MENU Service insignia |
A stripe was authorized on January 9, 1915, for each five years with the park service, [62] although there is no known photograph of an employee wearing them. With the 1920 uniform regulations, the single black stripe was regulated to one year of service, with a silver star taking its place for five years. The lowest device was to be 2-1/2 inches from the end of the sleeve. The stripes were to be "narrow black silk braid 3 inches long" and the stars were to be "embroidered white" (silver). Both were issued on long strips of unbound forest green serge.
Some employees had been around since long before the formation of the National Park Service, entitling them to an abundance of stars and stripes. "A man with fifteen or twenty years of service looks like a rear admiral," Frank Pinkley commented. [63] This situation was alleviated in 1930 by Office Order No. 204, which introduced gold stars to represent ten years of service.
Gold stars lasted only until Office Order No. 350 of June 15, 1938, revamped the stripes and silver stars as follows:
The "triangularly" part caused some problems later until it was decided that the fifth star would be centered over the bottom four and subsequent stars would contribute to an expanding pyramid. Before 1956 the service stars were made up on a continuous roll. When cut, these often unraveled and took on a ragged appearance. Charles C. Sharp suggested that they be made up on neat cloth panels, of from one to six stars each. This solved the problem. [64] Also in 1956, with some personnel reaching very long service, it was decided that when seven stars were worn, the bottom row would contain five stars.
The 1961 uniform regulations eliminated all the stars and stripes, replacing them with Department of the Interior pins for service in ten-year increments from ten to fifty years. These pins, worn at the discretion of the employee, featured a buffalo with U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR in an arc over the top and the year OFFICIAL FIRST DAY COVER designation across the bottom. They were all bronze, but each year had a different background color.
In 1972 the Service switched to pins supplied by the General Services Administration. These consisted of an eagle over a shield containing the years, with DEPT. OF THE INTERIOR on a ribbon underneath. They were bronze for ten years, silver for twenty years, and gold for thirty years and above, with different colored backgrounds.
The pins changed again in 1987. This time they came from the Office of Personnel Management and consisted of the national eagle emblem, complete with wreath of stars over the top. Again they came in bronze, silver, and gold, but there was no wording on them, only the years designation at the bottom. All of the designations had a blue background.
In 1990 the Service reverted to the Interior pin. Like the others, it is worn in the buttonhole on the left lapel. Also as in previous cases, the earlier pin continued to be issued until the stock of it was depleted. |
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