![]() |
Short history on our "Wings"........
Short history on our "Wings"...............;)
THE PARACHUTIST BADGE The most sougth after paratrooper insignia is the parachutist badge, or "Wings." It is a proud moment for any soldier when they are first pinned on him. There are three types of wings: Parachutist, Senior Parachutist and Master Parachutist. The requirements to win them are among the strictest and most rigorous in the Army. A bronze star, may be worn on the wings, for each combat jump in which the paratrooper has participated in. To earn the Parachutist Badge, a soldier must undergo and successfully complete the intensive and physically- taxing course of training at an authorized parachute school, or must take part in at least one combat jump into enemy-held territory as a part of an Airborne Assault landing. To earn the Senior Parachute Badge, a trooper must make at least 30 jumps, at least five of which must be made with combat equipment, including a weapon, ammunition, food and water. At least two of his jumps must be at night, one of which must be as a jumpmaster. In addition he must graduate from a jumpmaster school, or have been a jumpmaster in combat, or have performed at least half of his total jumps as a jumpmaster. The Master Parachutist Badge is the most difficult to earn. To receive it he must have made 65 jumps or more. Fifteen jumps must be with equipment, weapon, ammunition, food and water; four must be night jumps, one of which must have been as a jumpmaster. He must also be a graduate of jumpmaster school, or have been a jump- master in combat, or have at least half of his jumps as a jumpmaster. This is the most coveted badge. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ HOW THE PARACHUTE BADGE WAS DEVELOPED By Lt. Gen. William P. Yarborough The parachutist qualification badge was not developed in order to "identify the members of this unique organ- ization," it was to signify qualification in the art of military parachuting. The device which identified the 501st Parachute Battalion was an Ojibway Thunderbird on a silver shield with the motto GERONIMO." I designed the distinctive insigne. Its history is filed with the heraldry element of DCSPers in the Pentagon, I had hoped that every parachute unit of the American Army might have an American Indian Thunderbird of different design as the basis for its distinctive insigne and toward the end, I had done considerable research which had brought to light dozens of colorful thunderbird designs – all appropriate, I thought, to American Heraldry and Traditions. As to the parachute wings it is incorrect to state that "The Chief of Infantry suggested a design on a light blue background, similar in appearance to the badge of the Air Corps pilots." The one most firm requirement, placed by the Army, on any design of a parachute qualification badge was that it IN NO WAY resemble the pilot’s wings of the Air Corps. The parachute qualification badge as we know it came into being as a result of Lt. Col. WILLIAM M. MILEY’S initiative. As Commander of the 101st Parachute Battalion, he ordered me to Washington in early 1941, telling me not to come back to Ft. Benning until I had an approved qualification badge in my hands. He had (quite properly) rejected several badge concepts supplied by the Heraldry Branch of G-1. They were both unimaginative and in our view, even "recessive" instead of "aggressive." One consisted of a deployed parachute around which wings were folded in an almost funeral attitude. Arriving at the War Department, I set to work to produce a design which fitted the parameters supplied by the bureaucrats. After at least 50 tries, I came up with the design we now have. It seemed to me that the suggestion supplied that the wing tips were supporting the chute canopy was symbolic of the powered flight which always preceded the paradrop. Furthermore, the prohibition against extended wings of any kind (imposed by the Heraldry branch) had to be accepted. I walked the approved design in and out of every office which had a piece of the action in the War Department. I would wait doggedly until each action type got to it in his "In" basket, and then take it to the next one. When a contract was finally let with Bailey Banks and Biddle of Philadelphia, I camped on their doorstep until I was able to walk away with 350 sterling wings. These I carried triumphantly back to Col. Miley at Benning. All of these first wings bear BB&B on the back and they are a rare collector’s item. Feeling that the wings needed a little color and that perhaps they were on the small side, I designed the first felt backgrounds. For the 501st the background was Infantry Blue with Artillery Red superimposed so as to leave a narrow blue border. I am enclosing a copy of my Patent on the "Wings." I took the Patent out in order to protect the design from wrongful exploitation, and to keep the quality high. I never obtained a single penny from the sale of the wings nor from any commercial use – this was not my objective. Lt. Gen. William P. Yarborough U.S.A. (Ret.) 160 Hillside Rd. Southern Pines, NC 28387 Big Teddy :munchin |
Your post made me do some reading on General Yarborough, and I learned that he fought in a bottle at Tuminello Pass in Sicily during WWII. A good portion of my family is from that area of Sicily and bears the same last name. Thank you for helping me find that piece of family history.
|
| All times are GMT -6. The time now is 16:28. |
Copyright 2004-2022 by Professional Soldiers ®