107 years ago today (May 18,
1917) the Selective Service System (SSS) was created.
The SSS, shortly after the United
States declared War on Germany during World War 1, was made to Register every
American Man and then Draft those aged 21 to 30.
2.8 Million of the 4.2 Million
American Men who served during World War 1 were Draftees.
The Selective Service System did
not create The Draft in 1917, but it did do away with the paying of Substitutions
(as had been allowed by the Union and the Confederacy during the Civil War.)
History of The Draft:
In Colonial America
(1492-1776) the Thirteen Colonies used a Militia System for Defense which
required able-bodied White Males to
enroll in the Militia, to undergo a minimum of Military Training, and to serve
for limited periods of time in War or Emergency.
The same Militia System was used
after the United States became independent in 1776, but was done at the State
Level (not the Federal Level) until 1789.
During the American Revolutionary
War (1775-1783) the States sometimes Drafted Men for Militia Duty or to
fill State Continental Army Units. This First National Conscription was
irregularly applied and failed to fill the Continental Ranks.
Post Ratification of the
Constitution in 1789, Article I.8.15, allows for Congress to Conscript.
Giving it the power to provide for calling forth the Militia to execute the
Laws of the Union, suppress Insurrections and repel Invasions; Section 8.16 of
the same article, allows Congress to provide for organizing, arming, and
disciplining, the Militia, and for governing such Part of them as may be
employed in the Service of the United States, reserving to the States
respectively, the Appointment of the Officers, and the Authority of training
the Militia according to the discipline prescribed by Congress.
Article II.2.1 makes the
President the Commander in Chief of the Militia.
Conscientious Objection was
allowed and you could pay a fine instead of serving.
The Second Militia Act of 1792
defined the First Group who could be called up as "each and every free
able-bodied White Male Citizen" between the ages of 18 and 45.
During the War of 1812
(1812-1815): President James Madison unsuccessfully attempted to Federally
Draft 40,000 Men.
During the American Civil War
(1861-1865) both the Union and the Confederacy used the Draft.
In The Confederacy South:
The First Conscription Act, passed April 16, 1862, made any White Male between
18 and 35 years old liable to three years of Military Service.
On September 27, 1862, the Second
Act extended the age limit to 45 years.
The Third Act, passed February
17, 1864, changed this to 17 to 50 years old, for service of an unlimited
period.
From 1862-1864 those Drafted
could hire a Substitute to fight for them.
There were exemptions to the
Draft (most notably the “Twenty Negro Law” where any White Man that owned 20 or
more Black Slaves couldn’t be Drafted.)
It lasted until the Confederacy
was defeated in 1865.
Conscientious Objection was
allowed and you could pay a fine ($500 or $9,141.41 in today’s money) instead
of serving.
In the Union North: The
Militia Act of 1862 authorized a Draft within a State when the State could not
meet its quota with Volunteers.
The Act, for the first time, also
allowed Blacks to serve in the Militias as Soldiers and War Laborers, but in
Segregated Units headed by White Officers.
Anyone Drafted could hire a
Substitute (someone not themselves eligible to be Drafted) to fight for them.
2% of the Union Soldiers who fought were Draftees and 6% of the Union Soldiers
who fought were Draftee Substitutes.
Conscientious Objection was
allowed and you could pay a fine ($300 or $5,484.85 in today’s money) instead
of serving.
The Enrollment Act of 1863 also
known as the Civil War Military Draft Act was the first genuine National
Conscription Law. The law required the enrollment of every Male Citizen and
those Immigrants who had filed for Citizenship, between 20 and 45 years of age,
unless exempted by the Act.
The Act replaced the Militia Act
of 1862. It set up under the Union Army an elaborate machine for enrolling and
Drafting Men for Conscription. Quotas were assigned in each State, and each
Congressional District, with deficiencies in Volunteers being met by
Conscription.
The hiring of Substitutes was
still allowed. Draft Boards were local.
Once the Civil War ended in
1865 the Draft also ended and until 1917 the US Military had only
Volunteers (including during the Mexican-American War 1846-1848, the Second
Opium War 1856-1859, the Various Indian Wars 1860s -1920s the Spanish-American
War 1898, the Philippine-American War 1899-1902, the Boxer Rebellion 1899-1901
and the Mexican Border War 1910-1919.)
The Selective Service Act of
1917 allowed for the Draft during World War 1. All Males aged 21 to 30 were
required to register to potentially be selected for Military Service.
At the request of the War
Department, Congress amended the Law in August 1918 to expand the age range to
include all men 18 to 45, and to bar further Volunteering.
Unlike during the Civil War no
Draft Substitutes could fight for you.
The US Military was still
Segregated. Draft Boards were local.
Conscientious Objection was
allowed, but you had to serve in Non-Combat Military Roles.
