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On 13 June 1923, Captain E.J. King, Commander, Submarine Division Three
(later Fleet Admiral and Commander in Chief, U.S. Fleet, during WW II),
suggested to the Secretary of the Navy (Bureau of Navigation) that a
distinguishing device for qualified submariners be adopted. He submitted a
pen-and-ink sketch of his own showing a shield mounted on the beam ends of a
submarine, with dolphins forward of, and abaft, the conning tower. The
suggestion was strongly endorsed by Commander Submarine Division Atlantic.
Over the next several months the Bureau of
Navigation (now known as BuPers) solicited additional
designs from several sources. Some combined a submarine with a shark motif.
Others showed submarines and dolphins, and still others used a shield design. A
Philadelphia firm, which had done work for the Navy in the field of Naval
Academy class rings, was approached by the Bureau of Navigation with the
request that it design a suitable badge. Two designs were submitted by the
firm, and these were combined into a single design. This design was executed in
bas-relief in clay. It was a bow view of a submarine, proceeding on the
surface, with bow planes rigged for diving, flanked by dolphins in a horizontal
position with their heads resting on the upper edge of the bow planes.
Today a similar design is used: a dolphin fish flanking the bow and conning
tower of a submarine. On 20 March 1924, the Chief of the Bureau of Navigation
recommended to the Secretary of the Navy that the design be adopted. The recommendation
was accepted by Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., Acting Secretary of the Navy. His
acceptance is dated March 1924.
The submarine insignia was to be worn at all times by officers and men
qualified in submarine duty attached to submarine units or organizations,
ashore and afloat, and not to be worn when not
attached. In 1941 the Uniform Regulations were
modified to permit officers and men qualified who were eligible to wear the
submarine insignia after they had been assigned to other duties in the naval service,
unless such right had been revoked.
The officers insignia was a bronze, gold plated metal pin, worn centered
above the left breast pocket and above the ribbons and medals. Enlisted men
wore the insignia, embroidered in silk, white silk for
blue clothing and blue silk for white clothing. This was sewn on the outside of
the right sleeve, midway between the wrist and elbow. The device was two and
three-quarters inches long.
In 1943, the Uniform Regulations were modified to provide that
"Enlisted men, who are qualified and subsequently promoted to commissioned
or warrant ranks, may wear enlisted submarine insignia on the left breast until
they qualify as submarine officers, at which time this insignia would be
replaced by the officers submarine pin." In mid-1947, the embroidered
device shifted from the sleeve of the enlisted men's jumper to above the left
breast pocket. A change to the Uniform Regulations dated 21 September 1950
authorized the embroidered insignia for officers (in addition to the pin-on
insignia) and a bronze, silver plated, pin-on insignia for enlisted men (in
addition to the embroidered device).
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Examples
of various dolphin designs.
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SSBN Deterrent Patrol Pin
An FBM Submarine breast pin is awarded to personnel in the ships’ companies
of the silent service missile fleet. Successor to the Submarine Combat Patrol
Insignia awarded for submarine patrols during World War II, the device is known
as the FBM Patrol Pin, although its official designation is SSBN Deterrent
Patrol Insignia. The new insignia is considered to be in the same category and
will be worn in the same manner as the SCPI. However, only one of the two may
be worn by those individuals who qualify for both. The choice is the individual's. Design of the SSBN pin shows a silver
LAFAYETTE class submarine with superimposed Polaris missile and electron rings
which signify the armament and nuclear powered characteristics of the FBM
Deterrent Force. A scroll beneath the submarine will hold stars, one bronze
star for each successful patrol after the first or a silver star for five
successful patrols. Successful patrols will be so designated by fleet
commanders. Awards are being made retroactive to the first BM patrol of USS
George Washington (SSBN 598) which was completed on 21 January 1961. At that time GEORGE WASHINGTON had set a new record for submarine
submergence 66 days, 10 hours.
Us Navy SSBN patrol
pin
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Other US Navy
Submarine insignia
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Diesel Boats
Forever |
Submarine Combat
Patrol |
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DSRV Deep
Submergence Rescue Vehicle |
Submarine
Engineering |
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Submarine Medical |
Submarine Supply |
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