Wednesday's Hero
This Weeks Solider Was Suggested By Robert
June 26, 1898 - October 11, 1971
Lieutenant General Lewis B. "Chesty" Puller was a colorful veteran of the Korean War, four World War II campaigns, and expeditionary service in China, Nicaragua, and Haiti. He is the only one to win it five times for heroism and gallantry in combat earing him the distinction of being the most decorated Marine in the history of the USMC.
A Marine officer and enlisted man for 37 years, General Puller served at sea or overseas for all but ten of those years, including a hitch as commander of the "Horse Marines" in China. Excluding medals from foreign governments, he won a total of 14 personal decorations in combat, plus a long list of campaign medals, unit citation ribbons and other awards. In addition to the Navy Crosses, the highest honor the Navy can bestow, he holds its Army equivalent, the Distinguished Service Cross. A list of his awards can be found here.
Born 26 June 1898, at West Point, Virginia, the general attended Virginia Military Institute until enlisting in the Marine Corps in August 1918. He was appointed a Marine Reserve second lieutenant 16 June 1919, but due to force reductions after World War I, was placed on inactive duty ten days later. He rejoined the Marines as an enlisted man to serve with the Gendarmerie d'Haiti, a military force in that country under a treaty with the United States. Most of its officers were U. S. Marines, while its enlisted personnel were Haitians.
After almost five years in Haiti, where he saw frequent action against the Caco rebels, Puller returned in March 1924 to the United States. He was commissioned a Marine second lieutenant that same month, and during the next two years, served at the Marine Barracks, Norfolk, Virginia, completed the Basic School at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and served with the 10th Marine Regiment at Quantico, Virginia.
In July of 1926, Puller embarked for a two-year tour of duty at the Marine Barracks, Pearl Harbor. Returning in June 1928, he served in San Diego, California, until he joined the Nicaraguan National Guard Detachment that December. After winning his first Navy Cross in Nicaragua, he returned to the United States in July 1931 to enter the Company Officers Course at the Army Infantry School, Fort Benning, Georgia. He completed the course in June 1932 and returned to Nicaragua the following month to begin the tour of duty that brought him a second Navy Cross.
In January 1933, Puller left Nicaragua for the United States. A month later he sailed from San Francisco to join the Marine Detachment of the American Legation at Peiping, China. There, in addition to other duties, he commanded the famed "Horse Marines." Without coming back to the United States, he began a tour of sea duty in USS AUGUSTA of the Asiatic Fleet. In June 1936 he returned to the United States to become an instructor in the Basic School at Philadelphia. He left there in May 1939 to serve another year as commander of the AUGUSTA's Marine Detachment, and from that cruiser, joined the 4th Marine Regiment at Shanghai, China, in May 1940.
After serving as a battalion executive and commanding officer with the 4th Marines, Puller sailed for the United States in August 1941. In September, he took command of the 1st Battalion, 7th Marines, 1st Marine Division, at Camp Lejeune. That Regiment was detached from the 1st Division in March 1942 and the following month, as part of the 3rd Marine Brigade, sailed for the Pacific theater. The 7th Regiment rejoined the 1st Marine Division in September 1942, and Puller, still commanding its 1st Battalion, went on to win his third Navy Cross at Guadalcanal.
The action that brought him that medal occurred on the night of October 24-25 1942. For a desperate three hours his battalion, stretched over a mile-long front, was the only defense between vital Henderson Airfield and a regiment of seasoned Japanese troops. In pouring jungle rain the Japanese smashed repeatedly at his thin line, as General Puller moved up and down its length to encourage his men and direct the defense. After reinforcements arrived, he commanded the augmented force until late the next afternoon. The defending Marines suffered less than 70 casualties in the engagement while 1400 of the enemy were killed and 17 truckloads of Japanese equipment were recovered by the Americans.
After Guadalcanal, Puller became executive officer of the 7th Marines. He was fighting in that capacity when he won his fourth Navy Cross at Cape Gloucester in January 1944. There, when the commanders of the two battalions were wounded, he took over their units and moved through heavy machine-gun and mortar fire to reorganize them for attack, then led them in taking a strongly fortified enemy position.
