The
Information Dominance Corps
OPNAVINST 5300.12
Dated:
6 October 2009
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HISTORY OF THE AEROGRAPHER
RATING
CDR
Don Cruse, USN RET
Also see: Interesting
History November, 2009
Also see:
NWSA HISTORIAN'S
REPORT FOR 2004-2005
Also see:
NWSA HISTORIAN’S REPORT FOR 2005-2006
Also see:
OCEAN WEATHER
SHIPS 1940-1980
Also See:
LCDR
ROBERT F. FREEMAN, USN (Ret), NWSA President 1981-1982
Also See: NWSA
Historian COMMENTS May 2007
Alexander G. McAdie was
director of Harvard University’s Blue Hill Meteorological Observatory when
he agreed to provide instruction in “Aerography” to a small group of U.S.
Navy officer candidates. On December 3, 1917 the class convened for six
weeks of instruction. Enlisted weather observers, the predecessors of
today’s Aerographer’s Mate rating, known as Quartermasters (A),
“aerographic,” were trained at the QM School located at Pelham Bay Park,
on Long Island NY.
Professor McAdie was sworn in to the U. S. Naval Reserve as a LCDR on
February 1, 1918, and assigned to the Aviation desk in the Office of the
Chief of Naval Operations. His instructions were to “set up a Naval
Aerological Organization.” The Secretary of the Navy, Franklin D.
Roosevelt, encouraged this action, which constituted the origin of what
later became the Naval Weather Service.
In April LCDR McAdie was accompanied by eight junior officers and fifteen
QM(A) en route to Ireland and France, to set up coastal Aerography
stations for support of offshore patrol flights. By the end of hostilities
in Europe, the Naval Aerographic Organization boasted 53 reserve
aerologists and 200 enlisted personnel. Of course, the primary source for
these personnel was the U. S. Weather Bureau. By October, 1919 this
wartime number had shrunk to five officers and three QM(A) personnel. An
effort was then undertaken to build up personnel strength sufficient to
provide aerological support at all naval and Marine Corps air stations,
plus three seaplane tenders. The aircraft carrier would be invented in
1922 with USS LANGLEY (CV-1).
Maintaining some semblance of wartime aerological support to naval
aviation, a four-month training course on Naval Air Station Pensacola was
started on November 1, 1919 (see below). Creation of the Bureau of
Aeronautics in 1921 helped to clarify Aerology’s primary responsibilities
to naval aviation. The following year LT Francis W. Reichelderfer USN took
over the new Aerology desk within BuAer from LT Reed. In 1923 he managed
to have the QM(A) rating replaced by Aerographer, with training relocated
to Naval Air Station Anacostia. BuNav Circular Letter 99, dated December
23, 1923, established the rating of Aerographer. Chief Quartermaster John
R. Dungan USN changed his rating to Chief Aerographer while at Pensacola,
and thereby became our first.
Seniority in the Aerographer rating was built up by accepting senior petty
officers from other ratings, for training and conversion to Aerographer.
Thus, by 1925 nearly all shipboard and naval air station Aerological units
were led by Chief Aerographers.[1]
While the aforementioned organizational changes were taking place in
Washington, Pensacola personnel were busy establishing post-war training
in the “Cradle of Naval Aviation.” As early as 1917, during the latter
days of WW1, aerological services to naval aviation were needed. In
response, LT William F. Reed, USNRF reported aboard NAS Pensacola in
April, 1918 and began to organize a meteorological observatory. Weather
observations were made and there was a data exchange via telegraph with
several other locations, one of which was the Blue Hill Observatory. Thus
began map plotting, analysis and forecasting on the air station, carried
out primarily by assigned QM(A) personnel. In 1921 LT Reed was relieved by
LT J. B. Anderson, and took over the Aerology desk in BuAer.
Beginning on December 1, 1919, Navy, Marine, and Army enlisteds reported
to Pensacola for instruction. [2] This training routine was followed until
the school was relocated to NAS Anacostia DC on May 15, 1924. CAerog
Raymond J. Brown USN became the CPOIC there as Aerographers replaced the
QM(A) Navy rating. Class size at NAS Anacostia ranged from seven to twelve
students, both Navy and Marine, much the same as at NAS Pensacola. For
example, Class #1, which graduated in January, 1925 consisted of seven.
