Happy Birthday USMC

Status
Not open for further replies.
Semper Fi and Happy Birthday to all my fellow jarheads out there.
 

Attachments

  • mijfrs.jpg
    mijfrs.jpg
    22.4 KB · Views: 29
Happy Birthday Marines!

I recently plowed through Gunny Hathcock's book and Chesty Puller's after that. You have quite a legacy.

I just received my commemorative silver dollar in the mail and it's one beautiful coin. Funny, the obverse (front) is the first pic posted here and the reverse is the second. I wish I could give one to each and every one of you.
 
Last edited:
My dad was a Jarhead on Guam. The Marines have played no small part in my enjoying the life I do. Thank you gentlemen - one and all. Very much.

A HUGE Happy birthday to the corps.



-
 
Happy Birthday,Marines,and SEMPER FI to you all,my brothers.Today we celebrate the courage and sacrifice of our brothers and sisters,and also 230 years of romping stomping hell raising death and destruction.More especially,we honor the legacy of those who have gone before us,and welcome the new members of our Marine Family.Marine,a title than can only be earned,never given,and stays with you for ever.God Bless the Marine Corps,and SEMPER FI.
 
Happy Birthday and Semper Fidelis Marines!
Commandant Lejune's traditional message and Commandant Hagee's 2005 message attached.
 

Attachments

  • lejeuneMessage20041.pdf
    66.3 KB · Views: 36
  • CMC2005letter11.pdf
    27.2 KB · Views: 25
celibrated our birthday in a bunker this morning on TQ. I've been fortuante enough for the past 6 years to around for a formal ball, so a cake cutting in sand will do this year.

I love to put on the Dress Blue Alpha uniform and let the metals gingle :D and drink with the boys till the wife makes me go home. :D
 
Happy Birthday to my brothers, past and present and to our Marine Corps.

Semper Fi

USMC 1955-1963


THE BOYS OF IWO JIMA

Jeanne Nichols is hired each year to go to Washington, DC, with the eighth grade class from Clinton, Wisconsin where she grew up, to videotape their trip. This is Jeanne's first person report of the trip made in the Fall of 2000.

"I greatly enjoy visiting our nation's capitol. Each year I take some special memories back with me. This fall's trip was especially memorable. On the last night of our trip we stopped at the Iwo Jima Memorial. This memorial is the largest bronze statue in the world and depicts one of the most famous photographs in history - that of the five Marines, and one Navy Corpsman on duty with the Marines, raising the American flag at the top of a rocky hill on the island of Iwo Jima, Japan, during WW-II. Over one hundred students and chaperons piled off the buses and headed towards the memorial.

"I noticed a solitary figure at the base of the statue, and as I got closer he asked, 'Where are you guys from?' I told him that we were from Wisconsin. 'Hey, I'm a cheese-head, too! Come gather around Cheeseheads, and I will tell you a story.' (James Bradley just happened to be in Washington, DC, to speak at the memorial the following day. He was there that night to say good night to his dad, who has since passed away. He was just about to leave when he saw the buses pull up. I videotaped him as he spoke to the group, and received his permission to share what he said from my videotape. It is one thing to tour the incredible monuments filled with history in Washington, DC, but it is quite another to get the kind of insight the group received that night. When all had gathered around he reverently began to speak. Here are his words that night.)

"My name is James Bradley and I'm from Antigo, Wisconsin. My dad is on that statue, and I just wrote a book called Flags of Our Fathers which is #5 on the New York Times Best Seller list right now. It is the story of the six boys you see behind me. Six boys raised the flag. (EOB's NOTE: Flags of Our Fathers is an outstanding book. Recommend it.)

"The first guy putting the pole in the ground is Harlon Block. Harlon was an all-state football player from Weslaco, Texas. He enlisted in the Marine Corps with all the senior members of his football team. They were off to play another type of game. A game called "War." But it didn't turn out to be a game. Harlon, at the age of 21, died with his intestines in his hands. I don't say that to gross you out, I say that because there are generals who stand in front of this statue and talk about the glory of war. You guys need to know that most of the boys on Iwo Jima were 17, 18, and 19 years old.

(He pointed to the statue) "You see this next guy? That's Rene Gagnon from New Hampshire.

If you took Rene's helmet off at the moment this photo was taken, and looked in the webbing of that helmet, you would find a photograph...a photograph of his girlfriend. Rene put that in there for protection, because he was scared. He was 18 years old. Boys won the battle of Iwo Jima. Boys. Not old men.

"The next guy here, the third guy in this tableau, was Sergeant Mike Strank. Mike is my hero. He was the hero of all these guys. They called him the "old man" because he was so old. He was already 24. Mike would motivate his boys in training camp, he didn't say 'Let's go kill some Japanese,' or 'Let's die for our country.' He knew he was talking to little boys. Instead he would say, 'You do what I say, and I'll get you home to your mothers.'

