Description
The COMZ Europe patch is the shoulder sleeve insignia of the United States Army Communications Zone, Europe — the logistical command that kept Allied forces supplied, fueled, and moving during World War II. Shield-shaped, split vertically in royal blue and red with a white center field, it carries two fleur-de-lis flanking an upward-pointing white arrow. The design says exactly what the command was: French soil, forward momentum, support.
Activated in 1942, COMZ-EUR handled everything behind the front lines: supply depots, transportation networks, communications infrastructure, and the logistics chain that sustained the European Theater of Operations. After Normandy, that meant running supply lines across France while combat divisions pushed east. The men who wore this patch didn't make the headlines. They made the advance possible.
The blue and red halves echo the French tricolor, the ground where COMZ did its work. The white arrow runs up through the center of the shield, a fleur-de-lis on each side. France's heraldic symbol, worn by an American command. White merrow border, tight embroidery throughout.
For anyone who served in the ETO, or whose father did, this patch carries real weight. COMZ work was unglamorous: fuel, food, ammunition, and the constant pressure of keeping a moving army fed across hundreds of miles of liberated Europe. This is a patch for the guys who made it run.
A piece of WWII Army history that doesn't get nearly enough shelf space.
1 Review
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Comz Europe (France) shoulder Patch
Really Glad to find this patch after years of searching. I wore this patch on my Right shoulder from Jan. 1960 thru Early 1962. Very good match for one of my originals in mint condition! when the 1st. Logistical Command took over and we went to their circular leaning white arrow patch. [later 1st Log. went to VN]