Class #1 of the Primary Aerographer School on NAS Lakehurst consisted of
nine students, eight of whom graduated on March 25, 1929. Sea1/c Fred
Chase failed to graduate but later completed a full career in Aerology.
Through the early 1930s class sizes were small, but toward the end of that
decade the average number of students per class increased to twenty; and
the length of the training course remained twelve weeks. These were lean
times throughout the Navy and Marine Corps, but the advent of WW2 loosened
the purse strings.
In early 1942, wartime expansion dictated larger class sizes to meet the
needs of the fleet. Primary Aerographer School was re-sited off the NAS to
nearby Lakewood NJ, where the Navy had taken possession of a former
Catholic Prep School. The prep school had been purchased earlier from the
Claflin family and renamed The Newman School. Primary Aerographer School
occupied a portion of The Newman School called Locke Hall. WAVES were
added to the Aerographer rating for the first time. Class length was
reduced from twelve to ten weeks and classes overlapped each month, so
that every month 125 men and 25 WAVES graduated.
Commencing in 1933, senior petty officers began to rotate back to NAS
Lakehurst for the annual Advanced Aerographer School, consisting of six
months instruction with emphasis on forecasting. By the time WW2 appeared
on the horizon and this course of instruction was terminated, final Class
#9 graduated seventeen students in October, 1941. This Advanced Class was
re-established after WW2, and Class B-1 with 29 students, AGC and AG1,
graduated February 20, 1946. Then called “B School,” the course was
shortened to four months.
On August 8, 1942, the Aerographer rating was changed to Aerographer’s
Mate by Circular Letter 113-42 in order to accommodate the new Warrant
Officer specialty being established. Wartime personnel detailing was
de-centralized from BuAer and pools of AerMs were accumulated in Norfolk,
San Diego, Seattle and Alameda; and detailing authority was granted to the
Aerological Officers at those locations. By the end of WW2 there were
roughly 5,000 AerMs serving; but this was followed by rapid downsizing of
the military when hostilities ended. For example, on July 16, 1945 the
monthly quota for Class A Aerog School plunged from sixty-four to twelve.
Another change occurred in 1948 when AerMs became AGs, as part of the
Group IX (Aviation) restructured system for designating ratings by
digraph. The change facilitated machine processing of personnel records.
Ten years later, the Navy created Senior and Master Chief Petty Officers,
pay grades E-8 and E-9. Lee O’Rork became our first AGCM. The new Command
Master Chief program soon followed. AGCM William Heagley USN was the first
to serve as CMDMC of the Naval Weather Service. Another senior AG held a
billet in the Bureau of Naval Personnel, acting as AG Detailer.
In 1977 all enlisted military weather training was turned over to the U.S.
Air Force and the USAF was designated “Single Service Manager,” in the
interest of economy. Navy, Coast Guard, and Marine Corps weather training
was consolidated on Chanute AFB in Rantoul IL, where USAF training had
been conducted for many years. When Chanute AFB was closed during a
periodic Base Reduction and Consolidation evolution, weather training was
moved en toto to Keesler AFB in Biloxi MS. A large, modern school building
was constructed.
The AG rating continues to undergo rapid technological change, the same as
with telecommunications and related fields. From the time TIROS began
sending cloud photographs back to earth and computer technology permitted
the processing of these and other satellite data, training requirements
have been revolutionized for this rating. There is an awesome
responsibility at KAFB to prepare our AGs for duty in the fleet.
[1] MM(a)1/c Al Francis, Raymond J. Brown, and Robert L. Welles. CQM
Robert Currie, CSM Thomas Thomas, CY E. M. Brown, and BM1/c James B.
Chamberlain. (among others)
[2] 1921 Class: Naval Aviators LT Felix Stump, LT Adolph Schneider and LT
Margeson received some OJT but never served as Aerologists. Enlisted: Bob
Welles, Al Francis, Ken Crebbins, Roscoe Houseman, Byron Morris, Abe
Finer, plus two additional Navy and four Marines.
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