MikeH92467 said:
^^^Great explanation, Justin! Maybe we could boil it down further by saying that Commodore is a job while Admiral is a rank.
middyseafort said:
I think it's foolish to think that there isn't enlisted rates, chiefs and warrant officers in Starfleet. There's nothing wrong with being enlisted; my father was and rose to an officer grade.
aridas sofia said:
middyseafort said:
I think it's foolish to think that there isn't enlisted rates, chiefs and warrant officers in Starfleet. There's nothing wrong with being enlisted; my father was and rose to an officer grade.
My father was a boatswain's mate, second class during the Leyte campaign -- crewing LCTs and LCVPs. After the war he was a steelworker, and yet I think it just as likely a Starfleet defined from the start as not having enlisted rates would have them, as I do that they'd have steelworkers. And by leaving steelworkers and boatswain's mates out I wouldn't feel the least bit offended or hurt, because my great grandfather ten times back sailed on the Mayflower, and yet I wouldn't expect any Pilgrims crewing a WW2 navy movie.
Things change, and it's kinda cool to see things in the past -- or the future -- be a little different from the present.
Look at the target audience of the show. The only people who would have cared or noticed anything about Commodore were those who read sea stories and perhaps a larger group of vets of the US Navy. For those Vets a Commodore wouldhave been a job, the command of the merchant ships who awnsered to a Commander or Lt Commander the captain of the senior escort ship. In their service, unless merchant seamen, they didn't awnser to Commodores just as Kirk seemed to just tlerate them.J.T.B. said:
MikeH92467 said:
^^^Great explanation, Justin! Maybe we could boil it down further by saying that Commodore is a job while Admiral is a rank.
Except for the times when it was a rank and not a job. And only in the USN. It's a hard one to simplify!
--Justin
For those Vets a Commodore wouldhave been a job
Squiggyfm said:
What I don't get though is that they kept the O-7 Grade. They just changed the name of what you call one star-admirals from "Commodores" to "Real Admiral, lower half".
Sorta silly if you ask me.
Squiggyfm said:
Oh, well...then that makes all the difference in the world and clears up all the confusion when you're talking to two people of different ranks and they're both called "Rear Admirals."
Perhaps the Navy just wanted to grind in that stereotype and wanted more Rear Admirals.
aridas sofia said:
It remained a conferred rank in the U.S. Navy until 1947 and was used until 1950.
Look at the target audience of the show. The only people who would have cared or noticed anything about Commodore were those who read sea stories and perhaps a larger group of vets of the US Navy. For those Vets a Commodore wouldhave been a job, the command of the merchant ships who awnsered to a Commander or Lt Commander the captain of the senior escort ship. In their service, unless merchant seamen, they didn't awnser to Commodores just as Kirk seemed to just tlerate them.
Well at least now you can tell the lower half from the upper half. It used to be that all the Rear Admirals got two stars and I guess you wouldn't know the difference unless they told you or you saw the promotion letter.
Shall we revisit this thread with an eye towards analyzing XI ranks?![]()
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