| |
| |
|
No E-Bay Auctions
at this time |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| Refer
a Friend
Please
|
| |
|
|
| |
|

America's Honor Collection
New
releases are included below.
If you are looking for something specific, please e-mail
us.
|
Fifth
Release
Announced: 03-09-07
Orders Due: ASAP
ETA: Mid-2007
|
Third
Release
Announced:
05-5-05
Orders
Due: ASAP
Some Sold Out Already |
First
Release
Announced: 7-5-04
Orders Due: ASAP
Some Sold Out Already
|
Sixth
Release
Announced: 11-11-07
Orders Due: ASAP
ETA: First Qrtr 2008
|
Fourth
Release
Announced: 11-5-05
Orders Due:
ASAP
ETA: Due Soon |
Second
Release
Announced:
12-5-04
Orders
Due: ASAP
Some Sold Out Already
|
|
| Item Description
Not all items can be in stock at all
times.
Due to minimum order requirements
and shipping charges we "bunch" up re-orders to
save you money.
(We reserve the right to correct errors and change
prices without prior notice.) |
MSRP |
Our
Price |
E-mail or reserve link |
Please
remember to give your first and last name
and preferably at least the city and state
where you live in all your e-mails.
Non-USA
customers please include the country.
|
Please
copy & paste the entire description
line (no pictures
please) from
the item you are ordering into your e-mail.
It will save time and reduce possible confusion in determining what you
really are ordering.
With the quantity of lines we carry it's not possible to memorize all of
them.
|
Note:
Not all of the items below may be in stock or available
but the information is provided for reference purposes.
|
| Item Description |
MSRP |
Our
Pricing |
E-mail or reserve
link |
Sixth
Release
|
P/N: DI-240571
"We Can Do It!" Southern Pacific -
American Homefront Series --
America's Honor Collection 1944 AAR 40' Box Car
Click
on photo to see large version |
29.95
|
Reserve
$21.57
On Arrival
$22.47
|
E-Mail
your
Order
AOL
Hotmail & Similar Users Read This
|
|
|
P/N: DI-240321 Navy 7th Fleet --
American Honor Collection 1944 AAR 40' Box Car Click
on photo to see large version |
29.95 |
Reserve
$21.57
On Arrival
$22.47
|
E-Mail
your
Order
AOL
Hotmail & Similar Users Read This
|
P/N: DI-240331 Air Force Special
Operations Command --
American Honor Collection 1944 AAR 40' Box Car
Click on
photo to see large version |
29.95 |
Reserve
$21.57
On Arrival
$22.47
|
E-Mail
your
Order
AOL
Hotmail & Similar Users Read This
|
P/N: DI-240411 POW-MIA "You are
not Forgotten" --
American Honor Collection 1944 AAR 40' Box Car
Click
on photo to see large version |
29.95 |
Reserve
$21.57
On Arrival
$22.47
|
E-Mail
your
Order
AOL
Hotmail & Similar Users Read This
|
Fourth
Release
|
P/N: DI-240251
Coast Guard 5th District -- American Honor Collection
1944 AAR 40' Box Car
Click
on photo to see large version |
29.95 |
Reserve
$21.57
On Arrival
$22.47
|
E-Mail
your
Order
AOL
Hotmail & Similar Users Read This
|
P/N: DI-240371
Akron Canton & Youngstown "Save Rubber" --
American Homefront Series(C) AAR 1944 40' Box Car
Click
on photo to see large version |
29.95 |
Reserve
$21.57
On Arrival
$22.47
|
E-Mail
your
Order
AOL
Hotmail & Similar Users Read This
|
P/N: DI-240471
Milwaukee Road "Quiet! Loose Talk..." -- American Homefront
Series(C) AAR 1944 40' Box Car
Click
on photo to see large version
|
29.95 |
Reserve
$21.57
On Arrival
$22.47
|
E-Mail
your
Order
AOL
Hotmail & Similar Users Read This
|
The America's Honor Collection,
P/N: DI-240561 Liberty
Squadron Series, "Sack Time"
|
$29.95 |
Reserve
$21.57
On Arrival
$22.47
|
E-Mail
your
Order
AOL,
Hotmail & Similar
Users
Read This
|
Third
Release
|
American Homefront Series, from the America's Honor Collection
P/N: DI-240171 B&O "Uncle Sam"
Click
on photo to open large size picture in new page. |
$29.95 |
Reserve
$21.57
On Arrival
$22.47
|
E-Mail
your
Order
AOL,
Hotmail & Similar Users Read This
|
The America's Honor Collection,
P/N: DI-240211 Army 4th Infantry Division
Click
on photo to open large size picture in new page. |
$29.95 |
Reserve
$21.57
On Arrival
$22.47
|
E-Mail
your
Order
AOL,
Hotmail & Similar Users Read This
|
P/N: DI-240221 "Navy
Enterprise Group"
from the America's Honor Collection
Click
on photo to open large size picture in new page.
