what british army wears a small black snake patch
The 229th MI Battalion wears the Defense Language School (US Army Element) shoulder sleeve insignia.
No, Solid Snake was US Army.
Yes, I have tons of friends who do it. And some who deployed with 1st MEU while in the Army and still where their patch.
How do Get enrolled in the British Army when I am from another country? What are the requirements of being in the British Army? Will I get a chance to be recruited in the British Army?
the british army
A soldier that wears two stripes is a 'sergeant'.
the british army was aided by loyalist.
44th Home Counties Division saw active service in France and was then sent to the Middle East. It was disbanded after the battle of El Alamein where it fought in the Southern sector of the front line. The British used shoulder patches to designate Divisions. Then they would use small colored flashes for brigades or branch, such as artillery. Some wore an arc patch above the Divisional patch with the Regiment's name. So a British uniform could have 2 or 3 or even 4 colored patches on the sleeve. Most divisional formational patches were square or round and had some image in the center. I did not know of any that was a solid color or oval in shape. But I found it in my reference book. Note: The Canadian Divisions wore a solid patch in the shape of a rectangle. The 1st Canadian Division wore a maroon patch. Just for a comparison. The other divisions wore patches of light blue and red and one other color. Reference: "Army Badges and Insignia of WW2" by Guido Rosignoli.
the captain
Harry Patch (who turns 111 this year) is a British WWI veteran and one of six surviving veterans of World War I. The other five are: *Henry Allingham (113 - British) *John Babcock (109 - served in the Canadian Army; lives in the USA) *Frank Buckles (108 - American) *John Campbell Ross (110 - Australian) *Claude Choules (108 - served in the British Army; lives in Australia) There is at least one more claim, Douglas Terrey (106), although there are no surviving records to verify his claims.
Harry Patch (who turns 111 this year) is a British WWI veteran and one of six surviving veterans of World War I. The other five are: *Henry Allingham (113 - British) *John Babcock (109 - served in the Canadian Army; lives in the USA) *Frank Buckles (108 - American) *John Campbell Ross (110 - Australian) *Claude Choules (108 - served in the British Army; lives in Australia) There is at least one more claim, Douglas Terrey (106), although there are no surviving records to verify his claims.
None the British army is an army, not an air force.