Military Wiki
Advertisement
NATO Code OR-9 OR-8 OR-7 OR-6 OR-5 OR-4 OR-3 OR-2 OR-1
United Kingdom British Army
(Edit)
Army-GBR-OR-09a Army-GBR-OR-09b Army-GBR-OR-08a Army-GBR-OR-08b Army-GBR-OR-07 Army-GBR-OR-06 No Equivalent Army-GBR-OR-04 Army-GBR-OR-03 No Insignia
Warrant Officer Class 1 Warrant Officer Class 2 Staff/Colour Sergeant Sergeant Corporal Lance Corporal Private
(or equivalent)
Typical Command Size or Appointment:[1] Referred to individually by their appointment e.g. Regimental Sergeant Major. The most senior advisers to battalion commanding officers. Responsibility for discipline and equipment of officers and men Referred to individually by their appointment e.g. Company Sergeant Major. A senior management role focussing on the training, welfare and discipline of company/battery/ squadron Senior role combining man and resource management in company/battery/ squadron, or serves as platoon commander. Second in command of a troop or platoon section Second in command of section, leader of fireteam
Typical promotion to after:[2] 18 years After a few years as a sergeant 12 years depending on ability 6–8 years 3 years or after a five week programme known as Phase 2 training:[3]

The term used to refer to all ranks below officers is "other ranks" (abbreviated "ORs"). It includes warrant officers, non-commissioned officers ("NCOs") and ordinary soldiers with the rank of private or regimental equivalent. Officers may, in speaking, distinguish themselves from those "in the ranks".

Variants[]

Royal Artillery[]

Royal Artillery other ranks include lance bombardier and bombardier instead of lance corporal and corporal.

Foot Guards and Honourable Artillery Company[]

In the Foot Guards and Honourable Artillery Company:

  • Lance corporals wear two chevrons rather than one (allegedly because Queen Victoria did not like the look of one chevron, and thus decreed her personal troops would have at least two);
  • Corporals are automatically appointed lance sergeant, wearing three chevrons; in full dress, a lance sergeant's chevrons are white, whereas a full sergeant's are gold.

Household Cavalry[]

The Household Cavalry maintains the old cavalry tradition of having no rank of sergeant, which was originally an infantry rank only. This is allegedly because the word "sergeant" is descended from "servant" and such a title was considered inappropriate for Household troops.[citation needed] It has its own peculiar set of insignia and ranks with the following equivalents:

  • Staff corporal is equivalent to staff sergeant: four chevrons, point up and worn on the lower sleeve, with metal crown above;
  • Corporal of horse is equivalent to sergeant: three chevrons, point down, with a metal crown above (confusingly similar to the insignia of a staff sergeant in other units);
  • Lance-corporal of horse is equivalent to lance sergeant (corporal): same as a corporal of horse, but with a cloth crown rather than a metal one;
  • Lance corporal: two chevrons, with a crown above.

Similarly, warrant officer appointments are different, with, for example, "regimental corporal major" being used in place of regimental sergeant major.

Uniquely, non-commissioned officers and warrant officers of the Household Cavalry do not wear any insignia on their full dress uniforms (although officers do). Rank is indicated by a system of aiguillettes.

Cavalry regiments[]

In several cavalry regiments including the 1st The Queen's Dragoon Guards and the Queen's Royal Hussars, NCOs holding the rank of lance corporal wear two stripes. Full corporals are distinguished by the addition of a cypher above their two stripes in dress uniforms.

Staff sergeants in an appointment as squadron quartermaster sergeant in the cavalry, sometimes wear four stripes with a crown and are referred to as "sergeant major". The term "mister" is confined to WO2s.

Origins and history[]

The chevrons worn by many non-commissioned officers are based on heraldic devices and their current use for NCOs originates from the time of the Napoleonic Wars in 1802. As today, sergeants wore three chevrons, point downwards, on the upper arm, and corporals wore two, with sergeant-majors and quarter-master-sergeants then having four. Lance corporal, at the time not a rank but an appointment historically known as chosen man and carrying extra pay for privates holding it, were given a single chevron a few years later, and later in the century the lance-sergeant appeared, wearing three chevrons. The infantry rank of colour sergeant was created in 1813 as a reward for senior sergeants with one allowed per company. He was allowed to wear a badge consisting of a regimental colour supported by two crossed swords.[4]

The Royal Artillery had the special rank of bombardier below the corporal, and both he and the acting bombardier wore one chevron. The Royal Engineers and Army Ordnance Corps also had an additional rank of second corporal, who wore one chevron. On full-dress tunics, badges in white or gold lace were worn only on the right arm, but on service dress jackets, badges in worsted embroidery were worn on both arms. In February 1918 the acting bombardier was renamed lance-bombardier, and the full bombardier gained a second chevron in 1920 replacing the rank of corporal in the RA. Second corporals also disappeared at that time (second corporal had been an actual rank, whereas lance-corporal was a private acting in the rank of corporal).

