Happy Birthday Army!

| June 14, 2025 | 26 Comments

Congrats Army, 250 years young today. Got any plans for the day?

250th Anniversary of the Founding of the United States Army

Proclamations June 13, 2025

BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
A PROCLAMATION

On June 14, 1775, the sword and shield of our Republic were forged when the Second Continental Congress voted to establish what would later become the United States Army. Today, our Nation proudly celebrates 250 years of our Army’s strength, service, valor, and discipline. We honor its heroic legacy as the guardian of our sovereignty and our fortress against tyranny — and we pay tribute to the millions of warriors who live by the motto: This We’ll Defend.

Following the first shots of the Revolutionary War at Lexington and Concord on April 19, 1775, it became clear to the patriots that — despite their persistent efforts for peace — war against the British was necessary as a final recourse in defense of their freedom. In the wake of the Boston Massacre, the Intolerable Acts, and the enduring injustice of taxation without representation, they established the First Continental Congress in the fall of 1774 to formally address their grievances. After dozens of patriots perished at Lexington and Concord, the Colonies reconvened — and by June 14, the delegates had decided that there was only one path forward.

On that spring day, in a momentous act of unity and resolve, the Congress passed a resolution to formally establish the instrument of our national defense in the form of the Continental Army. “Resolved, that six companies of expert riflemen, be immediately raised in Pennsylvania, two in Maryland, and two in Virginia” the resolution reads.

With the passing of that fateful resolution, the scattered militias of the American Colonies banded together as a single force — boldly declaring that they would never waver in defense of their liberty and their home. The next day, George Washington was unanimously appointed as the Continental Army’s Commander-in-Chief. Weeks later, on July 3, 1775, he took charge of his Army in Cambridge, Massachusetts. “It is hoped that all Distinctions of Colonies will be laid aside so that one and the same Spirit may animate the whole, and the only Contest be, who shall render, on this great and trying occasion, the most essential service to the Great and common cause in which we are all engaged,” he wrote.

In the days, weeks, and years that followed, that very same Army shocked the Redcoats at Trenton and Princeton, won their first great victory at Saratoga, secured the cause of independence at Yorktown, preserved the Union at Gettysburg, held the line at Chateau-Thierry, stormed the bloody beaches of Normandy, and to this day, gallantly defends our inheritance of freedom against every foe with unmatched tenacity, courage, and strength. What was first formed as a ragtag army of farmers, frontiersmen, blacksmiths, and merchants now stands as the most dominant military force ever born of human will — guided by the promise to support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic.

To ensure our Army’s storied legacy continues well into the future, as President, I have purged the sinister ideology of “Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion” from the ranks of our military. I directed the Department of Defense to update its guidance regarding transgender — identifying medical standards to ensure our military remains the most lethal in the world. In a long overdue redress of injustice, I reinstated American service members who were dismissed for refusing the COVID vaccine, with full back pay and benefits. Every day, I am restoring a foreign policy of peace through strength — and as a result, military recruitment is soaring to historic highs. Under my leadership, the United States military will remain the mightiest, fiercest, boldest, and most revered in the entire world.

On this 250th anniversary of the founding of the United States Army, we pay tribute to every legend of liberty who sacrificed their life to keep America safe, sovereign, and free. As my Administration continues the work of protecting our homeland and upholding our way of life, we proudly summon the spirit, confidence, and resolve of the intrepid men who won our independence on the battlefield 250 years ago — and we vow that their legacy of courage will never perish, and that our sacred birthright of freedom will never, ever die.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, DONALD J. TRUMP, President of the United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim June 14, 2025, as a day in commemoration of the 250th anniversary of the founding of the United States Army. This We’ll Defend.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this
thirteenth day of June, in the year of our Lord two thousand twenty-five, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and forty-ninth.

DONALD J. TRUMP

Category: Big Army, Bravo Zulu

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KoB

A Glorious Day, indeed! Happy Birthday to a Trifecta of reasons to Celebrate. May we still be celebrating in another 250 years.

“This We’ll Defend”! My Oath to The Constitution of These States United didn’t come with an Expiration Date.

HT3

Congratulations US Army!

9xe4oq
2banana

And fu ck your riots

Thunderstixx

Minus the Vaseline !!!

Thunderstixx

HOOAH !!!

