93rd Signal Brigade (United States) explained

Unit Name:93rd Signal Brigade
Dates:1941–1946
1955–1972
1981–2007
2008–
Country:United States
Branch:U.S. Army
Garrison:Fort Eustis, VA
Motto:"Loyalty, Harmony, Accuracy"
Colors:orange, blue, white
Current Commander:Colonel William M. Martin
Identification Symbol Label:Distinctive Unit Insignia

The 93rd Signal Brigade is a unit of the United States Army which was active sporadically from 1941 to the present. Its mission has been to deploy, install, operate, and maintain a global tactical theater communications package, while supporting joint and combined operations. The 93rd Signal Brigade was deactivated on 23 April 2007, and replaced by the 35th Signal Brigade. The Brigade was reactivated at Fort Eustis, Va on 16 July 2008 to support the 7th Signal Command (Theater).

Insignia

Shoulder Sleeve Insignia Description/Blazon

Centered upon a blue disc NaNinches in diameter a white nine-pointed star, and centered thereon in a triangular form, three orange flashes.

Symbolism

The colors blue and white are a reference to the organization which is served by the unit. Orange and white are the colors traditionally associated with the US Army Signal Corps and the flashes refer to the signal communications mission of the organization. The outward points of the star connote signals transmitted and the inward points connote signals received. The nine points and three flashes allude to the unit's numerical designation.

Distinctive Unit Insignia Description/Blazon

A Gold color metal and enamel device NaNinches in height overall consisting of a shield blazoned: Azure over a flash in bend Argent a torch (bronze metal) Proper, inflamed of the last, in sinister three mullets palewise Or. Attached below and to the sides of the shield a Gold scroll inscribed "LOYALTY, HARMONY, ACCURACY" in Red letters.

Background

The distinctive unit insignia was originally approved for the 93d Signal Battalion on 20 February 1943. It was redesignated for the 93d Signal Brigade with symbolism revised to reflect correct lineal descent and color of stars on 29 October 1980.

Lineage

Constituted 3 November 1941 in the Regular Army as the 93d Signal BattalionActivated 15 May 1942 at Camp Crowder, MissouriInactivated 3 January 1946 at Camp Patrick Henry, VirginiaActivated 24 February 1955 at Fort Huachuca, ArizonaInactivated (less Company D) 21 September 1972 in Germany (Company D concurrently inactivated at Fort Hood, Texas)Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 93d Signal Battalion, redesignated 16 March 1981 as Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 93d Signal Brigade, and activated in GermanyInactivated 15 December 1991 in GermanyActivated 16 February 1998 at Fort Gordon, GeorgiaInactivated 16 April 2007 at Fort Gordon, GeorgiaActivated 16 July 2007 at Fort Eustis, Virginia

Honors

Campaign Participation Credit

Units

Units under the 93d Signal Brigade were:

History

Darmstadt 53On July 18, 1971, soldiers of the 93rd Signal Brigade were involved in racial unrest between African-American and white soldiers.[1] [2]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. 1971-11-01 . Darmstadt 53 . Forward . en . 1 . 5 . 30-33 . community.28036818 . 951632639 . This time the scene is Darmstadt, West Germany, in the 93rd Signal Battalion and auxiliary units at Cambrai-Fritsch Caserne and Kelly Barracks. . dmy-all .
  2. Alverson . Charles . Charles Alverson . 1971-12-23 . GI Blues: Today's Action Army in Germany: Battling racism in the US military . live . . en . 0035-791X . 11665743 . https://web.archive.org/web/20191105145516/https://www.rollingstone.com/culture/culture-news/gi-blues-todays-action-army-in-germany-78494/ . 2019-11-05 . 2022-05-12 . Expecting to have a nice, quiet court-martial, the Army was surprised to find that the incident rapidly blew up into a major civil rights issue. Outside money and support for the "Darmstadt 53" began to pour in. The ACLU and the NAACP took a heavy interest, and as the case came to trial seven high-powered lawyers, six of them civilian, were assembled to blow the Army’s case apart. . dmy-all .