The IV Corps was reconstituted in the Organized Reserve in 1921, allotted to the Fourth Corps Area, assigned to the Second United States Army, and activated with a headquarters composed of Regular Army and Organized Reserve personnel at Atlanta, Georgia, on 1 March 1922. The Headquarters Company was initiated on 29 March 1922 in Atlanta. on 15 June 1925, the headquarters was relieved from active duty, with all Regular Army personnel passing to the control of the Headquarters, Non-Divisional Group, Fourth Corps Area, which assumed the responsibilities of the IV Corps headquarters; both the Headquarters and Headquarters Company remained active in the Organized Reserve. The Headquarters, IV Corps, was withdrawn from the Organized Reserve on 15 August 1927 and allotted to the Regular Army, as was the Headquarters Company on 1 October 1933. The corps headquarters was partially activated at Atlanta with Regular Army personnel from the corps area headquarters and Reserve personnel from the corps area at large. On 1 October 1933, the IV Corps was relieved from the Second Army and assigned to the Third Army. For major maneuvers and command post exercises in the 1930s, the corps headquarters was occasionally organized provisionally using its assigned Reserve officers and staff officers from the Fourth Corps Area. The corps headquarters was fully activated on 20 October 1939, less Reserve personnel, at Fort Benning, Georgia.[2]
In the spring of 1945 the corps, still in the Fifth Army's central sector, took part in the successful Italian spring offensive, breaking out of the Apennines to outflank the units of the German Tenth and Fourteenth Armies defending Bologna and forming a pincer with the British Eighth Army on the right to surround them, and then driving on to the River Po and finally Verona and Brescia.
The corps was inactivated on 13 October 1945, at Camp Kilmer, New Jersey, it was reactivated again at Birmingham, Alabama, in 1958 and inactivated at Birmingham in 1968.[8]
Wilson, John B. "Armies, Corps, Divisions, and Separate Brigades | Army Lineage Series" U.S. Government Printing Office, 1999. CMH Pub 60-7-1. ISBN0160499925
^Clay, Steven E. (2010). U.S. Army Order of Battle, 1919-1941, Volume 1. The Arms: Major Commands and Infantry Organizatioms. Fort Leavenworth: Combat Studies Institute Press. p. 151.