The pre-war infantry rank of colour sergeant had generally given way to the ranks of company sergeant-major and quartermaster-sergeant in 1914 when the four-company organisation was introduced. Both of these ranks, their squadron and battery equivalents, and staff-sergeants in other arms, wore three chevrons and a crown, although in 1915 company, battery, squadron and troop sergeant-majors became warrant officers class II (by Army Order 70) and thereafter wore a single large crown, without any chevrons, on each forearm. Note the designation of warrant officer classes was in Roman rather than Arabic numerals until the latter half of the 20th century.

Regimental quartermaster-sergeants wore four chevrons on the lower sleeve, point upwards, with an eight pointed star above, but adopted the crown when they too became warrant officers class II in 1915. In their case, however, the crown was surrounded by a wreath. Regimental sergeant-majors, who before the Boer War had worn four chevrons with a crown, were given in 1902 the badge of a single large crown on the lower arm, but adopted a small version of the Royal arms in its place in 1915 when they became warrant officers class I.

There were also certain senior grades of warrant officer, peculiar to the specialist branches, which ranked above regimental sergeant-majors. These were the conductors of the Army Ordnance Corps and the first-class staff sergeant-majors of the Army Service Corps and the Army Pay Corps. They also wore a large crown, surrounded by a wreath, on the lower arm, although in 1918 this was replaced by the Royal Arms within a wreath. The RA also had its master gunners in three classes, but these were technical specialists and not normally seen in the field. The Royal Arms within a wreath is the badge of rank for a conductor, the most senior of all WO1 appointments, confined to the Royal Logistic Corps and held by fewer than twenty people as of 2004.

From 1938, there was also a rank of warrant officer class III. The only appointments held by this rank were platoon sergeant major, troop sergeant major and section sergeant major. The WOIII wore a crown on his lower sleeve. The rank was placed in suspension in 1940 and no new appointments were made, but it was never officially abolished. From 1938 to 1947 all WOII ranks wore the crown in wreath rank now worn by regimental quartermaster sergeants.

The grades of lance-sergeant and lance-corporal were not strictly ranks, but were appointments, held by selected corporals and privates, and usually carrying extra pay. The appointment was made by the man's commanding officer and could be taken away by him for disciplinary reasons, unlike full sergeants and corporals who could only be demoted by order of a court martial. It is only since 1961 that lance-corporal has been a separate rank in its own right, and the appointment of lance-sergeant was discontinued in 1946, except in the Foot Guards and Honourable Artillery Company (and its equivalent, lance-corporal of horse, in the Household Cavalry).

Sergeant or serjeant[]

The spelling serjeant is sometimes seen. This was in fact the official spelling, even during and after World War I – though interestingly not in the Royal Air Force – and appeared in such publications as King's Regulations and the Pay Warrant, which defined the various ranks. In common usage the modern spelling sergeant was already more usual, as for instance in the volumes of the Official History which began to appear in the 1920s. Serjeant-at-Arms is a title still held by members of the security staff in the Houses of Parliament. Also, in the newly-amalgamated infantry regiment The Rifles (as successor to The Light Infantry, which also used it), the spelling of serjeant is held with the 'J' in place of the 'G'.[5] This is currently the only British Army regiment using the alternative spelling[citation needed].

Historical ranks[]

  • Sergeant-major: equivalent to the current regimental sergeant major, a warrant officer class 1
  • Company sergeant-major: now an appointment of warrant officer class 2
  • Quartermaster sergeant: can now be a regimental quartermaster sergeant (warrant officer class 2) or a company quartermaster sergeant (staff sergeant)
  • Colour sergeant: gave way to staff sergeant over years prior to World War I although colour sergeant exists today in the Royal Marines and any infantry regiments, equivalent to a staff sergeant in the army, and is still used to refer to all staff sergeants in infantry regiments and the Honourable Artillery Company:
  • Lance-sergeant: appointment originally given to corporals acting in the rank of sergeant, discontinued in 1946 except in the Foot Guards, Honourable Artillery Company: and some cadet units[citation needed].
  • Acting bombardier: appointment originally given to Royal Artillery privates acting in the rank of bombardier, discontinued in 1920
  • Second corporal: Royal Engineer and Ordnance Corps rank until 1920, equivalent to lance-corporal but a substantive instead of an acting rank
  • Chosen man: was a rank primarily found in the The Rifle Brigade denoting a marksman and/or leadership material. Became lance corporal in early 19th century.

See also[]

References[]

  1. "British Army Website: Ranks". https://www.army.mod.uk/structure/32321.aspx. Retrieved 3 November 2013. 
  2. "British Army Website: Ranks". https://www.army.mod.uk/structure/32321.aspx. Retrieved 3 November 2013. 
  3. "British Army Website: Phase 2 Training". http://www.army.mod.uk/training_education/24529.aspx. Retrieved 3 November 2013. 
  4. p.146 Great Britain. War Office The Queen's Regulations and Orders for the Army Parker, Furnivall, and Parker, 1844
  5. The Rifles = Regimental Overview

External links[]

All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at British Army other ranks rank insignia and the edit history here.
Advertisement