112th Infantry Regiment, Pennsylvania Army National Guard: Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 11:32, 20 August 2023

112TH INFANTRY REGIMENT, PENNSYLVANIA ARMY NATIONAL GUARD


Coat of arms (crest) of 112th Infantry Regiment, Pennsylvania Army National Guard

(Coat of Arms)
Coat of arms (crest) of 112th Infantry Regiment, Pennsylvania Army National Guard

(Distinctive Unit Insignia)


Official blazon

Shield: Argent, issuant in fess a bridge of one arch Proper masoned Sable, the center portion shot away, in chief a cross patée Azure and a Spanish castle Gules; in base a lion rampant of the third grasping a cross of Lorraine of the fourth.
Crest: That for the regiments and separate battalions of the Pennsylvania Army National Guard: From a wreath Argent and Azure, a lion rampant guardant Proper holding in dexter paw a naked scimitar of the first, hilted Or and in sinister an escutcheon of the first on a fess Sable three plates.
Motto: STRIVE, OBEY, ENDURE.

Origin/meaning

To the old coat of arms of the 112th Infantry Regiment are added a rampant lion as found on the arms of Belgium and the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg grasping a red cross of the province of Lorraine in France. The lion is in the Infantry color and both symbols represent the locale of the Regiment’s combat in World War II. The shield is white, the old Infantry color. Service in the Civil War is shown by the cross patée, the badge of the 5th Corps, 3rd Division, in which the organization served in that war. The Spanish castle indicates service in Puerto Rico during the Spanish-American War, while the bridge, which is a representation of the bridge over the Vesle River at Fismes, France, where the Regiment saw its hardest fighting, symbolizes service in the World War I. The Crest is that for Regiments and Separate Battalions of the Pennsylvania Army National Guard.

The arms were approved on 2 January 1930. The insignia was amended to correct the blazon on 16 May, 2008.


Literature: Images and Information from Wikimedia Commons