History of the NCO Creed:
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The Creed has
existed in different versions for a number of
years. Long into their careers, sergeants
remember reciting the NCO Creed during their
induction into the NCO Corps. Nearly every
NCO’s office or home has a copy hanging on a
wall. Some have intricate etchings in metal on
a wooden plaque, or printed in fine
calligraphy. But a quick glance at any copy of
the NCO Creed and you will see no author's
name at the bottom. The origin of the NCO
Creed is a story of its own.
In 1973, the
Army (and the noncommissioned officer corps)
was in turmoil. Of the post-Vietnam
developments in American military policy, the
most influential in shaping the Army was the
advent of the Modern Volunteer Army. With the
inception of the Noncommissioned Officer
Candidate Course, many young sergeants were
not the skilled trainers of the past and were
only trained to perform a specific job; squad
leaders in Vietnam. The noncommissioned
officer system was under development and the
army was rewriting its Field Manual 22-100,
Leadership, to set a road map for leaders to
follow.
Of those
working on the challenges at hand, one of the
only NCO-pure instructional departments at the
U.S Army Infantry School (USAIS) at Fort
Benning, Georgia, GA was the NCO Subcommittee
of the Command and Leadership Committee in the
Leadership Department. Besides training
soldiers at the Noncommissioned Officers
Academy, these NCOs also developed
instructional material and worked as part of
the team developing model leadership programs
of instruction.
During one
brainstorming session, SFC Earle Brigham
recalls writing three letters on a plain white
sheet of paper... N-C-O. From those three
letters they began to build the NCO Creed. The
idea behind developing a creed was to give
noncommissioned officers a "yardstick by which
to measure themselves."
When it was
ultimately approved, the NCO Creed was printed
on the inside cover of the special texts
issued to students attending the NCO courses
at Fort Benning, beginning in 1974. Though the
NCO Creed was submitted higher for approval
and distribution Army-wide, it was not
formalized by an official army publication
until 11 years later.
Though it has
been rewritten in different ways, the NCO
Creed still begins its paragraphs with those
three letters: N-C-O. It continues to guide
and reinforce the values of each new
generation of noncommissioned officers.
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