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19th Ave New York, NY 95822, USA

 
457th BOMB GROUP HERALDRY
 
Our group has five emblems. One for the group and four for the groups’ squadrons. Major Frank Counselman is credited with designing the Group’s ‘Coat of Arms’. The emblems for the 748th, 749th and 751st Bombardment Squadron were designed by Corporal Lester Fried. Corporal Lester Fried was the one who designed and build the monument and was responsible for painting nose art on many A2 jackets. He also painted the first large mock-up of the Fireball group insignia that wa hung in the officers club and several larger-than-life pin-up figures that also were installed in the officers club.
‘Coat of Arms’ drawing by E.B. Benson 
 
When the emblems were finished and ready to use, they needed to be send to the office of The Quartermaster General in Washington D.C. who was authorised to approve the requests of new military insignia (heraldry). In case of the 457th Bomb Group, requests were sent for the insignia of the 748th, 749th and 751st Bombardment Squadrons. No official request had been made to approve the ‘Coat of Arms’ or groups insignia for the 457th Bombardment Group and for the 750th Bombardment Squadron. The insignia of the 750th Bombardment Squadron was borrowed from the 88th Bombardment Group, 317th Bombardment Squadron. For more information please go to the 750th Bombardment Squadron link below. 
 
457th Bombardment Group
748th Bombardment Squadron
749th Bombardment Squadron
750th Bombardment Squadron
751st Bombardment Squadron
 
Heraldry has become an important part of our groups’ history as it has for many other army groups over the years. It was so important that President Woodrow Wilson directed the creation of the Heraldic Program Office under the War Department General Staff in 1919. Its purpose was to take responsibility for the coordination and approval of coats of arms and other insignia for Army organizations. By the end of World War II, its role expanded to include the other military services. In 1957 Public Law 85-263 directed the Secretary of the Army to furnish heraldic services to all branches of the federal government. The Institute’s wide range of heraldic services include decorations, flags, streamers, agency seals, coats of arms, badges, and other forms of official emblems and insignia.
 
The institute is now (1960-present) called The Institute Of Heraldry (TIOH) and is located in Virginia. For more information please check out their website http://www.tioh.hqda.pentagon.mil/default.aspx
 
Aegis fortissima honos
(“Honor is the strongest shield”)
 
What is Heraldry?

Heraldry can be defined as a communication system that uses colors and symbols for the purpose of personal or organizational identification. All forms of communication are solutions created to help solve problems. In heraldry’s case, the problem was one of limited visibility. Advances in armor in the 11th and 12th Centuries provided soldiers with increased protection, including helmets that covered much of a person’s face. Without being able to see one another well enough to tell friend from foe, allies and enemies alike agreed that a system of identification was necessary in order to be effective in combat. The shield, heraldry’s most recognizable component, provided a broad, flat surface on which to paint colors and symbols assigned to a particular nobleman and his knights. Often, a nobleman also attached a cloak embroidered with his personal colors and symbols to his armor before riding into battle-a custom that gave rise to the term “a coat of arms.”

By the time a group of influential businessmen and landowners in Britain’s American colonies declared independence from the Crown in 1776, heraldry was found in every aspect of European life. Religious communities, trade guilds, city councils, and royal households all made use of heraldry, including the practice of passing down coats of arms from one generation to the next in aristocratic families. Determined to sever ties with the excesses of monarchy and the nobility, the founding fathers of the United States made sure that the honors, titles, and privileges given to Europe’s elite had no place in their young republic. Consequently, the construction of early U.S. society included a rejection of traditional heraldry.

For over a century, the U.S. Government and its armed forces would forge ahead in shaping a new nation without any real centralized authority to register, record, or regulate the design and use of federal and military symbols (called “insignia”). Eventually, President Woodrow Wilson would share his concern about the wide range of colors, shapes, and sizes that comprised U.S. military insignia in the early part of the 20th Century. In 1918, the President directed the War Department to establish an office that could organize military insignia such as metal badges, ribbons, patches, and flags. The Institute of Heraldry traces its roots back to President Wilson’s order, a task that captures the very foundation of heraldry-namely, developing a system for clear communication and identification on the battlefield.

Today, The Institute of Heraldry continues its mission to provide the highest quality heraldic services to the Federal Government, the Armed Forces, and the Office of the President. As important for the modern soldier’s success as it was for that of the medieval knight, heraldry refuses to be just another relic of feudal or imperial times of old. Heraldry is alive and well, still helping to solve the timeless problem of making identification as effective as possible

(source website The Institute of Heraldry)

 
 
 
 
 

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