Petty Officer First Class (IA)
Imperial Army Nautical Force Command ranks |
---|
Commissioned Officers |
O8 » Sea Admiral (various grades) |
O7 » Sea Commodore |
O6 » Sea Captain |
O5 » Commander |
O4 » Lieutenant Commander |
O3 » Lieutenant |
O2 » Sub-Lieutenant |
O1 » Ensign |
O0 » Officer Cadet (Sea Cadet) / Midshipman |
Enlisted |
E9 » Master Chief Petty Officer (MCPO) |
E8 » Senior Chief Petty Officer (SCPO) |
E7 » Chief Petty Officer (CPO) |
E6 » Petty Officer First Class (PO1) |
E5 » Petty Officer Second Class (PO2) |
E4 » Petty Officer Third Class (PO3) |
E3 » Able Sailor (AS) |
E2 » Sailor (SO) |
E1 » Sailor Apprentice (SA) |
E0 » Sailor Recruit (SR) |
The rank of Petty Officer First Class (E6) is the highest standard petty-officer rank in the Imperial Army Nautical Force Command.
Description (Specifications)[edit]
Petty Officer First Classs are non-commissioned officers aboard ship.
- The equivalent rank in the Imperial Army (Close Orbit and Airspace Control Command) is Leading Flight Sergeant.
- The equivalent rank in the Imperial Army (Ground Force Command) is Staff Sergeant.
In other services:
- The equivalent rank in the Imperial Marines is Staff Sergeant.
- The equivalent rank in the Imperial Navy is Petty Officer First Class.
History & Background (Dossier)[edit]
The term Petty Officer dates back to the Age of Sail. When the first proper navies were formed by taking up maritime vessels and sailors from trade, those officers who were the senior professionals in terms of the maritime trade (initially the Master, Carpenter, Boatswain (or "Bosun"), and Purser, but later including the Gunner, Surgeon, and Chaplain as well) were elevated above their peers by a special Royal Warrant making their position "official" and became known as "Warrant Officers". These tradesmen were generally literate in order to maintain records, though still of common birth, and thus were of inferior dignity to those gentlemen who had received a Royal Commission to lead men into battle (namely a Captain and any subaltern officers, such as Lieutenants and Ensigns, etc.). These gentlemen were leaders of men and of war, but rarely had any experience with the details of handling a ship, however, and thus relied upon the Warrant Officers to take care of those details for them. Warrant Officers were thus technical specialists, and the lesser sailors they appointed to assist them with their duties, or "Petty Officers", became known as their "Mates" (e.g., the Master and Bosun, and the Master's Mate and Bosun's Mate, respectively, etc.).
In this context, an officer was termed "petty" in order to distinguish him from a gentleman who held both his office and command by Royal Commission, or one whose position required that his authority be recognized by elevation above his social peers by special Royal Warrant. The "Petty Officer" was that of a senior sailor, less than the Commissioned Officers and Warranted Officers but more senior than the other ordinary sailors and was appointed as a petty or lesser officer due to experience by his superiors.
References & Contributors (Sources)[edit]
This page uses content from Wikipedia. The original article was at Petty_officer. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. The text of Wikipedia is available under the Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. |
- Bryan Steele. Mercenary (Mongoose Publishing, 2008), 12.
- Collated by: BackworldTraveller