Main Menu

C/BG

Started by Cecil DP, January 24, 2008, 09:34:40 AM

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Cecil DP

About 10 years ago, I was assisting at the MAWG Encampment and of course on the first day you had to pull  a fast one on the cadets. We had a young 1Lt who could pass as a cadet. We took two sets of C/LTC pips and created a Cadet National Commander in the grade of C/Brigadier General. I have never seen such awe struck cadets. Unfortuneately, we could only do it for an hour before it went too far.
Michael P. McEleney
LtCol CAP
MSG  USA Retired
GRW#436 Feb 85

BillB

Sometime around 1949, "someone" at National OK'd the rank of C/BGen. Now CAP has no record of it. But there were seven cadets nation wide that got the promotion. This lasted about one week until AFROTC complained that since they didn't have cadet general grade, CAP shouldn't. And those seven were returned to their original cadet grade.
Gil Robb Wilson # 19
Gil Robb Wilson # 104

Stonewall

1987 Tyndall AFB Summer Encampment during the dining-in, we did several skits, one of which included a C/BG with 4 diamonds...wore a MacArthur type hat, dark glasses and a pipe...fun stuff.
Serving since 1987.

Cecil DP

Quote from: BillB on January 24, 2008, 11:52:08 AM
Sometime around 1949, "someone" at National OK'd the rank of C/BGen. Now CAP has no record of it. But there were seven cadets nation wide that got the promotion. This lasted about one week until AFROTC complained that since they didn't have cadet general grade, CAP shouldn't. And those seven were returned to their original cadet grade.
I thought that until 1964 the highest grade for cadets was C/Maj with discretionary promotions
available for encampments and National Special Activities
Michael P. McEleney
LtCol CAP
MSG  USA Retired
GRW#436 Feb 85

BillB

#4
Cecil DP.  You are correct on the hiest cadet grade of being C/Major. The C/BG was an idea from National that's cadets with the third clasp on the Cadet COP could be appointed C/BG by the Wing Commander. But it was so short lived due to AFROTC complaint, that it never made it into the regs. And it reverted to C/Major being the highest grade.
The concept was after earning 1st clasp the cadet could promote to C/LTC,, 2nd Clasp to C/Col and third clasp to C/BG. There was never any information on what a C/BG could do as duty.
In 1964 Jack Sorensen came up with the current cadet grade stystem up to C/Col for the Spaatz. He told me one time that he considered adding C/BG grade to a Spaatz Cadet to serve as Regional cadet advisor. One C/BG per region. But he found there was no need for the idea and it was dropped.
Gil Robb Wilson # 19
Gil Robb Wilson # 104

mikeylikey

I am gald AFJROTC dictates policy for CAP.  I wonder, after they stole our cadet program, how could they even consider advising CAP on anything. 
What's up monkeys?

CAP Producer

The Chicago JROTC program has had the C/BG rank for 10 years that I know of.

Linky: http://www.chicagojrotc.com/city_corps_staff.jsp?rn=545875
AL PABON, Major, CAP

NIN

Centuries ago, when cadets wore tricorns..... >:D

Michigan Wing was one of the wings that used to hand out "discretionary" rank for encampment.  You might be a c/Lt Col, but you were selected as the C/CC for encampment, so for the duration of that week, you were a C/Col.  Or you were a flight commander, and normally a C/MSgt, but this week you're a C/1Lt.

Well, apparently NHQ was not happy about a wing letting a cadet wear 3 diamonds unless they'd earned it with the Spaatz.  (IMHO, not an incorrect position, BTW)  When told "Your cadet commander cannot wear 3 diamonds unless he/she has earned the Spaatz," the folks running encampment saluted, said "Yes, sir!" and created a 4-diamond insignia for the cadet commander.

I've seen it.  Cloth. Full-size. Mini. On shoulder boards.  It was COOL.

By 1981, the whole "three diamond" thing was back, since every encampment cadet commander  from the time I started going to encampment until NHQ finally published guidance disallowing ALL discretionary rank was wearing three diamonds.

Darin Ninness, Col, CAP
I have no responsibilities whatsoever
I like to have Difficult Adult Conversations™
The contents of this post are Copyright © 2007-2024 by NIN. All rights are reserved. Specific permission is given to quote this post here on CAP-Talk only.

SJFedor

Quote from: CAP Producer on January 24, 2008, 06:06:44 PM
The Chicago JROTC program has had the C/BG rank for 10 years that I know of.

Linky: http://www.chicagojrotc.com/city_corps_staff.jsp?rn=545875

Is it just me, or do all the JROTC kid's uniforms make them look like some foreign dictator?

Steven Fedor, NREMT-P
Master Ambulance Driver
Former Capt, MP, MCPE, MO, MS, GTL, and various other 3-and-4 letter combinations
NESA MAS Instructor, 2008-2010 (#479)

mikeylikey

Quote from: CAP Producer on January 24, 2008, 06:06:44 PM
The Chicago JROTC program has had the C/BG rank for 10 years that I know of.

