OSPREY· VANGUARD 39 US ARMOUR CAMOUFLAGE AND MARKINGS 1917.. 45 Text and colour plates by Steven]. Zaloga /' VANGUARD SERIES · .y EDITOR: MARTIN WINDROW 1 USARMOU., CAMOUFLAGE AND MARKINGS 1917-45· Text and colour plates by STEVEN ]. ZALOGA OSPREY PUBLISHING LONDON Published in 1984 by Author's Note Osprey Publishing Ltd ThesubjectofUS AFVmarkingsisavastone.This Member company ofthe George Philip Group short bookisan attempttopresenta basicoverview 12-14 Long Acre, London WC2E 9LP of the subject. However, it cannot possibly cover © Copyright 1984 Osprey Publishing Ltd every Army memorandum or order affecting marking patterns, nor the many unofficial vari This book is copyrighted under the Berne Convention. ations in insignia and colouring that took place in All rights reserved. Apart from any fair dealing for the combat. Special emphasis has been given here to purpose ofprivate study, research, criticism or review, actual combat markings, rather than the markings as permitted under the Copyright Act, 1956, no part us~d during peacetime service or used by training ofthis publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any unitsinCONUS (ContinentalUnited States). Part means, electronic, electrical, chemical, mechanical, ofthe difficulty in dealing with this subject is that optical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without American soldiers are notoriously lax about the prior permission ofthe copyright owner. Enquiries observing Army regulations in the field, especially should be addressed to the Publishers. thoseinvolvingaratherinsignificantmattersuchas vehicle markings. An attempt is made here to contrast the regulations with the actual practice. British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data Thisbookcould nothavebeenpreparedwithout the assistanceofmanyotherstudentsofthesubject, Zaloga, StevenJ. andtheauthorwouldliketothankespeciallyDavid US armour camouflage and markings 1917-45 List, James Loop, Shep Paine, Phil Dyer and 1. United States. Army-History George Balin for their many contributions to this 2. Camouflage (Military science) 3. Armoured vehicles, Military work. All photos used here are US Army Signal I. Title Corps unless otherwise noted. 358'.18 UG446·5 Filmset in Great Britain Printed in Hong Kong ~-I- RenaultFTlighttank(No.2367)ofthe2ndPlatoon,Co.C,327th TankBattalion,1StAEFTankBrigadeatSt.Mimel,France,on 12September1918.Themarkingsconsistprimarilyofawhite diamond,indicatingCo.C,anda redheart,indicatingthe2nd Platoon.Thesmallnumber'I'isthevehiclenumberwithinthe World War 1 platoon. These tanks remained in their original French camouflage. Prior to the Grt:at War, US military vehicles had the 1920S the colours were mixed by units on the traditionally been painted in Olive Drab (OD) or basis of Quartermaster Corps instructions. Al battleship grey. US Olive Drabis a verydark olive though prepared paint became available in that greenwithaslightlybrownishhue. The easiestway decade, this did not altogether ensure uniformity of mixing it has been the combination of orange due to manufacturers' variations. Officially, all oxide (rustorange) withcharcoalblack. Thecolour tactical (combat) vehicles were to be finished in has varied depending on the mixture and type of lustreless (matt) Olive Drab, and administrative pigments. Too much red oxide results in a more vehicles in CONUS in gloss Olive Drab. distinctly brown colour; too much yellow results in Thefirstinstructionsgoverningtheuseofcolours an olive green. The appearance ofthe colour has and markings on US vehicles in France with the varied enormously,'depending not only on the American Expeditionary Force (AEF) were issued pigmentsused, butontheirdurability. Whenfresh, in a memorandum by the ChiefofQuartermaster, the colour has been a very dark brownish-green. AEF,on 11September 1917.Thisorderedtheuseof However, various examples have faded to a field olive drab paint as the basic vehicle colour, and drab colour, to a pale olive green, or even to a provided details on the use of white lettering for distinctlypurplish-browncolouronoccasion. Until vehicle markings and serial numbers. This mem- 3 ASix-TonSpecialTractorbeingtowedbyaMackprUnemover