United States military aircraft national insignia

An A-10 Thunderbolt II with low-visibility USAF insignia on fuselage.

This is a listing of the nationality markings used by military aircraft of the United States, including those of the US Army, US Air Force, US Navy, US Marine Corps, US Coast Guard and their predecessors. The Civil Air Patrol is also included for the World War II period because it engaged in combat operations (primarily anti-submarine flights) which its July 1946 charter has since explicitly forbade.

History

U.S. Army Signal Corps Curtiss JN-3 biplanes with red star insignia, 1915
Nieuport 28 with the World War 1 era American roundels

The first military aviation insignias of the United States include a star used by the US Army Signal Corps, seen during the Pancho Villa punitive expedition, just over a year before American involvement in World War I began. The star was painted only on the vertical tail, in either red (the most often used color)[1] or blue (less likely, due to the strictly orthochromatic photography of that era, rendering the red star as a black one in period photos).[2] At the same time, the US Navy was using a blue anchor on the rudders of its seaplanes.

After American entry into World War I

As of 19 May 1917 all branches of the military, outside of the Western Front of Europe were to use a circular dark-blue field containing the single, five-pointed regular pentagram-outline white star, symbolic of a U.S. state from the national flag, itself containing a central red circle, painted in the official flag colors.[3]

A tricolor roundel was introduced by the US Army Air Service in February 1918 for commonality with the other allies, all of whom used similar roundels. American aircraft also used vertically-striped British and French style tricolors on the rudders during World War I, the British and French markings having the blue stripe forward, while American regulations specified that their aircraft have the red stripe forward although some of their aircraft had the colours in the French order. The order of the USAAS roundel's colours were similar to those of the defunct Imperial Russian Air Service. No connection existed between the US roundel and other Allied forces' military aircraft services, beyond the fact that the United States had joined the Allies of World War I and was using a tricolor roundel in what was now an available order. Tsarist aircraft often used a significantly larger white central circle, while the narrower red and blue rings on such large white-centered variant insignia were often separated with additional white rings. From the end of World War One until roughly 1922 Marine Corps aviation units added an American eagle atop the roundel and a fouled anchor superimposed behind the roundel, mimicking the Eagle, Globe, and Anchor emblem on the fuselage sides in the manner of a unit insignia.

Post-WW I and interwar period

In May 1917 the US adopted a red circle-centered white star in a dark blue circular field for all United States military aircraft. In August 1919, following the Armistice that ended World War I, the colors were adjusted to the current standards and the proportions were adjusted slightly so that the centre red circle was reduced slightly from being 1/3 of the diameter of the blue circular field, to being bound by the edges of an imaginary regular pentagon connecting the inner points of the star.

American entry into World War II

In the months after Pearl Harbor it was thought that the central red dot could be mistaken for a Japanese Hinomaru, from a distance and in May 1942 it was eliminated. On aircraft in service they were painted over with white. During November 1942, US forces participated in the Torch landings and for this a chrome yellow ring (of unspecified thickness) was temporarily added to the outside of the roundel to reduce incidents of Americans shooting down unfamiliar British aircraft, which could themselves be distinguished by a similar yellow outline on the RAF's "Type C.1" fuselage roundels of the time.

None of these solutions was entirely satisfactory as friendly fire incidents continued and so the US Government initiated a study that discovered that the red wasn't the issue since color couldn't be determined from a distance anyway, but the shape could be. After trying out several variations including an oblong roundel with two stars, they arrived at using white bars flanking the sides of the existing roundel, all with a red outline, which became official in June 1943. This still wasn't entirely satisfactory and at least one operational unit refused to add the red, resulting in bare white bars on the existing star roundel. The red outline was then replaced with a blue outline whose color exactly matched the round blue field that held the star in September 1943. On US Navy aircraft painted overall in gloss midnight blue starting in 1944, the blue color of the roundels was similar to midnight blue, so the blue portion was eventually dispensed with and only the white portion of the roundel was painted on the aircraft. In the Pacific Theater, even British Commonwealth aircraft in service with the SEAC, as with Lend Lease Chance Vought F4U Corsairs, began to officially sport the white "bars" as a more-or-less "universal" symbol on Allied aircraft opposing the Japanese, while also eliminating the red center of the RAF roundels they all used for the same reason the United States already had.

The U.S. Coast Guard uses the national roundel as a fin flash instead of on the fuselage.

Cold War (1945-1991) to present

In January 1947, single bisecting, lengthwise-running red bars, one per side, were added within the existing white bars on both USN and USAAF aircraft – both replacing the old center red circle, and restoring the official presence of a red device in the insignia, much as with the red stripes of the American flag – and in September of the same year, the United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) became an independent service and was renamed the United States Air Force (USAF), with the passage of the National Security Act of 1947 by the U.S. Congress.

In 1955 the USN would repaint all its aircraft from midnight blue to light grey over white and would use exactly the same roundel as the USAF again. Since then there have been some minor variations, mostly having to do with lo-visibility versions of the star and bars roundel. Air superiority F-15's eliminated the blue outline in the 1970s, and later some aircraft replaced the blue with black or a countershaded grey, or used a stencil to create an outlined "low-visibility" version.

Partly due to the 1964 adoption of the "racing stripe" insignia on its aircraft, the United States Coast Guard, unique among U.S. military organizations, uses the same insignia used by the other Department of Defense aviation forces on the vertical fin of its fixed-wing aircraft as a fin flash.

Insignia

Official dates refers to when a new insignia was officially ordered but implementation was not always immediate.

