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Dog tag history:


                                                  How the tradition, nickname started



   by Katie Lange                                                             who was in charge of the Army Morgue and Office
   DOD News                                                                   of Identification in the Philippines — recommended
                                                                              the Army outfit all soldiers with the circular disks to
     We all know what dog tags are — those little                             identify those who were severely injured or killed
   oval disks on a chain that service members wear to                         in action.
   identify themselves in combat. But have you ever                             It took a few years, but in December 1906, the
   wondered how and when that tradition started, and                          Army put out a general order requiring aluminum
   why they’re called dog tags?                                               disc-shaped ID tags be worn by soldiers. The half-
     We did some research to find the answers.                                dollar size tags were stamped with a soldier’s name,
                                                                              rank, company and regiment or corps, and they were
   Origins of the ‘Dog Tag’ nickname                                          attached to a cord or chain that went around the
     According to the Army Historical Foundation,                             neck. The tags were worn under the field uniform.
   the term “dog tag” was first coined by newspaper                             The order was modified in July 1916, when a sec-
   magnate William Randolph Hearst. In 1936, Hearst                           ond disc was required to be suspended from the first
   wanted to undermine support for President Franklin                         by a short string or chain. The first tag was to remain
   D. Roosevelt’s New Deal. He had heard the newly                            with the body, while the second was for burial ser-
   formed Social Security Administration was consid-                          vice record keeping. The tags were given to enlisted
   ering giving out nameplates for personal identifica-  North Carolina Museum of History photograph  men, but officers had to buy them.
   tion. According to the SSA, Hearst referred to them   These original World War I dog tags belonged   The Navy didn’t require ID tags until May 1917.
   as “dog tags” similar to those used in the military.  to Navy and Army veteran Thomas R. Darden.   By then, all U.S. combat troops were required to   Library of Congress photograph
     Other rumored origins of the nickname include   The tags are tied with twill rope or tape. Darden   wear them. Exact size specifications were put in   This dog tag belonged  to Union Army Cpl.
   World War II draftees calling them dog tags because   served in the Navy from 1903-1908 and in the   place, and the tags also included each man’s Army-  Alvin B. Williams of Company F, 11th Regiment
                                        Army as an officer from 1917 through the end
   they claimed they were treated like dogs. Another   of the Great War.      issued serial number. Toward the end of World War   New Hampshire Volunteers. Hailing from New
   rumor said it was because the tags looked similar to                       I, American Expeditionary Forces in Europe added   London, N.H., Williams enlisted on Aug. 11, 1862
                                                                                                                   at the age of 18. He was killed May 12, 1864,
                                                                              religious symbols to the tags — C for Catholic, H for
   the metal tag on a dog’s collar.     torical resources show that in 1862, a New Yorker                          near Spotsylvania Court House in Virginia.
     Regardless of where the nickname started, the   named John Kennedy offered to make thousands of   Hebrew and P for Protestant — but those markings
                                                                              didn’t remain after the war.
   concept of an identification tag originated long be-  engraved disks for soldiers, but the War Department
   fore that.                           declined.                             Slight differences                   cluded the fingerprint. By the war’s end, they also
                                          By the end of the Civil War, more than 40 per-  During World War I, Navy tags were a bit differ-  included the second chain that the Army had imple-
   Civil War concerns                   cent of the Union Army’s dead were unidentified.   ent than Army’s.        mented decades before.
     Unofficially, identification tags came about dur-  To bring that into perspective, consider this:  Of   Made of monel — a group of nickel alloys   At this time, all military tags included a notch in
   ing the Civil War because soldiers were afraid no   the more than 17,000 troops buried in Vicksburg   — they had the letters “U.S.N.” etched on them us-  one end. Historians say the notch was there due to
   one would be able to identify them if they died.   National Cemetery, the largest Union cemetery in   ing a specific process involving printer’s ink, heat   the type of machine used to stamp the tags. By the
   They were terrified of being buried in unmarked   the United States, nearly 13,000 of those graves are   and nitric acid. If you were enlisted, the etching   1970s, those machines were replaced, so the tags
   graves, so they found various ways to prevent that.   marked as unknown.   included your date of birth and enlistment, while   issued today are now smooth on both sides.
   Some marked their clothing with stencils or pinned-  The outcome of the war showed that concerns   officers’ included their date of appointment. The big-
   on paper tags. Others used old coins or bits of round   about identification were valid, and the practice of   gest difference was the etched print of each sailor’s   Dog tags today
   lead or copper. According to the Marine Corps,   making identification disks caught on.  right index finger on the back, which was meant to   Regulations have gone back and forth regard-
   some men carved their names into chunks of wood                            safeguard against fraud, an accident or misuse.   ing whether the two tags should stay together or be
   strung around their necks.           Making it official                      According to the Naval History and Heritage   separated. In 1959, procedure was changed to keep
     Those who could afford it bought engraved metal   The first official request to outfit service members   Command, the ID tags weren’t used in between
   tags from nongovernment sellers and sutlers — ven-  with ID tags came in 1899 at the end of the Spanish-  World War I and World War II. They were rein-  both dog tags with the service member if they died.
   dors who followed the armies during the war. His-  American war. Army Chaplain Charles C. Pierce —   stated in May 1941, but by then, the etching process   But by Vietnam, it was changed back to the original
                                                                                                                   regulation of taking one tag and leaving the other.
                                                                              was replaced with mechanical stamping.  For Marines, a person’s gas mask size was even-
                                                                                Meanwhile, the Marines had been required to
                                                                              wear ID tags since late 1916. Theirs were a mix of   tually included on the tags.
                                                                              the Army and Navy styles.              By 1969, the Army began to transition from se-
                                                                                                                   rial numbers to Social Security numbers. That lasted
                                                                                                                   about 45 years until 2015, when the Army began re-
                                                                              World War II
                                                                                By World War II, military ID tags were consid-  moving Social Security numbers from the tags and
                                                                              ered an official part of the uniform and had evolved   replacing them with each soldier’s Defense Depart-
                                                                              into the uniform size and shape they are today — a   ment identification number. The move safeguarded
                                                                              rounded rectangle made of nickel-copper alloy.   soldiers’ personally identifiable information and
                                                                                Each was mechanically stamped with your   helped protect against identity theft.
                                                                              name, rank, service number, blood type and reli-  Considerable technological advances have come
                                                                              gion, if desired. An emergency notification name   along since Vietnam, including the ability to use
                                                                              and address were initially included on these, but   DNA to identify remains. But despite these advance-
                                                                              they were removed by the end of the war. They also   ments, dog tags are still issued to service members
                                                                              included a “T” for those who had a tetanus vaccina-  today. They’re a reminder of America’s efforts to
                                                                              tion, but by the 1950s that, too, was eliminated.  honor all those who have served — especially those
                                                                                During World War II, Navy tags no longer in-  who made the ultimate sacrifice.














                                                Air Force photograph by Staff Sgt. Jonathan Fowler
   Dog tags hang from the Iraq/Afghanistan Dog Tag Memorial at the Museum of the Forgotten Warrior
   outside of Beale Air Force Base, Calif., Nov. 10, 2011. The memorial was built to honor all of the
   men and women killed during the Iraq and Afghanistan wars as of Oct. 30, 2011. The memorial                                               Navy photograph
   contains 6,296 individual dog tags.                                        During World War I, Navy identification tags contained a fingerprint.


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