|
$29.95 |
Reserve
$21.57
On Arrival
$22.47
|
E-Mail
your
Order
AOL,
Hotmail & Similar Users Read This
|
P/N: DI-240231 "Air
Force 49th Fighter Wing"
from the America's Honor Collection
Click
on photo to open large size picture in new page. |
$29.95 |
Reserve
$21.57
On Arrival
$22.47
|
E-Mail
your
Order
AOL,
Hotmail & Similar Users Read This
|
| Santa Fe "Keep Him Flying"
American Homefront Series, from the America's Honor Collection
P/N: DI-240271
Click
on photo to open large size picture in new page. |
$29.95 |
Reserve
$21.57
On Arrival
$22.47 |
E-Mail
your
Order
AOL,
Hotmail & Similar Users Read This |
Second
Release
|
The America's Honor Collection, P/N: DI-240241 Marines 15th Expeditionary
Force.
Click
on photo to open large size picture in new page. |
$29.95 |
Reserve
$21.57
On Arrival
$22.47
|
E-Mail
your
Order
AOL
Users Read This
|
The America's Honor Collection,
P/N: DI-240261 Liberty
Squadron Series, "Moonshine Raiders"
Click on photo to open large size picture
in new page. |
$27.95 |
S/O
|
E-Mail
your
Order
AOL
Users Read This
|
| The America's Honor Collection,
P/N: DI-240311
First Armored Division
Click on photo to open large size picture
in new page.
|
$29.95 |
Reserve
$21.57
On
Arrival
$22.47
|
E-Mail
your
Order
AOL,
Hotmail & Similar Users Read This
|
The America's Honor Collection,
P/N: DI-240361 Liberty Squadron Series, "5 by
5"
Click on photo to open large size picture
in new page. |
$26.95 |
Reserve
$21.57
On
Arrival
$22.47 |
E-Mail
your
Order
AOL
Users Read This |
The America's Honor Collection,
P/N: DI-240461 Liberty Squadron Series, "Surprise
Attack"
Click
on photo to open large size picture in new page.
|
$29.95 |
Reserve
$21.57
On
Arrival
$22.47 |
E-Mail
your
Order
AOL,
Hotmail & Similar Users Read This |
First
Release |
| The America's Honor Collection
P/N: DI-240111 Army 101st Airborne
Click on photo to open large size picture
in new page.
The 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault) has demonstrated
the characteristics of military professionalism since the
unit's activation Aug. 15, 1942.
On August
19, 1942, the first commander, Maj. Gen. William C. Lee,
promised his new recruits that
the 101st has no history,
but it has a "Rendezvous with destiny."
As a
division, the 101st has never failed that prophecy. During
World War II, the 101st Airborne
Division led the way
on D-Day in the night drop prior to the invasion. When surrounded
at Bastogne, Brig. Gen. Anthony McAuliffe answered "NUTS!" and
the Screaming Eagles fought on until the siege was lifted.
For their valiant efforts and heroic deeds during World
War
II, the 101st Airborne Division was awarded four campaign
streamers and two Presidential Unit Citations.