Mostoftheseinstructionswerelargelyignoredby intheUSAin1920.Thisshowsthegaudyfive-colourOrdnance the Tank Corps units in France. During the war, camouflagescheme,usedtoa limitedextentinWorldWarI. three light tank battalions with FT-I 7s and one heavy tank battalion with British Mark V tanks orandum was overridden by Bulletin No. 90 ofthe took partin the fighting of19I8. These tanks were GHQ,AEF,on I I November 1918,whichchanged delivered and remained in the colours of their the earlier instructions in a number ofdetails and original countries: the FT-I 7s were delivered in amplified other matters. Theform ofunit marking French camouflage, and the British Mark Vs in a adopted by the US Army in World War I was a monotone scheme, believed to be a dark bronze seriesofblackgeometricsigns, selectedindividually green. Theactualcolours ofthe French scheme are by each unit with the approval of the Director, not certain. They were evidently garish, as George Motor Transport Corps. The various instructions Patton, commander of the light tank battalions, alsoenvisioned the useofmulti-colourcamouflage. commented on their bright shades, but noted that The most detailed exposition of US camouflage the scheme was surprisingly effective. It is the patterns and colours was covered in Painting author's beliefthat they were finished in a manner Instruction Jor Camouflaging oj Ordnance Vehicles, very similar to the official US Ordnance scheme. published in October 1918 on the basis of As the light tank battalions were trained by the experimental work by the 40th Engineers French, notsurprisinglythey adopted French-style (Camouflage). It is believed that the patterns and unitmarkings.Theseconsistedofawhitegeometric colourswereheavilyinfluenced byFrenchpractices designindicatingcompany. The 1stCompanyused of the period. The basic colours involved were a 35cm circle, the 2nd Co. a 30cm square and the white, yellow, green, creamor brown, applied with 3rd Co. a 45cm-high triangle. Each tank section irregular black lines in between. The use ofsuch (platoon) had a card symbol: 1st, a spade; 2nd, a camouflage painting, ironically, was rescinded in heart; yd, a diamond; and 4th, a club. Thecolour theAEFin]une 1918by GHQ, AEF, due to paint ofthe card symbol was dependenton the battalion scarcity, and a conviction that it did little good. colours. The first battalion ofa brigade used blue; However, camouflage painting of equipment the second, red; and the third, yellow. In some continued in the US; an example on a Six-Ton units a small white numeral was added as the SpecialTractor (theUS-builtRenaultFT-17tank) vehicle number. Some vehicles retained remnants is shown in the plates. oftheirFrenchserial numbers and othermarkings. 4 The Inter-War Years caseoftanks, theunitinsigniacouldconsistofa pair ofcrossedrifleswiththe unitnumberaboveand the companyletterbelow;inthecaseofcavalrycombat Following the Armistice the US Army reverted to cars, a similar marking featured crossed sabres peacetime practices. The Quartermaster Corps instead ofrifles. The alternate form consisted ofa adoptedOliveDrab as thestandardvehiclecolour. written unit designator, often preceded by the unit Again, tactical vehicles such as tanks were to use crestincolour.Thealternateformusedathinwhite lustreless Olive Drab and administrative vehicles line painted above and below the unit designator. were to use gloss Olive Drab. However, many unit Usually the unit designator was simply an commandersdesired a 'spit'npolish' finish on their abbreviatedformoftheunitdesignationsuchas'1st tanks, and as a resultOrdnance authorised in 1928 Ca. F-22', indicating the 22nd vehicle ofF Troop, the use of spar varnish to obtain a glossy finish. 