experiment, Specialists (W) started attending
some of the classes at the Chaplains School
located in Norfolk, Virginia. This experiment
was so successful that the Chaplains Division
decided to require all new Specialists (W) to take
a course of indoctrination at the Chaplains
School.
The 8-week course of indoctrination for
Specialist (W) training at the Chaplains School
included instruction in: naval etiquette; naval
correspondence;
clerical procedures; choir
organization; rehearsal procedures; Navy Relief;
music for Protestant, Roman Catholic, and
Jewish services; military weddings and funerals;
and, some practical application in shorthand
and typing. Many of these same or similar sub-
jects are being taught in the RP A school to-
day located at Keesler Air Force Base, Biloxi,
Mississippi.
Between April 1942 and August 1945, the
Bureau of Naval Personnel selected 509
applicants for the Specialist (W) rating out of
1,455 applications. Approximately 350 of the
specialist selectees attended the indoctrination
course at the Chaplains School. This training
helped Specialist (W) petty officers to advance
quite rapidly. Alfred R. Markin was advanced to
Chief Specialist (W) on 29 February 1944 and is
recognized as being the first individual to receive
this rating. A total of 30 Specialists (W) were ad-
vanced to chief petty officer and most of these
senior petty officers were assigned to large train-
ing centers and in the offices of District, Force,
and Fleet Chaplains.
Women also distinguished themselves as
Specialists (W) during the war. Thirty-eight
WAVES were selected to serve in the rating.
Virginia T. Moore was the first woman to be
selected as a Specialist (W) and was subsequently
assigned duty in November 1943 in Washington,
DC. The first
WAVES to attend the
Chaplains School in June 1944 were recognized
as highly motivated, dedicated, and conscien-
tious students.
The first member of the Coast Guard to
receive the rate of Specialist (W) was Emil
Zemanel in November 1943. Thirty-five men
and 12 women of the Coast Guard were assigned
this rating and 30 of these individuals attended
the Chaplains School. The Coast Guard as-
signed some of the men of this rating to ships.
Specialists With the Marines
In February 1942, before the Navy had taken
action in regard to Specialists (W), the Marine
Corps established a rating known as Chaplains
Assistant (SSN534). The first Marine to receive
the new classification was Gilbert Dean Arnold,
who was made a master technical sergeant, the
equivalent of a chief petty officer in the Navy.
Thirty-five members of the Marine Corps
Womens Reserve became Chaplains Assistants
in addition to the 105 active duty Marines.
Unlike the Navy and Coast Guard who insti-
tuted the Specialist (W) as a wartime measure,
the Marine Corps announced that it intended to
retain its rating of Chaplains Assistant after the
war.
Performance Appraisal of Specialists (W)
Chaplains correspondence contains many
references attributed specifically to the
outstanding work of the Specialist (W). As a
chaplains assistant, the specialist took care of
many details relating to worship services. This
included preparing worship folders and
bulletins, sending out publicity, rigging chapel
spaces, and providing instrumental or vocal
music for services. Also, the Specialist (W) was
made available to provide special music for
funerals, weddings, and for other occasions.
Since Specialists (W) often served as
managers of the chaplains office, they were
called upon to answer many questions from
sailors and their dependents. An efficient assist-
ant was able to answer many routine inquiries,
thus relieving the chaplain for other important
duties and problems.
Chaplains who knew from experience the
value of Specialists (W) often had occasion to
voice their opinions concerning the lack of such
assistants when transferred to ships or stations
where this rate was not assigned.
After the war was over, Specialists (W)
began to disappear from the offices and worship
services of the chaplains. In spite of the desire of
the Chaplains Division to retain this rating, the
Department of the Navy decided that Specialist
(W) was an emergency rating only. Upon the
loss of these trained assistants, chaplains found
themselves having to return to prewar practices
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