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Does anyone know where I might go to find how much different ranks were paid in the U. S. Army in 1912?
My dad loved to reminisce about the pay difference between his last civilian job before enlisting in the USAF in 1958. He went from making $65 a week at General Tire to earning $72 a month (paid only once a month) as an E-3 (he was given promotion advancement for his prior ARNG time) in the AF. IIRC, my dad told me the military wasn't required to pay FICA until Kennedy became President, which was same time the military rescinded Service Numbers in lieu of SSN's for pay and/or personnel identification.In 1940, an Army buck private's pay was $21 per month, but was soon increased. Was surprised to find the earlier pay rates shown were as high as they were. The hourly civilian wage during WWI must have been very low, so Army pay, plus room and board, wasn't all that bad for a lot of the ranks.
Dad's BLUEJACKET'S MANUAL (NIP, 1940) shows the following:In 1940, an Army buck private's pay was $21 per month, but was soon increased. Was surprised to find the earlier pay rates shown were as high as they were. The hourly civilian wage during WWI must have been very low, so Army pay, plus room and board, wasn't all that bad for a lot of the ranks.
They even had a song about it "Twenty-one Dollars A Day...Once a Month"In 1940, an Army buck private's pay was $21 per month, but was soon increased. Was surprised to find the earlier pay rates shown were as high as they were. The hourly civilian wage during WWI must have been very low, so Army pay, plus room and board, wasn't all that bad for a lot of the ranks.
So do some more research - contact Archives. Or get into the 1912 (or both 1911 and 1912 FY) budget. Not on line, so you may have to (horror of horrors) go to a repository library and look at paper...I am not interested in army pay from 1940 to present. I am looking for army pay in 1912! And yes I have "GOOGLED' it but all the result seem to be the same as here.
Some people aren't grateful for what they get.Well I did the best I could and got no response so maybe others didn't want to do more research for you.
No, not in the days before WWI - there were career privates and even for those who weren't, promotion was slow. For enlisted as well as officers. Look up the careers of officers in the period from 1865 to 1917 - and then thereafter in the post-war years.Am I reading it right 7th year as a Private is $40? I'm not questioning the money, but you would have to be quite a dud to be a Private after 7 years!
Not sure how good room and board was in 1940, but in 1949, the housing for a Sargent was not all that good. See the attached pictures of the housing.In 1940, an Army buck private's pay was $21 per month, but was soon increased. Was surprised to find the earlier pay rates shown were as high as they were. The hourly civilian wage during WWI must have been very low, so Army pay, plus room and board, wasn't all that bad for a lot of the ranks.