United States Army Materiel Command

U.S. Army Materiel Command (AMC) is the primary provider of materiel to the United States Army. The Command's mission includes the management of installations, as well as maintenance and parts distribution. It was established on 8 May 1962 and was activated on 1 August of that year as a major field command of the U.S. Army. Lieutenant General Frank S. Besson, Jr., who directed the implementation of the Department of Army study that recommended creation of a "materiel development and logistics command", served as its first commander.

U.S. Army Materiel Command
United States Army Materiel Command shoulder sleeve insignia
Active1962–present
Country United States
Branch United States Army
TypeArmy Command
RoleDevelops, maintains, and supports material capabilities for the Army[1]
Sizemore than 60,000 military and civilians
Garrison/HQRedstone Arsenal
Motto(s)If a Soldier shoots it, drives it, flies it, wears it, communicates with it, or eats it – AMC provides it.
MarchArsenal for the Brave[2]
WebsiteAMC — The Army's Materiel Integrator www.army.mil/info/organization/unitsandcommands/commandstructure/amc/
Commanders
Current
commander
General Edward M. Daly
Notable
commanders
Frank S. Besson, Jr.
Ferdinand J. Chesarek

AMC operates depots; arsenals; ammunition plants; and other facilities, and maintains the Army's prepositioned stocks, both on land and afloat.[3] The command is also the Department of Defense Executive Agent for the chemical weapons stockpile and for conventional ammunition.

Materiel for 2nd Armored Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division, arriving in Gdańsk, Poland. M992 Field Artillery Ammunition Support Vehicles fill the left side of the foreground.

AMC is responsible within the United States Department of Defense for the business of selling Army equipment and services to allies of the United States and negotiates and implements agreements for co-production of U.S. weapons systems by foreign nations.

Commanders

No. Commander Term
Portrait Name Took office Left office Term length
1
Lieutenant General
Frank S. Besson Jr.
2 April 196210 March 19696 years, 342 days
2
General
Ferdinand J. Chesarek
10 March 19691 November 19701 year, 236 days
3
General
Henry A. Miley Jr.
1 November 197012 February 19754 years, 103 days
4
General
John R. Deane Jr.
12 February 19751 February 19771 year, 355 days
-
Lieutenant General
George Sammet Jr.
Acting
1 February 19771 February 1977~ 2 years, 78 days
5
General
John R. Guthrie
May 1977August 1981~ 4 years, 92 days
6
General
Donald R. Keith
August 198129 June 1984~ 2 years, 333 days
7
General
Richard H. Thompson
29 June 198413 April 19872 years, 288 days
8
General
Louis C. Wagner Jr.
13 April 198727 September 19892 years, 167 days
9
General
William G.T. Tuttle Jr.
27 September 198931 January 19922 years, 126 days
10
General
Jimmy D. Ross
31 January 199211 February 19942 years, 11 days
11
General
Leon E. Salomon
11 February 199427 March 19962 years, 45 days
12
General
Johnnie E. Wilson
27 March 199614 May 19993 years, 48 days
13
General
John G. Coburn
14 May 199930 October 20012 years, 169 days
14
General
Paul J. Kern
30 October 20015 November 20043 years, 6 days
15
General
Benjamin S. Griffin
5 November 200414 November 20084 years, 9 days
16
General
Ann E. Dunwoody
14 November 200828 June 20123 years, 227 days
17
General
Dennis L. Via
28 June 201230 September 20164 years, 94 days
18
General
Gustave F. Perna
30 September 20162 July 20203 years, 276 days
19
General
Edward M. Daly
2 July 2020Incumbent36 days

Major subordinate commands

See also: United States Army Medical Materiel Agency (an LCMC)

Formerly subordinate commands

  • CCDC (formerly United States Army Research, Development and Engineering Command) completed its transfer to United States Army Futures Command on 3 February 2019, which operates research and development engineering centers; Army Research Laboratories supports the centers' activities.

Other commands

See also

Comparable organizations

Notes

References

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