Greetings from a new member.  My Dad was in the 372GS Regiment Co A and it is absolutely great to finally find a few others connected to that unit.  
 
I had no idea, before reading about it here, that the 372 was part of Task Force Reed.  My dad must not have been directly involved in capturing the Lipazzanners or I think I would remember that story!
 
2 stories:  My dad got off a bus in London to buy my mother a rose, and before he went back down the street to get back on a buzz bomb hit the bus!  I owe my life to that rose seller! My mom kept that rose pressed until it disintegrated.  
 
Dad told the story about his best friend, his "buddy" in the system, and how they were delegated to clearing a small road in a town in Belgium, if I recall.  His friend triggerred a booby trap and was killed.  I wish I could remember and honor his name.  
 
Here is part of the order of battle for the 3rd Army; the 372 was part of Manton Eddy's XII Corps.
 
Regards,
 
Rick Lindquist 
 
XII Corps
    Maj. Gen. Manton S. Eddy
        2 Cavalry Group, Mechanized
        808 Tank Destroyer Battalion
        161, 244, 277, 334, 336, and 736 Field Artillery Battalions
        276 Armored Field Artillery Battalion
        177 Field Artillery Group
        215, 255, and 775 Field Artillery Battalions
        182 Field Artillery Group
        802, 945, and 974 Field Artillery Battalions
        183 Field Artillery Group
        695 and 776 Field Artillery Battalions
        404 Field Artillery Group
        273, 512, and 752 Field Artillery Battalions
        372, 398, and 1303 Engineer General Service Regiments
        452 and 457 Antiaircraft Artillery Automatic Weapons Battalions
        1103 Engineer Combat Group
        106 and 204 Engineer Combat Battalions
 
4th Infantry Division ("Ivy"--for IV)
    Maj. Gen. Raymond O. Barton
        8, 12, and 22 Infantry Regiments
        20, 29, 42, and 44 Field Artillery Battalions
        4 Engineer Combat Battalion
        70 Tank Battalion
        802 and 803 Tank Destroyer Battalions
        377 Antiaircraft Artillery Automatic Weapons Battalion
The division landed on UTAH Beach on D-Day, fought in Normandy, helped liberate Paris, penetrated the Siegfried Line on the Schnee Eifel, and fought in the Hurtgen Forest.
 
5th Infantry Division ("Red Diamond")
    Maj. Gen. S. Leroy Irwin
        2, 10, and 11 Infantry Regiments
        19, 21, 46, and 50 Field Artillery Battalions
        7 Engineer Combat Battalion
        737 Tank Battalion
        818 Tank Destroyer Battalion
        449 Antiaircraft Artillery Automatic Weapons Battalion
The division entered combat in Normandy in July and took heavy casualties in the fall fighting for Metz.
 
10th Armored Division ("Tiger")
    Maj. Gen. William H. H. Morris, Jr.
        CCA, CCB and CCR
        20, 54, and 61 Armored Infantry Battalions
        3, 11, and 21 Tank Battalions
        419, 420, and 423 Armored Field Artillery Battalions
        609 Tank Destroyer Battalion
        55 Armored Engineer Battalion
        90 Reconnaissance Squadron
        796 Antiaircraft Artillery Automatic Weapons Battalion
The division entered the line in Lorraine in late September and participated in the encirclement of Metz and the drive to the Saar River.
 
80th Infantry Division ("Blue Ridge")
    Maj. Gen. Horace L. McBride
        317, 318, and 319 Infantry Regiments
        313, 314, 315, and 905 Field Artillery Battalions
        305 Engineer Combat Battalion
        702 Tank Battalion
        610 Tank Destroyer Battalion
        633 Antiaircraft Artillery Automatic Weapons Battalion
The division began fighting in Normandy in August, had a hard fight for a crossing of the Moselle River in September, and in November participated in the drive to the Saar River.