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YOUR AMMO HERITAGE. THE ORDNANCE INSIGNIA

After receiving an Email from Chief Hamada, I could not find this document on the site.  After a short search It is here front and center!

YOUR AMMO HERITAGE    (This is the link to the Document)

YOUR AMMO HERITAGE.

THE ORDNANCE INSIGNIA

By CMSgt Paul B. Smith (ret)

Since the beginning of organized warfare, symbols have played an important part in rallying troops to action. Color bearers have willingly sacrificed their lives, time after time, to carry their nation’s symbols into battle so their pride and purpose is clear to all. The willingness to fight, and if need be, to die for a cause is often immortalized on a badge. We in the ammo community have a symbol too. However, like so many other customs and traditions, symbols can lose meaning without a periodic refresher.

Troops have always taken pride in their specific duty in the military and it has been traditional to create symbols with which to identify themselves with. Pilots and aircrew members are recognized by the symbol of a bird’s wings on their chest. These wings are a representation of flight. Our badge represents that which we work with – and that is BOMBS.

We are members of a unique and very old profession and have an equally unique symbol with which to identify. Everyone seems to have heard a different story regarding the origin and meaning of the U.S. Army ordnance badge. Some refer to it as the ‘piss pot’.

The phrase ‘piss pot’ comes from ‘pitch pot’. Pitch pots were a very familiar sight to most everyone in the United States for many years. Pitch pots were round iron or steel bowls filled with pitch and a small vent at the top for lighting. Pitch is a slow burning tar like substance. They were in reality lamps that would burn for many hours and used to mark construction or dangerous areas in roadwork to avoid in hours of darkness. But since the old AMMO symbol on their uniforms resembled these pitch pots, Army AMMO troops started calling it the pitch pot badge. And it wasn’t until relatively recently (late 1960’s during the Viet Nam War era) the word ‘pitch’ was crudely transformed into the word ‘piss’.

All of us in the ammo community have come in contact with this insignia in one way or another. There are even varying speculations as to what the ball with fire shooting out the top actually is. Hopefully, this pamphlet will clear up some of these questions and provide a quick refresher on an important aspect of our ammo heritage.

First we must clear up a most obvious question. What does the object of this symbol depict? It is an early hand grenade from 15th century France that is in the process of blowing up. We in the munitions career field have a direct relationship to this grenade in more than symbolism alone. The thrown bomb or grenade was the beginning of all munitions.

But before we continue, we need to follow the river to its origins to attempt to fully understand the beginnings. Take for example the missile that has its geneses from the spear or javelin. And our shape is no exception. If our symbol has its roots with the grenade then where did the grenade shape have its beginnings? It all began in pre-written history antagonists started throwing stones and rocks at one another. And it was learned by trial that the rounder and smoother the rock the more accurate the projectile. And that is where our ordnance insignia first got its shape. Solid shot cannon balls from the 13th century got its shape from the catapult balls from the 3rd century BC.

Nine hundred rounds of andesite shot of various calibers for catapults were unearthed from a “munitions” storage area at the site of the ancient city of Pergamum. The site dates back to the Hellenistic period (334 BC to 133 BC). Even though these were not explosive rounds they were the weapons technology of the era and where our symbol has its rudimentary beginnings.

The author had the privilege of entering the underground arsenal at the ruins of the ancient city of Tralleis located in western Turkey. The fortified storage tunnels were used from the Hellenistic era (334 BC to133 BC) through the Byzantine period (330 AD to 1282 AD). Archeologists have discovered smooth catapult balls made from marble within these dark catacombs.

Today’s AMMO troops are carrying out the same basic duties, as did these ancient warriors of over 2,000 years ago in weapons maintenance, storage and delivery.

Now progressing to more modern times. As soon as the Chinese, roughly in the 4th century AD, discovered the effects of burning the composition now known as black powder, the bomb was invented. Although made from only crude bamboo joints filled with black powder, its value as a defensive or as an assault weapon was soon realized. Eventually glass, clay and earthenware were used as some of the early materials these small bombs were made from. Recently the remains of one of Kublai Khan’s war ships, lost in 1281 AD, was discovered off the coast of Japan with ceramic projectiles containing gunpowder and iron shrapnel.

France is believed to be the first to make use of iron to build these small bombs. The 15th century French throwing bomb was constructed in three sizes: a three, two and a one-and-one-half pound iron sphere with a vent for a fuze. This iron ball was filled with gunpowder and pistol balls, which were used to create a deadly fragmentation effect. Soldiers in typical fashion began calling these bombs something totally unrelated to their true function. The bullets within the sphere reminded them of the seeds inside a pomegranate fruit. In middle French pomegranate is pronounced grenade. Thus the word grenade became synonymous with the small throwing bombs. The brave troops whose duty it was to carry a satchel full of these along with a slow burning match to light each bomb, were called grenadiers.

