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The
40th Signal battalion was constituted on 31 July
1942 as the 40th Signal Construction Battalion and
activated on 21 September 1942 at Camp Campbell,
Kentucky.
The
battalion departed for England aboard the Susan
B Anthony on 12 January 1944. It arrived in France
30 days after the initial D-Day landings and immediately
set out on its mission on cable construction across
Northern France to support the breakout.
From France, the battalion supported missions in
Luxembourg, Belgium, and Holland, before entering
Germany on 8 December 1944, where it stayed until
the end of the war.
- Excerpt from the 40th Signal battalion website
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40th
Light Signal Construction battalion during
World War Two
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40th
Light Signal Construction battalion insignia
post-WWII
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Description
of the Insignia
Shield:
Sable, on a bend tenne' fimbriated argent between
in chief a peach leaved and in base a horse's head
couped two telegraph poles of single arm each palewise
of the third.
On a wreath of the colors argent and tenne' a mural
crown of the first masoned sable and charged with
a lion passant guardant azure, armed and lanued
gules and enfiled by an oriental polearm of the
last.
Motto: Bene Factum (Well Done).
Shield
The background of the shield is black. The bend
is orange bordered silver for Signal Corps. The
silver peach is symbolic of the state of Georgia,
the origin of the cadre and original officers of
the 29th Signal Construction Battalion. The horse's
head represents the state of activation - Kentucky.
The telephone poles are symbolic of telephone construction,
the type of work done by the unit; the two poles
represent the second unit from one origin - the
29th Signal Construction Battalion.
Crest
The lion adapted from the arms of Normandy commemorates
the unit's initial combat service, while the mural
crown with its five embattlements represent the
total combined campaigns credited the organization
for service in France and Europe during World War
II. The polearm is indicative of service in Vietnam
and its two outer scarlet blades allude to the Meritorious
Unit Commendations awarded during that period.
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The
40th consisted mainly of Afro-American Soldiers
that distinguished themselves through excellence
during the Second World War. Most of them survived
the experience and returned home to their families.
Sadly
to say, there is very little information of these
soldiers brave contributions to the war effort,
but if there is any consolation to those who served
in the 40th, less than 10% died during the European
Theatre of Operations.
If
you wish to read more on African American soldiers
inWorld War Two, click on these two links.
AFRICAN
AMERICANS IN WORLD WAR II
AFRICAN-AMERICANS
IN MILITARY
They
survived thanks to their teamwork and training.
I hope that this website educates the young and
reminds elder generations of what it was like during
World War Two. If any survivors of this battalion
do exist, please contact me as soon as possible.
I would love to hear from you.
I
have sourced most of website through material available
from what I've read through Transcriptions and Records
Held in The Nara Archives in Maryland.
Please
Note that this information has been declassfied
as of the 15 January 1946.
Click
here for proof of this declassfication status
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