United States Army Pigeon Service
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The United States Army Pigeon Service (a.k.a. Signal Pigeon Corps) was a unit of the United States Army during World War I and World War II. Their assignment was the training and usage of homing pigeons for communication and reconnaissance purposes.[1]
During World War II, the force consisted of 3,150 soldiers and 54,000 war pigeons, which were considered an undetectable means of communication. Over 90% of US Army messages sent by pigeons were received.[2]
From 1917 to 1943 and from 1946 to 1957, the US Army Pigeon Breeding and Training Center was based at Fort Monmouth, N.J. From October 1943 until June 1946, the center was based at Camp Crowder.[3] The US Army discontinued using pigeons as message carriers in 1957. Fifteen "hero pigeons" were donated to zoos, and about a thousand other pigeons were sold to the public.[4]

G.I. Joe
During the Italian Campaign of World War II, G.I. Joe was a pigeon who saved the lives of the inhabitants of the village of Calvi Vecchia, Italy, and of the British troops of the 56th (London) Infantry Division occupying it. Air support had been requested against German positions at Calvi Vecchia on 18 October 1943, but the message that the 169th (London) Infantry Brigade had captured the village, delivered by G.I. Joe, arrived just in time to avoid the bombing. G.I. Joe flew this 20-mile distance in an impressive 20 minutes, just as the planes were preparing to take off for the target. He saved the lives of at least 100 men.[5][6]
For his efforts, G.I. Joe was presented the Dickin Medal for "the most outstanding flight made by a United States Army pigeon in World War II."[7]
President Wilson
Born in France, President Wilson's initial assignment was to the U.S. Army's newly formed Tank Corps. He first saw action, delivering messages for the 326th and 327th Tank Battalions, commanded by Colonel George S. Patton, in the Battle of Saint-Mihiel. Assigned to the forward-most squad in the advance, he was released from the turret of a tank to fly back with the locations of enemy machine gun nests. Artillery could then be brought to bear before the infantry advanced.
Following this action, he was in support of an infantry unit, the 78th Division, which was conducting operations in the vicinity of Grandpré, France, during the Meuse-Argonne Offensive. On the morning of 5 October 1918, his unit came under attack and was heavily engaged in a firefight with the enemy. President Wilson was released to deliver a request for artillery support, flying back to his loft at Rampont, forty kilometers away; he drew the attention of the German soldiers, who opened fire, creating a nearly impenetrable wall of lead that blocked his path. Despite this, President Wilson managed to deliver the lifesaving message within twenty-five minutes. When he landed, it was found that his left leg had been shot away and that he had a gaping wound in his breast.

Surviving his wounds, President Wilson retired to the U.S. Army Signal Corps Breeding and Training Center, where he eventually died in 1929.[8]
Cher Ami
Cher Ami, meaning "Dear Friend" in French, was a homing pigeon initially donated to the Signal Pigeon Corps by France. He spent several months on the front lines in 1918 and over the course of World War 1 delivered 12 messages in total. However, the most important mission he flew was on 4 October 1918 (just one day before President Wilson's key flight), and he ultimately saved 194 men's lives. The French awarded the pigeon a Croix de Guerre for his actions.[9]