Insignia Official dates Info
IntroducedSuperseded
19 March 19167 February 1917First national insignia of any type used by US military aircraft. Used by the U.S. Army Signal Corps' 1st Aero Squadron, while on the Pancho Villa Expedition.
15 April 1916 19 May 1917United States Navy anchor in blue – first official US naval aircraft insignia. Used on rudders and wings.
17 May 19178 February 1918Note larger center dot from later (1/3 diameter) and colors were Flag Red and Flag Blue as specified for the US Flag as Old Glory Red, and Old Glory Blue.
8 February 191819 August 1919To avoid confusion with German cross, and for commonality with Allied airforces during World War I, the US changed its roundel to the disused Russian design. Colors were to be based on US flag but availability resulted in considerable variation in hues.
19 August 19196 May 1942

Center red circle now inscribed within a regular pentagon formed by inner points of star, making red smaller than first version. Colors were Flag Red and Flag Blue until late 20s when current colors of Insignia Red and Insignia Blue were specified

19391941Neutrality marking on fuselage and sometimes wings of aircraft travelling in Europe, including Liberator transports. This flag was official from 4 July 1912 to 3 July 1959 when additional stars were added.
1 December 19411 July 1946Civil Air Patrol roundel.[4]
6 May 194228 June 1943Insignia Red dot removed to avoid confusion with Japanese Hinomaru roundel.
??Civil Air Patrol World War II roundel. Insignia Red propeller removed to avoid confusion with Japanese Hinomaru roundel.[4]
October 19421943Operation Torch – yellow varied in thickness, applied to roundels on fuselage and under wing but not overwing, but some units applied yellow borders on overwing roundels regardless. Yellow outermost ring likely inspired by similar, slightly darker hued British Type A.2 and C.1 roundels' outermost "rings".
28 June 194314 August 1943Experiments showed that at a distance, shapes were more important than colors, so bars were added to the roundel with an Insignia Red outline.
28 June 1943August 1943Several units in the Pacific refused to paint the red outline but added white bars pending new orders for a blue outline.
14 August 194314 January 1947The Insignia Red outline was replaced with an Insignia Blue outline through the amendment of Army-Navy aeronautical specification AN-I-9 on 14 August 1943. This was followed by an amendment to Technical Order 07-1-1, issued on 24 September 1943, for units in the field. On some US Navy aircraft in the Pacific the blue outline was lighter than the insignia blue.
31 July 194314 January 1947Insignia Blue lacked contrast with the Sea Blue or Black used on some aircraft and the Insignia Blue was dispensed with. Initially applications (as on the F6F) were made without orders however this became official practice in January 1945.
14 January 1947CurrentTwin Insignia Red lengthwise bars, bisecting the formerly all-white bars, were added to the roundel in reflection of 3 flag colors, roughly nine months before the official formation of the United States Air Force
14 January 194723 February 1955 1955Sea Blue or Black aircraft
1973?F-15 Air superiority Compass Ghost Scheme with 1943 blue outline removed but with red and white bars retained
1980scurrentLow visibility marking (also seen in other colors, including with colored area broken into several colors to contrast with background camouflage pattern); principally used on tactical aircraft in low visibility schemes
1980scurrentLow visibility marking as used on the F-117
1980scurrentAlternate low visibility markings used on some USAF aircraft.

Fin flashes and rudder stripes

Fin "Flash" Official dates Info
IntroducedSuperseded
19 May 1917
19 August 1919
8 February 1918
8 May 1942
United States Navy and United States Marine Corps, stripes optional after 10 December 1930 and mostly eliminated from Navy aircraft.
8 February 191819 August 1919"Reversed" UK Royal Air Force/French Aéronautique Militaire fin flash/rudder stripes for USAAS, United States Navy and Marine Corps aircraft during World War I and immediate post-war years, with the red stripe forwardmost.
17 May 1919November 1926US Army Air Service and United States Army Air Corps.
November 192612 September 1942USAAC > 20 June 1941 > USAAF – removed from camouflaged aircraft rudder surfaces from July 1940 and all other aircraft in 1942.
19368 May 1942United States Coast Guard
23 December 19416 May 1942USN and USMC. Number of rudder surface stripes not specified until 5 January 1942 when 6 white and 7 red stripes were specified (as with November 1926 USAAC red stripes) — officially removed four months before all USAAF aircraft had removed them.
6 April 1967CurrentOnly in use on United States Coast Guard fixed-wing aircraft – the USCG "racing stripe" placed on the forward fuselage took the place normally used for the national roundel.

See also

References

  1. as seen on the 1st Aero Squadron Curtiss JN-3s
  2. "Historic Wings - Flight Stories - Chasing Pancho Villa". fly.historicwings.com. HW. March 15, 2013. Retrieved February 21, 2016. Just one day after arriving, on March 16, 1916, the first reconnaissance flight was flown by Capt. Dodd with Capt. Foulois (as an observer) on the Curtiss JN-3 S.C. No. 43. As with all of the Army’s aircraft in that era, the plane carried simple markings — a red star on the tail and the large number 43 painted on the sides of the fuselage.
  3. Kershaw, Andrew: The First War Planes, Friend Or Foe, National Aircraft Markings, pages 41–44. BCP Publishing, 1971.
  4. 1 2 Although technically a civilian organization, the Civil Air Patrol engaged in military operations during World War Two, including patrolling and attacking German submarines with light bombs. Its charter was changed at the end of the war to explicitly preclude its subsequent use in military operations.

Bibliography

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