![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
My son-in-law, who was in the Navy about 30 years ago, mentioned at
dinner today that the guy who graduated #1in his platoon at Marine boot camp was given a set of blues, free. I think that's an urban legend. It certainly wasn't the case when I went through Parris Island in 1946. Was it done at San Diego? Anyone know? Thanks. vince norris |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
vincent p. norris wrote:
My son-in-law, who was in the Navy about 30 years ago, mentioned at dinner today that the guy who graduated #1in his platoon at Marine boot camp was given a set of blues, free. I think that's an urban legend. It certainly wasn't the case when I went through Parris Island in 1946. Was it done at San Diego? Anyone know? 2005 - 1946 = 59 years.= almost 2 x 30. When did you retire?!?!?!?!? As of 1961 [2005 - 1961 = 44 years - OMG I'm getting old] when I went through PI, honor man in a platoon got blues. Up to 10% could be promoted PFC. honor man was /usually/ the guy who had also been recruit platoon guide for the last phase since he had the job /because/ he was the most squared away boot; he and the similarly situated squad leaders and a couple/three other hotshots usually got the stripes. Cash sales/tailor shop managed to measure/fit the blues/sew the stripes on between the Final Field Inspection and graduation - wouldn't do to have an honor man blues/meritorious stripes going to someone who managed to flunk the FFI. ;- Dunno when it all started, but it had been going on for a while before 1961 at both depots. Moot point now. Since some time in the mid/late-80s, blues have been part of the seabag issue. -- OJ III [Email to Yahoo address may be burned before reading. Lower and crunch the sig and you'll net me at comcast.] |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
2005 - 1946 = 59 years.= almost 2 x 30. When did you
retire?!?!?!?!? I didn't serve long enough to retire. I got out in 1953. Because of a childhood injury, I was 4F in the draft--physically unfit for duty. But I wanted to fly, so I tried to get into the Navy V-5 program. No soap. Then I heard I could enlist in the marines and be guaranteed a chance to take a test for flight training. By telling a few fibs about my physical condition, I passed the physical and even survived Paris Island. I passed the test for flight training, too, and was sent to college for two years and then to Pensacola. I got my wings in 1951 and kept passing passing physicals until 1953 when a nosy flight surgeon decided I really wasn't fit to fly Uncle Sam's airplanes (which I had already done for about 1400 hours) so I was discharged. I never had a set of dress blues, either. vince norris |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
vincent p. norris wrote:
2005 - 1946 = 59 years.= almost 2 x 30. When did you retire?!?!?!?!? I didn't serve long enough to retire. I got out in 1953. slaps forehead Duh. Shoulda been able to figure that out on my own. If you had served long enough for a pensioned[1] retirement, you would have served long enough to know about that blues thing, and not asked in the first place. /slaps forehead [1 - Since once a Marine, always a Marine, the only difference between "retired" Marines is if they retired before or after the 20 needed to rate the pension {or retainer pay, retired pay, or whatever your pedant heart wants to call it}.] [Snip general stuff, addressed below, except...] I got my wings in 1951 and kept passing passing physicals until 1953 when a nosy flight surgeon decided I really wasn't fit to fly Uncle Sam's airplanes (which I had already done for about 1400 hours) so I was discharged. Tail end of Korea - when the health requirements for warm bodies in cockpits were returning to peace-time levels. In fact, through most of the post-WWII/peacetime draft/cold war/lukewarm war period, warm, willing, and get-in-shapeable bodies covered for a lot of sins, health history-wise, like the aftermath of your childhood injury or my hay fever/ not-ever-formally-diagnosed-even-if-I-was-an-Army/ Marine-Brat-who-had-been-under-military-health-care-all-my-life-asthma. I served with a lot of Marines in my career ['61-'82] who would have not been accepted for enlistment today for health reasons. With hindsight, safe in retirement, I can say that the USMC is right. I was lucky and never got into circumstances, even during VN tours as a helo gunner, where my "hay fever" presented a problem. BUT, if I had faced such a situation, I could have damned well taken down a lot of other good Marines with me. I never had a set of dress blues, either. Well, you would have, post-Korea. Blues were part of an Officer's required kit, pilot or otherwise. ;- [You could, though, have held off on the Mess Dress until you made Major. Gotta have the fancy togs to go along with the scrambled eggs.] -- OJ III [Email to Yahoo address may be burned before reading. Lower and crunch the sig and you'll net me at comcast.] |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
