The U.S. Marine Corps celebrates its 239th birthday on November 10th. Here are seven reasons why you should tip your cap and give an Ooh Rah to the men and women who are ‘always faithful’ to their duty and their country.
This ferocious, weeks-long World War I battle in June 1918 in Belleau (Aisne), France, saved Paris from the German raiding forces and turned the tide of the war. By the time the bayonet wielding Marines were done, the Germans were in full retreat and so frightened of these fighters they named them ‘Devil Dogs’, a mythical creature of German lore.
Marines still come to this place to drink from the Devil Dog fountain and pay their respects at Belleau Wood. Marines have been called Devil Dogs ever since.
Despite weeks of bombing by U.S. warships to soften the target, by the time the amphibious assault by Marines began in February 1945, the Japanese fighters had gone inland, positioned themselves in caves and were ready to rock. It was sometimes hand to hand, bloody fighting.
The Marines finally–triumphantly–erected the American flag on the highest point of the island, Mount Suribachi, a month after the battle began. After taking the island, U.S. B-29s were able to use Iwo to resupply.
The Marines finally–triumphantly–erected the American flag on the highest point of the island, Mount Suribachi, a month after the battle began. After taking the island, U.S. B-29s were able to use Iwo to resupply.
In August of 1942, U.S. Marines launched ‘Operation Watch Tower,’ a surprise attack that took control of a Japanese air base under construction on Guadalcanal, a ‘2,500-square-mile speck of jungle’ in the Solomon Islands. That was just the beginning of a bloody, six-month-long battle in which the Marines annihilated two-thirds of the Japanese troops stationed to defend it.
The victory was a turning point in the Pacific Theater in World War II.
They were called the Frozen Chosin. The 1st Marine Division was in a race to get to the Yalu River to gain strategic superiority in this Korean war campaign in 1950. But the 20-degree-below weather stymied their efforts and mucked up their gear. Worse, 150,000 Chinese troops had snuck around them, pinning them down at the Chosin Reservoir.
A 17-day battle in sub freezing temperatures ensued. Marines scaled the mountains in the dark to rescue their comrades. It wasn’t a win, but it was a display of the Marine Corps BadAssery in the face of overwhelming odds.
The Marines knew the North Vietnamese troops wanted their high spot atKhe Sanh.
On January 21, 1968, the bad guys came for it. They began an artillery assault like none other, destroying 90% of the Marines’ artillery. For 77 days, U.S. Marines held the position and repelled the attack.

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