Navy League Cadet Officers


Navy League Cadet Officers are volunteers who lead Canada's Navy League Cadet Programme that is solely sponsored by the civilian Navy League of Canada. While Navy League Cadet Officers wear a uniform similar to that of the Royal Canadian Navy, Navy League Cadet Officers are not members of the Canadian Forces. They are civilian youth leaders.

General

Navy League Cadet Officers work for individual Navy League Cadet Corps (or 'Corps de Cadet de la Ligue navale' in French). Every NLCC has a team of officers that work for the well being of the Navy League Cadets in their care, and provide a training programme that is similar to the basic levels of the Royal Canadian Sea Cadets.

Uniform of Navy League officers

Officers of the Navy League Cadet Programme wear a uniform that follows the naval tradition. While similar to that of the Royal Canadian Navy there are visible differences (according to NL 226):

Male and female uniforms

Male uniforms

Female officers

Cap badge

Ranks

Officers of the Navy League wear similar ranks to those of the Canadian Coast Guard with a maple leaf above the stripes and use Royal Canadian Navy rank titles designating them as adult leaders of the Navy League Cadet program. It is the practice that NL Cadet Officers use NL (in English) or LN (in French) with their rank title in written form to show that they represent the Navy League. In the French language, Navy League officers use French translations of their English-language rank titles, and not the distinctive French-language rank titles used by the French Navy and adopted for use in French by the Royal Canadian Navy.

Rank Midshipmen(NL)
Aspirant(LN)
Acting SubLieutenant(NL)
Sous lieutenant intérmaire(LN)
Sub Lieutenant (NL)
Sous lieutenant (LN)
Sleeve
Rank Lieutenant (NL)/(LN) Lieutenant Commander (NL)/(LN) Commander (NL)/(LN)
Sleeve

Honours and awards

Officers of the Navy League are authorized to wear recognised Canadian honours and awards as well as specialist badges earned as members of the Canadian Forces. A service pin is worn on the right side of the uniform to denote five year periods of service, and the NL of Canada has awarded a long service medal also worn on the right side for those officers who have served ten years in the program. Additional periods of ten years of service are recognised by a bar.

References

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