[1 - Since once a Marine, always a Marine, the only difference
between "retired" Marines is if they retired before or after the 20 needed to rate the pension.... I usually say, Marines on active duty and Marines no longer on active duty. I never had a set of dress blues, either. Well, you would have, post-Korea. Blues were part of an Officer's required kit, pilot or otherwise. ;- Now that you jog my memory, I do remember the day when an order arrived from Headquarters Marine Corps. Subject: Swagger Sticks. Para 1 said something like "On and after (date), all officers will carry swagger sticks." Para 2 said something like "Swagger Sticks will be 18 inches long, 3/8ths of an inch in diameter, covered with cordovan leather........" Para 3 said something about not carrying an umbrella or a bag of groceries while carrying a Swagger Stick. Whoever started reading it aloud to a group of us in the Squadron office began to giggle, and eventually we all howled with laughter. That must have been a bout 1952 or 53. If anyone has a copy of that order, it would be a service to mankind's merriment if he were to post it here. vince norris P.S. I never owned a swagger stick, either. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
vincent p. norris wrote:
[1 - Since once a Marine, always a Marine, the only difference between "retired" Marines is if they retired before or after the 20 needed to rate the pension.... I usually say, Marines on active duty and Marines no longer on active duty. I never had a set of dress blues, either. Well, you would have, post-Korea. Blues were part of an Officer's required kit, pilot or otherwise. ;- Now that you jog my memory, I do remember the day when an order arrived from Headquarters Marine Corps. Subject: Swagger Sticks. Para 1 said something like "On and after (date), all officers will carry swagger sticks." Para 2 said something like "Swagger Sticks will be 18 inches long, 3/8ths of an inch in diameter, covered with cordovan leather........" Para 3 said something about not carrying an umbrella or a bag of groceries while carrying a Swagger Stick. Whoever started reading it aloud to a group of us in the Squadron office began to giggle, and eventually we all howled with laughter. That must have been a bout 1952 or 53. If anyone has a copy of that order, it would be a service to mankind's merriment if he were to post it here. Actually, it was Officers and SNCOs [at a minimum, disremember whether it included NCOs - Cpls and Sgts]. One of the shorter-lived "customs". One of David M. Shoup's [MOH on Tarawa] first acts when he assumed his duties as CMC on 1 Jan 1960 was to meet with his staff, Marines and civilians, on 4 Jan 1960 to talk about things. The remarks are available at: http://hqinet001.hqmc.usmc.mil/HD/Hi...aggerstick.htm and were, as he noted in the introduction: "INTRODUCTION To all Marines, naval personnel and civilians who comprise our operating organization: Good Morning. Although I speak only to this small representative group personally, provision has been made whereby these remarks will be either read or heard by the majority of Marines of all ranks at all posts and stations." and went on for a few paragraphs of "new boss" stuff. Other than that, the sum of the his remarks addressed Uniforms and Equipment thusly: "UNIFORMS AND EQUIPMENT Non-combat type uniform changes now being processed will be the last such changes considered for some time unless directed by higher authority. Anything relating to the uniform of the Marine which better meets his needs in combat will be given high priority action. In general I feel that a clean, neat, well-fitted uniform with the Marine Corps emblem is tops. There is no need for gimmicks and gadgets. With respect to equipment we should emphasize simplicity, ruggedness and ease of maintenance. And in design and gadgetry the characteristics we demand should be a pattern of the necessary rather than the ideal. We shall continue to strive to obtain in a timely manner the best possible combat equipment There is one item of equipment about which I have a definite opinion. It is the swagger stick. It shall remain an optional item of interference. If you feel the need of it, carry it…" In the DC area as a Marine brat at the time, I can state that no