1stCavalryRegiment.TheArmyRegulationswere Marking patterns were authorised by Army not very clear as to where this insignia was to be Regulations AR-8so-S, published by the Adjutant carried, and as a result it varied from unit to unit. General. The basicmarkingsconsistedofUS Army Some units carried it on the bow, others on the registration numbers, which consisted ofthe letters turret front or sides. USAoveraserial, bothpaintedinwhitein4in.high AT3MediuInChristieTankofCo.F,67thInfantry(MediuIn letters. Although not mentioned in the regulations, Tanks)atPineCaInp,NY,in1935.ThisChristieisfinishedin tank serial numbers in this period were generally full AR-85O-5 regulation Inarkings. The unit Inarkingonthe turretconsistsoftheregiInentalcrest,followedbythearInSof 'w' preceded by the letter (War Department), service--crossedInfantryrifles-withtheregiInentalnUfilber aboveandthecOInpanyletterbelow.Thevehicleidentification which was mandated by Quartermaster Corps is carried on the bow. Besides these basic Inarkings, the regulations after 1926. individual vehiclenUInber'7'is carriedon the turret cupola andonthebow,andthevehiclenaIneiscarriedoneitherside Unitinsigniaconsistedofoneoftwoforms. In the ofthehull. S Another marking that was seen for a short time marking, most tanks ofthe period carried a small before the Tank Corps was disbanded in 1920 was brass plaque on either side of the turret, bearing the Tank Corpsinsignia, a trisected trianglein red, crossed rifles for infantry tanks and crossed sabres blue and yellow, symbolising the Tank Corps for cavalry combat cars. origins in the Infantry, Cavalry and Artillery. By the mid-1930s, when the US Army finally Another marking authorised by AR-8so-S during began to acquire new armoured vehicles, marking the early 1930S was the vehicle designation. This patterns began to become more colourful. The marking was usually carried on the hull front, a Army Regulations specifically authorised the typical example being 'T.1 Combat Car' on a employmentoftacticalmarkingsatthediscretionof Christie tank. Tanksofthe 1931 MechanizedForce unit commanders, and this loophole was en usedawhiterhomboidtanksuperimposedonapair thusiastically exploited to add a little colour. of crossed rifles as a unit marking in place of the One of the most evident markings was the plainercrossed-riflesinsigniaofthe infantry. There command guidon adopted by command combat was a considerable amount of variation in tank cars of the cavalry regiments. This was the markingsduringthisperioddue to theambiguityof traditional red/white cavalry guidon, and bore the the Army Regulations. Although not actually a regimental number on the top segment and the squadron on the bottom. Regim"ental commanders MI Combat Car ofthe Headquarters ofthe 13th Cavalryin used an all-white guidon with the regimental crest 1939. Regimentalcommandtanksuseda plainwhiteguidon superimposed. There was quite a variety ofother insigniawiththeregimentalcrestsuperimposed.Thecrestis repeatedbehind,inthesamelocationascarriedonothertanks changes in the use ofcavalry troop and squadron intheunit.AlsoevidentinthisviewaretheCavalryplaqueon the turretsideandthe vehicle registrationnumber. numbers on these combat cars after 1937, and 6 • interestedreadersarereferred tothedetailedarticle on the subject by D. P. Dyer in AFVNews.! The 66th Infantry (Light Tanks) also used a com plicated set ofmarkings, according to the research of D. P. Dyer. The HQ tanks of the three tank battalion HQ; used the old Tank Corps triangle. The three tanks either had a blank triangle, a triangle with the letter 'C', or a triangle with the letter'S' for the three battalion HQtanks. In one battalionthe trianglewas outlinedinwhiteand the letters were black; in another, the triangle was outlined in white with white letters; and in the last the triangle was outlined in black with black lettering. The two company command tanks ofthe threecompaniesineachbattalioncarriedatriangle with outline and numeral colour as per the A'MaeWest'(M2A2LightTank)ofthe3rdPlatoon,Co.B,1St TankBattalion,68thInfantry(LightTanks)atFt.Benningin battalion scheme mentioned above. The triangle April 1940. This tank displays Inarkingsfairly typicalofthe was in the company colours ofyellow, red or blue. inter-warperiod.Theturretunitdesignatorisanauthorised, alternate styleto the type seen on the photo here ofthe T3 Eachofthethreeplatoonsusedadifferentsymbol: a Christietankofthe67thInfantry.ThereddiaInondwithblack '4'seeInStoberelatedinstyletotheInarkingsadoptedby66th square (1st), circle (2nd) or diamond (3rd). This Infantry. insignia was painted in the company colours with outline and numeral colours