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US MILITARY CUSTOMS AND COURTESIES - University of …

Section2 Key Points1 MILITARY CUSTOMS and COURTESIES : Signs of Honor andRespect2 COURTESIES to Colors, Music, and Individuals3 MILITARY CUSTOMS : Rank and Saluting4 Reporting to a Superior OfficerUS MILITARY CUSTOMSAND COURTESIESThe courtesy of the salute is encumbent on all militarypersonnel, whether in garrison or in public places, inuniform or civilian clothes. The exchange of salutes inpublic places impresses the public with our professionalsincerity, and stamps officers and enlisted men asmembers of the Governmental instrumentality whichensures law and order and the preservation of the Hugh DrumeOfficership Track8420010_OT2_p128-135 8/15/08 2:38 PM Page 128 IntroductionA custom is a social convention stemming from tradition and enforced as an unwrittenlaw.

A custom is a social convention stemming from tradition and enforced as an unwritten law. A courtesy is a respectful behavior often linked to a custom. A military courtesy is such behavior extended to a person or thing that honors them in some way. Military customsand courtesies define the profession of arms. When you

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Transcription of US MILITARY CUSTOMS AND COURTESIES - University of …

1 Section2 Key Points1 MILITARY CUSTOMS and COURTESIES : Signs of Honor andRespect2 COURTESIES to Colors, Music, and Individuals3 MILITARY CUSTOMS : Rank and Saluting4 Reporting to a Superior OfficerUS MILITARY CUSTOMSAND COURTESIESThe courtesy of the salute is encumbent on all militarypersonnel, whether in garrison or in public places, inuniform or civilian clothes. The exchange of salutes inpublic places impresses the public with our professionalsincerity, and stamps officers and enlisted men asmembers of the Governmental instrumentality whichensures law and order and the preservation of the Hugh DrumeOfficership Track8420010_OT2_p128-135 8/15/08 2:38 PM Page 128 IntroductionA custom is a social convention stemming from tradition and enforced as an unwrittenlaw.

2 A courtesy is a respectful behavior often linked to a custom . A MILITARY courtesyis such behavior extended to a person or thing that honors them in some way. MILITARY customsand COURTESIES define the profession of arms. When youdisplay MILITARY CUSTOMS and COURTESIES in various situations, you demonstrate toyourself and others your commitment to duty, honor, and a Cadet and future Army leader, you must recognize that MILITARY CUSTOMS andcourtesies are your constant means of showing that the standard of conduct for officersand Soldiers is high and disciplined, is based on a code akin to chivalry, and is universalthroughout the profession of CUSTOMS and COURTESIES .

3 Signs of Honor and RespectEvery branch of the armed services has a variety of characteristic CUSTOMS establishedlong ago and still in use today. Army CUSTOMS and COURTESIES lend color, distinction, andceremony to your daily life as a are the outward signs of your respect for your nation, your flag, yourcomrades, and our country s fallen heroes. They engender mutual respect, good manners,politeness, and include such things as responding to a senior officer s presence, recognizingthe officer s rank or position of honor, correctly using MILITARY titles, wearing headgear,saluting appropriately, reporting correctly, and honoring national and Army symbols and to Colors, Music, and Individuals COURTESIES to ColorsNational and organizational flags that fly from flagstaffs equipped with finials (the decorativetop pieces), are Colors.

4 When not in use, Colors are furled and encased to protect MILITARY detachment assigned to protect, carry, and display them is called a color you pass an unfurled, uncased national Color, salute at six steps distance, and holdthe salute until you have passed six steps beyond the flag. Similarly, if the uncased Colorpasses by, salute when the flag is six steps away and hold the salute until it has passed sixsteps shouldn t salute small national flags carried by individuals, such as those carriedby civilian spectators at a parade or printed on solid objects.

5 It s also improper for you tosalute while you have any object in your right hand or a cigarette, cigar, or pipe in your to MusicMilitary music dates back to the early Roman times when such music called militaryformations together. Now MILITARY music establishes a sense of alertness, urgency, attentionto detail, self-discipline, and , whenever and wherever the United States National Anthem, To the Color, Reveille, or Hail to the Chief is played, at the first note, all Soldiers in uniform andnot in formation face the flag or the music, if the flag is not in view stand at attention, MILITARY courtesythe respect and honorshown to militarytraditions, practices,symbols.

6 And individualsmilitary customsthose time-honoredpractices and outwardsigns of militarycourtesy that create aformal atmosphere ofrespect and honorUS MILITARY CUSTOMS and COURTESIES 1298420010_OT2_p128-135 8/15/08 2:38 PM Page 129and give the prescribed salute. Hold the salute position until the last note of the musicsounds. MILITARY personnel not in uniform will stand at attention, removing headgear, ifany, and place the right hand over the heart. Vehicles in motion come to a halt. Soldiersriding in a passenger car or on a motorcycle dismount and salute.

7 Occupants of other typesof MILITARY vehicles and buses remain in the vehicle; the individual in charge of each vehicledismounts and renders the hand salute. Tank and armored car commanders salute fromthe , when honoring the US flag, national anthem, and bugle calls, officers andSoldiers stand at attention and face the music or the flag, if one is songs worthy of respect and honor include The Army Song, Stars and StripesForever, America the Beautiful, and God Bless America. Bugle calls are another form of MILITARY music to which you should respond withattention.

8 These include: Attention, Assembly, Adjutant s Call Carry On, Mess Call, Recall Taps, Tattoo To the Color, National Anthem Sound Off, 1st Call Reveille and to IndividualsYou show respect for people by standing when they enter a room or enter a not at attention or saluting, you allow officers the position of honor at a table. Theseinformal gestures demonstrate your character and respect for Army removing a beret, hat, or headgear isn t just good manners; it s a signof respect to others. You should remove your headgear indoors, unless you are under and enlisted Soldiers uncover when they sit as a member of or in attendance ona court or board, when entering places of divine worship, and during attendance at anofficial SECTION 2 The National Colors and the Army Colors are followed by organizational expression underarms means carrying aweapon in your hands,by a sling, or in a 8/15/08 2:38 PM Page 130 Outdoors, you should not remove your MILITARY headgear nor raise it as a form CUSTOMS .

9 Rank and SalutingMilitary RankFor thousands of years, in almost all cultures, leaders have worn or held symbols of theirposition and authority. In ancient Rome, magistrates carried the fasces, a bundle of rodswith an axe protruding, as a symbol of their power. Native American chiefs donned eaglefeathers to represent their bravery and status in the it s natural for the Army to have rank: Insignia of rank identify who is in US Army adapted much of its rank structure from the British MILITARY rank unlike a pay grade, which is an administrative feature is a visible markof responsibility and leadership meriting recognition and respect.

10 The customary wayyou recognize an officer of superior rank is to salute him or MILITARY SaluteThe origin of the MILITARY saluteis uncertain, but it probably began as a gesture of trustto show that a person was not holding a weapon. Some historians believe saluting beganin Roman times when assassinations were common. A citizen who wanted to see a publicofficial had to approach with his right hand raised to show that he did not hold a in armor raised their visors with the right hand when meeting other practice gradually became a way ofshowing respect and, in early American history,sometimes involved removing one s hat.


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