1/2 (Half) of whatever their rank/rate pay was at retirement.
Also, This goes up every time active duty pay goes up or gets a raise.
Example: If you were a Chief and making $2,000 at retirement
you would get $1,000/month. Then when the Navy got a raise
which is usually ever couple years by about 5% your pay goes
up too. Here is an Enlisted Pay Chart for 2012. Retiree's get half
of whatever this pay is according to this chart plus medical benefits.
Pay GradeYears of ServiceLess than 2Over 2Over 3Over 4Over 6E-726802925303731853301E-623182550266327722886E-521232266237524882662E-419472046215722672363E-317571868198119811981E-216711671167116711671E-114911491149114911491
Pay GradeYears of ServiceOver 8Over 10Over 12Over 14Over 16E-94709481649505108E-838554025413142574394E-735003612381139764089E-631433243343734963539E-528452995301330133013E-423632363236323632363E-319811981198119811981E-216711671167116711671E-114911491149114911491
A Royal Navy Captain is the same as a United States Navy Captain - it's the equivalent of a full Colonel in the armies of both countries. The next rank up is Commodore - Brigadier equivalent.
Captain Charles Dwight Sigsbee, US Navy.
In the US Military, the TITLES of "Captain" and "Commander" can be both a RANK and/or POSITION. Examples: 1. A US Navy Ensign (Gold Bar rank insignia and equal to a 2nd Lieutenant in the US Army) can command a small craft, and legally be called the "Commander" or "Captain" of that small boat. Even though he is NOT a Captain or Commander in rank. 2. The US Navy DOES have the rank of Captain and Commander. And yet, a man wearing the insignia of a US Navy Captain (Silver Eagle) or a Commander (Silver Oak Leaf) may NOT BE IN COMMAND OF A VESSEL. He might be working a desk in some office, on some base somewhere. 3. Then, there is the man who is actually a US Naval Commander (wearing the insignia of a US Naval Commander-Silver Oak Leaf) who is commanding a US Navy Vessel. Or a US Navy Captain who is really a US Navy Captain (wearing the rank of a US Navy Captain-Silver Eagle) who is the Captain of the US Naval vessel. 4. The US Army, US Marines, US Air Force do NOT have the rank of "Commander" or "Lieutenant Commander" in their organizations. LT(jg)-Lieutenant Junior Grade (equal to a US Army 1st Lieutenant-Silver Bar) John F. Kennedy was the "Captain" and/or "Commander" of his Patrol Torpedo Boat (#109) during WWII.
The Captain is the higher rank, it is an O-5 in the US Navy or an O-3 in the Marine Corps. ------------------- Depends on the service. In the Army, Marines and Air Force, a Captain is an O-3. In the Navy, a Captain is an O-6.
Justice O'Connor was eligible for full retirement benefits when she stepped down from the US Supreme Court in 2006. Her annual salary at that time was $208,100, which is also the retirement pay she receives from the federal government.
Justice O'Connor was eligible for full retirement benefits when she stepped down from the US Supreme Court in 2006. Her annual salary at that time was $208,100, which is also the retirement pay she receives from the federal government.
Acoording to: http://www.indeed.com/salary?q1=US+Navy+Nurse&l1=Dallas%2C+TXAverage US Navy Nurse Salary in Dallas, TX: $32000.According to: http://www.payscale.com/research/US/Hospital_Setting=Military/Salary Nurses can make up to around $53,000 annually.
The highest rank in the US Navy is O-10 Admiral (4 stars). EXCEPT during wartime, when the rank of Fleet Admiral (5 stars) is attainable. A Captain in the US Navy is an O-6. Commodore is not used by the US Navy,
I am pretty sure that Captain is the highest rank available to an LDO under present Navy regulations.
The captain of the CSS Alabama was Raphael Semmes. After given refuge in England he returned to the South and was promoted to the rank of rear admiral.Semmes was a thirty year veteran of the US Navy. He joined the Confederate navy at the outbreak of the US Civil War.
The most famous is the USS Maine (ACR-1) that was sunk near Havana; its captain at the time was Captain Charles Sigsbee.
The Navy does not have a recognized "father" of the modern steel Navy. Having said that, however, the general consensus leads to Captain John Paul Jones being the father of the modern steel Navy.