Army Specialist Corps
The United States Army Specialist Corps was a uniformed branch of civilian specialists employed by the U.S. Army during World War II. Men enlisted were not considered "upon active Military or Naval service".
Creation
Following the Attack on Pearl Harbor the United States Army Services of Supply required the direct enlistment of a vast amount of experienced civilian specialists, many of whom whose age or physical fitness would not meet the standard Army requirements. There was a great debate within the Army whether these new specialists should be enlisted and placed in Army uniforms, or remain civilians employed by the Army, who could be enlisted at a more rapid rate than the usual requests for commissions. The United States Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson favored a separate body of skilled specialists in business, technical and professional matters who would be uniformed, but not have any command functions.Section 1 of Executive Order 9078, dated 26 February 1942, established "in the War Department, under the supervision and direction of the Secretary of War, a corps of uniformed civilian employees to be known as the Army Specialist Corps.". Selective Service registrants likely to be drafted were ineligible, with the ASC recruiting men over the age of thirty years old, those that had a III-A Selective Service classification or men under thirty years old categorized as IV-F. Dwight F. Davis was commissioned the Director General of the Army Specialist Corps.
Skills
Men were commissioned in rank from Second Lieutenant to Colonel and enlisted from Corporal to Master Sergeant for the duration of the war and six months after.Skills in demand were:
- Engineers and Production Men
- Chemists
- Communications Men
- Transportation Men
- Businessmen, Bankers and Lawyers
- Accountants
- Warehousemen
- Miscellaneous