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History of the Army
Warrant Officer Corps

History of the Warrant Officer Corps.

a. Inception (1916-1940) The predecessor of the warrant officer was the Army Field Clerk (formerly Headquarters Clerk) and the Field Clerk, Quartermaster Corps (formerly Pay Clerk). Both were authorized by the Act of August, 1916. Although these personnel were initially considered civilians, the Judge Advocate General eventually determined that they held military status. The rank and grade of warrant officer was introduced in the Act of July 1918, which established the Army Mine Planter Service in the Costal Artillery Corps and directed that warrant officers serve as masters, mates, chief engineers, and assistant engineers of each vessel. Three varying levels of pay were authorized.

Photo of 8 of the original 40 mine planters appointed in 1922. Taken at Fort McPherson, GA.
Some of the original mine planters.

Additional Notes: In World War I, the Coastal Artillery Corps was responsible for mine defenses in major ports. Vessels ranging in size from small motorboats to 1,000-ton ocean-going ships were used to lay and maintain the minefields. Conflict between soldiers and civilian employees who manned these vessels revealed the need to ensure that vessels were manned by military personnel.

Officially, the birth date of the Army Warrant Officer Corps is  7 July 1918, when Congress established the Army Mine Planter Service as part of the Coastal Artillery. This assured that vessels would be manned exclusively by Army personnel holding the rank of warrant officer. The Army opened a school to train their mariners at Fort Monroe, Virginia, commanded by an officer who had graduated from the Naval Academy.

The official color of the warrant officer corps is brown, as warrant officers in the Mine Planter Service wore simple bands of brown cloth on their uniform sleeves as their insignia of rank. Warrant officers served in four positions aboard the vessels: masters, mates, chief engineers and assistant engineers. Masters wore four bands. Deck officers also wore an embroidered brown fouled anchor above the braid, while engineer officers wore an embroidered brown three-bladed propeller in a similar position.

The use of warrant officers was expanded by the Act of 1920, which authorized appointment of warrant officers in clerical, administrative, and band leading activities. The Act of 1920 authorized 1,120 warrant officers, provided for appointments in the Army-at-large rather than in specific branches and established warrant officer assignments in various headquarters and tactical units. Perhaps the most significant motive for the expansion was "a desire to reward enlisted men of long service and also to reward former commissioned officers of World War I who lacked either the educational or other eligibility requirements necessary for continuance in the commissioned status."

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Information Courtesy of U.S. Army

 

 

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