United States Army Materiel Command

U.S. Army's primary provider of materiel From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The United States Army Materiel Command (AMC) is the primary provider of materiel to the United States Army via its contracting support brigades.[3]

Active1962–present
RoleDevelops, maintains, and supports materiel capabilities for the Army[1]
Quick facts U.S. Army Materiel Command, Active ...
U.S. Army Materiel Command
Active1962–present
Country United States
Branch United States Army
RoleDevelops, maintains, and supports materiel capabilities for the Army[1]
SizeMore than 60,000 military and civilians
Garrison/HQRedstone Arsenal, Alabama
MottosIf a Soldier shoots it, drives it, flies it, wears it, communicates with it, or eats it – AMC provides it.
MarchArsenal for the Brave[2]
WebsiteAMC website
army.mil Profile
Commanders
Current
commander
LTG Christopher Mohan
Deputy Commanding GeneralLTG Gavin A. Lawrence
Command Sergeant MajorCSM Jacinto Garza
Notable
commanders
Frank S. Besson, Jr.
Ferdinand J. Chesarek
Insignia
Distinctive unit insignia
Close

AMC operates depots; arsenals; ammunition plants; and other facilities, and maintains the Army's prepositioned stocks, both on land and afloat.[4] The command is also the Department of Defense Executive Agent for conventional ammunition and the U.S. chemical weapons stockpile.

AMC is responsible for the business of selling United States Army equipment and services to allies of the United States and negotiates and implements agreements for co-production of U.S. weapons systems by other states.

History

AMC was established on 8 May 1962, and was activated on 1 August of that year as a major field command of the U.S. Army. Prior to its creation, Lt. Gen. Frank S. Besson, Jr. directed a Department of the Army study to be conducted, of which recommended the creation of a "materiel development and logistics command". He would serve as the AMC's first commander.

As part of the formation of AMC, various field activities and installations were transferred into it. Most of those field activities and installations came from six of the technical services, including: the Chief Chemical Officer, Chief of Engineers, Chief of Ordnance (the single largest source of AMC installations), the Quartermaster General, Chief Signal Officer, and the Chief of Transportation.[5] The seventh technical service, the Surgeon General, provided one medical depot. Several other installations and activities came from Headquarters, Department of the Army (HQDA) Deputy Chief of Staff for Logistics, the Continental Army Command (CONARC), and the Chief of Research and Development.

Since its creation in 1962, AMC underwent constant reorganizations in its headquarters and field commands. These conditions reflected a more fundamental problem, chronic dissatisfaction with the Army’s entire system for developing and fielding new weapons and equipment. A special Army Materiel Acquisition Review Committee, on 1 April 1974 recommended sweeping organizational and management reforms.[6]

Materiel Development and Readiness Command emblem, 1976–84

On 23 January 1976, AMC was renamed to U.S. Army Materiel Development and Readiness Command (DARCOM). DARCOM commander Gen. John R. Deane Jr. best summed up the renaming's purpose, which was "to emphasize that readiness is a part of our business."[7][8]

Both "materiel development" and "materiel readiness" represented two major organizational elements within the command. The former, materiel development, was responsible for research and development, producer tests and evaluation, and initial procurement of weapons and equipment. The latter, materiel readiness, was responsible for buying, fielding, and maintaining those systems.[6]

As part of this reorganization, commands managed by AMC were broken into individual commands for research and development, and for readiness.[7][8] Accordingly, during fiscal year 1976 the Tank-Automotive Command (TACOM) became the Tank-Automotive Research and Development Command and the Tank-Automotive Materiel Readiness Command. The Missile and the Armaments Commands were similarly divided.[6]

Effective 1 August 1984, DARCOM was renamed back to AMC. The reason for the change was to "remove a perceived boundary between development and logistics support implied in the DARCOM name". Additionally, it was said that the conciseness and clarity of the name AMC "[would] be better understood by allies and the general public."[8]

In December 2024, Army secretary Christine Wormuth, "in a dramatic and rare move", dismissed General Charles R. Hamilton, the AMC commanding general, following an Army investigation that concluded he had improperly intervened to arrange a battalion command position for a female lieutenant colonel he favored.[9]

Locations

AMC is currently headquartered at Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville, Alabama, and has operations in approximately 149 locations worldwide including more than 49 American states and 50 countries.

