Miklós Lovász wrote:Hi, all!
I just perused some links posted, and must say I became thoruroughly confused. I mean, okay, the USA, USN, USMC, USAF, USCG are pretty big outfits, but having all these different kind of Sargeants just doesn't make sense to me. Not to mention, that with the USA there are 8 different ranks, but only 6 levels, which confuses the hell out of me. It appears to me - and please, correct me if I see things wrong - that beeing a Sargeant is much more about position and responsabilities than a rank. I wonder if anybody has any idea why all these ranks were established and why are they kept in service.
Hi Miklos et all - All right a topic I can’t resist -
Sergeant’s – minor indeed (Actually that was pretty funny) I am just back from a bit of business travel so sorry for my tardiness. – (I have a question for you as well which I will post shortly)
Overall the US forces enlisted grades are pretty much in line with most other countries in terms of the numbers. If you want real complications look at the German Forces with the Feldwebel grades. – OberstabsYIKES !!
Maybe the easiest thing to say is this, The US, has combined “post” ,“rank” and “step” in some grades. In general a pay grade does mean a rank but not always and they are not the same. So an E-4 Corporal and an E-4 Specialist hold the same pay grade but not the same “post” or “rank”. The “pay grade” system is just a way of establishing a base and an equivalency between services, but as example on a joint service posting, a USN Petty Officer 2nd class does not care whether his subordinate is a Corporal or a Specialist, to him they are the same. To US Army members, they acknowledge the Corporal’s “rank” above Specialist. Also to be correct as example you do not have to be promoted from Specialist to Corporal to make Sergeant, you can make Sergeant from either. (I am willing to stand corrected if this has changed). So as example E-4 is one pay grade, Specialist and Corporal are two separate ranks, but they are really only one “step”.
As we all know if we go back far enough all “ranks” started as “posts”. You were a Captain as long as you were “Captain” after that you were just “Mister” again. In Rome the Tribune of the Vigiles was only Tribune as long as he held that “post”.
Rank systems today are actually more logical and less complex than they have ever been in history. The whole idea of “combined / unified /joint forces” (whatever you choose to call them) has made us all at least think first about how our own services relate to each other in terms of rank – (Not much of a problem in Canada these days, of course)
If you really want to get technical you can go back to Phillip of Macedon (Alexander the Greats father) for the first “recorded” Lance Corporal (Ouragos) File Closer. His job was to take over the file if the leader was killed but his main job was mostly to stop the other 6-7 guys from running away and he only got status no extra pay, but he was next in line to get a promotion. Of course …. he would be promoted to standing in front of the line………………..so he may not get paid for all that long.
An interesting thing is that the British Army has fewer grades than any other Armed Force, though if you really look closely you will find that more “ranks” (i.e. “steps” ) exist than are officially recorded. The British were never as concerned with having an equal number of enlisted ranks in each service. Even today the officially published RN rating structure essentially ignores the fact that a sizeable part of most of the rates in the technical branches never use the ranks of Leading Rate or Petty Officer progressing upward in the various Artificer or Mechanician grades (not Mechanic). Today they still have junior, ordinary, able, leading & petty grades but unless you know the RN you have no idea what rank a Weapons Operator or an Electrical Artificer 3rd class actually holds.
But back to the Yanks:
The US Army if you look at it actually with some changes in insignia kept the same basic structure as the British for 130 years or so.
Sergeants Major, Quartermaster/Paymaster Sergeants, First Sergeant, Sergeants, Corporals.
I guess if you want to understand it you have to go back to the days when a Corporal was actually a Corporal. By that I mean when a Corporal actually had some “rank”, ie leading a squad, section or team. After the Korean War the US Corporal pretty much became extinct in position if not in rank, and during the Vietnam War almost no Corporals were appointed. (The rank never disappeared but it was in abeyance) When the Corporal started to loose his status in this century, there became a need for more Sergeants.