Linky: http://www.chicagojrotc.com/city_corps_staff.jsp?rn=545875

Wow......it's like the BLING MONSTER attacked them in Chicago.  What the crap.  I do believe they are not following any of the JROTC uniform manuals there.  WOW
What's up monkeys?

SJFedor

Quote from: mikeylikey on January 24, 2008, 08:37:54 PM
Quote from: CAP Producer on January 24, 2008, 06:06:44 PM
The Chicago JROTC program has had the C/BG rank for 10 years that I know of.

Linky: http://www.chicagojrotc.com/city_corps_staff.jsp?rn=545875

Wow......it's like the BLING MONSTER attacked them in Chicago.  What the crap.  I do believe they are not following any of the JROTC uniform manuals there.  WOW

Including the JROTC regulation that outlines authorized cadet grades?

Steven Fedor, NREMT-P
Master Ambulance Driver
Former Capt, MP, MCPE, MO, MS, GTL, and various other 3-and-4 letter combinations
NESA MAS Instructor, 2008-2010 (#479)

mikeylikey

^ You Sir are correct!
What's up monkeys?

jimmydeanno

Just in case anyone was wondering, the flag on our right is the Municipal Flag of Chicago.

http://www.chipublib.org/004chicago/chiflag.html
If you have ten thousand regulations you destroy all respect for the law. - Winston Churchill

Gunner C

Quote from: SJFedor on January 24, 2008, 08:35:04 PM
Quote from: CAP Producer on January 24, 2008, 06:06:44 PM
The Chicago JROTC program has had the C/BG rank for 10 years that I know of.

Linky: http://www.chicagojrotc.com/city_corps_staff.jsp?rn=545875

Is it just me, or do all the JROTC kid's uniforms make them look like some foreign dictator?

I've seen Mexican generals with far less bling!  Good grief!  Isn't this supposed to be a learning experience?  What lesson are they teaching these young minds?  Not good ones, methinks.  :P

SJFedor

I pity the cadet who enlists and says at basic training "I was a C/BG back in Chicago!"

It'd be on like donkey kong.

Steven Fedor, NREMT-P
Master Ambulance Driver
Former Capt, MP, MCPE, MO, MS, GTL, and various other 3-and-4 letter combinations
NESA MAS Instructor, 2008-2010 (#479)

Gunner C

Quote from: SJFedor on January 24, 2008, 09:26:45 PM
I pity the cadet who enlists and says at basic training "I was a C/BG back in Chicago!"

It'd be on like donkey kong.

I can see it now:  Well, Buzz, you might have been someone back on the block, but you're a knucklehead here!  Do push ups until I get tired, Beanhead!

JayT

It seems gentlemen, that people who live in a glass house of cadet programs shouldn't throw rocks.

First, I don't believe it was JROTC who complained about the lack of C/BG rank, it was college ROTC. So, it wasn't a case of JROTC 'dictating our policy.' It was a legit complaint that lead to a change in policy.

Second, I learned more CP/military related stuff and much much much more AE related stuff in JROTC then is taught in CAP. To say 'Well, we occasionally let cadets go on missions' doesn't make/break the CP of CAP.
"Eagerness and thrill seeking in others' misery is psychologically corrosive, and is also rampant in EMS. It's a natural danger of the job. It will be something to keep under control, something to fight against."

mikeylikey

^ Why did you stick around in CAP then?  YOu should have done JROTC and left CAP right??   :o
What's up monkeys?

JayT

Quote from: mikeylikey on February 01, 2008, 07:35:54 PM
^ Why did you stick around in CAP then?  YOu should have done JROTC and left CAP right??   :o

I was in CAP before JROTC. My JROTC unit did also have major problems.

But, so does CAP. In my JROTC unit, no cadet ever had more then about a dozen or so ribbons. No cadet worried about lanyards, or service caps, or badges. No cadet every wore a civilian jacket over his/her blues. No cadet ever showed up in blues with a flip knife clipped to his/her belt.  Etc etc etc.

What I'm trying to say is, don't bash JROTC. Look at both programs from an ojective point of view.
"Eagerness and thrill seeking in others' misery is psychologically corrosive, and is also rampant in EMS. It's a natural danger of the job. It will be something to keep under control, something to fight against."

John Young

Quote from: JThemann on February 01, 2008, 07:44:21 PMI was in CAP before JROTC. My JROTC unit did also have major problems.

But, so does CAP. In my JROTC unit, no cadet ever had more then about a dozen or so ribbons. No cadet worried about lanyards, or service caps, or badges. No cadet every wore a civilian jacket over his/her blues. No cadet ever showed up in blues with a flip knife clipped to his/her belt.  Etc etc etc.

What I'm trying to say is, don't bash JROTC. Look at both programs from an ojective point of view.

As both programs are subject to their local leadership, the effectiveness of the respective program depends upon the administrators; thus, units vary.

Those aren't problems with "CAP" or "JROTC", those are problems with a "CAP unit" or "JROTOC unit." So, no one really should bash either program as a whole as both programs are pretty solid and similar in their nature and mission... Some units are just better or worse than others.
John Young, Maj, CAP