The value of this new weapon soon spread throughout Europe and Asia until there was no formidable army on earth, which did not include special hand grenade units in their ranks.

European countries were the first to use the symbol of this grenade on their uniforms. Our emblem began to show up on French and British uniforms around the late 17th century. It has been a distinctive part of military uniforms in several European nations for roughly 400 years. It became prominent and spread throughout Europe in the beginning of the 19th century. Italy seems to have adapted this symbol as the main theme for several different combat duties. Assault regiments, dragoons, tank regiments and the Italian grenadiers, to mention a few, all used the flaming bomb in some form. Today, Italy uses a very ornate bomb symbol on the hats of their Carabinieri paramilitary forces. Poland also uses the little bomb for the military police and artillery officers. The Polish ordnance units use a bursting bomb in front of crossed cannons. Great Britain is another country, which uses this symbol for many different military duties. In World War I (1914-1918), British uniforms are seen with the “bomber’s badge” on the right sleeve.

Turkey is a country that uses the symbol exclusively within its Army. At the entrance of each Turkish Army base, to include one on the island of Cyprus, there are large cement versions of the flaming bomb at the main entrance as well as along the outer walls of the complex. Within an Army HQ compound in the capital city of Ankara all the street lamps are in the shape of the familiar piss pot.

In modern day Switzerland, only the elite infantry grenadiers trained in demolitions, flamethrowers, and other special skills are authorized to wear the flaming bomb on their collar. The famed French Foreign Legion, whose presence has been throughout Asia and Africa for generations, have a unique seven-flamed bursting grenade on their berets. Iraqi as well as Israeli ordnance personnel wear our symbol. As you can see, space does not permit mentioning all the different nations or the various duties associated with wear of the flaming or bursting bomb.

The symbol first came to our shores on the uniforms of French soldiers fighting during the long struggle for possession of Canada and North America (1690-1763). The emblem is also seen on French uniforms, our allies, as well as the British whom we were fighting against, during the American Revolution (1775-1783). The United States was only 36 years old when our military unofficially adopted the flaming bomb as an insignia, shortly after the War of 1812. It became the official emblem of the U.S. Army Ordnance Corps in May of 1833. Just three years later in 1836 the American defenders at the Alamo faced the Mexican Army under the command of Santa Anna. During this famous battle the Mexican Grenadiers wore the small exploding bomb insignia on their shako (hat). There is an example of this emblem on display at the Alamo museum down town San Antonio.

During the American Civil War (1861-1865), ordnance troops from both the Confederate and Federal forces wore our symbol with pride. AFCOMAC has a beautiful example of a WWI US Army ordnance NCO uniform on display. The bursting bomb was part of the rank insignia. Before the out-break of World War II (1941-1945), the flame on the U.S. insignia was larger and had more of a European appearance in contrast to the current emblem which is more streamlined. In the U.S. Marine Corps, there is a variation of the symbol known as the gunner’s emblem. It is worn by Master Gunnery Sergeants in the Marine Corps and officially called the bursting bomb.

During WWII, our symbol appeared in a fascinating place. Woman Ordnance Workers (WOW’s) were employed in munitions factories all over America producing weapons and ammunition in support of the war effort. Part of their uniform was a bright red bandana with white flaming bombs- the distinctive WOW trademark.

At one time in our military history, this was worn as a rank insignia with the Coast Guard and Navy as Chief Mariner gunner. The flaming or bursting bomb is the oldest military insignia used today in our armed forces and is one of the oldest still used throughout the world.

It is truly an international symbol and just may be the single most widely used uniform emblem in the history of military heraldry.

At present, the USAF does not officially recognize the bursting bomb insignia as any part of our uniform except on an occasional unit patch. Our symbol has been an unofficial symbol since the days ex-Army Ammo troops reenlisted or transferred over to the newly formed Air Force just after World War II (1947). Since that time, it has been a familiar rallying point for Air Force AMMO troops stationed or deployed in every corner of the globe.

Although our duty as a 2WO in the U.S. Air Force in the present military era has us maintaining all manner of explosives from small arms bullets to sophisticated guided weaponry, the small ordnance insignia should remind us of our humble beginnings. Let it remain our rallying point during some of the rough times we all face in the daily, sometimes hectic duties of our bomb dumps. The next time you see our symbol of the flaming or bursting bomb, reflect back and consider its significance to our AMMO heritage. It is a symbol which holds fast to traditions. Our badge deserves a prominent place in the history of warfare which we are all proudly part of. Be proud of your unique duty and as members of the AMMO profession.