as per the battalion markings of the 1930S towards larger and more scheme. visible markings which could help to identify the The 68th Infantry (LightTank) used geometric sub-units of tanks. More tanks were being fitted markings, asdidsomeindependenttank battalions. with radios, so itwas necessaryfor tanks to be able Atleastonebattalionusedcardsymbols, minus the to identify one another at some distance during geometric shapes, reminiscent ofthe World War I wargames. Some of the methods included the pattern. painting oflarge troop and squadron numbers on cavalrycombatcars,and theuseofmoreprominent geometric insignia on infantry tanks. During this period regimental crests were still retained, Prelude to War especially on the cavalry tanks. With the consolidation ofcavalry and infantry Without a doubt, the most complicated and tank units in July 1940 and the formation ofthe confusing period ofUS tank markings occurred in newArmoredDivisions, markings beganto takeon theintervalbetween 1939,whentheUS tankforces a slightly more uniform appearance. The explicit began to bere-organised, and America's entryinto useoftheoldcavalryandinfantryregimentalcrests World War II in December 1941. During this was dropped, and gradually the pre-war form of period there was extensive experimentation with written unitdesignators on turretsideswasdeleted. the 7th Cavalry Brigade (Mechanized) and the This hardlyimplies that there was total uniformity Provisional Tank Brigade, eventually culminating ofmarkings. For example,the IstArmoredDivision in theformation oftheArmored Forceand thefirst at Ft. Knox in the autumn of 1941 adopted the Armored Divisions in July 1940. This hustle and Armored Force triangle with an Arabic 'I' bustle was accompanied by a great deal of superimposed as its vehicle marking. On M3 experimentationin tacticalvehiclemarkingswhich medium tanks this was carried on the front glacis is difficult to summarise comprehensively. The plate, on the hull roofin front ofthe turret, on the general trend was away from the staid unit engine deck and on the rear engine access doors. Unit insignia consisted of the company letter lAFV News, Vol. '5 no.2, March Ig80 vehicle number (e.g. D-6) carried on the super- 7 Early War Markings The outbreak .pf the war prompted the Armored Force to begin a more serious effort to standardise markings. An HQ Armored Force order of 28 January 1942outlinedthe markingpracticeswhich armouredvehicleswere tofollow. Markingswereto be applied in Air Corps Yellow, NO.4, Lustreless. As a national insignia, a yellow star was adopted. On most tanks, the star was to be applied to the turret side, ofat least 22ins. diameter, with a 4in. AnM2A2LightTankofthe44thTankCotnpany,NewJersey NationalGuardat DeKalb, NY, inthe sutntner of1940. This band running around the turret. The higher unit tank shows a variation of the official AR-850-5 regulation designationoftheunitwastobepaintedcentrallyin tnarkings, lacking the white lines above and below the unit descriptor. Olive Drab paint on any stars on vertical surfaces, but not on stars carried on the roof. Corps structure front and on the sponson rear surfaces, designations were to appear in Roman numerals, with the companyletter to the left and the number divisional designations in Arabic numerals. The to the right. Incontrast, the 2nd Armored Division Armored Force School and ReplacementTraining at Ft. Hood, Texas, used a reversal of the Centerwere to use 'AFS' or 'RTC' in the centre of contemporary US Army Air Force insignia, i.e. a thestar. GHQReserveTankGroupsweretousean red roundel with white star and blue centre. This Arabicnumeralwiththeletters'GP'centredbelow. wascarriedoneithersideofthehulland onthehull Theseletterswere to be 4in. high. Eachvehicle was and turretrear.Asimilarcompany-vehiclenumber to be named with the first letter of the name systemwas carried on the turret sides. At this time, correspondingto thecompanyletter. Somesamples some companies apparently used a system of offeredwere ANDYGUMP, BLONDIE, DIZZYDEAN and coloured broken bands around the lower rim ofthe FLASH GORDON. Recon companies were to use turrets. This may have been a form of either names beginning with 