By the end of World War I, some 2
Million Men Volunteered for various branches of the Armed Services, and some
2.8 Million had been Drafted.
The Draft ended when World War 1
ended on November 11, 1918.
From 1918-1940 the US Military
only had Volunteers.
The Selective Training and
Service Act of 1940, also known as the Burke–Wadsworth Act, was the first
Peacetime Conscription in United States History.
This Selective Service Act
required that Men who had reached their 21st Birthday but had not yet reached
their 36th Birthday register with local Draft Boards.
From 1940-1942 there was a
National Draft Lottery.
When the U.S. entered World War
II in 1941, all Men from their 18th Birthday until the day before their 45th
Birthday were made subject to Military Service, and all Men from their 18th
birthday until the day before their 65th Birthday were required to register and
those Drafted served for the “duration of the War plus 6 months.”
From 1942-1945 the National Draft
Lottery was replaced with the Local Draft Boards.
Conscientious Objection was
allowed, but you had to join the Civilian Public Service (working in Soil
Conservation, Forestry, Firefighting, Agriculture, Social Services and Mental
Health Services.)
12,000 Americans served in the
CPS.
By 1945, 50 Million American Men
had registered for the Draft and 10 Million were Drafted.
From 1946-1948 the US Military
had all Volunteers.
The Selective Service Act of
1948, also known as the Elston Act, was a major revision of the Articles of
War of the United States enacted on June 24, 1948 that established the current
implementation of the Selective Service System.
The new Law required all Men of
age 18 to 26 to register. The US Military also
became Integrated in 1948.
During the Korean War
1950-1953 The Selective Service System used Local Draft Boards to Draft 1.5
Million Men.
In 1953 President Eisenhower
ended the Paternity Deferment for Married Men.
In 1962 President Kennedy ordered
that Men with Children be placed at the bottom of the Draft List and Married
Men without Children be placed right above those with Men with Children.
President Johnson ended both of
these policies in 1965.
During the Vietnam War
1964-1973 8,744,000 Americans served in the US Military of whom 3,403,000
were deployed to Southeast Asia with 2,215,000 of them Draftees.
Of the nearly 16 Million Men not
engaged in active military service, 96% were Exempted (typically because of
jobs including other Military Service), Deferred (usually for Educational
Reasons), or Disqualified (usually for Physical and Mental Deficiencies but
also for Criminal Records including Draft Violations).
On December 1, 1969, a National
Draft Lottery was held to establish a Draft priority for all those born between
1944 and 1950.
This was done by President Nixon
because the Local Draft Boards were seen as favoring the White and Rich. A
National Draft Lottery was also held in 1970, 1971 and 1972.
Conscientious Objection was
allowed, but you had to serve in a Non-Combat Military Role or go to Prison.
On January 27, 1973 the US
officially ended the Military Draft (after the Paris Peace Accord between the
US and North Vietnam – also signed on January 27, 1973.)
From 1973-1980 not only was the
US Military All-Volunteer, but Men no longer had to register for the Draft with
the Selective Service System.
In 1980, after the Soviets
invaded Afghanistan, President Carter started requiring all Men to register for
the Selective Service System from the time they were 18 until they were 25.
This requirement remains in place
today with many Federal and State Penalties for not registering (ie. a Federal
Felony punishable by up to 5 years Imprisonment or a $250,000 Fine.)
Today, the Selective Service
System continues to update its policies with Congress in case the Draft is ever
brought back.
If the Draft was returned there
would be a National Draft Lottery to ensure equality (although Women still
won’t be Drafted even though they have been allowed in Combat Roles since
2016.)
College Deferments would only
last until the end of that Semester and not when you graduated.
Current Change to any National
Draft Lottery: The Men called first would be those who are or will turn 20
years old in the calendar year or those whose Deferments will end in the
calendar year.
Each year after, the Man will be
placed on a lower priority status until his liability ends.
For 51 years the US Military
has been an All-Volunteer Force.
They have fought in: the last
days of the Cold War 1973-1991, Lebanon 1982-1984, Grenada 1983, Libya 1986,
Panama 1989-1990, the Gulf War 1990-1991, Iraqi No-Fly Zone 1991-2003, Somalia
1992-1995, the Former Yugoslavia 1992-1996, Haiti 1994-1995, Kosovo 1998-1999,
Afghanistan 2001-2021, Yemen 2002-Present, Iraq 2003-2021, Pakistan 2004-2018,
Somalia 2007-Present, Indian Ocean Pirates 2009-2016, Libya 2011, Uganda
2011-2017, Syria 2014-Present and Libya 2015-2019.
A Poll conducted in 1973 (when
the Draft ended) found that 84% of every American either served or knew a Loved
One that served in the US Military.
A Poll conducted in 2019 found
that 0.01% of every American either served or knew a Loved One that served in
the US Military.
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