Skippy

Hooah
Hooooooahh

BlueCord Dad

Happy Birthday Army!!🎂👍🇺🇸👊

IMG_3896
Anonymous

Toby Keith…

rgr769

This song by Toby was played during the fireworks show at the end of the parade and celebration, for those of you here that missed the greatest military parade I have ever seen.

fm2176

“This We’ll Defend”… inscribed boldly on the Drill Sergeant Badge and indicative of the Army spirit since 1775. Army units are distinctive in that most regiments have their own nickname and/or motto. Those I had the honor of training and serving in are as follows:

1/19 Infantry “Rock of Chickamauga”
3/187 Infantry “Rakkasans” – Ne Desit Virtus: Let Valor Not Fail
1/3 US Infantry “The Old Guard” – Noli Me Tangere: Touch Me Not
3/15 Infantry “China” – Can Do
2/54 Infantry – I Will Cast My Shoe Over It

Hard to believe, but in 21 years of service, those are the only Infantry battalions I served in, with 1/19 and 2/54 both being OSUT (my initial training and Drill Sergeant duty, respectively). There was Vanguard (4th BDE), which became Spartan (2nd BDE) of 3ID, and time spent as attachments to other units (3/187 being OPCON to 3ID for the Invasion and later attached to 3rd ACR in Northern Iraq, and later serving as Vanguard LNO for CJTF-101 in RC-East), and time in MDW and PEO Soldier, but my service reflects how little many of us experience of the Army as a whole.

“The Army Goes Rolling Along”, as it has for 250 years now. Yesterday’s heroes paved the way for today’s young Soldiers, who in turn will eventually pass the torch to tomorrow’s Army. Some are immortalized in film and media, as well as unit histories. Most of us are remembered only in the lifetimes of those who sacrificed alongside us. But we all share a common bond: Soldier.

Of course, there are those who can’t simply let today’s celebrations go without turmoil. As I posted earlier today in another thread, it’s also Flag Day, but more importantly to some, DJT’s birthday. I’ll be honest, were it not for all the politicization of everything nowadays, I wouldn’t even know when the President/CinC’s King’s birthday is, just like I couldn’t tell you the birthdays of the other CinCs I served under (Bush 43, Obama, Trump 45, Biden).

Roh-Dog

25DEC?

o7

fm2176

I was just going off what everyone is telling me about the reason for these “protests”. I guess the term King has a different meaning to different people, and the one true King’s birthday is 25 DEC to a majority of Americans. Heck, I remember “Christ is King” being the subject of controversy last year, being said by some Conservatives and upsetting others. IIRC, it’s a big reason why Candace Owens and Ben Shapiro had a spat, leading to her departure from The Daily Wire.

There are already attacks on Jesus’s recognized birthday, though, with Christmas often being called “Xmas” or “the holidays” now. This is why we can’t have nice things. Because everyone wants to break them.

Roh-Dog

Just administering a little good-natured ribbing, Big Sarge.

One King, take all directions from the tower and watch… your lane!

Happy Army Birthday.

11B-Mailclerk

Do you really believe the “No Kings” nitwits are excluding that particular King of Kings?

Understand clearly who is behind that crap.

Skivvy Stacker

I’m proud to say that 1/3 “The Old Guard” was stationed here at Fort Snelling in Minnesota before being transferred to Washington DC.

Roh-Dog

May the honor and bravery you embody continue to preserve this Republic.

Forever remember the lives of those who came before. Never fail them.

250 years of resolve is just the beginning for this more perfect Union.

THIS WE’LL DEFEND

Green Thumb

And the Army goes rolling along….

ANCRN

I wonder if I still have some old MRE pound cake in the garage. Seems like an appropriate celebratory indulgence.

rgr1480

…add the cocoa powder, sugar packets, and dried milk into an empty c-rat tin; add a white C-ration plastic spoon-full of water, and stir until you have cake frosting. Liberally apply Slather over the pound cake. Now, enjoy.

Happy Birthday, Army!!!

ChipNASA

OK, happy birthday.
Goddamn grumpy fucking army people.
Anybody got Fucking cake?!?
🎂 🧐

11B-Mailclerk

(Burp) Nope.

GI Jane

Spent the day with fellow vets at my Legion Post. Happy 250th Birthday US ARMY! HOOAH!

Skivvy Stacker

My Great-Uncle Joe Reichert served in the Army in WWI.
My Uncle Jim McPhee served in the Army in WWII.
My dad and his brother Ron served in the Air Force in the first years after it had taken over from the Army Air Corps, both men were awarded the Army Good Conduct Medal (USAF didn’t have their own until 1963).
My two Nephews; Tyler and Robb Lauer both served in the Army during GWOT.

FuzeVT

So not exactly putting your best folks in front of the public, yes?

Well. . . smallest, anyway.

Jeep-sm
Last edited 6 days ago by FuzeVT
11B-Mailclerk

2nd Bubba Division, Fort Livingroom.