"The last guy on this side of the statue is Ira Hayes, a Pima Indian from Arizona. Ira Hayes walked off Iwo Jima. He went into the White House with my dad. President Truman told him, 'You're a hero.' He told reporters, 'How can I feel like a hero when 250 of my buddies hit the island with me and only 27 of us walked off alive?' So you take your class at school. 250 of you spending a year together having fun, doing everything together. Then all 250 of you hit the beach, but only 27 of your classmates walk off alive! That was Ira Hayes. He had images of horror in his mind. Ira Hayes died dead drunk, face down at the age of 32...ten years after this picture was taken.

"The next guy, going around the statue, is Franklin Sousley from Hilltop, Kentucky. A fun-lovin' hillbilly boy. His best friend, who is now 70, told me, 'Yeah, you know, we took two cows up on the porch of the Hilltop General Store. Then we strung wire across the stairs so the cows couldn't get down. Then we fed them Epson salts. Those cows crapped all night.' Yes, he was a fun-lovin' hillbilly boy. Franklin died on Iwo Jima at the age of 19. When the telegram came to tell his mother that he was dead, it went to the Hilltop General Store. A barefoot boy ran that telegram up to his mother's farm. The neighbors could hear her scream all night and into the morning. The neighbors lived a quarter of a mile away.

"The next guy, as we continue to go around the statue is my dad, John Bradley from Antigo, Wisconsin where I was raised. My dad lived until 1994, but he would never give interviews. When Walter Cronkite's producers, or the New York Times would call, we were trained as little kids to say, 'No, I'm sorry sir, my dad's not here. He is in Canada fishing. No, there is no phone there, sir. No, we don't know when he is coming back.' My dad never fished or even went to Canada. Usually, he was sitting there right at the table eating his Campbell's soup. But we had to tell the press that he was out fishing. He didn't want to talk to the press. You see, my dad didn't see himself as a hero. Everyone thinks these guys are heroes, 'cause they are in a photo and a monument. My dad knew better. He was a medic. John Bradley from Wisconsin was a caregiver. In Iwo Jima he probably held over 200 boys as they died. And when boys died in Iwo Jima, they writhed and screamed in pain. When I was a little boy, my third grade teacher told me that my dad was a hero. When I went home and told my dad that, he looked at me and said, 'I want you always to remember that the heroes of Iwo Jima are the guys who did not come back. Did NOT come back.'

"So that's the story about six nice young boys. Three died on Iwo Jima, and three came back as national heroes. Overall 7000 boys died on Iwo Jima in the worst battle in the history of the Marine Corps. My voice is giving out, so I will end here. Thank you for your time."

"Suddenly, the monument wasn't just a big old piece of metal with a flag sticking out of the top. It came to life before our eyes with the heartfelt words of a son who did indeed have a father who was a hero. Maybe not a hero for the reasons most people would believe, but a hero none-the-less.

"We need to remember that God created this vast and glorious world for us to live in, freely, but also at great sacrifice. Let us never forget the Revolutionary War to the Gulf War, and all the wars in-between, that sacrifice was made for our freedom. Remember to pray praises for this great country of ours and also pray for those still in murderous unrest around the world. STOP, and thank God for being alive at someone else's sacrifice. God Bless!
 
Semper Fi!

My Father was a Marine in WWII. He passed away in September after having a stroke. We had him creamated. My Brother and I intend to place some of his ashes into a 30-06 casing , wire one of his dog tags to it and place it at the Iwo Jima Memorial.

Sergeant Rufus Benjamin Rodgers Junior. USMC 830602
04-26-1924 to 09-15-2005
3rd Battalion, 9th Marine Regiment, 3rd Marine Division: Bougainville, Guam, Iwo Jima.
dad01.gif

"And when the pearly gate he reaches, Saint Peter he will tell; 'Another Marine reporting sir, I've done my time in hell!'"​

http://www.smellysmleshooters.net/myparents.htm
 
My 36th Marine Corps. birthday.

A friend of mine asked a few weeks ago, if the Corps. called would you put the uniform back on and report for duty?

I looked at him without hesitation and said, Hell yes.

Yeah I'm older and about 30 pounds heavier but I can still reload, inspect, instruct and strut.

Going to the Birthday Ball tonight.

Time to go book shopping.

Happy Birthday Marines.

Vick
 
Happy Birthday, Semper Fi And THANK YOU. For going to all the places that the rest of us can't or won't go to, and doing the things that the rest of us are unable or unwilling to do.

Like the ad says: "When it absolutely, positively has to be destroyed overnight!"

Jubei
 
I got better than a dozen emails at work today from all over from the various Marines I've served with, with just one line.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY!

I hung General Lejeune's Birthday message on my co-worker's desks while they were at lunch, and being the only Marine in the place, got numerous happy birthday wishes from the Air Force, Navy, and Army. I'll pass those on,

HAPPY BIRTHDAY!

S/F

Farnham
 
Happy Birthday and Semper Fi!

My best tour as a squid was working with you guys on the Iwo Jima (LPH-2) 1985-1989.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top