The big sergeant leaped forward with the brass badge of his rank glittering on his upper arm, but as he did so the ranks.
In line with the practice at the time the bronze badge would have been for officers and the brass badge for Other Ranks (OR's).
Lord Baden-Powell began awarding a brass badge in the shape of the fleur-de-lis arrowhead to army scouts whom he had trained while serving in India in 1897.
Quickly he picked four of the floury figures, among them an enormous man on whose right shoulder was the brass badge of a boss boy.
After passing tests on knots, tracking, and the national flag, they were given another brass badge, a scroll with the words Be Prepared, to wear below the fleur-de-lis.
This brass badge had the GRETSCH logo written in block type with an elongated letter "T" in the middle of the Gretsch name.
The brass badge had the GRETSCH logo in block letters above the grommet.
This time the brass badge was redesigned with the GRETSCH logo in the drop "G" font above the grommet.
The "stovepipe" shako was a tall, cylindrical type with a brass badge attached to the front.
He jerked his jersey, displaying a brass badge, P. A. Guard.