-
-
06-01-2013 05:24 PM
# ADS
Circuit advertisement
-
Re: Mymailman is the best!!!
What does the tresse on the trade patches indicate?
-
Re: Mymailman is the best!!!
Lol I am right there with you fred, make sure at christmas time you give him a bottle of wine or something for making him do all that extra work!
-
Re: Mymailman is the best!!!
hahaaha this is great fred how many times a week do you post mailman came again at least twice
-
Re: Mymailman is the best!!!
Hello,
The grey tress on the schirrmeister was instituted in 1943 and used instead of the silver wire rope boarder. The silver tress on the Farrier patch meant that the Farrier was an NCO Aspariant.
Fred
-
Re: Mymailman is the best!!!
by
ObKrieger
What does the tresse on the trade patches indicate?
Originally, Anwärter [candidates] for specialist careers/occupations who had already passed the required examinations wore a strip of NCO Tresse across the lower part of the respective trade badge. When they were appointed to a permanent post, the Tresse was removed. (This did not apply to medical personnel and paymaster candidates.)
Schirrmeister with shortened wartime training [Kriegsausbildung] wore the trade badge without a silver border. The wartime Kriegsschirrmeister (K) ("K" = "Kraftfahrgerät") wore a Schirrmeister trade badge without a silver border and an added strip of field-grey NCO braid across the lower part of the badge.
-
Re: Mymailman is the best!!!
Bookmarks