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WWI, U.S. ARMY, AIR SERVICE, 483rd AERO CONSTRUCTION SQUADRON, PATCH, ORIGINAL
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WWI, U.S. ARMY, AIR SERVICE, 483rd AERO CONSTRUCTION SQUADRON, PATCH, ORIGINAL
$35.04 CAD
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Buyers will be responsible for the cost and packaging of the returnd item(s). If you are sending the item within the United States and the order is valued at $100 or more, insure the shipment for the value of the merchandise and ship your return with a signature shipping service. Items valued over $35 must be returned to the seller with a trackable shipping service. For items below $35, we suggest USPS delivery confirmation service. If a package doesn’t arrive and you don’t use a trackable method to return or if you refuse the shipment as a method of return, we may not be able to cover you.
Buyers will be responsible for the cost and packaging of the returnd item(s). If you are sending the item within the United States and the order is valued at $100 or more, insure the shipment for the value of the merchandise and ship your return with a signature shipping service. Items valued over $35 must be returned to the seller with a trackable shipping service. For items below $35, we suggest USPS delivery confirmation service. If a package doesn’t arrive and you don’t use a trackable method to return or if you refuse the shipment as a method of return, we may not be able to cover you.
WWI, U.S. ARMY, AIR SERVICE, 483rd AERO CONSTRUCTION SQUADRON, PATCH, ORIGINAL, VINTAGE
Aero Squadrons were the designation of the first United States Army aviation units until the end of World War I. These units consisted of combat flying, training, ground support, construction and other components of the Air Service. After World War I ended, the majority of these squadrons were demobilized. Some however were retained during the interwar period of the 1920s and 1930s, and served in all theaters of operation during World War II. Today, the oldest squadrons in the United States Air Force and Air National Guard can trace their lineage back to the original Aero Squadrons of WWI.
Originally formed as the 71st Aero Squadron
AEF: 21 March 1918 ? February 1919
Construction Squadron
Air Service Production Center #2, Romorantin
Demobilized: February 1919
In January 1918 a new numbering scheme for aero squadrons was established.
Numbers 1?399 would be for Aero Service Squadrons (AS)
400?599 Aero Construction Squadrons (ACS)
600?799 Aero Supply Squadrons
800?1099 Aero Repair Squadrons.
The numerical designation of school squadrons at the various flying fields in the United States was discontinued in July 1918, and replaced by letter designation. For example, the 2nd Aero Squadron became Squadron A, Kelly Field. In November 1918, the personnel of the lettered squadrons of each flying field were merged into a single Flying School Detachment at such station.
In addition to the Aero Squadrons, whose mission supported airplanes in one way or another, Air Service Spruce Squadrons have been noted and listed. A part of the Signal Corps, they were located in Oregon and Washington states. When the U.S. entered World War I, it was quickly discovered that the nation had no capacity to build warplanes in quantity. Spruce timber, vital to wing construction was in critically short supply. In 1918, the United States Army stepped in and took over the production of airplane spruce in the pacific northwest, with the Spruce Production Division organizing loggers and constructing a plant to process the wood, construct roads and railroads into the forests to access and cut the timber.
Men in the Spruce Squadrons were part of the Signal Corps along with the Aero Squadrons, as the Signal Corps oversaw all Army aviation. About 50,000 soldiers were assigned to Spruce Squadrons, overseeing about 100,000 lumber workers, were assigned to small camps in the Pacific Northwest. Many of these men were itching to go "over there" and take part in combat, however, their labor and skills to produce spruce lumber were needed far more, in the forests of the Pacific Northwest to produce the materiel needed to build aircraft.