GERMAN WEHRMACHT HEER NCO UNTERFELDWEBEL SHOULDER BOARDS FOR SIGNALS
GERMAN JUNIOR SERGEANT SHOULDER BOARDS WITH LEMON YELLOW PIPING - REPRODUCTION
WW2 German shoulder boards for NCO Unterfeldwebel rank. Made of field grey wool and aluminum-silver tresse. Has lemon yellow piping forSignals. Unterfeldwebel ( 'Junior Sergeant') was a rank of the Wehrmacht, from 1935 until 1945.
Unterfeldwebel NCO shoulder boards were introduced in 1938. They indicated the rank and service branch of the wearer.
Has button hole for uniform attachment and black wool strap
The rank tresse is the early shiny silver ones.
Rank tresse was sewn onto the edges of the shoulder boards. The early war tresse was originally shiny silver aluminum probably due to the ease of seeing this bright silver tresse the Germans quickly introduced the subdued tresse instead.
After 1940 both silver and the subdued tresse was worn on the shoulder boards.
Check out our other shoulder boards of different ranks in all services with different piping Waffenfarbe colours in stock.
The Signal Corps (Nachrichtentruppe des Heeres) was an arm of service in the German Wehrmacht and Waffen SS, whose role was to establish and operate military communications, especially using telephone and radio networks.
By order of the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht dated 14 Oct 1942, it was part of the combat arms of the German Wehrmacht and Waffen SS until 1945.
At the start of the war the Signal Corps had:
• 104 divisional signal units with a headquarters, telephone company, radio company and light supply column
• 23 corps signal units with a telephone company, radio company, two telephone and radio companies and a light supply column
• 10 signal regiments and 12 field signal commands at army and army group level with HQs, a 1st (Operating) Unit (I. Abteilung (Betrieb)) with a telephone and a radio company, as well as a 2nd and 3rd (Construction) Unit (II. und III. Abteilung (Bau)) each with an operating and three construction companies
• 7 surveillance companies for communications surveillance
• 45 independent truck cable construction, telephone operating and telephone construction companies;
• 14 signal reserve units
As more large formations were created during the war, numerous new and reserve units were established including independent signal companies or special units, among them the wire construction companies, decimetre band (i.e. UHF) radio relay companies, carrier frequency companies, telephone exchange companies and telephone maintenance companies.
SKU | G1404 |
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Weight | 0.101000 |