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Signal Corps NCOs wearing maroon and black berets with 55th Signal Company Beret Flash and 114th Signal Battalion DUI—only the 55th's Airborne Combat Camera Documentation Team is authorized to wear the maroon beret but the beret flash was authorized for the company prior to the establishment of the Department of the Army Beret Flash (2012) [1 ...
U.S. Army's 101st Airborne Division, 1st Brigade Combat Team Beret Flash Source Created by English Wikipedia editor User:McChizzle using sources from the World Wide Web , such as:
An officer with the 101st Airborne Division wearing dark-blue beret with 326th Engineer Battalion Beret Flash and Airmobile Badge, 1977 In 1968, the 101st took on the structure and equipment of an airmobile division.
English: Former U.S. Army, 101st Airborne Division's Screaming Eagle Replacement Training School and the former 172nd Infantry Brigade Beret Flash Date 25 January 2021
The 326th Engineer Battalion (Sapper Eagles) [1] [5] is one of three air assault engineer battalions in the United States Army. [5] [6] The 326th is part of the 1st Infantry Brigade Combat Team ("Bastogne")(♣), 101st Airborne Division and has been a part of the 101st since World War I.
The support group was composed of the 326th Airborne Medical Company, the 426th Airborne Quartermaster Company, the 101st Parachute Support and Maintenance Company, the Headquarters, Headquarters Detachment and the Division Band. From 1974 to 1979, the 101st DISCOM wore dark-blue berets with a unique organizational beret flash (shown above) [9]
Redesignated 1 July 1956 as Battery A, 377th Airborne Field Artillery Battalion; Reorganized and redesignated 25 April 1957 at Battery A, 377th Artillery, an element of the 101st Airborne Division; Inactivated 21 May 1965 at Fort Campbell, Kentucky; Activated 20 December 1968 in Vietnam; Redesignated 1 September 1971 as Battery A, 377th Field ...
English: Former U.S. Army 101st Airborne Division, 101st Division Support Command Beret Flash—this beret flash was also worn by units at Fort Campbell that lacked an organizational beret flash for wear on the dark–blue beret in the 1970s (see first source below)