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A SUNDRY ASSORTMENT OF MILITARIA
ARMY AND MARINES
(9) MILITARY PIECES
CAMPAIGN MISSION TOKEN FROM
THE RECRUITING STATION OF OKLAHOMA CITY, OK
"5"
PRO PATRIA VIGILANS PIN
USASC
UNITED STATES ARMY SIGNAL CORP.
10TH ARMY MOUNTAIN DIVISION
INSIGNIA PATCH
AIR DEFENSE ARTILLERY
LAPEL BUTTON
CROSS CANNONS W/ ROCKET
OFFICER OF ROCKET ARTILLERY UNIT
USMC RIFLE EXPERT
4TH (CAN BE REMOVED)
HALLMARK
OEC 4-79
H-24N
(NOT PICTURED) ONE STRIPE
YELLOW ON BLUES
3 STRIPE PIN
BLUE ON SILVER
HALLMARK - K. & MEYER NEW YORK
BUTTONS PICTURED ARE AVAILABLE ON AN
ALTERNATE AUCTION
+++PLUS
(1) COAST ARTILLERY
INSIGNIA DISK PIN
MANUFACTURED BY
US MEYER INC.
NEW YORK
(1) AIR DEFENSE
INSIGNIA DISK PIN
UNMARKED
(1) UNDETERMINED
INSIGNIA DISK PIN
SINGLE STAR IN SHIELD
NO HALLMARK
(5) LARGE EAGLE BUTTONS
HANDY BUTTON MFG CHICAGO
(3) SMALL EAGLE BUTTONS
HANDY MFG INC
(2) LARGE EAGLE BUTTONS
SCOVILL MFG
WATERBURY, MA
(2) SMALL EAGLE BUTTONS
SCOVILL MFG.
WATERBURY, CT
(1) OLD BUTTON
CELLULIOD / COMPOSITE MATERIAL
ALMOST LIKE BAKELITE.
UNKNOWN MANUFACTURER
29mm
(1) K21
SEARGEANT CHEVRON
21mm X 28mm
(1) OLD BUTTON
METAL
EAGLE HOLDING AN ANCHOR
UNKNOWN MAKER
15mm
(1) MEDAL BOX
CAMPAIGN & SERVICE
VICTORY WORLD WAR II
STOCK NO. 71-M-945
SPEC. NO. P.Q.D. NO. 112D
D.L. AULD CO.
JUNE 1946
(3) CAMPAIGN MEDLAS
"FOR GOOD CONDUCT"
"LEROY DAVIS"
"FOR GOOD CONDUCT"
NO ENGRAVING
"VICTORY MEDAL W/ RIBBON
(1) OLD JAPAN
LIGHTER
FASHIONED AFTER A MILITARY ISSUE
COLT .45
(1) EKO COO-COO CLOK
NECKLACE
QUARTZ MOVEMENT
MARCASITE RHINSTEONES
MEASURES ABOUT
7cm X 3cm
TAKE ONE OR ALL
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FYI
Military uniforms comprises standardised dress worn by members of the armed forces and paramilitaries of various nations. Military dress and military styles have gone through great changes over the centuries from colourful and elaborate to extremely utilitarian. Military uniforms in the form of standardised and distinctive dress, intended for identification and display, are typically a sign of organised military forces equipped by a central authority.
Modern uniforms - The utilitarian necessities of war and economic frugality are now the dominant factors in uniform design. Most military forces, however, have developed several different uniform types, including combat dress, working dress, service or ordinary duty uniforms and (to a very limited extent) ceremonial full dress. The practice of wearing a form of full dress off duty ("walking out dress") has largely died out as the modern soldier prefers the casual clothing of his civilian peers. Soldiers of the French Armed Forces do however still wear their kepis and a modified form of parade dress off duty, which can be seen every 14 July, during the Bastille Day Military Parade, in Paris.
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The United States Army Signal Corps develops, tests, provides, and manages communications and information systems support for the command and control of combined arms forces. It was established in 1860, the brainchild of United States Army Major Albert J. Myer, and has had an important role from the American Civil War through the current day. Over its history, it had the initial responsibility for a number of functions and new technologies that are currently managed by other organizations, including military intelligence, weather forecasting, and aviation.
