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Chief of Ordnance of the United States Army

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

General officer who is responsible for the U.S. Army Ordnance Corps

Chief of Ordnance of the United States Army

United States Army Ordnance Corps Regimental Insignia

Incumbent
Steven Allen

since July 6, 2023

Formation May 14, 1812 First holder COL Decius Wadsworth Website Official website

The Chief of Ordnance of the United States Army is a general officer who is responsible for the Army Ordnance Corps and serves as the Commandant of the U.S. Army Ordnance School at Fort Gregg-Adams. The Chief of Ordnance is primarily focused on the doctrine, training, and professional development of Ordnance officers and soldiers. The position was created simultaneously with the establishment of the United States Army Ordnance Department on May 14, 1812.

The American Revolution established the general outlines of the future Ordnance Department. The Continental Congress' Board for War and Ordnance created the Commissary General for Military Stores to establish and operate ordnance facilities in an effort to alleviate the dependence on foreign arms and munitions. Colonel Benjamin Flower led the Commissary from his appointment in January 1775 until his death in May 1781. Ordnance facilities were established at Springfield Armory, Massachusetts and Carlisle Barracks, Pennsylvania for the production of arms, powder, and shot. After the war, the logistic elements were disbanded and the authority for procurement and provision of all things military was transferred to the Office of the Purveyor of Public Supplies located within the Treasury Department.[1]

By the dawn of the War of 1812, the Secretary of War recognized the need for a distinct branch to manage the procurement, research, and maintenance of Ordnance materiel. Decius Wadsworth, previously superintendent of West Point, was appointed a Colonel and given the title Commissary General of Ordnance, later changed to Chief of Ordnance. His ambition, during the war years and afterward, was to simplify and streamline Ordnance materiel management. His staff worked to reduce the variety of small arms and artillery pieces to a few efficient models. In addition, he aimed to develop a cadre of highly trained Ordnance officers who could dedicate their inventive ingenuity to their profession.[2]

Between 1906 and 1915 Chief of Ordnance Brig. Gen. William Crozier attempted to introduce scientific management systems into his department. With industrial productivity receiving national attention through the efforts of Frederick Winslow Taylor and others, Crozier sought favorable comparisons with private industry in his Congressional relations. Strikes at the Watertown Arsenal and Rock Island Arsenal limited the use of time studies and piece rates in the department, but at Springfield Arsenal a century's development of piece rates precluded the need for such studies or conflict. New Armory practices borrowed or influenced by Taylorism included centralized planning for better routing of tasks and components, improved accounting systems for tools and raw materials, introduction of high-speed tool steels, and reorganization of shop floors. By 1915, Armory managers also obtained substantial amounts of new equipment and completed direct rail links from the Armories to trunk lines. Better on-site transportation, along with increased use of electrical power and rebuilt power transmission systems, removed most of the Armory's long-standing geographic and power supply limitations. Capital improvements, and new accounting practices to control manufacturing materials purchases, had significant effects in reducing production costs, but still left the Army with a limited capacity to respond to a major conflict.[3] But Crozier had problems obtaining budget too.[4]

Ordnance Department supply failures during the first months of formal American involvement in the First World War cost Crozier his job, despite several attempts at wholesale departmental reorganization along functional lines with decentralized districts. In part by delegating more authority to district civilian managers, Crozier's successor, Maj. Gen. Clarence C. Williams (Chief of Ordnance, 1918-30), succeeded in gaining on ordnance supply problems as the war ended, by which time the department's reputation remained clouded.[3]

Following the massive reorganization of the Army in 1962 based on the Hoelscher Committee Report, the Ordnance Corps and the office of the Chief of Ordnance was disestablished. The Ordnance branch continued under the direction of the Army's Deputy Chief of Staff for Logistics. Army Materiel Command assumed responsibility for many of the Ordnance Corps historical functions; research, development, procurement, production, storage and technical intelligence.[2]

In 1985, the Ordnance Corps became the first of the Army's support elements to re-establish itself under the branch regimental concept. The Office of the Chief of Ordnance was reestablished and regained responsibility for decisions concerning personnel, force structure, doctrine, and training. This change gave the opportunity for Ordnance officers, soldiers, and civilians to identify with their historical predecessors in their mission of Ordnance support to the U.S. Army.[2]

In accordance with the 2005 Base Closure and Realignment Commission, the U.S. Army Ordnance School and the Chief of Ordnance moved from Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland to Fort Lee, Virginia.

In Fiscal Year 2024, all sustainment commandants were reduced on the Tables of Distributions and Allowances (TDA). The Chief of Ordnance was reduced from brigadier general to colonel. The current Chief of Ordnance is Colonel Robin (Rob) Montgomery.

