Unique Recognition for Selected Units
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3d Infantry:
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(a) The knapsack strap, a black leather strap woven with a narrower
buff strap and worn on the left shoulder, is authorized for 3d
Infantry, which is the oldest Regular Army regiment, to recall the
special markings on the regimental uniform of the eighteenth century.
The Secretary of War authorized the knapsack strap as part the
regiment's heraldic items in the 1920s.
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(b) The regiment traditionally marches in review with bayonets fixed.
At the battle of Cerro Gordo during the Mexican War the 3d Infantry
led a brilliant bayonet charge, and in 1922 the regiment requested
permission to pass in review for ceremonies and parades with bayonets
fixed. Although the regimental history reports the request was granted
by the War Department, there is no record in our files of the
approval. It was the usual practice in the nineteenth century to have
fixed bayonets at dress parades.
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4th Infantry:
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The 4th Infantry is the only regiment authorized to wear a distinctive
insignia made of cloth. It consists of one green and two red stripes
with the green in the middle. The insignia commemorates the heroic
actions of regimental band during the Mexican War. At Monterey in 1846
the band turned a captured Mexican battery on the enemy with great
effect. In 1923 the regimental commander requested that the
distinctive insignia recall the action of the band members, who had
been authorized to wear scarlet piping on their chevrons and trouser
stripes. The Secretary of War approved the red and green cloth
insignia on 19 February 1925.
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9th Infantry:
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On 22 December 1925, as a part of the official heraldic program
instituted after World War I, the Secretary of War authorized a belt
buckle as the distinctive insignia for the 9th Infantry. On the buckle
was an imperial five-toed Chinese dragon encircling a disc bearing the
numeral "9" and under the number the motto, "Kee Up the
Fire" The buckle commemorates the regiment's service in China
in 1900.
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14th Major Port:
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In recognition of the unit's outstanding achievement between
"D" Day and "V-E" Day, the port was granted the
privilege of marching through the streets of the town and county of
Southampton with bayonets fixed, drums beating, and colors flying.
Nearly two million men had departed through Southampton, England. The
port is perpetuated by the 374th Transportation Command.
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Regimental badges:
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The 10th Infantry, 10th Cavalry, and the 13th Armor have regimental
badges rather than coats of arms as authorized other Regular Army
regiments. Coats of arms evolved from the practice of placing heraldic
bearings on the surcoat worn over a soldier's armor, while badges
developed from honorary decorations. When the Army began to approve
heraldic items after World War I, a regiment could request either a
badge or coat of arms.
Prepared 6 January 1994 by DAMH-HSO [
Later DAMH-FPO]