For all these subordinate positions it is recommended that American citizens be employed whenever possible.
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RANK.
Since a consular officer generally holds office such a short time, one would not expect him to rank with Navy and Army officers, but such is the case. Here are the equivalents in rank:
- Consuls General
- rank with
- Commodores in the Navy or
- Brigadier Generals in the Army.
- Consuls and
- Commercial Agents
- rank with
- Captains in the Navy or
- Colonels in the Army.
- Vice Consular officers,
- Deputy Consular officers,
- Consular Clerks and
- Consular Agents
- rank with
- Lieutenants in the Navy or
- Captains in the Army.
It is an event of some consequence when a United States naval squadron, or even a lone cruiser, enters a foreign port where an American consular officer is stationed; for the time to “put on airs” and “show off”, if you ever do such things, is when you are away from home. On such an occasion a commander of a squadron sends an officer ashore to visit the consular officer and to invite him on board the flag-ship. Or, in case it is but a single war-vessel, the commander thereof first goes ashore, visits the consul and invites him on board. In either case the consul accepts the invitation, as in duty bound, goes on board and “tenders his official services to the commander”. Usually upon his return to the shore a salute is fired in his honor—nine guns if a consul general, seven if a consul or five if a commercial agent. While it is being fired he faces the vessel and at the end of the salute lifts his hat in token of acknowledgment and the formalities are over.
Consular officers are expected to advance the interests of the Navy socially and otherwise whenever they can do so without expense to the Government. One cannot but smile at the frequency with which these words or their equivalent occur throughout the “Regulations”.