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U.S. Army RationsA Short History

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Title: U.S. Army RationsA Short History


1
U.S. Army RationsA Short History
2
The Cooks Creed
  • Cleanliness is next to Godliness, both in persons
    and kettles be ever industrious, then, in
    scouring your pots. Much elbow grease, a few
    ashes, and a little water are capital aids to the
    careful cook. Dirt and grease betray the poor
    cook, and destroy the poor soldier whilst
    health, content, and good cheer should ever
    reward him who does his duty and keeps his
    kettles clean. In military life, punctuality is
    to be exact in time. Be sparing with sugar and
    salt, as a deficiency can be better remedied than
    an over-plus.
  • U.S. Army Cookbook, 1863

3
Early Rations
  • For more than a century after 1776, the basis of
    all troop feedingfor soldiers in camp, on the
    march, in action, or just survivingwas the
    simple fare of meat and bread, and sometimes
    vegetables, known as the garrison ration.
  • From the Revolutionary War to the First World
    War, the garrison ration served the unit, the
    small group, and the individual.

4
Revolutionary War Rations
  • In the Revolutionary War, the all-purpose ration
    (established by resolution of Congress) included
    beef, pork, or salt fish bread or flour peas or
    beans (or "vegetable equivalent") milk rice or
    Indian meal and spruce beer or cider. Candles
    and soap also were authorized "essentials."
    Ordinarily, preparation of the food was up to the
    soldier. To provide fresh meat, cattle and hogs
    were driven to camp at "proper seasons" for
    slaughter and curing. Depending on the
    availability of supplies, other occasional
    variations were provided from time to time. One
    of the most welcome was "spirits."

5
Revolutionary War Rations
  • Immediately after the Revolutionary War, the
    issue of meat was reduced and fresh foods
    virtually disappeared from the ration. Dr.
    Benjamin Rush, Army Surgeon in 1777-1778, and
    others, complained of the lack of fresh
    vegetables and pointed out that more soldiers
    died from sickness than were killed by the sword.

6
Civil War Rations
  • At the close of the Civil War, the basic ration
    included ¾ -pound of pork or bacon, 1 ¼ pounds of
    fresh or salt beef, and 18 ounces of flour. In
    varying proportions based on 100 rations, he was
    provided with potatoes, peas, beans or rice
    coffee or tea sugar vinegar salt and pepper
    candles and soap. On campaigns or marches, corn
    meal and hard bread were issued. For items not
    officially approved nor always available, it was
    expected that the soldier would resort to forage
    to augment the food supplied to him.

7
Civil War Rations
  • Especially on the march, both Billy Yank and
    Johnny Reb had to make do with iron rations an
    unsliced piece of salt pork, more like cheap
    bacon, which the troops called sowbelly.
    Hardtacka three-inch square, quarter-inch thick
    cracker made of compressed white flour and
    shorteningwas often so hard, they became known
    as teeth-dullers.

8
Civil War Rations
  • To consume the hardtack, soldiers had to break it
    into bits and soak it in coffee, or fry it up in
    grease into a concoction known as skilleygalee
    or hellfire stew. Each soldier was supposed to
    get enough coffee beans to make six strong cups a
    day.

9
Spanish-American War Rations
  • The prescribed ration was beef (or its
    equivalent), flour or bread, baking powder,
    beans, potatoes (fresh), green coffee, sugar,
    vinegar, salt, pepper, soap, and candles.
    Progress in the preparation, handling, shipping,
    and storage of foods was then considered to be
    sufficiently advanced to justify the procurement
    of large supplies of fresh and canned meats.
  • The lack or spoilage of fresh foods was at least
    a contributory cause to mortality statistics,
    which showed that fourteen soldiers died from
    illness and disease for every one who died from
    battle causes.

10
First World War Rations
  • Three special-purpose rations came into general
    use in World War Ithe reserve ration, the trench
    ration, and the emergency ration. The first of
    these was an individual packaged ration which the
    soldier carried for use when regular food was
    unavailable. The reserve ration, which sought to
    provide a complete food allowance for one man for
    one day, included a one-pound can of meat
    (usually corned beef), two 8-ounce tins of hard
    bread, 2.4 ounces of sugar, 1.12 ounces of
    roasted and ground coffee, and 0.16 ounce of
    salt. It weighed about 2 ¾ pounds and contained
    about 3300 calories. The food was considered
    ample and satisfying but the packaging, in
    cylindrical cans of one-pound capacity, was far
    from practical or economical.

11
First World War Rations
12
First World War Rations
  • As its name implies, the trench ration was
    designed to provide subsistence under conditions
    of trench warfare. The unit consisted of
    sufficient canned meats and canned hard bread to
    provide 25 men with food for one day. The canned
    meats were roast beef, corned beef, salmon, and
    sardines. Other components included salt, sugar,
    soluble coffee, solidified alcohol, and
    cigarettes. The unit was packed in large,
    galvanized containers designed to protect
    contents from poison gas. Although the trench
    ration was to be prepared as a hot meal, it could
    be used without preparation or cooking. The
    ration had the advantage of convenience, afforded
    excellent protection against poison gas, and
    provided a wider diet than the reserve ration.