General
Order Number Five, which gave birth to the division, reads, "The
101st Airborne Division, activated at Camp Claiborne, Louisiana,
has no history,
but it has a rendezvous
with destiny. Like the early American pioneers whose invincible
courage was the foundation stone of this nation, we have
broken
with the past and its traditions in order to establish our
claim to the future.
"Due
to the nature of our armament, and the tactics in which
we shall perfect ourselves, we
shall be called upon
to carry out operations of far-reaching military importance
and we shall habitually go into action when the need is
immediate
and extreme.
"Let
me call your attention to the fact that our badge is the
great American eagle. This is
a fitting emblem for
a division that will crush its enemies by falling upon them
like a thunderbolt from the skies.
"The
history we shall make, the record of high achievement we
hope to write in the annals of the
American Army and the
American people, depends wholly and completely on the men
of this division. Each individual, each officer and each
enlisted
man, must therefore regard himself as a necessary part of
a complex and powerful instrument for the overcoming of
the
enemies of the nation. Each, in his own job, must realize
that he is not only a means, but an indispensable means
for
obtaining the goal of victory. it is, therefore, not too
much to say that the future itself, in whose molding we
expect
to have our share, is in the hands of the soldiers of the
101st Airborne Division."
The 101st Airborne Division was reactivated as a training
unit at Camp Breckinridge, Ky., in 1948 and again in 1950.
It was reactivated again in 1954 at Fort Jackson, S.C., and
in March 1956, the 101st was transferred, less personnel and
equipment to Fort Campbell, Ky., to be reorganized as a combat
division.
In the mid-1960s, the 1st Brigade and support troops were
deployed to the Republic of Vietnam, followed by the rest
of the division in late 1967. In almost seven years of combat
in Vietnam, elements of the 101st participated in as many
as 15 campaigns, earning additional laurels to their proud
name.
In 1968, the 101st took on the structure and equipment of
an airmobile division. Today, the 101st stands as the Army's
and world's only air assault division with unequaled strategic
and tactical mobility.
In January
1991, the 101st once again had its "Rendezvous
with Destiny" in Iraq during the deepest combat air
assault into enemy territory in the history of the world.
Miraculously,
the 101st sustained no soldiers killed in action during the
100-hour war and captured thousands of enemy prisoners of
war.
Fort Campbell soldiers have supported humanitarian relief
efforts in Rwanda and Somalia, then later supplied peacekeepers
to Haiti and Bosnia.
In quest
of its "Rendezvous with Destiny",
the division has been chosen to develop and exploit the
doctrine
of air assault - Tomorrow's Division in Today's Army.
http://www.campbell.army.mil/dhistory.htm
|
$26.95 |
S/O |
E-Mail
your
Order
AOL
Users Read This |
| The America's Honor Collection
P/N: DI-240121 Navy Sea Bees

Click on photo to open large size picture
in new page.
The Seabees- "We Build, We Fight!" Because
civilians couldn't be used due to International laws, the
Navy needed a Militarized Construction
Force to build
advance bases in World War Two. Rear Admiral Ben Moreell
was tasked to form a Construction Battalion, or CB, which
is where
the unit got it's name. Admiral Moreell gave the newly formed
Seabees their motto- "We Build, We Fight" Construimus,
Batuimus, and the unit was born.
To form the Seabees, recruits were sought who needed little
or no training. After all, there wasa war on, and it was under
different conditions than we had ever fought before. Recruits
came from all walks of construction life, including men who
built Boulder Dam. All in all, over 325,000 men joined the
Seabees and their efforts in both the Atlantic and Pacific
theatres made our victory possible.
Typical
of the Seabee spirit, the first decorated Seabee hero of
the war, Seaman 2nd Class Lawrence
C. "Bucky"
Meyer, USNR, was among the Seabees of the 6th battalion who
worked on Henderson Field. In his off-time, he salvaged and
repaired an abandoned machine gun, which, on 3 October 1942,
he used to shoot down a Japanese Zero fighter making a strafing
run. For this exploit, he was awarded the Silver Star. It
was, however, a posthumous award, for 13 days after shooting
down the plane, "Bucky" Myer was killed in action
when the gasoline barge on which he was working was struck
by Japanese naval gunfire.
