[5] Major General Aleksander Pulk, commander of the 1st Division spoke at the regiment's sports field.
Around 100 veterans who were personnel of the armored trains during the Independence war attended.
Colonel Karl Parts, who led and organized armored trains during the Independence War, gave a speech about Rear Admiral Johan Pitka, who is often called "the father of the armored trains".
[6] Parts ended his speech by remembering the fallen personnel of the Armored trains in the Independence War and the actions of Captain Anton Irv, who died in 1919.
[2] In June 1940, the Soviet Union invaded and annexed Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia.
[8][9] The regiment's commander from 1940 to 1941, Erich Johann Friedrich Toffer [et], was arrested and deported by the NKVD.
The Chief of Staff of the Second Division was the former commander Voldemar Karl Koht from 1940 to the occupation of Estonia during the Second World War.