User:Sephiroth storm/Army Green Uniform

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Current and Recent Service Uniforms[edit]

US Army Green service uniforms for enlisted personnel, worn by Army Special Forces qualified personnel. Note shoulder patches denoting various units.
US Army Green service uniform for officers, as worn by former Army Chief of Staff General Peter J. Schoomaker.

Green Service Uniform[edit]

The main current service uniform is known as the green service uniform or "Class A's." The Army reviewed various ideas in the late 1940s in order to create a distinctive uniform. Pride in the uniform became a major issue in morale and retention, due to use of drab colors. Also, many civilian workers were mistaken for Army personnel, due to massive use of Army surplus clothing after World War II.[1]

Army commissions reviewed various factors of design, durability and appearance. Blue was considered because of its acceptance in men's clothing, but it would then have been too difficult to distinguish it from Air Force and Navy service uniforms and the Marine Corps and Navy dress uniforms. Several colors were reviewed, and finally green (shade 44) was designated the basic color for new dress uniforms.[2]

The green uniform has been worn with minor variations since its official adoption in 1954. The green color was adopted in order to provide a color which was more military, and distinct from various uniforms of civilian service workers.[3] It is scheduled to be discontinued in 2014. It features a main jacket with four buttons. Enlisted personnel wear insignia denoting their branch of service on their collars. Officers wear two sets of insignia consisting of the letters "US" on their collars and their branch on their lapels.

Proficiency badges, such as the marksman's badge, are worn on the upper left pocket flap. Above this are ribbons which are earned for various duties and training. Above the ribbons are qualification badges, such as the paratrooper badges and Combat Action Badge. A nametag is worn on the upper right pocket flap. Unit awards and foreign awards are worn above the pocket, with a regimental insignia above both. Special duty badges, such as the recruiter's badge, are worn on the upper two pockets of the jacket; the side on which they are worn varies by badge, and is specified by regulation.

On each shoulder of the uniform are unit patches. The left side will have the patch of the current unit the soldier is stationed with. On the right shoulder of the dress uniform the soldier may wear the patch of the unit to which the soldier was assigned while deployed to a combat zone. Tabs indicating Ranger or Special Forces qualification, if applicable, are worn above the unit patch on the left shoulder. A similar "airborne" tab is worn immediately above the unit patch if the command is designated as majority airborne, irrespective of whether the individual soldier is qualified as a paratrooper. As the shouder sleeve insignia generally indicates merely the general-officer command to which the soldier is assigned, the soldier's immediate battalion or intermediate-level command is indicated by distinctive unit insignia of metal and enamel, on the soldier's epaulets.

The Army Green Service Uniform has been authorized for withdrawal from issue, and will cease to be issued at a future date. The Army Green Service Uniform will be withdrawn from wear authorization after July of 2014.

references[edit]

http://www.qmfound.com/Army_Green_Uniform.htm http://www.army.mil/symbols/uniforms/history.html

  1. ^ Prestige of the Soldier,By MAJOR A. M. KAMP, JR.The Quartermaster Review - May/June 1954, Quartermaster foundation, qmfound.com, accessed 4-9-08.
  2. ^ THE ARMY GREEN UNIFORM, by Stephen J. Kennedy and Alice F. Park, March 1968, Clothing and Organic Materials Laboratory, U.S. ARMY Natick LABORATORIES, accessed at qmfound.com, accessed 4-9-08.
  3. ^ Cite error: The named reference qmfound was invoked but never defined (see the help page).