AMC employs upwards of 70,000 military and civilian employees.

From 1973 to 2003, AMC was headquartered in Alexandria, Virginia, and prior to 1973, it was headquartered at what is now Reagan National Airport.[10] AMC was located at Fort Belvoir, Virginia, between 2003 and 2005 before being relocated to Alabama by the 2005 Base Realignment and Closure Commission.

List of commanding generals

Gen. Charles R. Hamilton assumes command of AMC from Gen. Edward M. Daly on 16 March 2023.
More information No., Commanding General ...
No. Commanding General[11] Term
Portrait Name Took office Left office Term length
As U.S. Army Materiel Command
1
Frank S. Besson Jr.
General
Frank S. Besson Jr.
2 April 196210 March 19696 years, 342 days
2
Ferdinand J. Chesarek
General
Ferdinand J. Chesarek
10 March 19691 November 19701 year, 236 days
3
Henry A. Miley Jr.
General
Henry A. Miley Jr.
1 November 197012 February 19754 years, 103 days
As U.S. Army Materiel Development and Readiness Command
4
John R. Deane Jr.
General
John R. Deane Jr.
12 February 19751 February 19771 year, 355 days
5
George Sammet Jr.
Lieutenant General
George Sammet Jr.[13]
1 February 19771 May 197789 days
6
John R. Guthrie
General
John R. Guthrie
1 May 19771 August 19814 years, 92 days
7
Donald R. Keith
General
Donald R. Keith
1 August 198129 June 19842 years, 333 days
As U.S. Army Materiel Command
8
Richard H. Thompson
General
Richard H. Thompson
29 June 198413 April 19872 years, 288 days
9
Louis C. Wagner Jr.
General
Louis C. Wagner Jr.
13 April 198727 September 19892 years, 167 days
10
William G.T. Tuttle Jr.
General
William G.T. Tuttle Jr.
27 September 198931 January 19922 years, 126 days
11
Jimmy D. Ross
General
Jimmy D. Ross
31 January 199211 February 19942 years, 11 days
12
Leon E. Salomon
General
Leon E. Salomon
11 February 199427 March 19962 years, 45 days
13
Johnnie E. Wilson
General
Johnnie E. Wilson
27 March 199614 May 19993 years, 48 days
14
John G. Coburn
General
John G. Coburn
14 May 199930 October 20012 years, 169 days
15
Paul J. Kern
General
Paul J. Kern
30 October 20015 November 20043 years, 6 days
16
Benjamin S. Griffin
General
Benjamin S. Griffin
5 November 200414 November 20084 years, 9 days
17
Ann E. Dunwoody
General
Ann E. Dunwoody
14 November 200828 June 20123 years, 227 days
18
Dennis L. Via
General
Dennis L. Via
28 June 201230 September 20164 years, 94 days
19
Gustave F. Perna
General
Gustave F. Perna
30 September 20162 July 20203 years, 276 days
20
Edward M. Daly
General
Edward M. Daly
2 July 202016 March 20232 years, 257 days
21
Charles R. Hamilton
General
Charles R. Hamilton
16 March 202322 March 20241 year, 6 days
-
Christopher Mohan
Lieutenant General
Christopher Mohan
Acting
22 March 202420 November 20251 year, 243 days
22
Christopher Mohan
Lieutenant General
Christopher Mohan
20 November 2025Incumbent109 days
Close

Organization

The Army Materiel Command oversees 10 major subordinate commands (MSC) and two separate reporting activities (SRA).[14][15][16]

Current

Major subordinate commands

Separate reporting activities

  • U.S. Army Chemical Materials Activity, activated as the Chemical Materials Agency in 2002 (an AMC major subordinate command), was redesignated to "Activity" and became an AMC separate reporting activity in 2012.[18]
  • U.S. Army Logistics Data Analysis Center

Former units

Major subordinate commands

Separate reporting activities

See also

References

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI