1/11 ACR 1975 M109A1 patch 1-73 Armor 1974 Dist TCQC patch 2/3 ACR 1980 TCQC patch 2-37 Armor 1968 TCQC patch 2-37 Armor 1968 TCQC patch 2-37 Armor 1968 TCQC patch 2-37 Armor 1968 TCQC patch 2-37 Armor 1968 TCQC patch 2-37 Armor 1968 TCQC patch 2-37 Armor 1968 TCQC patch 2-37 Armor 1968 TCQC patch 2-37 Armor 1968 TCQC patch 2-37 Armor 1968 TCQC patch 2-37 Armor 1968 TCQC patch 2-37 Armor 1968 TCQC patch Show me a bigger version!

AN   OVERVIEW   OF   TANK   GUNNERY   PATCHES



Purpose — History — Descriptions — Collecting



            Tank gunnery patches are specialized insignia that were worn by the personnel in some Armor and cavalry units beginning in the early 1960s.1 They were awarded to the crews that achieved a qualified or higher score during gunnery qualification training. These patches — which were also known as "qualification" and "TCQC" patches2 — were not authorized by the Department of the Army, but were approved by local commanders as a way to promote esprit de corps.
            Unfortunately, these patches fell out of favor in the early 1980s as the new camouflaged Battle Dress Uniform ("BDU") replaced the fatigues that soldiers had been wearing for decades. For many units, 1982 or 1983 was the last year they issued qualification patches.

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            Gunnery qualification patches differ from better known awards, such as the combat infantryman's badge and airborne wings, in several key ways. First, qualification patches were issued to vehicle or weapons system crews, not to individual soldiers. The crew had to work together to qualify for the patch. Second, gunnery patches were awarded for successfully completing training that was directly related to the soldier's specific warfighting role. Finally, the patch–like the warfighting proficiency for which it was awarded–had a limited shelf-life and had to be re–earned each year.
             Furthermore, TCQC patches were "unofficial" in every sense of the word. While shoulder patches are authorized by the Department of the Army and designed by the Army's Institute of Heraldry, gunnery patches were designed and adopted by the using units. Some involved complex designs that depicted the unit's heritage, while others did not even identify the unit or the purpose of the insignia. And, although a soldier's qualification patch may have been one of his most prized possessions, he was typically required to remove it from his uniform when he arrived at a new unit.
            Gunnery patches were most widespread in units stationed in Germany. They apparently began to be used in Korea in the late 1960s, and were in widespread use there from the early 1970s until being phased-out in the mid–1980s. Qualification patches spread to units in the Continental United States ("CONUS") slowly, and did not achieve anything approaching widespread acceptance until well into the 1970s. Their use varied substantially, depending on the unit and installation. TCQC patches were apparently less popular in reserve component ("RC") units, and those RC units that did adopt them typically did so in the 1980s or later, years after they became common in Active Duty units. However, a high percentage of RC units continued to wear their gunnery patches into the mid– and late–1980s, well after the vast majority of Active Army units had stopped wearing them.

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            The first unit to adopt TCQC patches was the 3rd Armored Division, which began issuing them in 1962. These patches featured the distinctive shape that was to become unique to tank gunnery patches: a wide patch (about 5" wide), with a straight horizontal bottom and vertical sides that were pinched inward half way up the patch, culminating with either a pointed or curved top. Ironically, many of these early qualification patches did not identify which unit issued them or what purpose they served. All they included were the Armor branch insignia and the year issued. See Figures 1 & 2.

Figure 1

3rd Armored Division 1963 Qualified TCQC patch. German made, embroidered on twill with a standard edge. The 3rd Armd Div's 1962 TCQC patch was identical except for the year. ASMIC #3F18.

Figure 2

8th Infantry Division(Mech) 1964 Qualified TCQC patch. German made, embroidered on twill with a standard edge. For some unknown reason the ASMIC catalog does not include any qualification patches for the 8th Inf Div(M).

The 3rd Armored Division would continue to wear TCQC patches for two decades and would become one of the most prolific issuers of gunnery patches. Photo #1 shows the commanding general of the 3rd armored Division wearing a 1962 Distinguished Tank Crew patch.

Photo 1


            Qualification patches were awarded once each year, for qualification gunnery.3 In the vast majority of units, tank gunnery patches recognized two levels of qualification: "Qualified" and "Distinguished." In some units, separate patches were issued. See Figures 3 & 4.

Figure 3

3rd Bn, 63rd Armor 1974 Qualified TCQC patch (1st Inf Div(M)(Fwd)). German made, embroidered on twill with a standard edge. Not in ASMIC catalog.

