The Washington National Guard is one of the four elements of the State of Washington's Washington Military Department and a component of the National Guard of the United States. It is headquartered at Camp Murray, Washington and is defined by its state and federal mission. At the call of the Governor, the Washington National Guard will mobilize and deploy during times of state emergency to augment local jurisdictions and responders in their efforts to protect lives and property. The Washington National Guard is also subject to the call of the President of the United States to serve as part of the total U.S. Military force.
Makeup
The Washington National Guard is made up of the Washington Army National Guard (WAARNG) and the Washington Air National Guard (WA ANG). The WAARNG is a reserve component of the U.S. Army and the WA ANG is a reserve component of the U.S. Air Force. There are approximately 8,400 citizen-soldiers and airmen serving in the Washington National Guard (6,300 in the WAARNG and 2,100 in the WA ANG).
The WAARNG is made up of five Major Subordinate Commands:[1]81st Brigade Combat Team (headquartered in Seattle), 96th Troop Command (headquartered in Tacoma), 56th Information Operations Brigade (headquartered at Joint Base Lewis-McChord), 96th Aviation Troop Command (headquartered at Joint Base Lewis-McChord), and the 205th Leadership Regiment (headquartered at Camp Murray).
In 1853 President Millard Fillmore signed the Organic Act creating the Washington Territory and appointing Major Isaac Stevens the first governor and commander-in-chief of the Territorial Militia. The Territorial Militia organized in 1855 and supported the Territorial Government, provided defense against Indian uprisings and sent a unit to fight for the Union in the Civil War. The Washington National Guard trained as completely uniformed and equipped force for the first time in 1890 on the shores of American Lake near Tacoma.
The citizen soldiers and airmen of The Washington National Guard are dedicated to the mission of safeguarding lives and property in Washington State in serving in the US and overseas. Members come from a wide diversity of communities, professions and backgrounds from around the State of Washington.
Washington National Guard historical timeline
1853
President Fillmore signed the Organic Act creating the Washington Territory and Maj. Issac Stevens was appointed first governor and commander-in-chief of the Territorial Militia (the beginnings of the Washington National Guard).
1855–1858
Washington Territorial Militia members informally mustered in support of the Territorial government involving local Indian uprisings.
1862–1865
Washington Territorial Militia members formed into the "1st Washington Territory Infantry" and brought into service for the Civil War.
1885
Washington Territory Militia "officially" formed and recognized as the Washington National Guard in the Legislative Assembly of Washington Territory.
1889
On November 11, 1889, Washington became a state.
1890
State Legislature met and appropriated $20,319.33 for a "Brigade Encampment" to be held that summer. Completely uniformed and equipped for the first time, the Washington State National Guard trained on the shores of American Lake near Tacoma.
1890–1898
Washington National Guard members involved in additional Indian conflicts, civil unrest, riots and fire fighting.
1898–1899
Washington National Guard members called into Federal Service during the Philippine Insurrection.
1916
Washington National Guard members involved in Mexican Border dispute.
1917–1918
Washington National Guard members Federalized for service in World War I.
1919–1940
Washington National Guard members involved in civil disturbance, labor conflicts, flooding assistance and fire fighting.
1941–1945
Nearly 12,000 Washington National Guard members were inducted into Federal Service at the beginning of World War II.
1946–1960
Washington National Guard members involved in civil disturbance, labor conflicts, flooding assistance, fire fighting.
1961
Washington National Guard members activated for the Berlin Crisis and the Berlin Airlift.
1962–1979
Washington National Guard members involved in flooding assistance, fire fighting.
1980
More than 2,000 members of the Washington National Guard are called to state active duty when Mount St. Helens erupted.
1981–1990
Washington National Guard members involved in assistance to law enforcement, search and rescue, emergency recovery, flood assistance, etc.
1990–1991
Washington National Guard members activated in support of Operations Desert Shield/Desert Storm (Gulf War 1).
1991–1996
Washington National Guard members serve in support of state missions involving winter storms, flooding assistance, fire fighting, etc.