CONTINUE THE AMMO PRIDE

Paul B. Smith, CMSgt, USAF (ret)
Hill AFB, Utah

FOR WE ARE AMMO

The symbol of the shell and flame signifies we are the caretakers of the instruments of war, death and destruction, but we fear no evil. As the keepers and builders of these ominous items of evil-iron, we constantly seek wisdom to ensure munitions make the mission on time, all the time……….
FOR WE ARE AMMO.
Our daily efforts make us the cornerstone of mission requirements…regardless of conditions or constraints; or lack of time; or number of changes to requirements, or whatever the obstacle……………..FOR WE ARE AMMO.

Our spirit will always be willing and undimmed. The light of the shell and flame will always guide our way for mission success, and to remind us of our heritage of pride, professionalism, and established standards of outstanding mission support………………………………………FOR WE ARE AMMO.

The light of the shell and flame will also serve as a reminder of the level of excellence and esprit de corps set by those who came before us; the light of the shell and flame will also help us look back to remember those Ammo troops, both active duty and retired, who are no longer with us and the service they performed for their country and to the Ammo community. In so doing, we will gain strength from the fact that such men lived……..FOR WE ARE AMMO.

The symbol of the shell and flame will also serve as a constant reminder for us to always stand together so that we may stay strong in our resolve, and that Ammo always remains the keystone of U.S. Air Force mission success.

FOR WE ARE AMMO
Larry DiAmco October 2002

John Finn, Medal of Honor Winner, Dies at 100

Please help honor an Aviation Ordnance Chief and Hero, by signing the online petition to have a US Navy ship named after him. http://www.petitiononline.com/USSLTJWF/ . Chief Finn (later commissioned and retired as a Lt. USN) is the only Aviation Ordnanceman (or equivalent in the other services) to be awarded the Medal of Honor!
IYA AmmO YAS

Retired Navy Lt. John W. Finn, received the Medal of Honor for mounting a daring counterattack on Japanese aircraft from an improvised machine gun post during the raid on Pearl Harbor. He died May 27 at a veterans home in Chula Vista, Calif. At 100, he was the oldest surviving recipient of the nation’s highest honor for valor and was among the first to receive the award during World War II.
On the morning of Sunday, Dec. 7, 1941, when Japanese aircraft Hawaii, plunging the nation into World War II, numerous acts of valor played out. Of the 15 Medal of Honor recipients from those attacks, 14 were for rescue attempts. John Finn’s award was the only one for fighting back. Amid the death and destruction, Aviation Ordnance Chief Finn, on an airfield runway, was waging a war of his own against the Japanese

A few minutes before 8 o’clock, Japanese planes attacked the Kaneohe Bay Naval Air Station, about 12 miles from Battleship Row at Ford Island, hoping to knock out three dozen Navy aircraft before they could get air born.

Chief Finn, the Aviation Ordnance Chief in charge of munitions at the naval station and a veteran of 15 years in the Navy, was in bed in a nearby apartment with his wife, Alice. He heard the sound of aircraft, saw one plane flash past his window, then another, and he heard machine guns.

He dressed hurriedly, and drove to the naval station. At first, he observed the base’s 20 miles-per-hour speed limit. But then, “I heard a plane come roaring in from astern of me,” he recalled decades later in an interview with Larry Smith for “Beyond Glory,” an oral history of Medal of Honor recipients. “As I glanced up, the guy made a wing-over, and I saw that big old red meatball, the rising sun insignia, on the underside of the wing. Well, I threw it into second and it’s a wonder I didn’t run over every sailor in the air station.”

When Chief Finn arrived at the hangars, many of the planes had already been hit. He recalled that he grabbed a .30-caliber machine gun and mounted it on a makeshift tripod, carried it to an exposed area near a runway and began firing. For the next two and a half hours, he blazed away, although peppered by shrapnel as the Japanese planes strafed the runways with cannon fire.

As he remembered it: “I got shot in the left arm and shot in the left foot, broke the bone. I had shrapnel blows in my chest and belly and right elbow and right thumb. Some were just scratches. My scalp got cut, and everybody thought I was dying: Oh, Christ, the old chief had the top of his head knocked off! I had 28, 29 holes in me that were bleeding. I was walking around on one heel. I was barefooted on that coral dust. My left arm didn’t work. It was just a big ball hanging down.”

Chief Finn thought he had hit at least one plane, but he did not know whether he brought it down. When the attack ended, he received first aid, then returned to await a possible second attack. He was hospitalized the following afternoon.

On Sept. 15, 1942, Chief Finn received the Medal of Honor from Adm. Chester W. Nimitz, commander in chief of the Pacific Fleet, in a ceremony aboard the carrier Enterprise at Pearl Harbor. Admiral Nimitz cited Chief Finn for his “magnificent courage in the face of almost certain death.”

John William Finn was born on July 23, 1909, in Los Angeles County, the son of a plumber. He dropped out of school to join the Navy at age 17.