It was during the landing on Treasury Island in the Solomons,
on 28 November 1943, that Fireman 1st Class Aurelio Tassone,
USNR, of the 87th Naval Construction Battalion created that
legendary figure of the Seabee astride his bulldozer rolling
over enemy positions. Tassone was driving his bulldozer ashore
during the landing when Lieutenant Charles E. Turnbull, CEC,
USNR, told him a Japanese pillbox was holding up the advance
from the beach. Tassone drove his dozer toward the pillbox,
using the blade as a shield, while Lieutenant Turnbull provided
covering fire with his carbine. Under continuous heavy fire,
Tassone crushed the pillbox with the dozer blade, killing
all 12 of its occupants. For this act Tassone was awarded
the Silver Star.
Although Seabees were only supposed to fight to defend what
they built, such acts of heroism were numerous. In all, Seabees
earned 33 Silver Stars and 5 Navy Crosses during World War
II. But they also paid a price: 272 enlisted men and 18 officers
killed in action. In addition to deaths sustained as a result
of enemy action, more than 500 Seabees died in accidents,
for construction is essentially a hazardous business.
The
Seabees have participated in every major conflict since.
In Korea, they performed acts that facilitated
the UN. During
Operation Deep Freeze in Antartica, they build a 200 foot
runway. In Scotland, they created a floating drydock and
service
facility for Polaris submarines. In Viet Nam, before the
conflict, they started as part of Task Force 90's "Passage
to Freedom. During the conflict, they were invaluable in
constructing
support systems and bases, including some crucial locations
to support the Special Forces.
Since
then the Seabees have modernized, increased their battle
readiness profile, and participated
in every action of the
combined military from the invasion of Granada to disaster
relief in major floods and hurricanes. Their "Can Do" attitude
has served the military well, and they stand ready to serve
in time of war or time of peace.
Many thanks to Dr. Vincent A. Transano, command historian
of the Naval Engineering Command.
For a more detailed history,
go to http://www.history.navy.mil/faqs/faq67-1.htm |
$26.95
|
S/O |
E-Mail
your
Order
AOL
Users Read This |
The America's Honor Collection
P/N: DI-240131 Air Force 23rd Wing Flying
Tigers

Click on photo to open large size picture
in new page.
The Creation of the 14th Air Force Eventually
the AVG contract expired and the China Air Task Force and
23rd
Fighter Squadron carried on as the "Flying Tigers" under
the command of Brig Gen Chennault.
Their
numbers grew in China and by special order of the President
in March 1943, the 14th Air Force
was established by Army
Air Force Chief Lt Gen "Hap" Arnold. Chennault continued
as the commander and was promoted to Major General. The "Flying
Tigers" conducted effective fighter and bomber operations
along a 5,000-mile front from Chunking and Cheng Tu in the
west to Indo-China in the south; from the Tibetan Plateau
in Burma to the China Sea and Formosa in the east. They were
also instrumental in establishing supply of Chinese forces
through airlifting cargo across "The Hump" in the
China-Burma-India theater. The Tigers eventually grounded
the Japanese Air Force as the war came to a close.
Chennault's record of combat achievements, unrivaled in the
annals of World War II, is a testament to his courage, tactical
innovation and gritty determination - an air strategist who
produced an indominatable fighting force in spite of continuous
obstacles. The man, a legend in his own time, was responsible
for the destruction of more than 2,100 Japanese planes, the
sinking of 2,135,489 tons of enemy shipping, and 59,450 enemy
casualties.
Our Entry into Space
After inactivation in January 1946, the 14th Air Force was
reactivated to serve Air Defense Command, Continental Air
Command (CONAC) and the Reserve until 1960. Inactive for six
years, the 14th became part of Aerospace Defense Command (ADCOM)
in 1966. In 1968, the 14th assumed the functions of ADCOM's
Ninth Aerospace Defense Division and became the 14th Aerospace
Force (AEROF), the first command dedicated to space surveillance
and tracking.
