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  2. List of United States Army Field Manuals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_United_States_Army...

    Field Service Regulations, United States Army, 1914, corrected to July 31, 1918. (Changes Nos. 1 to 11) 31 July 1918 [39]...Field Service Regulations, revised by the General Staff... De facto: These FSR supersede FSR, 21 May 1913. Leonard Wood: INACTIVE: FSR 1914 (C) (incl. C1 – C11) Field Service Regulations, United States Army, 1914

  3. List of numbered documents of the United States Department of War

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_numbered_documents...

    Field service regulations : United States Army: 1914: 244: regulations 476: Manual for noncommissioned officers and privates of infantry of the organized militia and volunteers of the United States: 1914: 262: manual 482: Drill regulations for field artillery (4.7-inch gun) United States Army (provisional) 1914: 114: drill regulations/artillery 484

  4. U.S. Army Regimental System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U.S._Army_Regimental_System

    The United States Army Regimental System (USARS) is an organizational and classification system used by the United States Army.It was established in 1981 to replace the Combat Arms Regimental System (CARS) to provide each soldier with continuous identification with a single regiment, and to increase a soldier's probability of serving recurring assignments with their regiment.

  5. SIDPERS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SIDPERS

    Standard Installation and Division Personnel Reporting System (SIDPERS) was the main database or, rather, databases for personnel accounting by the United States Army. The Active Army, US Army Reserve , and Army National Guard each had separate, largely incompatible databases, each bearing the name SIDPERS or a variation thereof.

  6. Classes of supply - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classes_of_supply

    The United States Army divides supplies into ten numerically identifiable classes of supply. The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) uses only the first five, for which NATO allies have agreed to share a common nomenclature with each other based on a NATO Standardization Agreement (STANAG). A common naming convention is reflective of the ...

  7. REDCON - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/REDCON

    REDCON-1: Full alert; unit ready to move and fight. WMD alarms and hot loop equipment [2] stowed; OPs pulled in. (A hot loop is a field telephone circuit between the subunits of a company.) All personnel alert and mounted on vehicles; weapons manned. Engines started. Company team is ready to move immediately. REDCON-1.5

  8. 111th Aviation Regiment (United States) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/111th_Aviation_Regiment...

    The Regiment was organized in the Florida Army National Guard as Company D, 26th Aviation Battalion and federally recognized on 1 September 1978 at Jacksonville. It was expanded, reorganized and redesignated on 2 October 1986 as the 419th Aviation Battalion, and redesignated on 1 October 1987 as the 111th Aviation, a parent regiment under the ...

  9. Overseas Service Bar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Overseas_Service_Bar

    An overseas service bar is not authorized for a fraction of a 6–month period. (2) Korea, between 27 June 1950 and 27 July 1954. Credit toward an overseas service bar is authorized for each month of active Federal service as a member of the U.S. Army serving in the designated hostile fire area in Korea between 1 April 1968 and 31 August 1973.