1679

33RD INFANTRY REGIMENT FLAG.

Currency:USD Category:Firearms & Military Start Price:300.00 USD Estimated At:600.00 - 800.00 USD
33RD INFANTRY REGIMENT FLAG.

6’ x 6’ silk embroidered with gold fringe. On June 30, 1916, General Orders No. 22 commanded that seven new infantry regiments be raised for the U.S. Army for WW1. One of these was the 33rd Infantry Regiment who deployed for protection of the Canal Zone for first time in November 1920 at Fort Clayton (named for Col. Bertram Tracy Clayton who was killed in action in France, May 30, 1918).
In 1941, the regiment was transferred to the Caribbean Defense Command with its battalions being sent to Surinam (now Dutch Guiana) to protest the bauxite mines, Aruba, Trinidad and the border of French Guiana, then controlled by the pro-German Vichy French.
In March 1944, the regiment arrived in New York and was sent to Louisiana for the remainder of World War 2. Some of its members volunteered to join the famous Merrill’s Maurauders becoming part of the 2nd Battalion, 5307th Composite Unit. On June 26, 1944, the 33rd Infantry was deactivated.
Its flag is on a blue field which is the official color of the U.S. Infantry. Their motto embroidered on riband “RIDENTES VENIMUS” translates “Smiling We Come”. The regiment’s crest was approved Jan. 8, 1924 is placed on the chest of the eagle about the vintage of this historic Canal Zone flag.
CONDITION: good-very good overall, light fading, embroidered panels very good, silk background on ribband with losses, fraying and reductions in upper corner of fly. (02-17547-57/JS). $600-800.