Figure 4

3rd Bn, 63rd Armor 1974 Distinguished TCQC patch (1st Inf Div(M)(Fwd)). German made, embroidered on twill with a standard edge. Not in ASMIC catalog.

In other units, qualified crews received the basic TCQC patch, while distinguished crews wore this patch with an added "Distinguished" tab. See Figure 5.

Figure 5

4th Bn, 64th Armor 1974 Qualified TCQC patch with "Distinguished" tab (3rd Inf Div(M)). German made, embroidered on twill with a standard edge. Not in ASMIC catalog, but illustrated in an article in THE TRADING POST. See SFC John Huffman, "Qualification Insignia," THE TRADING POST, (Jan-Mar 1974), p. 69.

Finally, some units issued the same patch to qualified and distinguished crews, with a tab stating whether the crew member had earned a qualified or distinguished rating (and, typically, the year it was awarded). See Figures 6 & 7.

Figure 6

4th Bn, 69th Armor TCQC patch with "Qualified 1975," "Distinguished 1976." and "Top Tank Crew 1977" tabs (8th Inf Div(M). German made, embroidered on twill with a standard edge. Not in ASMIC catalog.

Figure 7

2nd Sqdn, 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment SSQC (Scout Section [or Squad] Qualification Course) patch with "19 Qualified 77" and "19 Distinguished 77" tabs. U.S. made, all embroidered with a merrowed edge. ASMIC #3D3, 3D4, 3D5. A Scout Squad had two scout vehicles; a Scout Section had two Scout Squads for a total of four vehicles.

This allowed a soldier to wear one patch and multiple tabs showing his continuing proficiency as a soldier. See Figure 6. In units where the year was included on the patch, soldiers sometimes overlapped the patches to accomplish the same result. See Figure 8.

Figure 8

1st Armored Division 1978 "Amber" (qualified) TCQC patch (ASMIC #1L1) with a 1979 Qualified TCQC patch (ASMIC #1L2) sewn on top of the 1978 patch. German made, embroidered on twill with a standard edge.


            Some units awarded a third patch at an intermediate level, typically either "Superior" or "Expert." See Figures 9 & 10.

Figure 9

1st Sqdn, 9th Cavalry Superior M551 Qualification patch (1st Cav Div). This patch was probably worn in the late 1970s. U.S. made, all embroidered with a merrowed edge. ASMIC #9B1.

Figure 10

2nd Armored Division(Fwd) Expert TCQC patch. Embroidered on twill with a merrowed edge. Although this unit was stationed in West Germany, this patch appears to be U.S.-made. Not in ASMIC catalog.

In addition, some units issued tabs or scrolls for qualified or distinguished platoons, which were worn above or below the standard qualification patch. See Figures 11 & 12.

Figure 11

3rd Armored Division 1977 M551 Qualification patch (not in ASMIC catalog) with "Distinguished" tab (ASMIC #3H18) and "1977 Qualified Cav Platoon" scroll (not in ASMIC catalog). German made, embroidered on twill with a standard edge. The tab and platoon scroll were separate from the patch, but the soldier who wore this patch sewed the tab and scroll onto the patch before he attached them to his uniform.

Figure 12

11th Armored Cavalry Regiment Qualification patch (ASMIC #11A) with "1978 M60A1 TCQC" (ASMIC #11D) and "Platoon Qualification" (ASMIC #11B2) tabs. German made, embroidered on twill with a standard edge.

I am not aware of any unit that extended this approach to an entire company/troop or battalion/squadron, even though some units did company-level gunnery exercises known as "battle runs."
            A handful of units issued a special tab or patch to the top tank crew in the unit. See Figures 6(above) & 13.

Figure 13

1st Bn, 73rd Armor 1974 "Top Gun 2nd Div" TCQC patch (2nd Inf Div). Korean made, all embroidered with a standard edge. "2335" is apparently the tank gunnery score this crew achieved. ASMIC #73B1 (variant).

One unit, the 2nd Bn, 77th Armor, which was assigned to the 9th Infantry Division at Fort Lewis, Washington, took this concept one step further, issuing "High Platoon" and "High Company" tabs to the best units within the battalion. See Figure 14.

Figure 14

2nd Bn, 77th Armor 1976 TCQC patch with "High Tank," "High Platoon," and "High Company" tabs (9th Inf Div). "1976" is actually on a separate segment; this unit used this same approach in 1977 and 1978. The patch (ASMIC #77G) and "1976" segment are U.S. made, embroidered on twill, and have a standard edge. The tabs are U.S. made, all embroidered, and have a standard edge. Only the patch is in the ASMIC catalog. Although the manufacturing approach and appearance are very different with regard to the patch and year segment, versus the tabs, I received all these items directly from the unit at the same time, so there is little doubt they were worn together.

