The 94th Training Division (Force Sustainment) Distinctive Unit Insignia (DUI), or unit crest, was first approved for wear on 4 June 1970 by the 94th U.S. Army Reserve Command, which had been created on 22 April 1968 and given the numerical designation and Shoulder Sleeve Insignia of the 94th Infantry Division, inactivated three years earlier. The DUI was reassigned and redesignated for the 94th U.S. Army Regional Support Command on 16 April 1996, and carried forward when that Command was redesignated the 94th U.S. Army Regional Readiness Command (RRC) in 2003.
But when the 94th RRC was inactivated in 2008, the Distinctive Unit Insignia was redesignated for the 94th Training Division, which had been created through the redesignation of the still-inactivated 94th Infantry Division on 5 September 2006, WHICH was finally activated on 16 September 2009. As of Winter 2024, the 94th Training Division remains in the U.S Army Reserve. Headquartered at Fort Gregg-Adams (known as Fort Lee prior to 2023), the Division consists of four Brigades (Ordnance, Quartermaster, Transportation, and Personnel Services ).
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Distinctive Unit Insignias are worn by all Soldiers (except General Officers) in units that have been authorized to be issued the device. It is worn centered on the shoulder loops of the Army Green Service Uniform (AGSU) and the blue Army Service Uniform (ASU, Enlisted only) with the base of the insignia toward the outside shoulder seam. Current regulations do not permit the DUI to be worn on the Dress variations of either uniform, however.
More guidance on wear of the DUI is found in DA Pamphlet 670-1, Section 21-22, "Distinctive unit insignia" and 21–3(d) and (e), "Beret" and "Garrison Cap," respectively. Related Items
94th Training Division Patch (SSI)