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Link to Navy Speak - Navy Terms & Acronyms: Navy Speak

All Hands Magazine's full length documentary "Making a Sailor": This video follows four recruits through Boot Camp in the spring of 2018 who were assigned to DIV 229, an integrated division, which had PIR on 05/25/2018. 

Boot Camp: Making a Sailor (Full Length Documentary - 2018)

Boot Camp: Behind the Scenes at RTC

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OPSEC - Navy Operations Security

Always keep Navy Operations Security in mind.  In the Navy, it's essential to remember that "loose lips sink ships."  OPSEC is everyone's responsibility. 

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RTC Graduation

RESUMING LIVE PIR - 8/13/2021

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Please see changes to attending PIR in the PAGES column. The PAGES are located under the member icons on the right side.

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Comment by JessicaB-Sailor Mom on April 6, 2011 at 6:39pm

The ship number identifies the building they are in (they also have a name of a famous ship, but few refer to them by the name). It's the Division number that is the most important - they will write that on their sailor hat and it will be there forever, throughout their Navy career! But the ship number is important when you send them letters.

There are 14 different "ships" (barracks), and about 12 divisions in each ship, and every one of them has a different address.

The only difference that I know of in the divisions is the 900 divisions are performance divisions...singers, musicians, flag carriers and the 800's divisions...special ops, seals, etc

TG stands for Training Groups (the number of groups or Divisions that graduate on the same day). A Division is approx 88 recruits who live and train together. Their Division number is important, for lots of reasons, but it will ALWAYS define them. They write that number on their lid (sailor hat, aka dixie cup) and that always stays with them, well after boot camp is over! Ship number just identifies the building their barracks are in (each building also has a name of a famous US ship). We won't know how many divisions are in this PIR (Pass-In-Review, aka graduation) group for about a week. It takes a while for them to fill up all the divisions. Those first 4-10 days they arrive are called Processing Days (P-days) and they are not assigned to Divisions until those are over. I hope this info helped!

BTW, a great thing to do while your recruit is in bc is to change your User ID name (go to settings in right hand corner of your page). If others know your Division number and PIR group, they can identify you quicker.



Ship 02 USS Ruben James, Ship 03: USS Hopper, Ship 04: USS Arleigh Burke, Ship 05: USS Theodore Roosevelt, Ship 06:USS Constitution, Ship 07: USS Chicago, Ship 09: USS John F. Kennedy, Ship 10:USS Enterprise, Ship11: USS Kearsarge, Ship 12:USS Triton, Ship 13:USS Marvin Shields, Ship 14:USS Arizona

  • Comment by JessicaB-Sailor Mom on April 6, 2011 at 6:44pm
  • This is an excerpt from Arwen-who is former Navy, Married to former Navy, has a son in the Navy and has a son who is in the process of enlisting in the Navy

    At this point, unless you're SpecOps/pre-BUDs, no one pays attention to what school the recruits are going to, whether they are nukes or undesignated.

    When a group of new arrivals comes in from the airport, they go through a simple sort - those with music or flag/drill experience are shunted off to a 900 division, those going into SpecOps are sent to the 800 division (they only do a dozen or so each year.

    The remaining recruits are assigned pretty randomly, mostly as they arrive. Once one is full, the start filling another, so divisions end up with groups of recruits from only a few areas.

    Sometimes a division fills, and there are only one or two recruits remaining from the arrival group. They are held as the first recruits for the next division.

    That's how random it can be.

    That is also how divisions are assigned to ships. There are 12 barracks per ship. They fill a ship with divisions as they arrive, and when full, move to the next ship. The ships are not filled in order, because they were not built in order. The last of the new barracks was completed only 6 months ago, .

    There are two ships that are not filled like this.
    Ship 6 contains ONLY 900 divisions. It contains all of the music practice rooms and instruments. One division per PIR group lives here.
    Ship 5 (formerly 17) is for sailors who are being held for medical treatment, for extra training, or are being processed out for medical or legal reasons. Some injured sailors actually complete their training from Ship 5 (formerly 17), others are assigned to new divisions when they are ready. It is often called the boringest ship in the Navy, because they're not in training and have nothing to do but sit around - literally.
  • ******************************************************************************************************
  • Ship 6 and Ship 4 is RCU-Recruit Convalescent Unit-where sick or injured recruits go to heal and be cycled back into another TG. Ship 04 has also been used for regular divisions.
  • Ship 5 is for those recruits in the process of being discharged from Boot Camp. It is also for THU-Temporary Holding Unit-where new graduated Sailors go if they are on hold for "A" school. (They are in separate quarters from those being discharged.)
  • Ship 2 houses the 900 DIV.

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Replies to This Discussion

This is so helpful, thank you. So our son is in division 40, and that will always be with him? Do they still do.dog tags?
Yes...it's in his Sailor hat for good! Yes, all military get dog tags.

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