Description
The 130th Rescue Squadron's patch splits the world in two and puts a sword through both halves — mountains on the dark side, an eagle in flight on the gold, and "That Others May Live" arcing over all of it. Circular, with the field divided between black and gold, the design places a large silver sword vertically at center, its blade running from the blue water at the base up through both hemispheres of the split field. The bald eagle banks across the gold half. Snowy mountains rise from the black. "130TH RESCUE SQUADRON" scrolls at the bottom.
The 130th Rescue Squadron is a California Air National Guard unit based at Moffett Federal Airfield, where they fly the HH-60G Pave Hawk in the Personnel Recovery mission. California's rescue community has deep roots — Moffett has been home to military aviation operations since the 1930s, and the 130th represents the Guard's contribution to CSAR in one of the most operationally complex geographic environments in the country.
The patch is circular with a clean split design — black field on the left, gold on the right, divided by the central silver sword. The bald eagle is embroidered in white and brown on the gold half, wings fully extended in level flight. The mountains on the black half are white and gray, suggesting snow-covered peaks. The blue water at the base of the sword ties the design together. Scroll text at top and bottom is crisp and readable.
For 130th RQS veterans, California ANG alumni, Moffett Field history buffs, or CSAR collectors, this patch is a clean piece of unit identity. The sword and split design make it immediately distinct from the more standard circular rescue patches, which is fitting for a Guard unit that's run its own course.
"That Others May Live." The 130th's patch says it against a split sky, with a sword in the middle. That's about right.