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2006-09-20 04:27:14 · 15 answers · asked by paul s 1 in Politics & Government Military

15 answers

It's because they're very similar to the tags used on dog collars for the purpose of identification.

2006-09-20 04:29:26 · answer #1 · answered by squirrellondon 4 · 2 0

The term "dog tag" otherwise known as an identification tag came from the similarities as a dog, who wears tags around their necks on collars to identify who they are. (ie Name, SSN, Blood-type, & Religion) Hence the nickname.

2006-09-20 18:43:31 · answer #2 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

Because just like a dog wears tags on his collar to identify him and his owner, the military dog tag does the name. Has the name, SSN, blood type, religion.

2006-09-20 04:31:19 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Because they are worn around the neck, much like the tags on a dog, that gives the owners name and other pertinent information.

2006-09-20 04:31:38 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Because they resemble the id tags worn around dogs necks!!

2006-09-20 04:36:55 · answer #5 · answered by Bex2k6 3 · 0 0

I don't know for sure but I would guess because they kinda look like the tags you get for your pets...and they have some of the same info...like ID numbers and the like....just a guess though.

2006-09-20 04:30:19 · answer #6 · answered by yetti 5 · 0 0

they look like dog tags, except they have a slot in them. The slot is to be put between the upper and lower jaw in your mouth between the teeth. Then your jaw is slammed shut and it enters the bone. This way they can identify your body when it gets recovered.

2006-09-20 06:06:50 · answer #7 · answered by frankalan9999 3 · 0 0

Straight Dope Science Advisory Board will go to any length to settle a bar bet, Sally.

In this case, we went to the Smithsonian National Museum of American History and museum specialist Margaret Vining in the Armed Forces Collections Division.

In the early days, the U.S. Army recorded the measurements and distinctive facial features of soldiers--but only for the purposes of apprehending deserters, cutting undesirable recruits and settling accounts upon discharge.

Soldiers who wanted their loved ones to know of their fate could only improvise their own identification. As early as the Spanish-American War, soldiers were purchasing crude stamped period identification tags. During the Civil War of 1861-1865, some soldiers going into combat pinned slips of paper with their name and home address to the backs of their coats. Notes, diaries and letters helped with identification. Some soldiers stencilled identification on their knapsacks or scratched it in the soft lead backing of the Army belt buckle. Some purchased items sold by "private concerns."

These private concerns (read: folks out to make a buck) advertised in such popular periodicals as Harper's Weekly and Leslie's. Their pins were usually shaped to suggest a branch of service and engraved with the soldier's name and unit. Other entrepreneurs set up shop on the roadside where soldiers would certainly pass. Their machine-stamped tags were made of brass or lead with a hole and usually had (on one side) an eagle or shield and such phrases as "War for the Union" or "Liberty, Union, and Equality." The other side had the soldier's name and unit and sometimes a list of battles in which he had participated.

An enterprising man from New York named John Kennedy (no relation to the president, one presumes), wrote to the Army in May of 1862, offering to furnish discs for all officers and men in the Federal Army, even enclosing a design for the disc. The National Archives now has the letter along with the reply, a summary refusal without explanation.

So far as can be determined, the U.S. Army first authorized identification tags in War Department General Order No. 204, dated December 20, 1906, which essentially prescribes the Kennedy identification tag:

"An aluminum identification tag, the size of a silver half dollar and of suitable thickness, stamped with the name, rank, company, regiment, or corps of the wearer, will be worn by each officer and enlisted man of the Army whenever the field kit is worn, the tag to be suspended from the neck, underneath the clothing, by a cord or thong passed through a small hole in the tab. It is prescribed as a part of the uniform and when not worn as directed herein will be habitually kept in the possession of the owner. The tag will be issued by the Quartermaster's Department gratuitously to enlisted men and at cost price to officers ..."

It wasn't until the Great War (World War I for you kids) that the Army changed regulations on July 6, 1916, so that all men were issued two tags: one to stay with the body and the other to go to the person in charge of the burial for record-keeping purposes. In 1918, the Army adopted and allotted the serial number system, and name and serial numbers were ordered stamped on the identification tags of all enlisted men. (Sidenote: Serial number 1 was assigned to enlisted man Arthur B. Crean of Chicago in the course of his fifth enlistment period.) In July 1969 the Army converted to the Social Security number for personnel identification.

2006-09-20 04:33:14 · answer #8 · answered by melissa 6 · 2 0

When they were first used in ww1 they were little round discs just like dog tags.

2006-09-20 04:35:28 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

early slang for soldiers was G. I. later the term dog faces (referring to the long sad faces of combat vets) was and still is, common. dog faces wear dog tags. none of the terms are insults. for example, the Marines refer to them selves as "Devil Dogs".

2006-09-20 06:32:50 · answer #10 · answered by ron m 4 · 0 0

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