11th Military Police Brigade (United States)

11th Military Police Brigade

Shoulder sleeve insignia
Active 25 February 1967—3 January 1972
16 September 2005-- Present
Country USA
Branch Reserve
Type Military Police Brigade
Role Military Police
Size Brigade
Garrison/HQ HHC Los Alamitos, CA
320th MP BN Ashley, PA
324th MP BN Fresno, CA
387th MP BN Scottsdale, AZ
400th MP BN Fort Meade, MD
744th MP BN Bethlehem, PA
607th MP BN Texas
Motto Command, Plan, and Control
Colors Green and Gold
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Adolph McQueen
Insignia
Distinctive unit insignia

The 11th Military Police Brigade is a military police brigade of the United States Army Reserves based in Los Alamitos, California.

Organization

The brigade comprises six reserve military police battalions. The brigade Headquarters and Headquarters Company is located in Los Alamitos, California. The 320th Military Police Battalion is located in Ashley, Pennsylvania. The 324th Military Police Battalion (I/R) is located in Fresno, California. The 400th Military Police Battalion is located at Fort Meade, Maryland. The 744th Military Police Battalion is located in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. The 336th Military Police Battalion is located in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (no longer in the 11th MP Brigade, now in the 333rd Military Police Brigade). The 607th Military Police Battalion is located in Grand Prairie, Texas. The 96th Military Police Battalion located in San Diego, California. The 387th Military Police Battalion is located in Scottsdale, Arizona.[1]

The 11th MP Brigade headquarters is now located in Los Alamitos California.

Heraldic Items

Shoulder sleeve insignia

  1. Green and yellow are the colors traditionally used by Military Police units.
  2. The circular shape denotes the unit’s continual service to maintain justice.
  3. The bars allude to the unit’s designation number, “11” and the black color signifies might.
  4. The double-headed axe represents the unit’s military readiness and vigilance, to enforce military security.

Distinctive unit insignia.

  1. Green and yellow (gold) are the colors used for Military Police organizations.
  2. The scroll, ancient symbol for a legal document, is emblematic of the laws, decrees and edicts to be maintained by the organization.
  3. Order out of chaos are among the many symbols attributed to two columns and signify the embodiment of the unit’s operation and jurisdiction. The two columns also simulate the numeral eleven and allude to the unit’s designation.
  1. The distinctive unit insignia was originally approved for the 11th Military Police Group on 6 June 1969.
  2. It was re-designated for the 11th Military Police Brigade effective 17 September 2004.

Lineage

History

The 11th Military Police Brigade was originally constituted on 29 December 1966 in the Regular Army as Headquarters and Headquarters Detachment, 11th Military Police Group, and activated 25 February 1967 at Fort Bragg, North Carolina.[2] The brigade received its distinctive unit insignia on 6 June 1969.[3]

It was Inactivated on 3 January 1972 at Fort Bragg, North Carolina.[2]

Re-designated 13 March 2003 as Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 11th Military Police Brigade; concurrently, withdrawn from the Regular Army and allotted to the Army Reserve.[2] It received a shoulder sleeve insignia on 17 September 2004.[3]

Activated 16 September 2005[2] with headquarters in Ashley, Pennsylvania. The 11th MP Brigade provides peacetime command and control of six Military Police Battalions in Pennsylvania, Texas and Maryland.[4]

The 11th Military Police Brigade served as Task Force MP North, Camp Cropper, Iraq, August 2008 to June 2009 conducting detainee operations. During this time thousands of detained Iraqis were released to their village leadership or turned over to the Government of Iraq for prosecution. The 11th Military Police Brigade earned the Meritorious Unit Commendation for superior performance during this time.

The 11th Military Police Brigade was moved to JFTB Los Alamitos, CA in October 2009.

References

  1. Bell, Mark SFC (16 October 2012). "Scottsdale, Ariz., is home to new military police battalion". US Army. Retrieved 23 June 2014.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Lineage and Honors: 11th Military Police Brigade
  3. 3.0 3.1 The Institute of Heraldry: 11th Military Police Brigade, United States Army. Retrieved 08-13-2008.
  4. Army Reserve Command Structure: 11th Military Police Brigade, United States Army. Retrieved 08-13-2008.