**Army WWII "Grasshopper" Patch**
Before drones, before satellites, there was the Grasshopper. A pilot, a light plane, and a radio—calling in artillery and spotting the enemy from treetop level. This patch honors the unsung aviators who flew unarmed into the fight.
During World War II, the U.S. Army's light observation aircraft—L-4 Piper Cubs and L-5 Stinson Sentinels—earned the nickname "Grasshoppers" for their ability to land and take off from impossibly small fields. These aircraft provided critical artillery spotting, reconnaissance, and liaison missions across every theater. Flying low and slow with no armor and no weapons, Grasshopper pilots were some of the bravest aviators in the war.
• **Type:** Embroidered patch with WWII-era Grasshopper nose art design
• **Backing:** Hook & loop (Velcro) for display and gear attachment
• **Durability:** Dense stitching preserving vintage WWII artwork quality
• **Detail:** Period-accurate design capturing wartime light aviation heritage
• **Application:** Shadow boxes, WWII collections, flight jackets, museum displays
**Perfect For:** WWII aviation enthusiasts, light observation aircraft historians, Army aviation heritage collectors, L-4/L-5 aficionados, and anyone who honors the pilots who flew into danger with nothing but courage and a radio.