About USNMT
The USNMT is the leading proponent of small arms marksmanship and safety training for U.S. Navy personnel. Each year, the Team conducts the Fleet Forces Command (LANT) Rifle and Pistol Matches and Fleet Forces Command (PAC) Rifle and Pistol Matches, in which hundreds of sailors are trained in service rifle and service pistol marksmanship, small arms safety, and marksmanship competition rules and procedures. Sailors participating in Fleet matches represent their commands in individual and team events, earn marksmanship medals and badges, and qualify to stand armed watches aboard ships and at other commands.
USNMT also conducts the annual All Navy
Rifle and Pistol Championships, in which Sailors who have fired qualifying scores in
Fleet matches compete. As members of the Navy and
Naval
Reserve Rifle and Pistol Teams, top-scoring USNMT members represent the Navy in the
most prestigious, varied, and highly-competitive individual and team marksmanship events
in the world: the annual Interservice Rifle and Pistol Matches, the Civilian Marksmanship Program's
National Rifle and Pistol
Matches, and the National Rifle Association's
National Rifle and Pistol
Championships.

USNMT members also provide marksmanship training to Sailors in their home commands throughout the year, promote command rifle and pistol teams, develop and perfect marksmanship techniques for experimental and newly-introduced small arms, and test ammunition and related small arms accoutrements.
The Fleet, All Navy, Interservice, and National competitions serve as venues in which Navy personnel test and validate small arms and ammunition innovations developed by Naval Surface Warfare Center, Crane Division, Crane, Indiana. Crane Armorers and Engineers apply the lessons learned from this process to benefit the entire Fleet. SEALs, Naval Construction Battalion personnel, shipboard watchstanders and other Sailors who must use small arms in defense of our country deserve not only the best training program, but also the most accurate and reliable weapons and ammunition, the Navy can provide.
Team History
During the 1920s and early 1930s U.S. Navy rifle and pistol
marksmen were victorious in many competitions at the National Matches. In 1921,
Boatswain's Mate 1st Class Enos P. Amy (USN) received his first "Leg" points
toward a Distinguished Pistol Shot Badge as a member of the "1921 USN Team." Six
years later, Amy earned his badge (serial # E001). On 1 September 1928, BM1 Amy
earned his Distinguished Marksman Badge for rifle marksmanship (serial # E003), becoming
the first Navy "Double Distinguished" shooter.
From 1932 until 1957, the Navy's participation in competitive marksmanship declined, until only a few commands encouraged rifle and pistol matches. Navy marksmen participated in the National competitions on only an informal basis.
In 1957, then-Chief of Naval Operations (CNO) Admiral Arleigh "31 Knot" Burke, an ardent supporter of small arms proficiency, took steps to get the Navy's marksmanship training program back on course. Adm. Burke issued a directive establishing Small Arms Marksmanship Instructor (SAMI) billets throughout the Navy. Cmdr. Bob Joerg wrote the required instructions, including OPNAVINST 3591.1. The SAMI billets were established in District/River Commands, Type Commands, and certain large naval stations. To provide marksmanship experts for the billets, records were seached to locate the top rifle and pistol shots on active duty in the Navy. The Chief of Naval Personnel selected 32 highly qualified individuals to fill the billets. An Officer's billet in Pers C, Bureau of Naval Personnel (BUPERS), Education and Training, was also established.
A Small Arms Training Unit (SATU) was established at the Naval Training Center, San Diego. The SATU served as an advance nucleus of skilled marksmen in preparation for high level competitions, and for assignment as instructors, coaches, and match officials in Fleet, All Navy, and National matches. To provide the equipment necessary to support the small arms marksmanship program, the Chief, Bureau of Naval Weapons, provided the necessary funds and personnal to support the SATU.
Because management control of the small arms training program was placed under the Chief of Naval Personnel, a Small Arms Competition Selection was established in the Training Management Division of the Bureau of Naval Personnel. This section, in coordination with the Assistant CNO for Fleet Operations and Readiness, provided support for the program. The Chief of Naval Personnel also designated the Officer-in-Charge for Navy Rifle and Pistol Teams for the Interservice and National matches.
Adm. Burke asked the Chief of Naval Personnel to consider
rifle and pistol competitions a military requirement for naval personnel, so
commands could attain an acceptable degree of operational readiness.
Conduct of Navy rifle and pistol matches was outlined in the Navy's Landing Party
Manual. In the late 1960s this was replaced by a BUPERS publication entitled
"Small Arms Marksmanship Manual," NAVPERS 93863, written by Lt. Cmdr.
"Walt" Walter. The manual addressed every aspect of Navy small arms
marksmanship training from ROTC to the Fleet. A four-week course was established at
SATU to instruct the "Small Arms Marksmanship Instructor" (SAMI) course,
promulgated in the Formal Schools Manual, NAVPERS 91769 and designed to qualify Gunners
Mates and Aviation Ordnancemen as SAMIs.
Adm. Burke then assigned Cmdr. Joerg to man the BUPERS billet as "Head, Small Arms
Training Project." Joerg identified qualified small arms instructors and had
them designated NEC 9595 (Small Arms Instructor), which Sailors of all ratings could hold.
