Diver insignia

The Diver Insignia (also known as "Diver Badges") are qualification badges of the Uniformed Services of the United States which are awarded to servicemen qualified as divers. Originally, the Diver Insignia was a cloth patch decoration worn by United States Navy divers in the upper-portion of the enlisted service uniform's left sleeve during the first part of World War II when the rating insignia was worn on the right sleeve. When enlisted rating insignia were shifted to the left sleeve in late World War II, the patch shifted to the upper right sleeve. The diving patch was created during WWII, and became a breast insignia in the late 1960s.

Currently, the United States Navy and the United States Army issue Diver Insignia/Badges denoting degrees of qualification. Coast Guard and Marines Corps personnel are eligible to earn most of the naval diver insignia.

Contents

United States Maritime Services

Diving Medical Technician Insignia
Master Diver Insignia
1st Class Diver Insignia
2nd Class Diver Insignia
Scuba Diver Insignia
Joint diver insignia of the Navy, Marine Corps, and Coast Guard
Navy & Coast Guard Diving Officer Insignia
Navy Diving Medical Officer Insignia
Marine Corps Combatant Diver Insignia
Coast Guard Scuba Diver Officer Insignia
NOAA Diver Insignia

United States naval diver insignia are awarded, per degree of qualification, to Sailors, Marines, and Coast Guardsmen. The elementary naval diver insignia is the Scuba Diver Insignia, awarded upon qualifying as a basic naval diver. Previously, the Scuba Diver Insignia was awarded in two degrees, one for officers and one for enlisted. The Navy eliminated the Scuba Diver Officer insignia in the 1990s, but it remains in service within the Coast Guard. The silver-colored insignia features an old-fashioned diving mask and open-circuit breathing apparatus. [1]

In 2001, the Marine Corps authorized the creation of a new badge, the Combatant Diver Insignia, attesting to the wearer's closed-circuit rebreather and reconnaissance combat diver training; the gold-colored Combatant Diver Insignia depicts a wetsuit hood, low-profile diving mask, and chest-mounted rebreather. [2]

The Naval deep sea diver qualification insignia are awarded in four degrees; Second-Class Diver, First-Class Diver, Master Diver, and Diving Officer. However, the Marine Corps does not award the Diving Officer insignia to its officers. In the Navy, the master diver is the most qualified diver; he must be a Chief Petty Officer before applying to attend the Master Diver course. [3]

The Diving Medical Officer and the Diving Medical Technician insignia are awarded to naval medical personnel qualified as a diver and as medical technicians, the Master Diver Insignia resemble the diving medical insignias but are decorated with a caduceus; the Diving Medical Officer Insignia is gold in color while the enlisted Diving Medical Technician Insignia is silver. Since the Marine Corps and the Coast Guard have no organic medical officers, it does not issue the Diving Medical Officer Insignia. [1] [3]

Like the Navy's surface, submarine, and aviation enlisted specialties, dive-qualified enlisted personnel place a term after the sailor’s rating; for example, if Boatswain's Mate Second-Class Jones is dive-qualified, he is referred to, in writing, as BM2 (DV) Jones.

The only non-military uniform service of the United States that awards diver badges is the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Commissioned Corps (NOAA Corps). NOAA Corps officers qualified as NOAA divers may wear the NOAA Diver Insignia after authorization by the Director of the NOAA Corps. The NOAA Diver Insignia is a gold-colored pin consisting of a NOAA Corps device surrounded by two dolphins. [4]

Diver Badge
Awarded by United States Army
Type Badge
Status Currently awarded
Statistics
Last awarded continuing
Precedence
Next (higher) (Group 4 badges)
Pathfinder, Parachutist, Air Assault, Military Freefall Parachutist
Equivalent (Group 5 badges)
Driver and Mechanic, Rigger

United States Army

The United States Army issues Diver Badges in four degrees (Second-Class Diver, Salvage Diver, First-Class Diver, and Master Diver) and Special Operations Diver badges (formerly the Scuba Diver badge) in two degrees (Diver and Diving Supervisor). The Second-Class and First-Class Diver badges are identical to those issued by U.S. naval forces. The Army does not issue officer or medical diver badges; however, Navy-awarded Diving Officer, Diving Medical Officer, and Diving Medical Technician Badges are authorized for wear on Army uniforms with written approval from the United States Army Human Resources Command. [5] [6] [7]

On 17 September 2004, the Army's Scuba Diver badge was redesigned and renamed the Special Operations Diver badge, and an additional grade, the Special Operations Diving Supervisor badge, was created. Previously, the U.S. naval forces' and the U.S. Army's Scuba Diver Badges were identical. The new design includes sharks, symbolizing speed, stealth, and lethal efficiency, and two Fairbairn-Sykes Fighting Knives in saltire, representing the heritage of OSS Operational Swimmers during World War II. The Combat Diver Qualification and Combat Diving Supervisors Courses are taught by Company C, 2nd Battalion, 1st Special Warfare Training Group at the Special Forces Underwater Operations School, Naval Air Station Key West. [8] [9] [6] [7]

United States Air Force

The United States Air Force issues an enlarged version of the naval Scuba Diver Insignia as their Scuba Badge to graduates of the Air Force Combat Diver Course at the Navy Diving Salvage and Training Center, Naval Support Activity Panama City. [10] [11]

See also

United States portal
Military of the United States portal
United States Air Force portal
United States Army portal
United States Marine Corps portal
United States Navy portal
United States Coast Guard portal


References