Description: Army-Navy "E" for "Excellence in Production" Award, 8 foot Banner/Flag/Pennant, with FOUR Stars, indicating that the manufacturer received the "E" Award FIVE times!! Complete with the three bright solid brass Snap Hooks for hoisting on a flag staff. Rare! Rare! Rare!Manufactured by the PHILADELPHIA QUARTERMASTER DEPOT, and so marked. Mint "New Old Stock" Unissued, visually stunning condition!!! Only rarely do ANY these coveted Banners come on the market! And even more rarely does a 'stone cold' mint example become available from a private collection or a museum. And I am not sure another FOUR (4) STAR Banner will appear for sale in my lifetime. The only other Four (4) Star Banners I know of are on display in three different museums, one of which is the NATIONAL WWII MUSEUM in New Orleans! For perspective, over 85,000 separate manufacturers were involved at one time or another during WWII in producing materiel for the war effort and of those only 4,283, or about 5% received even a single 'E' Award. The contractor to whom this Banner was awarded received the 'E' Award FIVE times, i.e. FOUR STARS! Only 820 companies earned a Banner such as this one...less that nine one-thousandth of one percent, or 0.009%That's how RARE this one is! And this museum-grade example is in "stone-cold" Mint condition.This Banner was obviously never flown. Neither has it ever been displayed on hung in factory! ***** PARTICULARS:+ Spotless, flawless, perfect condition!+ Manufactured by the Philadelphia Quartermaster Depot (PQD) for the U.S. War Department.+ It is 92" x 48" approx 8 feet in length and 48 inches in width at the Hoist end, tapering to 32 inches wide at the "Swallow-tail" end. + The very heavy canvas Hoist end edge is 2" wide and has three (3) bright brass 7/8" Grommets with three (3) heavy brass Snap Hooks for fastening to the flagpole line.+ Lightly stamped in black ink on the canvas Edge of the hoist end in 3/4" block san serif letters from the Philadelphia QM Depot: P.Q.D. PATENT DESIGN PATENT 134-583+ Double-sided applique Letters, four Stars, the 'E' and the detailed gold Oak and Laurel Wreath!+ Dimensions: - Each of the four white STARS stands a full 6" tall - The bright white 'E' stands 9-1/2' in heights. - The bright white letters of 'ARMY' and 'NAVY' are each 8" tall. - The gold Oak and Laurel WREATH is a full 2 feet in diameter and is top-stitched for detail!+ Stunning workmanship! + Heavy cotton is bright, unfaded, free of holes, discoloration, snags, mildew stains, stretch marks, or damage from 80 years of long term storage before I acquired it years ago. + Provenance unknown. +++++ + The Army-Navy "E" Award was an honor presented to a company during World War II for excellence in production of war equipment. The award was also known as the Army-Navy Production Award. The award would consist of a pennant for the plant and emblems for all employees in the plant at the time the award was made. The pennant was triangular swallowtail with a white border, with a capital E within a yellow wreath of oak and laurel leaves on a vertical divided blue and red background. ARMY is on the red background and NAVY on the blue background. + Usually an Army officer and a Navy officer would be present at a ceremony when a company would assemble all the employees and a ceremony would ensue. After the award of the pennant to the plant (to be flown), the employees present would receive their pins. A total of 4,283 companies received the award in the course of the war. This amounted to about 4% of the companies engaged in war work. Plants with continuing excellent work were awarded stars to add to their pennant. A handful of plants earned up to six stars by the end of the war. The Army-Navy "E" Award program was terminated after the war ended. *****Army-Navy Excellence AwardThe Army-Navy “Excellence in Production” (“E”) Award was created in 1942 to recognize industries for their outstanding production contributions to the War and Navy Departments. It combined the Navy “E” Award, Army “A” Award, and Army-Navy Munitions Board “Star,” which had been in place since 1906. While all factories involved in war production were eligible for the award, this honor was only accorded to 5% of wartime industries. Recipients were chosen based on a number of factors, primarily the “quality and quantity of production in the light of available facilities...Other factors to be weighed may include: a) Overcoming of production obstacles, b) Avoidance of stoppages, c) Maintenance of fair labor standards, d) Training of additional labor forces, e) Effective management, f) Record on accidents, health sanitation, and plant protection, [and] g) Utilization of subcontracting facilities.” While the Army and Navy Production Boards, which nominated plants for the award, were dissolved in December 1945, recipients of the “E” Award still retain the right to fly the flag and wear the pins received for their service.