Cmdr. Joerg filled all the billets which he had established in all the Naval
District Headquarters Staff, Major Naval Air Stations, and a SATU at Camp Elliott under
the command of Naval Training Center, San Diego. This unit had military personnel assigned
as armorers who built the weapons used by the teams. These billets were later changed to
civilian billets and manned by retired armorers who later came under the control of
Naval Ordnance System Command and finally Naval Surface Warfare Center, Crane,
Indiana. Ten military billets remained at SATU for the Navy's best marksmen, who
taught sailors the safe and accurate use of small arms for defending their commands.
The Naval Reserve portion was assigned a coordinator and
the billet was established at Naval Reserve Center, St. Louis, Mo. Lt. Cmdr. Arnold
Kansteiner was first assigned this billet. Ammunition allowances for training, command
teams, and Fleet and All Navy competition including All Navy teams were coordinated with
Naval Ordnance Systems Command.
Cmdr. Joerg then established Naval District, Atlantic and Pacific Fleet Matches, and an
annual All Navy Match, held alternately on the East and West Coasts. He published BUPERS
NOTE 3590 in the Spring of each year outlining the ranges and rules for the matches.
Appropriated funds were authorized for Sailors attending the matches, though many attended
on no-cost orders and leave papers. They all came under control of the Commanding Officer
of the base hosting the event. To qualify for the Fleet Matches, a Sailor had to shoot in
a Naval District Match and be selected by the Small Arms Marksmanship Instructor as a
member of that team.
From the Fleet and All Navy Matches, pistol and rifle teams were selected from the best
individuals available and trained from the time the All Navy Matches were over. The
team stayed together until the National Matches and Championships were complete, usually
in late August. At that time, BUPERS had a budget of $500,000 to equip and supply all
the competitions and provide TAD funding for the team.
In the early 1960s, the Interservice Matches were established with the Air Force responsible for the pistol matches, the Navy and Marine Corps for the rifle matches, and the Army for the international competitions. The
international matches were used to select military personnel, from all services, to
compete in events such as the Championships of the Americas, Pan American Games, CISM and
the Olympics. During this time, BUPERS supported the National Matches and the
Interservice Matches with up to 300 personnel at Camp
Perry, Ohio, and Marine Base, Quantico,
Va., respectively. The program was managed by Cmdr. Bob Joerg, Capt. Otto Finely, Cmdr.
Burt Parke, Cmdr. Tom B. Martin, Lt. Cmdr. Alex Leitner, Lt. Cmdr. Walter, and Lt. Cmdr.
Lonnie Conn. Mr. Harold Barrett was assigned as the final administrator for the program.
As late as the early 1970s, the Navy remained dedicated to marksmanship training. In 1970, Vice-Adm. D.H. Guinn, Chief of Naval Personnel, stated:
"All Navy men have defense responsibilities against overt and covert enemy action. To discharge these responsibilities the fundamental military concept of competency with firearms is a requirement. The security of ships and stations and the survival of their crews may be dependent upon individual proficiency with assigned firearms."
Soon thereafter, however, several factors combined to the
detriment of Navy marksmanship training. Under Chief of Naval Operations, Adm. Elmo
Zumwalt, the Career Counselor rating was established and billets were needed on the Naval
District Staffs. Zumwalt refused to establish new billets and the Naval Districts (ND)
were required to "offset" billets in order to fill the new
requirement. Most NDs chose the SAMI billet as the "offset" and those
people were lost. Inevitably, with no district coordinator the Naval District Matches
faltered and eventually collapsed. In the middle 1970s, funding for the program began
to dwindle. Around 1978, the SATUs were disestablished and Small Arms Instructor
Training was assigned to the Air Force. Further reorganization sent the BUPERS billet to
the Naval Technical Training Command in Memphis, Tenn., with Mr. Barrett in charge.
Without a supporting organization and dedicated shooters in the needed billets, the
program came to a halt.
In addition to the disestablishment of SATUs, other developments during the last 20 years
have threatened to leave Sailors inadequately equipped and trained to defend their ships
and stations. Individual small arms proficiency has not received the same emphasis in the
Navy as it has in the Marine Corps or Army, due in part to the Navys focus upon
high-tech weaponry wielded by ships, submarines and aircraft. This oversight was
evident as long ago as November 1963, when the Chief of Naval Personnel testified before
Congress:
"We have too many people who have no experience in small arms. In our engrossment with huge new weapons systems, we lose sight of the fact that a knowledge of small arms shooting is going to be tremendously important."
Additionally, the downsizing of both personnel and budgets
have posed obstacles to the re-establishment of a comprehensive small arms training
program. Finally, popular misconceptions about the value of small arms and individual
small arms marksmanship, brought about by recent anti-firearm propaganda campaigns,
have also been to the detriment of marksmanship, even within the Armed Forces.
The USNMT strives to rebuild the Navy's small arms training program. Today, Team members
constitute a core group of Sailors, proficient and ready to train other Sailors in a
fundamental skill that professional- and citizen-soldiers used to establish America's
independence more than two centuries ago and defend that independence in subsequent wars
around the globe, and that all who will defend it in the future should possess.
The Navy is
America's "forward-deployed" force -- the "tip of the spear" for U.S.
military action anywhere in the world, at any time. The USNMT, through
hosting the Fleet and All Navy matches, works to ensure that skilled
marksmen are available for deployment upon every ship and submarine in the Fleet.
(Note: The Team History section was compiled from "Taking Aim," Naval
Training Bulletin, Summer 1964, and the recollections of veteran Navy marksman,
LCDR (Ret) Howard "Walt" Walter.)