News

The 29th Infantry Division of the Army National Guard will keep its patch that was in danger of being retired due to its references to soldiers in the Confederate Army.
Storied 29th Infantry Patch Possibly on Chopping Block Due to Confederate Ties The color guard presents their unit’s colors during the 29th Infantry Division’s transfer-of-authority ceremony ...
The Army National Guard will get to keep its famed 29th Infantry Division patch with references to the Confederacy after a review from a commission established by ...
Soldiers of the 4th Engineer Battalion proudly don the Ivy patch during their official integration into the 4th Infantry Division, marking a new chapter in the unit's storied history.
Commission reviewing military symbols for Confederate ties recommends 29th Infantry Division be allowed to keep blue-and-gray patch ...
Rocky the Bulldog will earn his 3rd Infantry Division uniform patch at a ceremony at Club Stewart on Friday.
The commission also gave notice that it would recommend that the Army’s official description of 29th Infantry Division heraldry be changed to remove language that can be viewed as suggesting ...
As part of an effort to strip commemorative nods to the Confederacy from the military, an independent naming commission has determined that the 29th Infantry Division should keep its unit patch ...
The 29th Infantry Division patch commemorates soldiers from the North and South joining together, and will be retained.
Steven Melnikoff, 102, a D-Day veteran, objects strongly to changing the blue-and-gray patch of the 29th Infantry Division. He wore the patch during the invasion of Normandy in 1944 and while ...