He served stateside after he recovered from his Pearl Harbor wounds, became a lieutenant in 1944 and remained in military service after the war. He was living on a cattle ranch in Pine Valley, Calif., about 45 miles east of San Diego, before entering the nursing home where he died. His survivors include a son, Joseph. His wife died in 1998.

Only four of the Pearl Harbor Medal of Honor recipients survived the war, ten died in the attack and one died in November 1942 in the battle for Guadalcanal.

General Marquez – The Reason AFCOMAC Exists Today

General Marquez

Beyond question, General Marquez understood a peacetime atmosphere is not a good training ground for the rigors of wartime munitions tasking orders. He also understood, before it was too late, before we had lost much of the expertise in producing massive frags gained during the Vietnam War, that we needed an institution that perpetuated the knowledge we had gained and helped preclude some of the disasters we had experienced. AFCOMAC perpetuates that knowledge and provides a scenario where in a peacetime world AMMO troops get a real-world feel for the demands of a wartime environment.

The following Beale AFB News Article came out in 2006 – on the 20th anniversary:

AFCOMAC celebrates 20-year anniversary

Posted 10/6/2006   Updated 10/6/2006  Email story   Print story

by Airman 1st Class George Cloutier 9th RW Public Affairs

10/6/2006 – Beale AFB, Calif. — One of Beale’s least known units in
fighting the Global War on Terror is celebrating its 20th anniversary today.

The 9th munitions squadron, or the Air Force Combat Ammunition Center, has consistently provided the Air Force with the finest training for ammo troops for two decades, teaching Airmen the skills they need to take the fight to the enemy.

AFCOMAC is a mandatory course for those in the munitions career field who are training for their seven and nine-level status.

“When you look back at the history, AFCOMAC was started because of the draw back that happened after the Vietnam War, because there weren’t as many people putting bombs together in a combat setting,” said Maj. Jeffrey Stremmel, AFCOMAC commander. “Lt. Gen. Leo Marquez put together an action team to look at this, and the team came back to him with the idea for AFCOMAC.”

One of the major faults the action team found with the training munitions troops were receiving was the fact that there was little to no realistic training taking place, according to Major Stremmel.

“General Marquez then told his team to build the bombs for real, and they found out they lacked that vital skill,” said Chief Master Sgt. Patrick Adams, AFCOMAC munitions superintendent. “The bottom line is that they were not able to build the bombs as they would need to in a real combat setting.”

After it was realized that ammo troops lacked such critical skills, AFCOMAC was set up to give troops the realistic training they would need to perform in a real wartime scenario.

“This program was originally introduced to the Air Force in 1986, when it was at the Sierra Army Detachment in Herlong, Calif.,” said Senior Master Sgt. David Nixon, AFCOMAC munitions flight chief.

While much has changed in the munitions world over the years, the core facets of the training program have remained intact.

“From the outside, you might not think the program has changed all that much,” Chief Adams said. “If you just measured the number of bombs with the number of days in the exercise, if you look at it in numbers, you might think it hasn’t changed at all.”

Though on the outside the program may seem the same, AFCOMAC has stayed up to date with the latest munitions technology, according to Chief Adams.

“Back when I first came through, we were in the middle of the cold war and were making a lot of dumb bombs,” he said. “Seeing it again I’m just amazed at how this school has managed to help stay in touch with the Air Force munitions mission.”

“One of the ways the school has managed to stay in touch with the Air Force mission is by the emphasis the course now puts on smart munitions,” Major Stremmel said. “As the years have gone by, we’ve developed more varieties of smart weapons.”

When the school made the jump to smart munitions, other facets of the course changed as well.

“One of the major changes we made in the late 90s was doubling the number of students that made precision guided munitions,” the chief said. “We were trying to get 60 to 70 percent of our munitions to precision guided munitions. When we made that change, we doubled the amount of people we were putting through the course. Our classes now have 70 Airmen each.”

Since then, AFCOMAC students have used the knowledge they obtain from the course to rain fire on the enemy, according to the major.

“I know we’ve provided realistic training to the career field supporting combat operations,” Major Stremmel said. “When Al-Zarqawi was taken out in June, it was done with two 500-pound bombs. The professionals who put those bombs together came through this school.”

Students and instructors of the school have also contributed in other ways over the years as the war on terror has raged on.

“When Desert Storm started, the school was closed down, and they sent AFCOMAC down range to build bombs and run operations,” Chief Adams said. “Some guys went to the Pentagon Air Operations Center. Some went to Air Force Central Command Air Operations Center. When Operation Iraqi Freedom kicked off, the whole unit shut down and forward deployed.”

Throughout the Global War on Terror and even before, the AFCOMAC mission has been and will remain a critical asset to the Air Force.

“We’ve made huge contributions throughout the years,” Chief Adams said.

The Air Force can be proud knowing that Beale’s Ammo Warriors are on the job.