The 14 AEROF mission performed a major portion of the CONAC
space defense responsibilities. The Space Defense Center located
in Cheyenne Mountain and operated by the 14 AEROF served as
a command post for a global network of electronic and optical
sensors that detected, tracked, and identified all man-made
objects orbiting the earth. The primary detection and tracking
network was the USAF SPACETRACK system. Also included were
the Ballistic Missile Early Warning System and the Sea Launched
Ballistic Missile System with sites located around the world.
The 14 AEROF also maintained the 10th Aerospace Defense Squadron,
which provided launch services at Vandenberg AFB, with a subordinate
unit at Johnston Island in the Pacific.
Delta I
A Brief Return to Flying
On October 8, 1976, the 14 AEROF was redesignated as 14
AF (Reserve) at Dobbins AFB, Georgia where it managed airlift
forces for the Military Air Command. On July 1, 1993, the
14th Air Force returned to its former space role and the Flying
Tigers became a Numbered Air Force for Air Force Space Command,
responsible for performing space operations.
The 14th of Today
As
the Air Force's sole Numbered Air Force for space, the
14th Air Force space operations mission
includes space launch
from the east and west coasts, satellite control, missile
warning, and space surveillance. Its overall mission is
to ensure warfighters
are supported by the best space capabilities available. The
14th Air Force consists of two launch wings (the 30th Space
Wing at Vandenberg AFB, CA and the 45th Space Wing at Patrick
AFB, FL, Cape Canaveral AS), a space control and missile
warning
wing (21st Space Wing at Peterson AFB, CO), a satellite control
wing (50th Space Wing at Schriever AFB, CO) and an air
base
wing supporting Buckley AFB (460th Air Base Wing at Buckley
AFB, CO). The "Flying Tigers" now serve as the
Air Force space operational component of US Strategic Command.
In Fall 1997, the 14th Air Force established the Air and
Space
Operations Center (AOC)/614th Space Operations Group, at
Vandenberg AFB for the 24-hour command and control of all
space operations
resources. The Flying Tigers - a proud past and a brilliant
future.
http://www.vandenberg.af.mil/14af/14af_history/ |
$26.95
|
S/O |
E-Mail
your
Order
AOL
Users Read This |
| The America's Honor Collection
P/N: DI-240141 Marines 1st Division

Click on photo to open large size picture
in new page.
The 1st Marine Division was activated aboard the battleship
Texas February 1, 1941. It is the oldest, largest (active
duty), and most decorated division-sized unit in the United
States Marine Corps.
Division regiments were in existence as early as March 8,
1911, when the 1st Marines was formed at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
It saw action in Haiti in 1915, in the Dominican Republic
in 1916, and throughout the Caribbean during World War I.
The 5th Marines was created in Vera Cruz, Mexico July 13,
1914. It served in Santo Domingo in 1925 and participated
in 15 major engagements during World War I. These included
Belleau Wood, Chateau and St. Mihiel. On Aug. 11, 1917, 7th
Marines was activated in Philadelphia, Penn. It spent the
duration of World War I in Cuba and was disbanded after the
war. It was reactivated in 1941. The 11th Marines was formed
in January 1918 at Quantico, Va., as a light artillery regiment.
The regiment went to France as an infantry unit, providing
a machine gun company and a guard company. Decommissioned
and reactivated twice between world wars, the regiment again
served as infantry in Nicaragua. Re-formed in 1940 as a full-fledged
artillery unit, 11th Marines joined 1st Marine Division.
Guadalcanal was the first major American offensive of World
War II. Launched August 7, 1942, this operation won the Division
its first of three World War II Presidential Unit Citations.
Others won were for the battles of Peleliu and Okinawa.
" The Old Breed" was the unit chosen to land at
Inchon, Korea, September 15, 1950, adding one more PUC to
its list of decorations. The fifth PUC was for the Division's
"attack in the opposite direction," fighting its
way out of the Chosin Reservoir against seven Communist Chinese
divisions. The Chinese suffered an estimated 37,500 casualties
trying to stop the Marines' march out of the "Frozen
Chosin." Battles between April and September earned
the division its sixth PUC. The 2d Battalion, 1st Marines
returned
to Guantanamo Bay for two months in 1962 during the Cuban
missile crisis. More than 11,000 Marines of 5th Marine Expeditionary
Brigade participated in the naval blockade, which forced
the
withdrawal of the missiles from Cuba.
