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Chaplain Corps (United States Army)
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    Chaplain Corps (United States Army)

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    United States Army
    Chaplain Corps
    Army.mil-53469-2009-10-20-071025.gif
    United States Army Chaplain Corps
    Branch Plaque
    Active 29 July 1775 – present
    Country  United States of America
    Branch Emblem of the United States Department of the Army.svg United States Army
    Type Corps
    Role Military Chaplaincy
    Size 2,700
    Motto(s) "Pro Deo et Patria"
    (Latin: For God and Country)
    Colors Black
    Engagements American Revolutionary War
    American Civil War
    Spanish–American War
    World War I
    World War II
    Korean War
    Vietnam War
    Gulf War
    Somali Civil War
    Kosovo War
    War in Afghanistan
    Iraq War
    Website Official Website
    Commanders
    CCH CH (MG) Thomas L. Solhjem
    DCCH CH (BG) William Green Jr.
    Notable
    commanders
    CH (COL) John T. Axton
    CH (MG) William R. Arnold
    CH (MG) Francis L. Sampson
    CH (MG) Kermit D. Johnson
    CH (MG) Patrick J. Hessian
    CH (MG) Gaylord T. Gunhus
    Insignia
    Branch Insignias ChristChaplainBC.gif USarmychinsigjew.gif USarmychinsigmus.gif USarmychinsigbud.gif US Army Hindu Faith Branch Insignia.png USA - Chaplain Assistant 2.png Chaplain Candidate Branch Insignia.png
    Distinctive unit insignia
    USArmyChapCorRegInsignia.png

    The United States Army Chaplain Corps (USACC) consists of ordained clergy of multiple faiths who are commissioned Army officers serving as military chaplains as well as enlisted soldiers who serve as assistants. Their purpose is to offer religious church services, counseling, and moral support to the armed forces, whether in peacetime or at war.

    U.S. Army Institute for Religious Leadership

    See footnotes

    The U.S. Army Institute for Religious Leadership (USAIRL) is part of the Armed Forces Chaplaincy Center (AFCC), which also includes the Air Force Chaplain Service Institute (AFCSI) and the U.S. Naval Chaplaincy School and Center (NCSC). The three schools are co-located at Fort Jackson, in Columbia, S.C.

    In 2005, the Base Realignment and Closure Commission decided to put all military ministry training at the same location. While it was authorized, funding was not part of the BRAC, and the Air Force departed Ft Jackson in 2012, currently leaving only the Army and Navy at the Armed Forces Chaplaincy Center.

    The purpose of the AFCC was to have closer cooperation among the three chaplain corps and to share instruction and training. While that was the goal, the core curricula were maintained by the three service schools and a joint program of instruction (POI) was never created.

    The U.S. Army Chaplain School was approved on 9 February 1918. Its first session began on 3 March 1918, at Fort Monroe, Virginia. Chaplain (MAJ) Aldred A. Pruden, who developed the plan for the school, was named the first commandant of the school. It subsequently moved to Camp Zachary Taylor (Kentucky), Camp Grant (Illinois), Fort Leavenworth (Kansas), Fort Benjamin Harrison (Indiana), Harvard University (Massachusetts), Fort Devens (Mass.), Fort Oglethorpe (Georgia), Carlisle Barracks (Pennsylvania), Fort Slocum (New York) (1951–62), Fort Hamilton (N.Y.) (1962–74), Fort Wadsworth (N.Y.) (1974–79), and Fort Monmouth (New Jersey) (1979–95).

    Noncombatant status

    Chaplain Candidate

    Due to a revision of DA PAM 611-21 (Military Occupational Classification and Structure) Effective 1 October 2013, Chaplain Candidates, previously belonging to the Staff Specialist Branch until ordination have worn the Staff Specialist insignia in lieu of religious denomination insignia. The transition from the Staff Specialist Branch to the Chaplain Branch left the candidates without an authorized branch insignia. Responding to the need, Chief of Chaplains Chaplain (Major General) Donald L. Rutherford submitted a request for collar insignia which was approved by HQDA, G-1 on 23 February 2012. The design for the collar insignia was authorized on 18 June 2012.

    Religious Affairs Specialist or NCO

    Specialty insignia

    For FAQs regarding uniforms and insignia, see footnote

    Chiefs of Army Chaplains

    The Chief of Chaplains of the United States Army is the head of the Army Chaplaincy. The position was created to better organize the corps. The current Chief of Chaplains is Chaplain (Major General) Thomas L. Solhjem became the United States Army's 25th Chief of Chaplains on 31 May 2019.

    Army bases chaplaincy

    See footnotes For a link to the chaplaincy at each of the bases listed below, see general footnoteand the footnote following each base

    Joint-base chaplaincy

    Field Service (unfinished oil) by James Pollock, U. S. Army Vietnam Combat Artists Team IV (CAT IV 1967)
    Chaplain Martain's Bible by Stephen H. Sheldon, U. S. Army Vietnam Combat Artists Team III (CAT III 1967)
    A Roman Catholic army chaplain celebrating a Mass for Union soldiers and officers during the American Civil War (1861–1865).

    U.S. Military Academy chaplaincy

    Chapels

    For all six USMA chapels, see footnote

    Chaplains

    See footnote

    Cadet Prayer

    See footnote

    Museum

    For USA Civil War chaplains, see footnote For historic photographs of Army chaplains in World War I, World War II, the Korean War, and the Vietnam War, see footnote

    The U.S. Army Chaplain Museum is located at Fort Jackson, South Carolina. It was established on 14 August 1957, at the then–United States Army Chaplain School at Fort Slocum, New York. It was dedicated on 10 February 1958, by Chaplain (MG) Patrick J. Ryan, Chief of Chaplains.

    "The Four Chaplains"

    When the troop-transport ship Dorchester was torpedoed during World War II, four Army chaplains ministered to the soldiers and sailors on the sinking ship, gave up their life jackets, and sacrificed their lives when the ship sank. Those chaplains – known as "The Four Chaplains" – were Lt. George L. Fox, Methodist; Lt. Alexander D. Goode, Jewish; Lt. John P. Washington, Roman Catholic; and Lt. Clark V. Poling, Dutch Reformed.

    Other notable chaplains

    Hymn

    See also

    Army chaplains at the Tomb of the Unknowns, in Arlington National Cemetery.

    Further reading

    • Bergen, Doris L. The Sword of the Lord: military chaplains from the first to the twenty-first century (Univ of Notre Dame Press 2004)
    • Honeywell, Roy John. Chaplains of the United States Army (Office of the Chief of Chaplains, Department of the Army, 1958)
    • Pickard, Scott D. "Co-workers in the field of souls: the Civil War partnership between Union chaplains and the US Christian Commission, 1861–1865." (2013). online
    • Shea, Michael E. Sky Pilots: The Yankee Division Chaplains in World War I (2014)
    • Stover, Earl F. The United States Army Chaplaincy (Office of the Chief of Chaplains, Department of the Army, 1977)
    • O'Malley, Mark. An History of the Development of Catholic Military Chaplaincy in the United States of America (Gregorian University, Rome, 2009)

    External links


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