NEW MARS ASSIGNMENT FOR HAM RADIO OPERATORS
December 30th, 2009 by hamslife
No! NASA is not looking for hams willing to operate from the planet Mars. The MARS referred here is the Military Auxiliary Radio System formally known as the Military Affiliate Radio System.
The program behind MARS started back in November 1925 under the leadership of Captain Thomas C. Rives of the United States Army Signal Corps. Captain Rives organized a group of amateur radio operators with the intent of utilizing their talents to train soldiers how to use the new technology of radio communications. He would also use the organization, which was then called Auxiliary Amateur Radio System (AARS), to assist in research and development of radio equipment to be used by the US Army. AARS members could also provide an instant pool of already trained radio operators for military operations if needed.
That pool of ready trained operators proved very useful when the
November 1948 AARS changed its name to Military Amateur Radio System (MARS) and was split into two separate groups, the Army MARS, and the newly formed United States Air Force MARS. (The USAF became a separate branch of the
MARS kept its acronym but changed its name to Military Affiliate Radio System on September 2, 1952. The Navy-Marine Corps MARS program was established on August 17, 1962.
The MARS program became well known for its handling of messages and phone patches for military personnel serving overseas. Modern email and cell phones has almost eliminated the need for MARS to handle personal messages for those serving in the military.
December 23, 2009 MARS again changed its name while keeping it well known acronym. The new name for MARS is the Military Auxiliary Radio System. The Department of Defense give the following definition of a military auxiliary: “an organized body of volunteers prepared to supplement the uniformed services or any designated civilian authorities by provision of specialized autonomous services when called upon or when situations warrant.” The Civil Air Patrol and the Coast Guard Auxiliary are two examples of Military Auxiliaries.
With the name change came a modification of its primary mission. MARS now will provide auxiliary emergency communications for US Military and other federal agencies such as FEMA and Homeland Security. MARS may now assist state, local, and select private and public agencies with emergency communications. The new focus of the MARS’ mission is homeland security.
This entry was posted on Wednesday, December 30th, 2009 at 8:18 pm and is filed under MARS, Ham Radio Club, Disastor, Military Auxiliary, AARS, Captain Rives, US Army, Emergency communications, Community Service, Radio History, amateur radio, Military Comunications, United States Coast Guard, Message Handling, Public Service, ham radio. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.










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