*****from the NAVAL HISTORY and HERITAGE COMMANDArmy-Navy E AwardWar Department Circular, 1942: Army-Navy Production AwardPress Release, 1945: Army-Navy E Award TerminationSample E Award Letter: 1942 letter from Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox to American Brass CompanyCIRCULAR NO. 228, 1942Army-Navy Production Award.1.a. The War Department and the Navy Department have agreed to make a single award to individual plants which have achieved outstanding performance on war production, to be known as the Army-Navy Production Award.b. Hereafter the Army-Navy Production Award will be presented plants doing outstanding war production work, and awards of the Navy E, the Army A, and the Army-Navy Star will be discontinued.2.a. The award will consist of a pennant for the plant and emblems for all employees in the plant at the time the award is made. These will be paid for by the Department making the award.b. The pennant will be swallow tailed, will have a white border, and will have a white capital letter E within a yellow wreath of oak and laurel leaves on a vertical divided blue and red background. ARMY will be on the red background and NAVY on the blue.c. The emblems will have a capital letter E within a wreath of all silver oak and laurel leaves, and horizontal swallowtail wings divided in five - red, white, blue, white, red.3. The Under Secretary of War has designated an Army Board for Production Awards to serve under the Director, Procurement and Distribution Division, Services of Supply, the duty of which is to formulate policies and rules governing nominations and awards, and to make final selections of award recipients from nominations submitted by the supply services and by the Matériel Command, Army Air Forces, and other production agencies.4. All plants engaged in War production and construction work are eligible for the Army-Navy Production Award. There will be equal opportunity for Government as well as private plants, small as well as large, those engaged partly on war work as well as those engaged wholly on war work, subcontractors as well as prime contractors.5. Quality and quantity of production in the light of available facilities are the factors which will be given the greatest weight in selecting recipients of the award. Other factors to be weighed may include-a. Overcoming of production obstacles.b. Avoidance of stoppages.c. Maintenance of fair labor standards.d. Training of additional labor forces.e. Effective management.f. Record on accidents, health sanitation, and plant protection.g. Utilization of subcontracting facilities.6. Nominations for plants doing War Department work will be handled in the following manner:a. District procurement officers with the approval of the chief of the district will recommend the names of plants which in their opinion merit such awards. They will forward their nominations to the chief of their respective supply service or to the Commanding General, Matériel Command, in the case of Army Air Forces, together with sufficient data to justify their choices, including the reports of the local Army inspector.b. The chiefs of the supply services and the Commanding General, Matériel Command, Army Air Forces, will study the nominations and will forward their recommendations to the Award Board for final action. The chiefs of the supply services or the Commanding General, Matériel Command, Army Air Forces, may also make initial nominations which they will forward with supporting data to the Award Board.c. Recommendations for awards may be made directly to the Award Board by agencies concerned with production. Any awards granted to such nominees will consist of the Army-Navy pennant and emblems.d. In the exercise of its discretion, the Award Board may prescribe other methods by which nominations and recommendations may be submitted to it.e. The Award Board will consider the recommendations made to it and make the final selections.7. The Award Board, upon reaching a decision to make an award and having cleared the award with the Incentive Division, Office of the Under Secretary of the Navy, which is similarly charged, will forward the name of the recipient, together with any special instructions which it may deep appropriate, to the Public Relations Branch, Services of Supply, which will be charged with all publicity and arrangements in connection with the award.[A. G. 201.4 (7-8-42).]War EmploymentBureau of Public RelationsPress Branch *****Future ReleaseFor Release to P.M.’s of December 5, 1945Joint Army – Navy ReleaseArmy-Navy “E” Award Termination Sees Award Granted to 5% of Eligible PlantsWar workers in 4283 of the nation’s top-flight war production facilities earned the Army-Navy “E” Award for their part in the defeat of the Axis Powers, it was announced today by the War and Navy Departments. This number includes the Navy “E” Awards made prior to July 1942 when the Navy “E”, the Army “A” and the Army-Navy Munitions Board “Star” Awards were merged and became known as the Army-Navy “E” Award.Representing only 5% of the estimated war plants in the nation, those plants meeting the stringent eligibility requirements ranged in size from a one-man plant to large corporations and included facilities that converted from peace to war production, as well as