(Redirected from Chief of Ordnance)
The 'Ordnance Corps' is a
combat service support branch of the
United States Army.
Mission
The mission of the Corps (as stated on their
website) is:
“The purpose of the Ordnance Corps is to support the development, production, acquisition and sustainment of weapons systems and munitions, and to provide explosive ordnance disposal, during peace and war, to provide superior combat power to current and future forces of the United States Army.”
History
The Ordnance Corps was created in
1775 by a committee of the
Continental Congress (which included future
President of the United States George Washington) to study the procurement and storage of ammunition and methods of arms. The committee appointed
Ezekiel Cheever as Commissary General of the Artillery Stores and technically the first
Chief of Ordnance.
In 1776, Continental Congress created a Board of War and Ordnance, which was responsible for the issuing of supplies to soldiers. In 1777, a Ordnance powder magazine (the first) was established in
Carlisle, Pennsylvania, which was followed soon after by an arsenal and armory operations at
Springfield, Massachusetts, which would go on to become the famous
Springfield Armory. Other armories would later be established in
Harpers Ferry,
West Virginia and
Watertown,
Massachusetts.
The Board of War and Ordnance was reorganized as a
department by Congress in 1812 as part of preparations for the
War of 1812. In this capacity, the Ordnance Department was responsible for the arms and ammunition production, acquisition, distribution, and storage in a larger geographical base than in its prior existence during the
American Revolution.
1832 saw the department acquiring new responsibilities to research & development and a system of field service. The department was further developed during the
Mexican-American War.
The
American Civil War proved to be a great challenge to the Ordnance Department, as its installations on both sides of the war were prime targets for attacks. Nevertheless, it succeeded in providing massive amounts of weapons and supplies procurement and field support for fast moving armies during the war. The
Spanish-American War was noted as the first conflict in which the department deployed materials overseas and provided
close combat support.
World War I proved to be a major turning point for the Corps as it mobilized the massive industrial base of the
United States, as well as jointly developing weapons with its European allies and established supply depots overseas and Ordnance training facilities.
World War II expanded the Corps even more, as it expanded its production, acquisition, distribution, and training mission.
The Corps has also been involved in the development of
rockets,
guided missiles and
satellites.
Chiefs of Ordnance
★
Ezekiel Cheever 1776
★
Colonel Decius Wadsworth, 1815-1821
★ Colonel
George Bomford, 1832-1848
★ Colonel
George Talcott, 1848-1851
★ Colonel
Henry K. Craig, 1851-1861
★
Brigadier General James W. Ripley, 1861-1863
★ Brigadier General
George D. Ramsay, 1863-1864
★ Brigadier General
Alexander B. Dyer, 1864-1874
★ Brigadier General
Stephen V. Benet, 1874-1891
★ Brigadier General
Daniel W. Flagler, 1891-1899
★ Brigadier General
Adelbert R. Buffington, 1899-1901
★
Major General William Crozier, 1901-1918
★ Major General
Clarence C. Williams, 1918-1930
★ Major General
Samuel Hof, 1930-1934
★ Major General
William H. Tschappat, 1934-1938
★ Major General
Charles M. Wesson, 1938-1942
★
Lieutenant General Levin H. Campbell, Jr., 1942-1946
★ Major General
Everett S. Hughes, 1946-1949
★ Major General
Elbert L. Ford, 1949-1953
★ Lieutenant General
Emerson L. Cummings, 1953-1958
★ Lieutenant General
John H. Hinrichs, 1958-1962
★ Major General
Horace F. Bigelow, 1962
★ Major General
William E. Potts, 1983-1986
★ Major General
Leon E. Salomon, 1986-1988
★ Major General
James W. Ball, 1988-1990
★ Major General
Johnnie E. Wilson, 1990-1992
★ Major General
John G. Coburn, 1992-1994
★ Major General
James W. Monroe, 1994-1995
★ Major General
Robert D. Shadley, 1995-1997
★ Brigadier General
Thomas R. Dickinson, 1997-1998
★ Major General
Dennis K. Jackson, 1998-2000
★ Major General
Mitchell Stevenson, 2000-2003
★ Brigadier General
William M. Lenaers, 2003-2004
★ Major General
Vincent E. Boles, 2004-2006
★ Brigadier General
Rebecca S. Halstead, 2006-Present
Notes
, Was not officially a Chief of Ordnance as the department did not yet exist.
, The Ordnance Department and Artillery Department were merged from 1821 to 1832 in the interest of economy. The Ordnance Department would be re-established in 1832.
, The Office of the Chief of Ordnance was abolished and all ordnance-related administrative functions were performed by other Army agencies in 1962. The position was re-established in 1983, as a proponent agency for all ordnance-related occupational specialties and career management fields. The Ordnance Corps would join the regimental system of the
U.S. Army in 1986, with the Office of the Chief of Ordnance being re-established as the head of the Corps.
References
★
A brief history of the Ordnance Corps
External links
★
Official website of the Ordnance Corps
★
In Praise of Ordnance by
Ernie Pyle