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Florida Naval Militia

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Florida Naval Militia
Florida Naval Militia members in 1912.
Active1897 - 1903
1911 - 1917
1934 - 1941
Country United States
Allegiance Florida
BranchNavy
TypeNaval militia
RoleMilitary reserve force

The Florida Naval Militia was the official naval militia of the state of Florida. Naval militias were organized as naval parallels to the National Guard as dual federal and state obligations, with the naval militias normally being under state control but subject to federal activation. The Florida Naval Militia was active during three periods in Florida history: between 1897 and 1903; between 1911 and 1917; and between 1934 and 1941.[1]

History

History of predecessor units

Florida Naval and Marine Militia (CSA)

The Florida Naval and Marine Militia served as a predecessor to the Florida Naval Militia. The Florida Naval and Marine Militia was a Confederate naval force which served between the years of 1861 and 1865.[2]

Naval militiamen in Sarasota, Florida, wearing their white uniforms in 1917.

Spanish–American War – World War II

1897–1903

The Florida Naval Militia was first created in 1897, and consisted of one battalion of four divisions, located at Jacksonville, Pensacola, Port Tampa, and Tampa. From 15 December 1898 until 21 June 1899, the USS Wasp was loaned to the Florida Naval Militia by the U.S. Navy.[3] During the Spanish–American War, the members of the Florida Naval Militia were drafted into the federal Navy and Coast Guard, with only the Jacksonville Division being reorganized after the war until its disbandment in 1903.[1]

1911–1917

The Florida Naval Militia was reinstated in 1911 with three divisions located in Key West, Jacksonville, and Sarasota. After the onset of World War I, the entire naval militia was activated for the duration of the war, and not reconstituted under state service after the war ended. Before being federalized, members drilled once per week (later increased to twice per week), underwent physical examinations and measurements for uniforms, and were vaccinated for typhoid and smallpox.[4]

1934–1941

Due largely to the efforts of Governor David Sholtz, the Governor of Florida and an officer in the Naval Reserve, the Florida Naval Militia was reorganized in 1934. However, with the entrance of the United States into World War II, the members of the naval militia were once again called into federal service, and the organization was dissolved in 1941.[1]

Naval militiamen in Sarasota, Florida, wearing their black uniforms in 1917.

Although currently not organized, federal and state laws still allow each state to maintain its own military forces, including a naval militia. Title 32 § 109 of the United States Code grants each state and territory the right to maintain their own troops organized as a state defense force outside of the federal military structure.[5] Title 10 § 7851 of United States Code specifically defines the Naval Militia as the Naval Militia of the States, the District of Columbia, Guam, and the Virgin Islands.[6] State naval militias are able to use vessels, material, armament, equipment, and other facilities of the Navy and the Marine Corps available to the Navy Reserve and the Marine Corps Reserve so long as the naval militia or division within the naval militia which has access to federal equipment is at least 95 percent composed of Navy Reserve or the Marine Corps Reserve members.[7]

States creating a naval militia may therefore either create a naval militia completely out of civilian volunteers under Title 32; a naval militia composed of Navy and Marine Corps Reserve members and eligible for federal equipment under Title 10; or a hybrid naval, composed of some units of civilian volunteers and ineligible for federal aid, and some units of federal reservists, whose units are eligible for federal aid, which allows the organization as a whole to receive federal equipment and aid while opening membership to civilians as well. The New Jersey Naval Militia offers an example of a hybrid-approach to the naval militia; the New Jersey Naval Militia was composed of three battalions. The first battalion was composed solely of navy and marine reservists in order to receive access to federal support and Navy and Marine Corps facilities. The second battalion was organized as an operational Naval State Guard, and the 3rd Division provided support and auxiliary functions.[8][9] By only seeking federal recognition for the first battalion as a naval militia, and considering the other two as divisions of the New Jersey State Guard, the NJNM was able to receive federal aid and include significant numbers of civilian volunteers into the state naval force. Such an organizational method is legal so long as only the units with federal recognition are given access to federal equipment.

Florida state law grants the governor the authority to create and maintain a naval militia as well. Maintaining a naval militia organized under federal guidelines is authorized under Title XVII, chapter Chapter 250 of Florida state law.[10] Florida law also allows the creation of a state defense force, which could include or wholly consist of a naval unit not held to federal standards.[11] As such, the Governor of Florida could theoretically reactivate the Florida Naval Militia based on existing legal permission at any time.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c "Florida Naval Militia". State Archives of Florida Online Catalog. Retrieved 30 June 2014.
  2. ^ "Florida Naval and Marine Militia (1861-1865)". University of Florida Digital Collections. Retrieved 5 November 2014.
  3. ^ Turner Publishing Company Staff (Jun 15, 1999). USS Wasp. Vol. 2. Turner Publishing Company. p. 11. ISBN 1563114046. Retrieved 30 June 2014.
  4. ^ Shank, Ann. "Sarasota Naval Militia". Saratosa History Alive!.
  5. ^ "32 USC § 109 - Maintenance of other troops". Legal Information Institute. Retrieved 30 June 2014.
  6. ^ "10 U.S. Code § 7851 - Composition". Legal Information Institute. Retrieved 30 June 2014.
  7. ^ "10 U.S. Code § 7854 - Availability of material for Naval Militia". Legal Information Institute. Retrieved 30 June 2014.
  8. ^ Girardet, Wayne E. "The New Jersey Naval Militia" (PDF). The Defense Technical Information Center Website. Retrieved 30 June 2014.
  9. ^ "Committee Report on the New Jersey Naval Militia Joint Command to The Adjutant General: Organization". The Official Website of New Jersey. Retrieved 30 June 2014.
  10. ^ "250.04 Naval militia; marine corps". Official Internet Site of the Florida State Legislature. Retrieved 30 June 2014.
  11. ^ "251.04 Requisitions; armories; other buildings". JUSTUA US LAW. Retrieved 30 June 2014.