The U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) was established August 10th, 1949. Although, the federal government has overseen the U.S. Armed forces since our nation’s inception, the Department of Defense name and centralized defense department was not established until the late 1940s. The “official” anniversary of the creation of the Department of Defense as we know it in modern times is August 10. Established in 1949 thanks to an amended National Security Act (more on that below) the agency is run by the Secretary of Defense (SECDEF) with the Joint Chiefs of Staff for the various military services operating subordinately to the SECDEF.
The DoD Birthday will be celebrated on Monday, August 10, 2020.
The United States Department of Defense (DoD) is a federal agency described as an Executive Branch department. The DoD is described as being among the largest employers in the world; there are more than one million active duty service members, more than 800 thousand members of the Guard and Reserve, and more than 700 thousand civilian employees.
The Department of Defense headquarters is located inside the Pentagon operating with the mission statement to provide the nation with military forces to act as a deterrent and provide national security.
The official date of the creation of the Department of Defense may be a bit misleading for some as the nation has always had an entity that operated in a similar capacity; but as we’ll learn below the road to the DoD as we now know it was a long and winding one.
A Brief History of the Department of Defense
In 1789 the first United States Congress convened and drew up legislation to create the U.S. War Department, the first hint at what would later evolve (slowly) into the Department of Defense. The War Department would be responsible for both Army and Navy operations until the Navy Department was created.
In the aftermath of the War of 1812, lawmakers decided that the War Department needed reforming; it was reorganized into a group of bureaus with the bureau chiefs acting as advisers with the Secretary of War presiding over them. With the start of the Civil War, the United States War Department received expanded duties including the recruitment and training of two million troops from both the regular army and the volunteer force. Another chain of command handled wartime operations.
At the end of the Civil War, the U.S. War Department also found itself in charge of freed slaves, refugees, and responsible for support of new governments in the south. There would be many changes in command structure, staffing, and basic organization of the War Department all the way up until the end of World War Two, when the most significant changes would begin.
Big Changes For The War Department
The National Security Act of 1947 brought big changes, creating a unified command then known as the National Military Establishment, or NME. A presidential request for the creation of a unified department of national defense resulted in Congress debating the place of the post-war military in America and whether there was any danger of giving the executive branch of government too much authority over the armed forces.
The War Department was divided in 1947 into the Department of the Army and the Department of the Air Force; a new Secretary of Defense would oversee the service secretaries but the changes were not long for this world; in 1949 President Harry Truman placed the National Security Act Amendment of 1949 into law with his signature.
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