XXIV - John A. Chapman “Chappy” Women's T-Shirt
Money back within 30 days for an exchange.
John A. Chapman “Chappy” was a U.S. Air Force Combat Controller and Medal of Honor recipient who fought to the last on Takur Ghar, Afghanistan, during Operation Anaconda. Surrounded and under heavy fire, he continued the fight alone, holding his ground and helping save the lives of his teammates.
His actions became the foundation of the story told in Alone at Dawn, the book by Dan Schilling & Lori Chapman, featured in the upcoming film by the same name. This design reflects that moment of standing alone and still in the fight.
STS, Inc. is bringing back the old-school designs that meant something. Trademarked and unapologetic.
Product: Next Level Apparel 6710 Ladies' Triblend Crew
-
4.3 oz.,
-
Fabric: 50% polyester / 25% cotton / 25% rayon, 32 singles
-
1x1 rib knit neck
-
Single-needle stitch at neck
-
Shoulder to shoulder taping
-
Tear-away label
-
Side seamed
-
Preshrunk for better fit
-
Soft, satin label
-
Fitted silhouette
| Size | Body length | Body width | Sleeve length |
|---|---|---|---|
| S | 25.5" | 16" | 6.75" |
| M | 26" | 17" | 7" |
| L | 26.5" | 18" | 7.25" |
| XL | 27" | 19.5" | 7.5" |
| 2XL | 27.5" | 21" | 7.75" |
CCT History
Combat Control Teams (CCT) were established in 1953 to provide air traffic control and command-and-control capabilities in support of U.S. and allied special operations. Evolving from WWII pathfinders and glider operations, CCTs became essential for establishing drop zones, landing zones, and assault strips in denied or austere environments. Over the decades, they’ve deployed alongside every U.S. SOF element, enabling precision airpower in conflicts from Southeast Asia to the Middle East. CCTs are uniquely qualified as FAA-certified air traffic controllers and hold a wide array of advanced skills: they are certified Joint Terminal Attack Controllers (JTACs), combat divers, static-line and military free-fall parachutists (HALO/HAHO), qualified in demolitions, small unit tactics, survival/evasion/resistance/escape (SERE), communications, fire support coordination, and reconnaissance. Their ability to integrate air and ground operations under extreme conditions makes them one of the most versatile and mission-critical assets in U.S. special operations.