Finally, Figure 15 is a patch that was apparently issued to the tank battalion within the 24th Infantry Divison(Mech) that scored the highest overall score at tank gunnery in 1966.

Figure 15

24th Infantry Division(Mech) 1966 High Tank Battalion TCQC patch. German made, all embroidered with a standard edge. Not in ASMIC catalog.

Unfortunately, this patch does not identify which battalion wore it; the patch is based on the distinctive insignia of the 70th Armor, but at this time the 24th ID's order of battle included the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd Battalions, 70th Armor.
            Finally, many units issued gunnery support patches to the soldiers, such as mechanics, truck drivers, and cooks, who supported the tankers and other qualifying soldiers during gunnery. See Figures 16 & 17.

Figure 16

1st Armored Division 1972 TCQC Support patch. German made, embroidered on twill with a standard edge. ASMIC #1E.

Figure 17

2nd Sqdn, 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment 1976 Distinguished TCQC Support patch. U.S. made, embroidered on twill with a merrowed edge. ASMIC #3D35.

            Gunnery patches were typically issued at the division, armored cavalry regiment, or battalion/squadron level. They were rarely issued at the corps, brigade, or company level (unless the issuing unit was a separate tank company or armored cavalry troop not assigned to a battalion or squadron, See Figure 18).

Figure 18

Company F, 40th Armor Qualified TCQC patch with "Distinguished" tab (Berlin Bde). German made, embroidered on twill with a standard edge. Not in ASMIC catalog. There were also "TCQC 1978" and "TCQC 1979" tabs that went under this patch.

See Figure 19 for a patch issued at the brigade level, in this case by the 1st Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division in Korea.

Figure 19

1stBrigade, 2nd Infantry Division 1983 TCQC patch. Korean made, embroidered on twill with a merrowed edge. Not in ASMIC catalog.

See Figure 20 for a rare example of a qualification patch that was issued by a cavalry troop that was part of a squadron.

Figure 20

Troop G, 2nd Sqdn, 6th Cavalry 1977 Qualified patch. U.S. made, embroidered on twill with a merrowed edge. ASMIC #6G.

            TCQC patches were always most popular in armored and armored cavalry units, although some mechanized divisions used them fairly extensively. All three of the armored cavalry regiments that served in the Active Army during the mid-1970s through early 1980s (the 2nd and 11th in Germany, and the 3rd at Fort Bliss, Texas) issued an extensive array of gunnery patches.
            Surprisingly few qualification patches indicate the type of tank used by the unit.4 The exception were patches worn by M551 "Sheridan" crews, which almost always indicated that they were for Sheridan gunnery.5 See Figures 9 (above), 11 (above) & 21.

Figure 21

4th Sqdn, 7th Cavalry 1973 Distinguished Sheridan qualification patch (2nd Inf Div). Korean made, embroidered on twill with a standard edge. Not in ASMIC catalog.

            Gunnery patches were only worn on the field uniform, and were typically sewn on the right pocket of the soldier's shirt, field jacket, tanker's jacket, or coveralls. In the 1960s, qualification patches were in full color; subdued patches replaced color patches in the early 1970s.
            Army units stationed overseas typically had their qualification patches manufactured locally. This can help identify which unit issued them, as different manufacturing approaches were used in West Germany, South Korea, and CONUS. Patches manufactured in Germany almost always were embroidered on twill cloth, with standard (a.k.a. "cut" edges). See Figures 1-6, 8, 11-12, 16, 18 (above); Figure 15 (above) is a rare all-embroidered German-made patch. Patches manufactured in Korea can be either embroidered on twill or fully embroidered, and almost always have standard/cut edges. See Figures 13 & 21 (above). Patches manufactured in the United States can be either fully embroidered or embroidered on twill, with either standard/cut edges or heavy "merrowed" edges. See Figures 7 (above), 20 (above) & 22.

Figure 22

2nd Bn, 69th Armor 1977 TCQC patch (197th Inf Bde). U.S. made, embroidered on twill with a standard edge. Not in ASMIC catalog.

Subdued twill patches that have been removed from a soldier's uniform are frequently very faded, with the olive drab twill cloth sometimes appearing to be almost white. See Figures 5 & 11 (above).

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            Gunnery patches are unique to the United States Army. As far as I am aware they have never been worn by the Marine Corps, or any of the foreign armies that have served with, or been trained by, the U.S. Army.
            Qualification patches are specifically part of Armor Branch's heritage. They were not used by light infantry units. Few mechanized infantry, field artillery, air defense artillery, or engineer units issued gunnery patches. When such units did wear them, it was almost always because they were part of a division or armored cavalry regiment that adopted the patch pursuant to a comprehensive qualification patch program. See Figures 23 & 24.

