Bonjour,
Two years ago in a garage sale, late in the morning (around 10 !), I noticed in a shoe box, an Indian head patch. I thought at the beginning it was a vehicle collector patch but when I saw snaps in the back, I knew it was a good shot… In the box, more treasures were hidden among plastic toys and cheap tools. The young seller told me that all these military insignias came from his grandfather who spent, according to him, few years in the US Army during WWII and in ...PTO. Unfortunately in France, Korea war is a forgotten war and only few people know french soldiers fought bravely in the country of the morning calm.
We have here a little grouping from a “bataillon de Corée” sergeant.
The COREE tab is an official type (gold letters on black). They are widely used since may 51 by French volunteers and became official after a CO (general MONCLAR) in October 51.
The 2nd Infantry Division SSI is a flat edge US made. 6 female snaps were sewn in the back in order to clean easily the uniform.
Two crossed rifles with 23 added
Japanese made DI of the 23rd Infantry Regiment made by N.B.I Co Japan. The French Bn was the fourth battalion of the 23 IR.
Nations Unies shield. This insignia is the first type made by Drago Paris Nice from 1950 till 1952. This insignia was designed to follow the US uniforms regulations and has to be worn on the Ike jacket or summer shirt instead of collar discs.
The the red piping on the sergeant stripes on the right side means this NCO came from colonial troops.
The UN sky blue background ranks are unofficial and are rarely seen
The Distinguished Unit Citation has the two oak leaves (General orders 86, 49 and 72)
and the Korean Presidential Unit Citation (General orders 276 and 304) are the two unit citations won by the Bn.
After some works, I discovered that this junior NCO has been wounded as a group leader, received a TOE war cross and ended his tour as Bn postman.
Hope you enjoy
Cheers
Valery
Two years ago in a garage sale, late in the morning (around 10 !), I noticed in a shoe box, an Indian head patch. I thought at the beginning it was a vehicle collector patch but when I saw snaps in the back, I knew it was a good shot… In the box, more treasures were hidden among plastic toys and cheap tools. The young seller told me that all these military insignias came from his grandfather who spent, according to him, few years in the US Army during WWII and in ...PTO. Unfortunately in France, Korea war is a forgotten war and only few people know french soldiers fought bravely in the country of the morning calm.
We have here a little grouping from a “bataillon de Corée” sergeant.
The COREE tab is an official type (gold letters on black). They are widely used since may 51 by French volunteers and became official after a CO (general MONCLAR) in October 51.
The 2nd Infantry Division SSI is a flat edge US made. 6 female snaps were sewn in the back in order to clean easily the uniform.
Two crossed rifles with 23 added
Japanese made DI of the 23rd Infantry Regiment made by N.B.I Co Japan. The French Bn was the fourth battalion of the 23 IR.
Nations Unies shield. This insignia is the first type made by Drago Paris Nice from 1950 till 1952. This insignia was designed to follow the US uniforms regulations and has to be worn on the Ike jacket or summer shirt instead of collar discs.
The the red piping on the sergeant stripes on the right side means this NCO came from colonial troops.
The UN sky blue background ranks are unofficial and are rarely seen
The Distinguished Unit Citation has the two oak leaves (General orders 86, 49 and 72)
and the Korean Presidential Unit Citation (General orders 276 and 304) are the two unit citations won by the Bn.
After some works, I discovered that this junior NCO has been wounded as a group leader, received a TOE war cross and ended his tour as Bn postman.
Hope you enjoy
Cheers
Valery
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