swagger sticks were to be seen on January 5th - or ever again - in the hand of a Marine Officer or SNCO. They got the message, loud and clear, however quietly, indirectly, spoken. ;- [Step-dad was a senior Marine lawyer {law school on the GI bill post-WWII USMC service} at a time when the Marines had 150 billets for lawyers, 93 of them filled. He had a heart attack and was being medically retired, physical for promotion waived, as a LtCol in spring of 1961, just after I had enlisted and was in the 120-day pool waiting for HS graduation/shipment to PI. As a senior lawyer, Ted was granted a "good-bye, thanks for everything" audience with the Commandant, family included. Ted proudly advised the Commandant that although he regretted leaving the USMC early, his replacement "your newest Marine, my step-son Private Johnson, is about to leave for PI after graduation." General Shoup avoided comment on my '50s DA-style haircut, and if he even raised an eyebrow I didn't notice it as he shook my hand - too busy staring at that MOH ribbon atop a rather impressive set of other ribbons and badges. If I could have melted into the wall, I would have.] -- OJ III [Email to Yahoo address may be burned before reading. Lower and crunch the sig and you'll net me at comcast.] |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "vincent p. norris" wrote in message ... My son-in-law, who was in the Navy about 30 years ago, mentioned at dinner today that the guy who graduated #1in his platoon at Marine boot camp was given a set of blues, free. I think that's an urban legend. It certainly wasn't the case when I went through Parris Island in 1946. I was stationed at PI in 1953 and that wasn't the case then, but I think that they did that for a while in the 70's when I was at MCAS Beaufort. Leanne -- Saepe Expertus, Semper Fidelis, Frates et Sororis Aeterni - Often Tested, Always Faithful, Brothers and Sisters Forever |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
When I went through in '79 it was true
"vincent p. norris" wrote in message ... My son-in-law, who was in the Navy about 30 years ago, mentioned at dinner today that the guy who graduated #1in his platoon at Marine boot camp was given a set of blues, free. I think that's an urban legend. It certainly wasn't the case when I went through Parris Island in 1946. Was it done at San Diego? Anyone know? Thanks. vince norris |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Fri, 25 Mar 2005 22:50:28 -0500, vincent p. norris
postulated : My son-in-law, who was in the Navy about 30 years ago, mentioned at dinner today that the guy who graduated #1in his platoon at Marine boot camp was given a set of blues, free. I think that's an urban legend. It certainly wasn't the case when I went through Parris Island in 1946. Was it done at San Diego? Anyone know? Thanks. vince norris It was true the summer of 1955 when I went through PI. (Damn; almost 50 years ago !) Greasy |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Greasy Rider© @invalid.com wrote:
vincent p. norris postulated : My son-in-law, who was in the Navy about 30 years ago, mentioned at dinner today that the guy who graduated #1in his platoon at Marine boot camp was given a set of blues, free. I think that's an urban legend. It certainly wasn't the case when I went through Parris Island in 1946. Was it done at San Diego? Anyone know? Thanks. vince norris It was true the summer of 1955 when I went through PI. (Damn; almost 50 years ago !) OK, fellow Jarheads, I'm bringing in the big guns on this. Just sent a query off to Leatherneck Magazine - those guys are good at this sort of USMCiana, and we'll get to the bottom of it yet. Chapter and verse, I'd warrant. Right now I'd guess the honor man dress blues award was a post-Korean War thing, and we know from Vince that they weren't doing it immediately after WWII [prolly 'cause the USMC had more worries, with Truman/Johnson trying to shut them down], so lets see what the Leatherneck memory/trivia banks come up with. -- OJ III [Email to Yahoo address may be burned before reading. Lower and crunch the sig and you'll net me at comcast.] |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Swift Boat Veterans For Truth: Are They Going To Sink John Kerry? | BUFDRVR | Military Aviation | 151 | September 12th 04 09:59 PM |
Lot of noise being made about Purple Hearts | Jack | Military Aviation | 154 | September 8th 04 07:24 PM |
boot camp advice | jameson | Military Aviation | 17 | July 22nd 04 05:12 AM |
boot camp info | jameson | Naval Aviation | 7 | July 17th 04 02:19 AM |
good book about prisoners of war | Jim Atkins | Military Aviation | 16 | August 1st 03 10:18 AM |