Vert, a mullet with its points terminating in balls Or charged with a fleur-de-lis of the field.
That for the regiments and separate battalions of the Army Reserve: On a wreath of the colors Or and Vert, the Lexington Minute Man Proper. The statue of the Minute Man, Captain John Parker (H.H. Kitson, sculptor), stands on the common in Lexington, Massachusetts.
TOUJOURS EN VEDETTE (Always Alert).
The colors green and yellow are those used for Military Police organizations. The star is a representation of the customary badge of U.S. Marshals and Sheriffs in the days of the vigilante and the Old West; and is symbolic of vigilance, law and order attributes of the Military Police. The fleur-de-lis represents service in France and the place in which the Battalion was originally constituted.
The crest is that of the United States Army Reserve.
The coat of arms was approved on 19 February 1952.