In February 1944, Puller took command of the 1st Marines at Cape Gloucester. After leading that regiment for the remainder of the campaign, he sailed with it for the Russell Islands in April 1944. He went on to command it at Peleliu in September and October 1944. He returned to the United States in November 1944, named executive officer of the Infantry Training Regiment at Camp Lejeune in January 1945, and took command of that regiment the next month.
In August 1946, Puller became Director of the 8th Marine Corps Reserve District, with headquarters at New Orleans, Louisiana. After that assignment, he commanded the Marine Barracks at Pearl Harbor until August 1950, when he arrived at Camp Pendleton, California, to re-establish and take command of the 1st Marines, the same regiment he had led at Cape Gloucester and Peleliu.
Landing with the 1st Marines at Inchon, Korea, in September 1950, he continued to head that regiment until January 1951, when he was promoted to brigadier general and named Assistant Commander of the 1st Marine Division. That May he returned to Camp Pendleton to command the newly reactivated 3rd Marine Division in January 1952. After that, he was assistant at division commander until he took over the Troop Training Unit, Pacific, at Coronado, California, that June. He was promoted to major general in September 1953, and in July 1954, assumed command of the 2nd Marine Division at Camp Lejeune. Despite his illness, he retained that command until February 1955, when he was appointed Deputy Camp Commander. He served in that capacity until August, when he entered the U. S. Naval Hospital at Camp Lejeune prior to retirement.
In 1966, General Puller requested to return to active duty to serve in Vietnam, but was turned down because of his age. He died 11 October 1971 in Hampton, Virginia, after a long illness. He was 73.
These brave men and women sacrifice so much in their lives so that others may enjoy the freedoms we get to enjoy everyday. For that, I am proud to call them Hero.
We Should Not Only Mourn These Men And Women Who Died, We Should Also Thank God That Such People Lived
This post is part of the Wednesday Hero Blogroll. To find out more about Wednesday Hero, you can go here.
8 comments:
Sunni, this Wed. hero stuff is great. How does it work, as I may have a great nominee for you?
Hey there. It is something that fellow blogger started. His name is
Indian Chris. You can sign up to be on the blog roll at
http://rightwingrightminded.blogspot.com/. Or if you locate the Wednesday Hero blog roll on the right hand side of my page, you should be able to go to
Right Wing and Right minded to sign up.
OK, I don't want to sound too green but, what is this 'blog roll' stuff, exactly?
Ah! Well blog rolling is this nifty little set of html that links several sites together, and once the html is installed the individuals with that blog roll on their page never need to make an update.
I have one blog roll for my daily reads, and I started one for Saturday's Super Sites. This is useful because anyone who has been selected a Saturday's Super Site is on the roll. I can then give the code for the blog roll out to everyone on that list and they post it in their side bar. By doing this all the sites are now linked to, by each other, and as I add more sites to the list, the blog roll is automatically updated with no need for the other's on the blog roll to manipulate any html.
Wednesday's Hero is done by another blog author, but it is the same sort of idea. All the blogs that are participating in the posting of the weekly Wednesday's Hero post are now all linked together with one blog roll. You could go to any page on the blog roll and find an identical blog roll with the same sites listed. The owner of the blog roll can add sites as he needs to, and the rest of us do not have to do a thing.
You can also create your own, for your uses and purposes as well. I use blogrolling.com for mine. I hope that wasn't too confusing. Let me know if you have any other questions. I am glad to help.
I get it somewhat. Sorry.
If I did a blog roll of a site would it simply link to that site or would I have an identical post on my site? I like the former idea but, am not so sure about the later.
I would like to post the graphic of your 'Saturday Super Sites' in my sidebar. I would have to understand blog rolls better before I committed to that, however.
I don't mean to be a pain, here.
If you want to link to a single page then just link to it. Blogroll is overkill for that.
However if you have a list of websites that changes fairly regularly then you should use blogroll. So for the Saturday Super Site and Wednesday's Hero the list of website changes week by week. Instead of having to keep adding new links, you can run a blogroll and add / change / delete links at will.
As an added bonus, if many people are running the blogroll, ALL of them are updated at the same time.
Hope that helps,
E
Thanks, I nay try this.
Yes, than you E. You explained much better than I could, and it made a great deal more sense. I love it when fellow readers see me pandering and help out!
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