Fewer than three years later, the Division was again on the
move. In 1965, 7th Marines participated in Operations Starlite
and Piranha, the first major engagements for American ground
troops in South Vietnam. March 1966 saw 1st Marine Division
Headquarters established at Chu Lai. By June, the entire Division
was in South Vietnam, its zone of operation - the southern
two provinces of I Corps - Quang Tin and Quang Ngai. Between
March and October 1966 to May 1967, the Division conducted
44 named operations. Major engagements included Operations
Hastings and Union I and II. In these operations, 1st Marine
Division units decisively defeated the enemy. During the 1968
Tet Offensive, the Division was involved in fierce fighting
with both Viet Cong and North Vietnamese Army elements. It
was successful in beating back enemy assaults in its operation
areas.
After six hard years of combat, 1st Marine Division returned
home to Camp Pendleton in 1971, closing another chapter of
dedicated service to Corps and country. In 1975, the Division
supported the evacuation of Saigon by providing food and temporary
shelter at Camp Pendleton for Vietnamese refugees as they
arrived in the United States. In 1990 1st Marine Division
formed the nucleus of the massive force sent to Southwest
Asia in response to Iraq's invasion of Kuwait. During Operation
Desert Shield, the Division supported I Marine Expeditionary
Force in the defense of Saudi Arabia from the Iraqi threat.
In 1991 the Division went on the offensive with the rest of
Coalition Forces in Operation Desert Storm. In 100 hours of
ground offensive combat 1st Marine Division helped to liberate
Kuwait, smashing the Iraqi Army in the process.
Immediately following the Persian Gulf conflict, the Division
sent units to assist in relief efforts following a typhoon
in Bangladesh (Operation Sea Angel) and a volcanic eruption
in the Philippines (Operation Fiery Vigil). In December 1992
Operation Restore Hope, bringing relief to famine-stricken
Somalia, kicked off with the early morning amphibious landing
of Marines from the Camp Pendleton-based 15th Marine Expeditionary
Unit, which was supported by Battalion Landing Team, 2d Battalion,
9th Marines. More than 15,000 metric tons of food was successfully
distributed from 398 different food sites in the city during
the operation. The final phase of the operation involved the
transition from a U.S. peacemaking force to a United Nations
peacekeeping force. U.S. Marine involvement in Operation Restore
Hope officially ended April 27, 1993, when the humanitarian
relief sector of Mogadishu was handed over to Pakistani forces.
Today 1st Marine Division is a multi-role, expeditionary
ground combat force. The Division is employed as the ground
combat element (GCE) of I MEF or may provide task-organized
forces for assault operations and such operations as may be
directed. The 1st Marine Division must be able to provide
the ground amphibious forcible entry capability to the naval
expeditionary force (NEF) and to conduct subsequent land operations
in any operational environment.
The 1st Marine Division is currently composed of 1st, 5th,
7th and 11th Marines; Headquarters Battalion; 3d Assault Amphibian
Battalion; 1st and 3d Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalions;
1st Combat Engineer Battalion; 1st Tank Battalion; and 1st
Reconnaissance Battalion. These units represent a combat-ready
force of more than 19,000 men and women.
Headquarters Battalion provides command and administration
for 1st Marine Division. Within the battalion are a headquarters
and service company, military police company, a communications
company, and a truck company. The division headquarters is
located in the 11 Area, while Headquarters Battalion and its
companies are located in the 33 Area. The 1st, 5th and 7th
Marines each consist of one headquarters company and four
infantry battalions, with one battalion deployed outside the
continental United States at all times. The infantry battalions
are the basic tactical units that the regiment uses to accomplish
its mission of locating, closing with and destroying the enemy
by fire and close combat. The 1st and 5th Regiments are located
in the 53 and 62 Areas, respectively. The 7th Marines is located
in Twentynine Palms, Calif.