13
First World War Rations
  • The emergency ration, popularly known as the
    "Armour" or "iron" ration, was a packaged unit of
    concentrated food carried by the soldier to
    sustain life during emergencies when no other
    source of subsistence was available. It consisted
    of three 3-ounce cakes of a mixture of beef
    powder and cooked wheat and three one-ounce
    chocolate bars. These hardy items were contained
    in an oval-shaped, lacquered can which fitted the
    soldier's pocket.

14
Second World War Rations
  • The D ration was intended to allay the hunger of
    a single missed meal. It can be called the first
    modern emergency ration.
  • The D ration consisted of a chocolate bar,
    stabilized to a high melting point by the
    inclusion of oat flour. Each bar provided 600
    calories. Three 4-ounce chocolate bars provided
    one ration.

15
Second World War Rations
  • Misuse of the D ration as a combat food led to
    its unpopularity and replacement by the C and K
    rations.
  • The June 1944 version of the C ration included 3
    cans of B (bread) units, 3 cans of M (meat)
    units, and 1 accessory pack. The B and M units
    varied to fit the meal.

16
Second World War Rations
  • B units included biscuits, compressed and
    premixed cereal, candy-coated peanuts or raisins,
    soluble coffee, sugar, lemon- or orange-juice
    powder, hard candies, jam, cocoa beverage powder,
    and caramels.
  • M units included meat and beans meat and
    vegetable stew meat and spaghetti ham, egg, and
    potato meat and noodles pork and rice
    frankfurters and beans pork and beans ham and
    lima beans and chicken and vegetables.

17
Second World War Rations
  • The accessory packet included 9 cigarettes,
    water-purification tablets, book matches, toilet
    paper, chewing gum, and an opener for the meat
    cans.
  • The C ration had 3,700 calories.

18
Second World War Rations
  • The K ration was developed for parachute troops,
    tank corps, motorcycle troops and other mobile
    units. It was officially adopted in 1942.

19
Second World War Rations
  • The K ration had 2,700 calories.
  • The letter K was chosen merely to have a
    phonetically different letter from the letters C
    and D.

20
Second World War Rations
  • The breakfast packet contained a canned meat
    product, biscuits, a compressed cereal bar,
    soluble coffee, a fruit bar, gum, sugar tablets,
    4 cigarettes, water-purification tablets, a can
    opener, toilet paper, and a wooden spoon.

21
Second World War Rations
  • The dinner carton had a canned cheese product,
    biscuits, a candy bar, gum, a variety of beverage
    powders, granulated sugar, salt tablets,
    cigarettes and matches, a can opener, and spoon.

22
Second World War Rations
  • The supper packet included a canned meat product,
    biscuits, bouillon powder, confections and gum,
    soluble coffee, granulated sugar, cigarettes, can
    opener, and spoon.

23
Second World War Rations
  • Wiseman and I woke up hungry in fact, we were
    always hungry, for neither British nor American
    combat rations were enough to fill a man. You
    could subsist on them, to be sure, but you were
    never full. That is why we were always on the
    lookout for food. We picked ripe fruit from the
    trees, milked the cows, and filched whatever
    victuals the civilians had abandoned in their
    houses.
  • --David Kenyon Webster, Parachute Infantry An
    American Paratroopers Memoir of D-Day and the
    Fall of the Third Reich

24
Army Food Service in the 1950s
  • Army cooks in Korea used much the same types of
    rations and equipment as their Second World War
    counterparts.
  • The 1950s took full advantage of the postwar
    revolution in commercial kitchen appliances to
    help modernize garrison dining facilities
    throughout the military.

25
Army Food Service in the 1950s
  • A tour through a late-50s vintage, up-to-date
    dining facility might reveal innovations such as
    an electric potato peeler capable of peeling
    100 to 400 pounds of potatoes per hour a
    140-quart vertical-type rotary mixing machine for
    mixing doughs, batters, potatoes, etc
    large-scale refrigerators called reach-in
    boxes stoves and ranges with hot tops and
    griddles, and an assortment of range assistants
    (steam kettles, deep fat fryers, veggie
    warmers, and triple deck ovens) a conveyor-type
    toaster for toasting 500-600 slices of bread per
    hour and a shiny new twin coffee urn for perking
    15 gallons of java at a time.

26
Vietnam War Rations
  • By the late 1960s, it was not uncommon to find
    ice cream and eggs to order at far-flung fire
    support bases. The Sea Land Corporation
    off-loaded large refrigerator cargo vans and
    convoyed them to major distribution centers
    throughout the country. Use of helicopters
    permitted troops in the field to enjoy
    garrison-type meals almost on a daily basis.

27
Rations Today
  • Thermal processed Meals, Ready-to-Eat (MREs) were
    added to field rations in the late 1970s.
    Flameless ration heaters were added later, giving
    soldiers the option of eating a balanced hot meal
    anytime, anywhere.

28
Sources
  • Quartermaster Professional Bulletin, U.S. Army
    Quartermaster Center and School, Summer 2002.
  • Army Operational RationsHistorical Background,
    from Special Rations for the Armed Forces,
    1946-53, Chapter 1, by Franz A. Koehler, Office
    of the Quartermaster General, 1958.
  • Rations in Review, by Colonel James C. Longino,
    Q.M.C., The Quartermaster Review, May-June 1946.

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Prepared by Craig Maile, CIMC
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