'R', and maintenance regimental or platoon insignia, but details are 'Mae Wests' of the 192nd Tank Battalion during aututnn lacking. tnanoeuvresinArkansasinSeptetnber1941,shortlybeforethe In theautumn of1940 theQuartermaster Corps battalionwasre-eqnippedandshippedtothePhilippines.The tnarkings here consist of a white circle, bordered with a began examining various paints to determine how coloured band and with a black nutnber in the centre. The exacttneaningofthecircletnarkingisnotcertain,butitwas to reduce the visibility of white registration probably used to distinguish platoons. At the base of the numbers. AfterexperimentaluseofDarkEarthand turrets is a two-colour band, probably used to distinguish cotnpanies of the battalion by alternating the colours and BlackinNovember 1940,BlueDrab (medium blue patterns.Stylesthathavebeennotedincludethistwo-colour grey) was chosen, and this was officially mandated band,a tnonochrotnecontinuousband,anda brokenwhiteor yellowband. in a memorandum from the Adjutant General's office in December 1940. While this was not officially ordered until War Department Circular No. 174 in June 1942, all vehicles ordered since fiscal year 1941 had been marked in this fashion according to contract requirements. The various memoranda released at this time stressed the use of lustreless Olive Drab, not the glossy finish so popular during the 1930s. The selection of the Blue Drab for vehicle registration numberswasduetothefact thatBlueDrabisnearly identical to Olive Drab in tonal value, and so is difficult both to see and to photograph. 8 companies, 'M'. The exception was HQ units, which could use any letter except those used by other companies in the division. In addition, a newsystem of'bumpercodes' was promulgated to replace the pre-war system ofunit markings. These markings were applied fore and aft. Examples of the codes for various units of I Armored Corps are given below: IST ARMORED CORPS ·HQCO HQ-I5 (I in star) ·Signal Bn SG-12 IST ARMORED DIVISION.. ·CCA. ... CC-A-4 (I in star) ·Div. Arty. Cmd.... FA-6 Sig. Co SG-I9 Servo Co S-2I 8Ist Rcn. Bn. ·HQCO R-HQ-2 A Co R-A-I6 Lt. Tank Co.... R D-I7 1St Armd. Regt. .HQCO I-HQ-9 Rcn. Co I-R-25 Servo Co I-S-8 Maint. Co I-M- AnM3half-trackofthe41stArlDoredInfantry,2ndArlDored DivisioninConverse,LA,inSeptelDber1941.This showsthe 10 lDarkingstypicalofthe2ndArlDoredDivisionatthetitne; a nationalinsigniaconsistingofa reddisc,whitestarandblue 1St Tank Bn.... 1-1-3 cockade.ThebUIDpercodesidentifyitasthe18thhalf-trackof H Co.... I-H-I4 Co.A. 27th Field Arty. Bn. . ..Servo Battery ... 27-S ArmyAirForcewasdoing. However,lackofyellow 6 paint-andageneralresentment throughoutmuch B Battery ... 27-B-9 ofthe rest ofthe Army over the Armored Forces' 75ISt Tank Bn. ·B Co.... 75I-B-I6 elite pretensions-led to the use ofwhite stars on HQCo. 75I-HQ-9 many armoured vehicles. Additional Abbreviations: . The Armyformalised the use ofa white star as a Maintenance Co. form ofnational insignia in its August 1942 AR (Regiment) .M 850-5. This regulation also set out the size and Maintenance Co. location of the stars on various types of vehicles. (Battalion) .0 This edition of the AR-850-5 was followed by Engineer Co. or Bn. .E subsequent changes in 1943, 1944 and 1945· Division Train .TN Usually the changes showed star placement on Supply Bn. .Q newer vehicle types. The illustrations in this book Field Artillery ·FA (unless no F Co.) show a typical selection ofUS armoured vehicles Infantry ·I and the official size and positioning ofthe stars. It should be kept in mind that stars were applied by Theselectionofyellowfor the nationalstarwasa the unit in the field or by the depot, not in the curious choice, as the rest ofthe Army was in the factory. As a result, there was some variation in processofadopting thewhitestar. Itis theauthor's their size and placement. Many depots cut a few beliefthat thechoiceofa yellowstarwas partofthe standard star stencils, and used them on vehicles Armored Force's effort to keep itselfdistinct from which by strict interpretation of regulations the rest ofthe Army, in mucll the same way as the required other sizes. 9
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