The 11th Marines consists of a headquarters battery and four
artillery battalions. The 11th Marines is the primary source
of fire support for 1st Marine Division in amphibious assault
and subsequent operations ashore. It provides direct and general
fire support to frontline units as required by the infantry
commanders. The 11th Marines' organic weapon is the 155 mm
howitzer (M198 towed howitzers). The Las Pulgas (43) Area
is home to 11th Marines, 1/11 and 2/11. Las Flores (41) Area
is home to 5/11 and 3/11 is located at Twentynine Palms.
1st Tank Battalion was activated on 1 November 1941 and is
located at Twentynine Palms, Calif. Its mission is to provide
combat power to 1st Marine Division in the form of amphibious
and/or Maritime Preposition Forces; conduct operations ashore
utilizing maneuver, armor protected firepower, and shock action
in order to close with and destroy the enemy. As a separate
battalion, 1st Tank Battalion is responsible for providing
armored assets as well as anti-armor systems and staff expertise
in their employment. The 1st Tank Battalion is equipped with
the M1A1 Abrams Battle Tank.
The 1st Combat Engineer Battalion performs many specific
functions while fulfilling its mission of providing both tactical
and logistical engineer support to 1st Marine Division. The
battalion shares San Mateo (62) Area with 5th Marines.
The mission of 3d Assault Amphibian Battalion is to transport
the surface assault elements of the landing force from amphibious
shipping to inland objectives during the amphibious assault
and to provide support to mechanized operations ashore. The
amphibious assault vehicles are primarily used to transport
personnel in tactical operations. The battalion is located
in Camp Del Mar (21) Area.
The Division has two light armored reconnaissance battalions.
The mission of a LAR battalion is to conduct reconnaissance,
security and economy of force operations, and within its capabilities,
limited offensive or delaying operations that exploit the
unit's mobility and firepower. 1st LAR Battalion was activated
31 May 1985 and is located at Las Flores (41) Area. 3d LAR
Battalion was activated on 11 September 1986 and is located
at Twentynine Palms.
The Division reactivated the 1st Reconnaissance Battalion
on 8 June 2000 but the battalion was originally activated
on 1 March 1937. It now calls the Margarita(33) Area home.
Before 1944 Marine Recon was primarily scout/sniper units.
In April 1944 a two company amphibious reconnaissance battalion
was formed with the mission of conducting beach reconnaissance
and hydrographic survey. Today the Battalion performs a wide
variety of tactical and special operations in support of the
Division.
http://www.i-mef.usmc.mil/msc/1mardiv/history.htm
|
$26.95
|
S/O |
E-Mail
your
Order
AOL
Users Read This |
| The America's Honor Collection
P/N: DI-240151 Coast Guard 1st District
Click on photo to open large size picture
in new page.
From Maine to the Shrewsbury River in NJ, coastline stretches
along 2,000 miles making up the First District. It is best
known for its rich history, beautiful scenery, and prosperous
fishing industry.
District One utilizes a wide variety of Coast Guard assets,
including 34 small boat stations, 27 cutters, one air station,
and many other marine safety offices, groups, and aids to
navigation teams. These resources are kept running by less
than 3,700 active duty and reserve members.
With an excess of one million boats registered in the First
District, Coast Guard personnel have performed over 8,300
search and rescue cases since 1999. These men and women conduct
search and rescue safety inspections, perform maritime law
enforcement, respond to oil spills, and provide upkeep for
thousands of bouys and other aids to navigation. Together
with 6,400 auxiliarists, the First District also educates
the public on boating safety.
The First Coast Guard District has shown that truly, it is
Always Ready, yesterday, today, and for the future. Semper
Paratus!
www.uscg.mil
|
$26.95
|
S/O |
E-Mail
your
Order
AOL
Users Read This |
The America's Honor Collection,
P/N: DI-240161 Liberty Squadron Series, "Belle Wringer"
Click on photo to open large size picture in new page.
|
27.95 |
S/O |
E-Mail
your
Order
AOL
Users Read This |
| Item Description |
MSRP |
Our
Pricing |
E-mail or reserve link |
|
|