Item Description
Original Item: Only One Available. This is an excellent example of a Vietnam Era General Officer’s Belt, as issued to General’s of the U.S. Army during the Vietnam War and beyond.
Up through WWI, all officers wore a brown belt with an interlocking eagle plate in garrison (The Model 1910 Officer’s Garrison Belt). After the war, the belt was no longer regulation. In July 1943, the Army Chief of Staff “expressed a desire” as the original memorandum states, “for a belt to be worn by all general officers when carrying sidearms, except when actually going into combat.” The use of the belt was left to the discretion of each General Officer. It was worn with the Army Combat Uniform and also issued in conjunction with the General Officer’s Issue Colt Model 1903 Pocket Model.
This belt is in excellent condition, showing only signs of light handling and storage wear. As stated previously, it was up to each General Officer how and when they wore their belts. Apparently this belt was rarely worn, or may have possibly been a General’s spare. The Belt is marked size “38”, and features a solid brass “Spoon and Wreath” style belt buckle, with the federal eagle riteved on. The buckle is devoid of markings, which is common for these belts.
U.S. Army Generals:
A general officer is an officer of high military rank; in the uniformed services of the United States, general officers are commissioned officers above the field officer ranks, the highest of which is colonel in the Army, Marine Corps, Air Force,and captain in the Navy, Coast Guard, Public Health Service Commissioned Corps (PHSCC), and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Commissioned Corps (NOAACC).
General officer ranks currently used in the uniformed services are:
One-star: brigadier general in the Army, Marine Corps, Air Force, and and rear admiral (lower half) in the Navy, Coast Guard, PHSCC, and NOAACC
Two-star: major general in the Army, Marine Corps, Air Force, and and rear admiral in the Navy, Coast Guard, PHSCC, and NOAACC
Three-star: lieutenant general in the Army, Marine Corps, Air Force, and and vice admiral in the Navy, Coast Guard, PHSCC, and NOAACC
Four-star: general in the Army, Marine Corps, Air Force, and and admiral in the Navy, Coast Guard, PHSCC, and NOAACC
Above these four general-officer ranks are five-star ranks, but these are generally reserved for wartime use. They are the General of the Army (in the Army, equivalent to the foreign rank of field marshal), Fleet Admiral (in the Navy), and General of the Air Force (in the Air Force). Nine Americans have held five-star ranks, but none currently.
The highest ranks, senior to the five-star ranks, are General of the Armies (in the Army) and Admiral of the Navy (in the Navy). These ranks are sometimes called six-star ranks, but holders of the ranks have never used six-star insignia. Only four people have ever held these ranks, which are sometimes considered to be the equivalent of the foreign ranks of generalissimo or grand marshal, and they have never been used at the same time as all other general-officer ranks. The rank of General of the Armies has been held only by John J. Pershing, promoted in 1919, George Washington, promoted posthumously in 1976 as part of American bicentennial celebrations, and Ulysses Grant, promoted posthumously in 2022 to commemorate the 200th birthday of the Army's first four-star general. The rank of Admiral of the Navy has been held only by George Dewey, promoted in 1903 with the date of rank retroactive to 1899. Proposals to bring back these ranks were made during World War II, with Douglas MacArthur and Chester W. Nimitz under consideration for appointment as General of the Armies and Admiral of the Navy, respectively, but this was never implemented.
Throughout much of U.S. history, ranks above three stars were either not used at all, used only on a temporary basis, or only used one at a time, with different titles used at different times for the same rank.
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