Military Rank
Military rank is more than just who salutes
whom. Military rank is a badge of leadership. Responsibility for personnel,
equipment, and mission grows with each increase in rank.
Do not confuse rank with pay grades, such as E-1,
W-2 and O-5. Pay grades are administrative classifications used primarily to
standardize compensation across the military services. The "E" in E-1
stands for "enlisted" while the "1" indicates the pay grade
for that position. The other pay categories are "W" for warrant
officers and "O" for commissioned officers. Some enlisted pay grades
have two ranks.
The Army, for example, has the ranks of corporal
and specialist at the pay grade of E-4. A corporal is expected to fill a
leadership role and has a higher rank than a specialist even though both receive
the same amount of pay. In the Marine Corps, master gunnery sergeants and
sergeant majors are E-9s, but the sergeant major has the higher rank.
One big problem throughout military history has
been identifying who's in charge.
From the earliest days of warfare to the present,
special rank badges meant survival. In the heat of battle, knowing who to listen
to was as important as the fighting skills soldiers and sailors developed. They
had to know at a glance whose shouted orders to obey.
In the earliest times, rank was not an issue.
"Do what Grog says" was enough so long as everyone knew Grog. As
armies and navies started growing, however, that kind of intimacy wasn't
possible. The badge of rank, therefore, became important. Today's Army, Marine
Corps, Navy, Air Force and Coast Guard rank insignia are the result of thousands
of years of tradition.
Through the ages, the badge of ranks have included
such symbols as feathers, sashes, stripes and showy uniforms. Even carrying
different weapons has signified rank. The badges of rank have been worn on hats,
shoulders and around the waist and chest.
The American military adapted most of its rank
insignia from the British. Before the Revolutionary War, Americans drilled with
militia outfits based on the British tradition. Sailors followed the example of
the most successful navy of the time -- the Royal Navy.
So, the Continental Army had privates, sergeants,
lieutenants, captains, colonels, generals, and several now-obsolete ranks like
coronet, subaltern and ensign. One thing the Army didn't have was enough money
to buy uniforms.
To solve this, Gen. George Washington wrote,
"As the Continental Army has unfortunately no uniforms, and consequently
many inconveniences must arise from not being able to distinguish the
commissioned officers from the privates, it is desired that some badge of
distinction be immediately provided; for instance that the field officers may
have red or pink colored cockades in their hats, the captains yellow or buff,
and the subalterns green."
Even during the war, rank insignia evolved. In
1780, regulations prescribed two stars for major generals and one star for
brigadiers worn on shoulder boards, or epaulettes.
The use of most English ranks carried on even after
the United States won the war. The Army and Marine Corps used comparable ranks,
especially after 1840. The Navy took a different route.
The rank structure and insignia continued to
evolve. Second lieutenants replaced the Army's coronets, ensigns and subalterns,
but they had no distinctive insignia until Congress gave them "butterbars"
in 1917. Colonels received the eagle in 1832. From 1836, majors and lieutenant
colonels were denoted by oak leave; captains by double silver bars --
"railroad tracks"; and first lieutenants, single silver bars.
In the Navy, captain was the highest rank until
Congress created flag officers in 1857 -- before then, designating someone an
admiral in the republic had been deemed too royal for the United States. Until
1857, the Navy had three grades of captain roughly equivalent to the Army's
brigadier general, colonel and lieutenant colonel. Adding to the confusion, all
Navy ship commanders are called "captain" regardless of rank.
With the onset of the Civil War, the highest grade
captains became commodores and rear admirals and wore one-star and two-star
epaulettes, respectively. The lowest became commanders with oak leaves while
captains in the middle remained equal to Army colonels and wore eagles.
At the same time, the Navy adopted a sleeve-stripe
system that became so complex that when David Glasgow Farragut became the
service's first full admiral in 1866, the stripes on his sleeves extended from
cuff to elbow. The smaller sleeve stripes used today were introduced in 1869.
Chevrons are V-shaped stripes whose use in the
military go back to at least the 12th century. It was a badge of honor and used
in heraldry. The British and French used chevrons -- from the French word for
"roof" -- to signify length of service.
Chevrons officially denoted rank in the U.S.
military for the first time in 1817, when cadets at the U.S. Military Academy at
West Point, N.Y., wore them on their sleeves. From West Point, chevrons spread
to the Army and Marine Corps. The difference then was chevrons were worn points
down until 1902, when Army and Marine Corps enlisted personnel switched to the
present points up configuration.
Navy and Coast Guard petty officers trace their
insignia heritage to the British. Petty officers were assistants to the officers
aboard ship. The title wasn't a permanent rank and the men served at the
captain's pleasure. Petty officers lost their rank when the crew was paid off at
the end of a voyage.
In 1841, Navy petty officers received their first
rank insignia -- an eagle perched on an anchor. Ratings -- job skills -- were
incorporated into the insignia in 1866. In 1885, the Navy designated three
classes of petty officers -- first, second and third. They added chevrons to
designate the new ranks. The rank of chief petty officer was established in
1894.
During World War II, the Army adopted technician
grades. Technicians of a given grade earned the same pay and wore the same
insignia as equivalent noncommissioned officers except for a small "T"
centered under the chevrons. Technicians, despite the stripes, had no command
authority over troops. This evolved into the specialist ranks, pay grades E-4 to
E-7. The last vestige today survives plainly as "specialist," pay
grade E-4. When there were such people as specialists 7, they wore the current
eagle symbol surmounted by three curved gold bars -- often called "bird
umbrellas."
When the Air Force became a separate service in
1947, it kept the Army officer insignia and names, but adopted different
enlisted ranks and insignia.
Warrant officers went through several iterations
before the services arrived at today's configuration. The Navy had warrant
officers from the start -- they were specialists who saw to the care and running
of the ship. The Army and Marines did not have warrants until the 20th century.
Rank insignia for warrants last changed with the addition of chief warrant
officer 5. The Air Force stopped appointing warrant officers in the 1950s and
has none on active duty today.
Other interesting rank tidbits include:
Article by By Jim Garamone, American Forces Press Service