new plants built especially for war purposes. Both prime and subcontractors were eligible for and received the award. Approximately 50% of the Awards went to plants having less than 500 employees, generally considered as “smaller war plants”.The Army-Navy “E” Award was granted only to facilities which were particularly outstanding in production for the War and Navy Departments. Excellence in quality and quantity of production were two of the determining factors in granting Awards. Others included: (a) overcoming of production obstacles; (b) low rate of absenteeism; (c) Avoidance of work stoppages; (d) maintenance of fair labor standards; (e) training of additional labor forces; (f) effective management; (g) record on accidents, health, sanitation, and plant protection: (h) utilization of sub-contracting facilities; (i) cooperation between management and labor as it affected production; and (j) conservation of critical and strategic materials.Nominations for the Army-Navy “E” Award were the responsibility of the Technical Services of Army Service Forces, the Army Air Forces, the Bureaus of the Navy Department, the Coast Guard, or the Marine Corps, whichever had the largest contractual interest in the plant. Thus, if the Army had the largest volume of business in the plant, it nominated the plant. If the Navy had the largest interest, it nominated the plant.For the Army, the nomination originated with the field procurement officer in closest touch with the plant. Thus, the field procurement officer of the service having the largest contractual interest in the plant, such as the Ordnance Department, Chemical Warfare Service, or other technical service of the Army, or the Army Air Forces, recommended a plant for the Award. From the local inspector or District Office, this recommendation was forwarded to the Office of the Chief of the Service for review prior to submission to the Army Board for Production Awards.The Navy followed a similar procedure. The cognizant inspector or supervisor, such as the inspector of Naval Aircraft, the Inspector of Naval Material, the Naval Inspector of Ordnance, or the Supervisor of Shipbuilding, initiated the recommendation which was forwarded to the appropriate Bureau of the Navy Department for further review prior to submission to the Navy Board for Production Awards. The action of either Board had to be concurred in by the other Board before an Award was granted.The members of the Navy Board for Production Awards at the time of the termination of the Award program were: Admiral C.C. Bloch, USN (Retired), Chairman; Rear Admiral W.T. Cluverius, USN (retired); Rear Admiral George H. Rock, (CC) USN (Retired); and Lieutenant James S. Copley, USNR, Secretary. The members of the Army Board for Production Awards were: Major General William H.Harrison, Chairman; Major General Edward M. Powers; Brigadier General Hugh C. Minton; Brigadier General Alexander G. Gillespie; Colonel Ralph F. Gow; Mr. Edward F. McGrady; and Lt. Colonel Robert B. Clark, Jr., Recorder.Plants which maintained an outstanding record of performance for six months after receiving the original Army-Navy “E” Award were granted a Star Award, indicated by a white star on their “E” flag. Additional stars could be won by continued outstanding performance for succeeding six-month periods until the flag carried four stars, after which the interval was increased to one year.Of the 4283 plants which were granted the Award, eight had won six Star Awards when the program ended. Four of these had retained their original Navy “E” Awards and were as follows: Cameron Iron Works, Houston, Texas; General Motors Corporation, Fisher Body Division, Die & Machine Unit, Detroit Michigan; Midvale Company, Nicetown, (Philadelphia), Pennsylvania; and Northern Ordnance, Inc., Minneapolis, Minnesota. The other four, which had converted from the Navy “E” Award to the Army-Navy “E” Award, were as follows: Arma Corporation, Brooklyn, New York; Ford Instrument Company, Inc., Buildings 1, 2, 3, and 4, Long Island City, New York; Keuffel & Esser Company, Hoboken, New Jersey; and Miehle Printing Press and Manufacturing Company, Chicago, Illinois.Of the remaining Awards, 763 had been granted one Star Award, 723 had been granted two Star Awards, 776 had been granted three Star Awards, 820 had been granted four Star Awards, and 206 had been granted five Star Awards.The final Awards were granted at the August meetings of the Army and Navy Boards for Production Awards and both Boards have subsequently been dissolved,Plant which have won the Award are at liberty to continue flying the Army-Navy “E” Award flag, and to make use of the Award insignia in their publicity and advertising, while their employees, entitled to receive Army-Navy “E” Award pins, may continue to wear them.
Price: 1950 USD
Location: Little Rock, Arkansas
End Time: 2024-12-11T14:44:48.000Z
Shipping Cost: 12.85 USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Conflict: WW II (1939-45)
Original/Reproduction: Original
Theme: Militaria
Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
Region of Origin: United States