2331

11th FIELD ARTILLERY FLAG, CIRCA 1970.

Currency:USD Category:Firearms & Military Start Price:150.00 USD Estimated At:300.00 - 400.00 USD
11th FIELD ARTILLERY FLAG, CIRCA 1970.
3’ x 4’ double applique embroidered on red field with gold fringe, unit crest and motto “ON TIME”. This unit was redesignated in 1960s for the Vietnam War. Four battalions of the 11th field artillery regiment served in Southeast Asia. The 1st Battalion served with the 9th Infantry Division; 2nd Battalion served with the 101st Airborne Division; another battalion served with the 11th Infantry brigade. Lastly, the 7th Battalion served the 25th infantry division. Lt. Robert Kalsu, NFL Buffalo Bills lineman was killed July 21, 1970 by mortar fire, a member of A battery, 2nd Battalion. The 2nd Battalion, 11th Field Artillery, is currently assigned to the 25th Infantry Division (Light). It is the only unit of this regiment that remains. The regimental flag is scarlet, the traditional color for American artillery units since the Corps of Artillery of the Continental Army was formed in 1777. The scarlet trim of their uniforms was matched with a plum on their hats of the same color. In the center of the Eagle is the regimental crest and on the ribbon in its beak is their motto, “On Time.” This regiment has a long lineage (1916-1958) prior to this flag’s Vietnam era manufacture and Philadelphia QM issue. The 11th Field Artillery Regiment was constituted in June 1916 in the Regular Army at Camp Douglas. Two months after the United States declared war, 10 officers and 200 enlisted men of the 6th Field Artillery were transferred to the newly formed 11th Field Artillery at Camp Jones near Douglas, Arizona. The unit was supplemented by draftees from New York, Ohio, Missouri and California. At full wartime strength, the 11th had 63 officers, 1496 enlisted, and 24 guns. In April 1918, the 11th was ordered to Fort Sill in Oklahoma where it became part of the 6th Field Artillery Brigade, 6th Division. The regiment was shipped to England in July 1918 and fought in the Meuse-Argonne Offensive seeing its first action on the night of October 26 at Rémonville and participating in the largest artillery barrage of the war on November 1st. On November 6th, the guns of the 11th's Battery E were the first Allied artillery pieces to fire on the rail line between Metz and Sedan and managed to silence a German battery some 3,000 yards away. Battery E, which had become separated from the rest of the regiment and was situated east of Beaufort, was accorded the honor of firing the final shot of World War One. That shot, a 95-pound shell, was fired at 10:59:59 AM on November 11th, 1918 by a 155mm howitzer at an unknown target (probably the Metz-Sedan railway). The regiment was relieved in November 1920 from assignment to the 6th Division and on March 1st was assigned to the Hawaiian Division (later designated the 24th Infantry Division). The regiment was relieved in March 1958 from assignment to the 24th Infantry Division. CONDITION: fine overall. (02-19473-4/JS). $300-400.