1659

93RD SIGNAL BRIGADE (CORPS) FLAG.

Currency:USD Category:Firearms & Military Start Price:300.00 USD Estimated At:600.00 - 800.00 USD
93RD SIGNAL BRIGADE (CORPS) FLAG.

3’ x 4’ double applique cotton, orange field, the color for signal units of the Army since 1872. The designation is on white which is also a Signal Corps additional color. The central device is a variant of their brigade crest and features a red lightning bolt (which is white on the crest) and lit torch within a white multi-point star on blue background which is the background on the crest.
The U.S. Army Signal Corps was established in 1860 prior to the Civil War. Within that conflict they were tasked with communications management via telegraph and wig-wag signal flags created especially for that purpose (a system created in 1856). Codes were created to make communications by both manners classified and code books devised and distributed to units.
After the war, the Signal Corps remained active in Army campaigns expanding their communications capabilities to carrier pigeons, telephones and later radios but the signal flags were still used at times. Intelligence and counter-intelligence gathering was part of their mission profile and what would become the National Weather Service was sprung from the Corps in 1870. The branch is a key component of Army operations today with satellite uplink technology, computers and more.
The brigade originally formed as the 93d Signal Battalion in November 1941. The unit was activated in May 1942 at Camp Crowder, Missouri. Sent to Europe during World War Two, they served in the campaign in France ending with the surrender of Germany. They battalion was deactivated in January 1946 at Camp Patrick Henry, Virginia as part of the draw down of the U.S. military. However, in February 1955 the unit was reactivated at Fort Huachuca, Arizona. Sent again to Europe, the battalion, less one company, was deactivated in September 1972 in Germany. In March 1981, the Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 93d Signal Battalion was redesignated as the Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 93d Signal Brigade, and then again deactivated in Germany in December 1991. In February 1988, the brigade was again reactivated this time at Fort Gordon, Georgia where they would remain until deactivated once more in April 2007. In July 2007, the unit was again reactivated, this time at Fort Eustis, Virginia. The brigade would serve in the Middle East during Operation Desert Shield/Desert Storm.
Component members of the brigade, past and current, include the 67th Signal Battalion (Reflagged as part of the 35th Signal Brigade); 63rd Signal Battalion (also later reflagged as part of the 35th Signal Brigade); the 56th Signal Battalion (later reflagged as part of the 21st Signal Brigade); 26th Signal Battalion; 51st Signal Battalion and the 34th Signal Battalion, all posted to Germany.
CONDITION: very good to fine overall. (02-17547-25/JS). $600-800.