There were 1,866 press releases posted in the last 24 hours and 400,172 in the last 365 days.

CIWT Celebrates the 130th Birthday of the Chief Petty Officer Rate

The ceremony began with the observance of morning colors, then Senior Chief McClain, gave opening remarks followed by CIWT Command Master Chief Jason Thibodeaux’s anecdote from retired Adm. William Halsey about naval chiefs.

“’Chief petty officers carry those ships to sea, and bring them back safely,’” said Thibodeaux, quoting Halsey. “’Chiefs run the Navy... we train Sailors, mentor officers, and make sure the mission gets accomplished,’ you embody a spirit of can do, you embody the spirt of getting things done. Today, my brothers and sister, we are going to pay homage to someone who embodies that. Cyrus, join me upfront.”

Navy Counselor Chief Cyrus Irani was awarded the Navy and Marine Corps Commendation Gold Star for his exemplary service as Navy Counselor at CIWT. Irani was rung ashore concluding this 20 years of naval service followed by his family.

To conclude the ceremony, the Corry Station chief’s mess presented Irani with a retirement shadow box and cut the cake honoring the 130 years of chief petty officers.

On Apr. 1, 1893, the rate of CPO was officially established for nine occupational specialists or ratings, chief master- at- arms, chief boatswain’s mate, chief quartermaster, chief gunner’s mate, chief machinists, chief carpenter’s mate, chief yeoman, apothecary, and band master.

It wasn’t until 1958 that the Career Compensation Act added two new additional paygrades, Senior Chief (E-8) and Master Chief (E-9).

Chiefs have been laying the foundation for today’s Sailors since 1893 and this dedication continues on 130 years later for future Sailors.
 

With four schoolhouse commands, two detachments, and training sites throughout the United States and Japan, Center for Information Warfare Training trains over 26,000 students every year, delivering trained information warfare professionals to the Navy and joint services. Center for Information Warfare Training also offers more than 200 courses for cryptologic technicians, intelligence specialists, information systems technicians, electronics technicians, and officers in the information warfare community.