2341

ARMY MEDICAL DEPARTMENT REGIMENT FLAG, CIRCA 1990.

Currency:USD Category:Firearms & Military Start Price:100.00 USD Estimated At:200.00 - 300.00 USD
ARMY MEDICAL DEPARTMENT REGIMENT FLAG, CIRCA 1990.
3’ x 4’ double applique embroidered on maroon field with white fringe, medical department coat of arms with caduceus and motto: “TO CONSERVE FIGHTING STRENGTH”. The U.S. Army Medical Department Regiment was activated in July, 1986, at Fort Sam Houston in San Antonio Texas. This post is considered the "Home of Army medicine." The roots of the U.S. Army Medical Department began on 27 July, 1775, when the Continental Congress authorized a Medical Service for an army of 20,000 men. It created the Hospital Department to handle sick and wounded troops. On 14 April, 1818 the Congress passed an Act which reorganized the staff departments of the Army. The Act provided for a Medical Department to be headed by a Surgeon General. The passage of this law is when the modern Medical Department of the Army began. For much of the Army’s history, the regiment was a tactical as well as an administrative and ceremonial organization. In the late 1950s the Army reorganized its regiments to meet the requirements demanded changes in warfare that would generate high casualty rates. Between 1957 and 1959, the Army eliminated the regimental headquarters as a tactical and administrative organization from most of its combat arms regiments with the exception of some of the cavalry regiments. In the reorganization, some Army units lost their lineage and history. The Army took note and created the U.S. Army Regimental System in 1981. In 1984, the Combat Arms Regimental System was expanded to include the non-combat arms branches under a “whole-branch” concept in which the entire branch is provided a regimental-model history. CONDITION: fine. (02-19473-10/JS). $200-300.