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Official logotype of the engineering duty officer community. An engineering duty officer (EDO) is a restricted line officer in the United States Navy, involved with the design, acquisition, construction, repair, maintenance, conversion, overhaul and disposal of ships, submarines, aircraft carriers, and the systems installed aboard (weapons, command and control, communications, computers).
The Civil Engineer Corps (CEC) is a staff corps of the United States Navy. CEC officers are professional engineers and architects, acquisitions specialists, and Seabee Combat Warfare Officers who qualify within Seabee units. They are responsible for executing and managing the planning, design, acquisition, construction, operation, and ...
U.S. Marine Corps: United States Marine Corps Aviation: Senior Enlisted Advisor, Deputy Commandant for Aviation (DCA) Master Gunnery Sergeant Michael S. Hnyla [96] U.S. Marine Corps: Combat Development and Integration, Headquarters Marine Corps Marine Corps Combat Development Command: Sergeant Major, Marine Corps Combat Development Command ...
U.S. Army Chief of Engineers U.S. Army Corps of Engineers: United States Army Chief of Engineers (COE) and Commanding General, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) Lieutenant General William H. Graham Jr. [80] U.S. Army: Surgeon General of the United States Army U.S. Army Medical Command Army Medical Department: Surgeon General of the United ...
After the attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941, the Navy's military construction program amounted to global proportions, expanding far beyond the continental United States and its prewar possessions to Europe, North Africa, Asia and the far corners of the Pacific. To provide supervisors for this huge wartime effort, more than 10,000 Reserve ...
The Civil Engineer Corps came into existence and was conferred relative rank in 1881, despite the fact that civil engineers had been employed by the Navy at least since 1827. The insignia of two crossed silver sprigs was adopted in 1905.
Units (commands) of the United States Navy are as follows. The list is organized along administrative chains of command (CoC), and does not include the CNO's office or shore establishments. Deployable/operational U.S. Navy units typically have two CoCs – the operational chain and the administrative chain. Operational CoCs change quite often ...
A "shooter" in working uniform gives the signal to launch an F/A-18 Super Hornet from USS Enterprise (CVN-65). The United States Navy has nearly 500,000 personnel, approximately a quarter of whom are in ready reserve.