Mission statement
The mission of the Signal Corps is to provide and manage communications and information systems support for the command and control of combined arms forces. Signal support includes Network Operations (information assurance, information dissemination management, and network management) and management of the electromagnetic spectrum. Signal support encompasses all aspects of designing, installing, maintaining, and managing information networks to include communications links, computers, and other components of local and wide area networks. Signal forces plan, install, operate, and maintain voice and data communications networks that employ single and multi-channel satellite, tropospheric scatter, terrestrial microwave, switching, messaging, video-teleconferencing, visual information, and other related systems. They integrate tactical, strategic and sustaining base communications, information processing and management systems into a seamless global information network that supports knowledge dominance for Army, joint and coalition operations.
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The 10th Mountain Division (Light Infantry) is a light infantry division of the United States Army based at Fort Drum, New York. It is a subordinate unit of the XVIII Airborne Corps and the only division-sized element of the U.S. Army to specialize in fighting under harsh terrain and weather conditions. The division retains the "mountain" designation for historical purposes but is actually organized as a light infantry division.
Activated in 1943, the 10th Mountain Division was the last among currently active divisions to enter combat during World War II. The 10th fought in the mountains of Italy in some of the roughest terrain in the country. After the war, the division was briefly redesignated as the 10th Infantry Division, a training unit, also seeing brief deployment to Germany before inactivation.
Reactivated in 1985, the division saw numerous deployments to contingencies throughout the 1990s. Division elements participated in Operation Desert Storm, Operation Restore Hope, Operation Uphold Democracy, Task Force Eagle, and Hurricane Andrew disaster relief. Since 2001, the division and its four combat brigades have seen numerous deployments to both Iraq and Afghanistan in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom, respectively.
Origins - The 10th Division was originally organized in 1918 as a regular army and national army division for World War I. However, it did not go overseas and demobilized in February 1919 at Camp Funston, Kansas. Though there was a 10th Infantry Division active in the US Army during World War I, that division was redesignated the Panama Canal Division after the war, and it shares no connection with the 10th Mountain Division activated during World War II.
In November 1939, during the Soviet Union's invasion of Finland, Russian efforts were frustrated following the destruction of two armored divisions by Finnish soldiers on skis. Upon seeing the effectiveness of these troops, Charles Minot Dole, the president of the National Ski Patrol, began to lobby the War Department of the need for a similar unit of troops in the United States Army, trained for fighting in winter and mountain warfare.
In September 1940, Dole was able to present his case to General George C. Marshall, the Army Chief of Staff, who agreed with Dole's assessment, deciding to create a "Mountain" unit for fighting in harsh terrain. On 8 December 1941, the Army activated its first mountain unit, the 87th Mountain Infantry Battalion (later the 87th Infantry Regiment) at Fort Lewis, Washington. The 87th trained in harsh conditions, including Mount Rainier’s 14,411 foot peak. The National Ski Patrol took on the unique role of recruiting for the 87th Infantry Regiment and later the Division. After returning from the Kiska Campaign in the Aleutian Islands near Alaska, Army commanders decided to expand the concept of mountain warfare for an entire division. The 87th would form the core of this new division.
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Insignia or insigne pl -nia or -nias (in Latin, insignia is the plural of singular insigne: emblem, symbol, ensign, badge of honor) : a symbol or token of personal power, status or office, or of an official body of government or jurisdiction. An insignia is usually the emblem of a specific or general authority.
Typical examples of insignia are:
Crowns
Flags of a country or state
Coats of arms and Heraldry
Seals
Ensigns
Roundels
Badges
Cockades
Other National Emblems
Shoulder patch, or shoulder sleeve insignia (SSI)
Military aircraft insignia
Military rank and unit markings
Official insignia are often protected by law as to allow their use only by people holding a specific office or staff members acting on behalf of such a person. Misuse, defacement and destruction of such symbols is considered an offense in many countries.
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