List of Army Chiefs of Ordnance[edit] Name Photo Term began Term ended 1. Colonel Decius Wadsworth July 2, 1812 June 1, 1821 2. Colonel George Bomford May 30, 1832 March 25, 1848 3. Brevet Brigadier General George Talcott March 25, 1848 July 10, 1851 4. Colonel Henry K. Craig July 10, 1851 April 23, 1861 5. Brevet Brigadier General James Wolfe Ripley April 23, 1861 September 15, 1863 6. Brigadier General George D. Ramsay September 15, 1863 September 12, 1864 7. Brevet Major General Alexander B. Dyer September 12, 1864 May 20, 1874 8. Brigadier General Stephen Vincent Benet June 23, 1874 January 22, 1891 9. Brigadier General Daniel W. Flagler January 23, 1891 March 29, 1899 10. Brigadier General Adelbert R. Buffington April 5, 1899 November 22, 1901 11. Brigadier General William Crozier November 22, 1901 December 19, 1917 Acting Brigadier General Charles B. Wheeler 20 December 1917 19 April 1918 Acting Brigadier General William S. Peirce 19 April 1918 2 May 1918 12. Major General Clarence C. Williams May 2, 1918 April 1, 1930 Acting Brigadier General Colden Ruggles April 2, 1930 June 2, 1930 13. Major General Samuel Hof June 3, 1930 June 2, 1934 14. Major General William H. Tschappat June 3, 1934 June 2, 1938 15. Major General Charles M. Wesson June 3, 1938 May 3, 1942 16. Major General Levin H. Campbell Jr. June 1, 1942 May 31, 1946 17. Major General Everett S. Hughes June 1, 1946 October 31, 1949 18. Major General Elbert L. Ford November 1, 1949 October 31, 1953 19. Lieutenant General Emerson L. Cummings November 1, 1953 April 2, 1958 20. Lieutenant General John H. Hinrichs April 2, 1958 May 31, 1962 21. Major General Horace F. Bigelow June 1, 1962 July 31, 1962 22. Major General William E. Potts October 28, 1985 June 13, 1986 23. Major General Leon E. Salomon June 13, 1986 August 12, 1988 24. Major General James W. Ball August 12, 1988 July 13, 1990 25. Brigadier General Johnnie E. Wilson July 13, 1990 June 30, 1992 26. Major General John G. Coburn June 30, 1992 June 20, 1994 27. Major General James W. Monroe June 20, 1994 August 11, 1995 28. Major General Robert D. Shadley August 11, 1995 July 10, 1997 29. Brigadier General Thomas R. Dickinson July 10, 1997 September 18, 1998 30. Major General Dennis K. Jackson October 20, 1998 July 25, 2000 31. Major General Mitchell H. Stevenson July 25, 2000 August 15, 2003 32. Brigadier General William M. Lenaers August 15, 2003 September 10, 2004 33. Major General Vincent E. Boles September 10, 2004 October 30, 2006 34. Brigadier General Rebecca S. Halstead October 30, 2006 June 26, 2008 35. Brigadier General Lynn A. Collyar June 26, 2008 July 29, 2010 36. Brigadier General Clark W. LeMasters Jr. July 29, 2010 March 21, 2012 37. Brigadier General Edward M. Daly June 12, 2012 May 17, 2013 38. Brigadier General John F. Haley May 17, 2013 June 12, 2015 39 Brigadier General Kurt J. Ryan July 10, 2015 June 1, 2016 40 Brigadier General David Wilson August 10, 2016 May 8, 2018 41 Brigadier General Heidi J. Hoyle May 8, 2018 May 21, 2020 42 Brigadier General Michelle M.T. Letcher June 16, 2020 June 21, 2021 43 Brigadier General Michael B. Lalor July 13, 2021 July 6, 2023 44 Brigadier General Steven L. Allen July 6, 2023 June 4, 2024 45 Colonel Robin (Rob) Montgomery June 5, 2024 Present

The following individuals have served as acting Chief of Ordnance:[5]

  1. ^ Sterling, Keir Brooks (1987). Serving the Line with Excellence: The development of the US Army Ordnance Corps, as expressed through the lives of its chiefs of ordnance, 1812-1987, with a short sketch of the history of Army Ordnance, 1775-1987. Army Ordnance Center and Schools: TRADOC Historical Studies.
  2. ^ a b c "The History of Ordnance in America". Army Sustainment Magazine. 44 (3): 6–16. Archived from the original on December 22, 2016. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  3. ^ a b Raber, Michael S.; Malone, Patrick M.; Gordon, Robert B.; Cooper, Carolyn C.; Colton, Richard (August 1989). CONSERVATIVE INNOVATORS AND MILITARY SMALL ARMS: AN INDUSTRIAL HISTORY OF THE SPRINGFIELD ARMORY, 1794-1968 (PDF). U.S. Department of the Interior – via National Park Service. This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the Federal government of the United States.
  4. ^ "Events and Economics of the War" (PDF). Engineering and Mining Journal. McGraw-Hill: 487. 15 September 1917.
  5. ^ "Chiefs of Ordnance". Go Ordnance.army.mil. Ft. Lee, VA: U.S. Army Ordnance School. Retrieved August 8, 2020.

 This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the United States Army.


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