922.410. PCarlMH
Twenty-Nine Lets Go. N.p.: n.d. 38 Ivs.
See "Virginia's Own in the World War, a Brief
History of the 80th, 29th, and 42nd Divisions"
under 80th Infantry Division entries.
Allsup, John S. Normandie 44 Hedgerow Hell
L 'enferdu Bocage. N.p.: Heimdal, 1985. 160.
DLC
American Battle Monuments Commission. 29th
Division, Summary of Operations in the World
War. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing
Office, 1944. 39. PCarlMH
-. Terrain Photographs, World War Battlefields
in Europe, 29th Division. Washington, D.C.:
Government Printing Office, 1923. PCarlMH
Balkoski, Joseph. Beyond the Beachhead: The
29th Infantry Division in Normandy.
Harrisburg, Pa.: Stackpole Books, 1989. 304.
Boyle, Donald S. My Longest Day: (and other
tales from the E. T.O.) Oxford: Silver Willow,
1996. 52. DLC
Congo, William, editor. 29th Infantry Division
(Light) Reactivation Ceremony Program, Fort
Belvoir. Virginia, 5 October 1'985. N.p.: 1985.
23.
Controvich, James T. Bibliography of Unit
Histories Concerning the 29th Infantry
Division. N.p.: 1986. 13. Mimeo. PCarlMH
Cutchins, John A. History of the Twenty-Ninth
Division "Blue and Grey," 1917-1919.
Philadelphia: McCalla and Co., 1921. 463.
PCarlMH
Ewing, Joseph H. The 29th Infantry Division: A
short history of a fighting division. Padacuh,
Ky.: Turner Pub., 1992. 128. DLC
-. 29th Let's Go! A History of the 29th Infantry
Division in World War II. Washington, D.C.:
Infantry Journal Press, 1948. 315. PCarlMH
-. 29th Let's Go! A History of the 29th Infantry
Division in World War II. Nashville, Tenn.:
Battery Press, 1979. 237. PCarlMH
Murphy, Charles E. Twenty Nine Let's Go.
Compilation of battlefield sketches, maps,
etc., having to do with training and combat
phases of the 29th Division from 1943 to
1945. Fort George C. Meade, Va.: 1948. 63.
PCarlMH
Nobles, Gertude C. Postcards from Normandy:
Inspired by true events, footprints of history
surrounding the 29th Infantry Division.
Maryland?: G. Nobles, 1999. 57 lvs. DLC
-. Postcards from Normandy: Inspired by true
events, footprints of history surrounding the
29lh Infantry Division. Baltimore, Md.:
Chagrew Publishers, 2000. 132. DLC
Tydings, Millard E. The Machine Gunners of the Blue and Grey Division (Twenty-Ninth).
Aberdeen, Md.: Hartford Printing and Pub. Co., 1920. 140 DLC