Corps & Branches were another big influence
There were “Sergeants of the staff” who “ranked in staff matters” over other sergeants as early the “War of Independence”. As the Army grew, so did the staff Corps, and they were very separate, in 1860 there were 8 staff bureau’s & 2 corps: Adjutant General, Inspector General, Bureau of Military Justice, Quartermaster General, Subsistence, Medical, Pay, Ordnance Departments, Corps of Engineers, Corps of Topographical Engineers. In 1863, The Corps of Engineers and The Corps of Topographical Engineers were combined and the Signal Corps added. In 1865 at the end of the Civil War, the regular army was re-organized into 10 regiments of cavalry (1st-10th), 45 regiments of infantry, and 5 regiments of artillery, Adjutant General, Inspector General, Judge Advocate Generals, Quartermaster General, Subsistence, Medical, Pay, Ordnance Departments, Corps of Engineers, and Signal Corps.
Every Unit had a Sergeant Major, Regimental Quartermaster Sergeant, Commissary Sergeant, Hospital Steward, BandMaster or Principal Musician, plus on a company level a First Sergeant, Company Quartermaster Sergeant and others. When the war ended there was established - 1 General, 1 Lieutenant General, 5 Major Generals, 10 Brigadier Generals of the Line, and 8 Brigadier Generals of the Staff. (The Signal Corps and Inspector Generals Department were commanded by Colonels) The army contained 54,302 men. What happened was that all junior “ Sergeant’s of the staff” ceased to be, but the “senior Sergeants of the staff” stayed and became the Quartermaster, Paymaster (etc.) Sergeant’s which all ranked with Sergeant’s Major. Now in a period of “peace” as well the US was locked into this system and the promotion was tied to the branch, so various “Master” & “Staff” NCO’s became a fixture of the Army. On the Engineer side, Sergeants became “Staff Sergeants” and there were no Corporals but instead Staff Privates 1st & 2nd class.
After WWI, Master Sergeants evolved out of Quarter
master Sergeants, Pay
master Sergeants, Band
master Sergeants. Basically the concept was that to break the whole “branch/corps” concept so that a “Master Sergeant” could perform many tasks from QM Sgt to Sergeant Major. Between the wars, a Master Sergeant (or a Master Sergeant serving as a Sergeant Major was the pinnacle of an Enlisted man’s existence) The Technical Sergeant grade was created to recognize the fact that a modern world needed highly specialized and intelligent NCO’s. At this time the “First Sergeant” (Company Sergeant Major) grade was considered so unimportant that it was first going to be equal to a Sergeant, then a Staff Sergeant and finally was made equal to Technical Sergeant until 1941, when it was kicked up to it’s current level.
After 1918 and before the Army again created the “rank” of Sergeant Major in the 60’s ----- all Sergeants Major were in fact Master Sergeant’s holding the post / billet of Sergeant Major.
1919-41
1st Grade: Master Sergeant
2nd Grade: Technical Sergeant /First Sergeant
3rd Grade: Staff Sergeant
4th Grade: Sergeant
5th Grade: Corporal
in 1937, the new “Technician” grades were introduced the US, which were a way to acknowledge a”non substantive promotion” i.e. a promotion of skill not rank, they lasted until the big re-org in 1948.
However, in spite of this logical step, when the US Army (Air Corps) wanted to recruit new young men in WWII rather than make them “Technicians” , they graduated basic training as Corporals, branch training as Sergeants and as enlisted aircrew they would be a Staff Sergeant. So a normal B-17 would have 4 Officers & 6 Staff Sergeants aboard. This is by the way
no reflection on the bravery of the men involved, being called Staff Sergeant was a small price to pay for dying so quickly. In the US Navy or Marines he would be 2 or 3 ranks lower . (Mind you this also followed a British/ Commonwealth pattern, my cousin Ross Meggison, left the RCAF in 1945 as a Flying Officer, serving over 5 years as a tail gunner & instructor. – of the 92 gunners in his class in 1940, he was the only survivor. In case anyone ever wondered why a “hairybag” like myself would care or know about the AF – he is why)
But as to why there are grades that exist today. When in the 60’s the Corporal “disappeared”, and Sergeant effectively became deputy Squad leader & Team Leader, Staff Sergeant remained in in the WWII billet of Squad Leader, SFC as Platoon Sergeant, and above was 1st Sergeant as Company NCO. On an equal level generally at a Battalion level would be a Master Sergeant as Operations, Intelligence, and potentially as Supply, Transport, or MP Sergeant (etc).