Item Description
Original Item: Only One Available. This is a lovely example of what we believe to be a class “marching” type of banner for the Army Ordnance Training Corps. The banner measures 70” x 13” and is offered in wonderful condition but is not without a few scattered areas of staining, most particularly staining caused by what appears to be organic matter.
The banner is a rather simple design and only features Kanji down the center painted in black. The characters painted are 陸 軍 兵 器 學 校 演 習 隊 本 部 which translates to “Army Ordnance School Training Corps Headquarters”. Now we do not know if this was a specific school or just a broad banner used for all training locations and schools.
A lovely example ready for further research and display.
Imperial Japanese Army Academy
The Imperial Japanese Army Academy was the principal officer's training school for the Imperial Japanese Army. The programme consisted of a junior course for graduates of local army cadet schools and for those who had completed four years of middle school, and a senior course for officer candidates.
Established as the Heigakkō in 1868 in Kyoto, the officer training school was renamed the Imperial Japanese Army Academy in 1874 and relocated to Ichigaya, Tokyo. After 1898, the Academy came under the supervision of the Army Education Administration.
In 1937 the Academy was divided, with the Senior Course Academy being relocated to Sagamihara in Kanagawa prefecture, and the Junior Course School moved to Asaka, Saitama. The 50th graduation ceremony was held in the new Academy buildings in Sagamihara on 20 December 1937, and was attended by the Shōwa Emperor (Emperor Hirohito) himself. In 1938, a separate school was established for military aviation officers. During World War II, the school was highly respected and faculty consisted of many Tokyo Imperial University alumni. It also accepted a large number of students from China, and many of those cadets later had prominent ranks in the Republic of China Armed Forces. In June 1945, as a precautionary measure due to Allied bombings, the Academy sent its entire staff and 3,000 students on a long-term bivouac in Nagano Prefecture, leaving the installation under a light guard as caretakers. In September 1945, after the surrender of Japan, a battalion of the U.S. Army’s 1st Cavalry Division took control of the Academy from the soldiers guarding it. The Academy was abolished along with the Imperial Japanese Army at the end of 1945, and its Sagamihara grounds are now part of the United States Army base of Camp Zama.
Currently the corresponding institution for the modern Japan Ground Self-Defense Force is the National Defense Academy of Japan.
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