Navy Traditions and Customs
Why is the Colonel Called "Kernal"?
The Origin of the Ranks and Rank Insignia Now Used by the United
States Armed Forces
Enlisted Ranks:
Chevrons
Chevron is a French word meaning rafter or roof, which is what
a chevron looks like; two straight lines meeting at an angle just
as rafters do in a roof. It has been an honourable ordinarie
in heraldry since at least the Twelfth Century. Ordinaries are
simple straight line forms that seem to have originated in the
wood or iron bars used to fasten together or strengthen portions
of shields. Other ordinaries include the cross, the diagonal cross
or "x," the triangle, the "y," and horizontal,
vertical and diagonal lines. The chevron was a basic part of the
colorful and complicated science of heraldry. It appeared on the
shields and coats-of-arms of knights, barons and kings.
Chevrons were thus easily recognized symbols of honor. That might
by why French soldiers started wearing cloth chevrons with the
points up on their coat sleeves in 1777 as length of service and
good conduct badges. Some British units also used them to show
length of service. In 1803 the British began using chevrons with
the points down as rank insignia. Sergeants wore three and Corporals
two. Perhaps they wore them with the points down to avoid confusion
with the earlier length of service chevrons worn with the points
up. Some British units also used chevrons of gold lace as officers'
rank insignia. British and French soldiers who served in our Revolutionary
War wore chevrons as did some American soldiers. In 1782 General
George Washington ordered that enlisted men who had served for
three years "with bravery, fidelity and good conduct"
wear as a badge of honor "a narrow piece of white cloth,
of angular form" on the left sleeve of the uniform coat.
In 1817 Sylvanus Thayer, the superintendent of the U.S. Military
Academy, West Point, used chevrons to show cadet rank. From there
they spread to the rest of the Army and Marine Corps. From 1820
to 1830 Marine Captains wore three chevrons of gold lace with
points down on each sleeve above the elbows of their dress uniforms.
Lieutenants wore one or two gold lace chevrons depending on whether
they were staff or command officers. Marine Noncommissioned Officers
started wearing cloth chevrons with the points up as rank insignia
in 1836. They had been wearing them for three years as length
of service badges. In 1859 they began wearing chevrons in about
the same patterns they do today.
Starting in 1820 Army company grade officers and Sergeants wore
one chevron with the point up on each arm. The officers' chevrons
were of gold or silver lace, depending on the wearer's branch
of service. Captains wore their chevrons above the elbow while
Lieutenants wore theirs below. Sergeant Majors and Quartermaster
Sergeants wore worsted braid chevrons above the elbow while other
Sergeants and Senior Musicians wore theirs below. Corporals wore
one chevron on the right sleeve above the elbow. By 1833 the Army
and Marine company grade officers had stopped wearing chevrons
and returned to epaulettes as rank insignia. Sergeants of the
Army dragoons then began wearing three chevrons with points down
and Corporals two. All other NCOs wore cloth epaulettes to show
their rank. From 1847 to 1851 some Army NCOs wore chevrons with
the points up on their fatigue uniform jackets but still used
cloth epaulettes on their dress uniforms. After 1851 all Army
NCOs wore chevrons with points down until 1902 when the Army turned
the points up and adopted the patterns used today, two chevrons
for Corporals, three for Sergeants and combinations of arcs and
other devices beneath the chevrons for higher grades of Sergeants.
The stripes worn by Air Force members date from 1948. The basic
design was one of several presented to 150 NCOs at Bolling Air
Force Base, Washington D.C., in late 1947 or early 1948. Some
55 percent of the NCOs preferred that design so on March 9, 1948,
General Hoyt S. Vandenberg, then the Air Force Vice Chief of Staff,
accepted their choice and approved the design. Naturally, it took
some time to obtain and distribute the new stripes so it could
have been a year or more before all Air Force members got them.
Whoever designed the stripes might have been trying to combine
the shoulder patch worn by members of the Army Air Forces during
World War II and the insignia used on aircraft. The patch featured
wings with a pierced star in the center while the aircraft insignia
was a star with two bars. The stripes might be the bars from the
aircraft insignia slanted gracefully upward to suggest wings.
The silver grey color contrasts with the blue uniform and might
suggest clouds against blue sky.
Most enlisted service members wear chevrons or stripes to show
their ranks. The exceptions are the lowest three grades of Navy
and Coast Guard Seamen and the Army Specialists. The Seamen wear
one, two or three diagonal stripes or "hashmarks" on
their sleeves. These stripes first appeared on the cuffs of sailors'
jumpers in 1886. Petty Officers and Seamen First Class wore three
stripes, Seamen Second Class two stripes and Seamen Third Class
one stripe. Shortly after World War II the Navy moved the stripes
to its Seamen's upper arms, as did the Coast Guard. Army Specialists
wear an insignia that combines a spread eagle and, depending on
the pay grade, arcs--sometimes called "bird umbrellas."
The eagle and arcs are mounted on a patch that suggests inverted
chevrons. The badge appeared in 1955 as part of an effort to differentiate
between the Army's technical or support specialists who were not
NCOs and the NCOs.