Figure 23

3rd Armored Division 1966 Distinguished Infantry Squad patch. German made, embroidered on twill with a standard edge. Until recently, it was understood that the first year in which the 3rd Armd Div issued an infantry squad patch was 1968. Not in ASMIC catalog.

Figure 24

1st Sqdn, 11th Armd Cavalry Regt 1975 Qualified M109 self-propelled howitzer crew patch. German made, embroidered on twill with a standard edge. ASMIC #11T5.

Few air cavalry units used gunnery patches, which is surprising in light of their popularity in armored cavalry units. See Figure 25 for one of the few examples.

Figure 25

2nd Armored Cavalry Regiment 1981 "Air Cavalry Fight" qualification patch. German made, embroidered on twill with a standard edge. ASMIC #2Y.

            Collecting these patches is challenging because there are few references available; many of the patches lack information that identifies which unit issued them; the tabs that go with the patches (and include important information, such as the year they were issued) are easily misplaced; and these patches were not manufactured in anything approaching the quantities that, say, divisional shoulder patches are. In addition, some units issued very few patches to their soldiers, even though they (naturally) wanted to wear one on each of their field uniforms. As a result, some personnel went to their local tailor shop and had extra patches made, and these patches may or may not have fully matched the design issued by the unit. Compare Figure 26 (3rd Armd Div 1966 TCQC patch issued by Division Headquarters) with Figure 27 (patch sold by a tailor shop in the 2nd Brigade, 3rd Armd Div area (Gelnhausen)).

Figure 26

Official 3rd Armored Division 1966 Qualified TCQC patch issued by Division Headquarters. German made, embroidered on twill with a standard edge. Not in ASMIC catalog.

Figure 27

3rd Armored Division 1966 Qualified TCQC patch sold by a tailor shop in the 2nd Brigade, 3rd Armd Div area (Gelnhausen). German made, embroidered on twill with a standard edge. Not in ASMIC catalog.

Although the basic design, shape, and colors of the two patches are very similar, the size and execution of the Armor Branch insignia and year are fairly different. In addition, the twill cloth is materially different, with the official patch using a traditional twill cloth with fairly obvious "ridges," whereas the unofficial patch lacks those ridges.
            Finally, the Army has done virtually nothing to preserve these patches or any information about them, even though they played a significant role in promoting professional pride in the units that awarded them. Few Army museums include any qualification patches in their collections and those that do typically only have a handful of patches. Sadly, there are probably many gunnery patches that have been lost to history because the Army did nothing to preserve them or record the history surrounding their use.

What This Website Does Not Address

            There are certain types of patches this website does not address. This website does not address the patches issued to units that participated in the Canadian Army Trophy ("CAT") competition, a semi-annual NATO tank gunnery competition that was sponsored by the Canadian Army from the 1960s to 1991. For a discussion of the CAT patches worn by U.S. Army units, see Steve Tatum, "Canadian Army Trophy Tank Gunnery Competition," THE TRADING POST, (Jul-Sep 1992), page 64, and William K. Emerson, "Tid Bits," THE TRADING POST, (Oct-Dec 2005), pages 5-7. CAT patches differ from standard gunnery patches in that they are only awarded to the soldiers who participated in the CAT competition, and were awarded to all the soldiers who participated without regard to how well they or their unit performed. Unlike regular gunnery patches, CAT patches were issued by many of the other NATO countries that participated.

            This website also does not address master gunner patches, which are worn by graduates of the Armor School's Master Gunner courses. For information on these patches, see William K. Emerson, "Tid Bits," THE TRADING POST, (Oct-Dec 2005), pages 5-7.

            Finally, this website does not address the patches worn by Army marksmanship training units or marksmanship teams.

Endnotes

1. There were a few qualification patches that pre-dated the patches addressed on this website. The best known of these patches was the diamond–shaped "Tanker" patch issued by the 1st Armored Division at Fort Hood, Texas, in the early 1950s. See "First Armored Tanker Insignia," Armor (Mar-Apr 1975), p. 33 (reprinted from Armor (Nov-Dec 1951)). This patch is #1A in the ASMIC Qualification Patch Catalog and #1JJ in the ASMIC Armor–Cavalry Patch Catalog.

2."TCQC" stands for "Tank Crew Qualification Course." This website uses these three names interchangeably.

3. One gunnery each year was designated "qualification gunnery." The other gunnery exercises were called "sustainment gunnery."

4. But see Figure 12, which states that the unit was equipped with M60A1 Main Battle Tanks.

5. The Sheridan was a light tank used by armored cavalry units and the 82nd Airborne Division. It entered service in the late 1960s and was largely phased out of service a decade later.

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