Civil unrest at WSU campus and at the Makah Indian Reservation in the first dispute regarding whaling in over a hundred years.
1999
Assistance to Law Enforcement – World Trade Organization Conference civil unrest on the streets of Seattle. Washington National Guard members deployed to Kosovo in Federal Active service as part of Operation Joint Guardian.
2000
Washington National Guard members deployed to Macedonia in Federal Active service as part of Operation Joint Guardian.
2001
Washington National Guard members involved in wild land fire fighting.
2001–2002
In response to the September 11 attacks, Washington National Guard members began to be deployed in the U.S. and around world in support Operations Noble Eagle (United States) and Enduring Freedom (Afghanistan) including Washington's regional airports, the northern border with Canada, the Olympic Games and the search for terrorists in the Afghan mountains.
2003–Present
Since September 11, 2001 more than 13,000 citizen soldiers and airmen have served in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom (Iraq, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia), Operation Enduring Freedom/Freedom’s Sentinel (Afghanistan, Philippines, Cuba, Djibouti (Horn of Africa), Korea, Uzbekistan), and Operation Inherent Resolve (Qatar, Kuwait, Iraq, Syria). Nearly 900 Washington Guardsmen have served in support domestic operations of Noble Eagle within the United States to include Airport Security, Border Patrol, security at military bases, and miscellaneous missions in Bosnia, Germany, Egypt and Kuwait.
2005
As a result of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, over 750 Washington Guard pilots, mechanics, supply and admin specialists, truck drivers and many others supported Humanitarian Relief efforts in Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama.
2006
The 194th Regional Support Wing, later redesignated as the 194th Wing, was formed within the Washington Air National Guard, bringing together existing Air Guard units including the 252nd Combat Communications Group, air support operations units, mission support units, and a medical support unit into one wing.
2007
Nearly 500 citizen soldiers and airmen served on state active duty in the aftermath of the December 2 storm and subsequent flooding in Southwest Washington. Missions focused on evacuating stranded residents, door-to-door health and welfare checks, transportation of vital supplies and provision of generators.
2009
Nearly 550 citizen soldiers and airmen responded statewide to battle snow and flooding. The eastern Washington mission focused on snow removal from roads and public school buildings, while western Washington missions focused on evacuating stranded residents, door-to-door health and welfare checks, transportation of vital supplies.
2011
Based off of recommendations in the Department of Defense’s Quadrennial Defense Review, in 2011 the National Guard Bureau established the first two, of later ten,
Homeland Response Forces (HRF) in Washington and Ohio. These HRFs are 560-person Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear, high-yield Explosive (CBRNE) task forces established to support local, state and federal emergency managers in response to CBRNE disasters, or deliberate acts, and additional HAZMAT-related hazards. The Washington HRF’s area of responsibility is FEMA Region 10 and has been dubbed the 10th HRF. Nine other HRFs exist across the country with identical alignment by respective FEMA regions. The predominant force provider for this capability is the Army Guard’s 96th Troop Command, whose commander holds two roles as both the HRF and Troop Command Commander, however other Army Guard and Air Guard forces combine with the 96th’s to constitute the full task force.[2][3]
2014
More than 620 citizen soldiers and airmen responded to the State Route 530 slide near Oso, WA. The mission focused on assisting in the Search and Rescue efforts after the mile long mud slide that killed 41 people and caused millions in damage.
Approximately 250 soldiers have been activated and deployed to assist firefighters in containing multiple wildfires across the State of Washington.
2020
Washington State Governor Jay Inslee authorized sending more than 600 citizen soldiers to King County to control an outbreak of "destructive protests and looting" in response to the murder of George Floyd. On May 31, the National Guard was activated statewide.[4]
In addition, more than 2,500 soldiers were activated for the COVID-19 response, working in hospitals, off-site immunization clinics, food banks, building tests kits, working in Employment Security and more. [5]
On Friday, November 1, 2024, Washington State Governor Jay Inslee activated the National Guard on standby status as a precautionary measure against election-related violence. The activation was effective Monday, November 4th through Thursday, November 7th. [7]