KP duty

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 Sailor on KP duty on a U.S. Navy ship
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Sailor on KP duty on a U.S. Navy ship

KP duty is "kitchen police" work under the kitchen staff assigned to U.S. enlisted military personnel. "Kitchen police" can be either the work or the personnel assigned to perform such work. In the latter sense it can be used for either military or civilian personnel assigned or hired for duties in the military dining facility excluding cooking.[1]

The U.S. military often uses the word 'police' as a verb to mean "to clean" or "to restore to order." For example, after a company picnic on a U.S. Marine Corps base, a group of Marines might be assigned to police, or clean up, the picnic grounds. Its origins in this usage probably came from the French sense of maintaining public order. Kitchen police then may mean to restore the kitchen to order, or clean up the kitchen.

In the military, it is often more formally known as mess duty, and is restricted to enlisted personnel. A service member is "put on kp" for some minor infraction committed while on duty, in uniform, or on a military installation, something that would not require an Article 15 Hearing, or nonjudicial punishment. KP is also assigned out of necessity, not just for punishment. In this latter case, all enlisted personnel assigned to a mess would be put on a roster and regularly receive assignments to KP duty on a rotating basis.[2]

KP duties, however, can include any tedious chores in the military mess at an installation or in the field, such as food preparation, although not cooking, or the more obvious dish washing and pot scrubbing, sweeping and mopping floors, wiping tables, serving food on the chow line, or anything else the kitchen staff sees fit to assign to its kp crew. KP duty can be particularly onerous because it is on top of all regular duties, as institutional kitchens often open before and close after regular duty hours, and generate large volumes of unpleasant food wastes. Mess halls for the modern U.S. military may be contracted out making KP duty less common today than it once was.

[edit] Popular culture

The image of enlisted soldiers peeling potatoes in an installation's kitchen was once associated with the popular culture image of KP duty due to its frequent appearance in mid-twentieth century movies and comic strips about life in the service for Americans. Irving Berlin's Yip Yip Yaphank, 1918, musical review contains the song "Kitchen Police (Poor Little Me)."

[edit] References

  1. ^ Department of the Army Headquarters (1998). AR 310-25, Dictionary of the United States Army Terms. U.S. Government Printing Office. Retrieved on 2006-11-20.
  2. ^ Treadwell, Mattie E. (1991). The Women's Army Corps. United States Army in World War II Special Studies. Center of Military History United States Army U. S. Government Printing Office. Retrieved on 2006-11-20.