CHAPTER 1
THE EARLY YEARS
“Resolved, That two battalions of marines be raised … that they be inlisted and commissioned to serve for and during the present war between Great Britain and the colonies, unless dismissed by order of Congress: that they be distinguished by the names of the first and second battalions of American marines.”
Thus was the Marine Corps born, on November 10, 1775.
It had been a tumultuous year for the colonies. Seven months before, the American revolution had begun with the battles of Lexington and Concord. Throughout the fall, the Second Continental Congress, meeting in Philadelphia, had debated the subject of a Continental Navy. By February 17, 1776, the debate was over. A contingent of eight ships sailed down the icy Delaware River, bound for the Bahamas. It was the first deployment of the Continental Navy. Under the command of Commodore Esek Hopkins was the flagship Alfred with her 24 guns. Beside her sailed the Columbus, the Andrea Doria, and the Cabot. The sloops Hornet and Providence were nearby, as were the schooners Wasp and Fly. Sailing with the Continental Navy were 234 enlisted Marines under the command of Captain Samuel Nicholas. Hopkins planned to seize the capital city of Nassau, on the northern side of New Providence Island. The harbor was guarded by Forts Montague and Nassau. A secret report to Congress claimed a large cache of military stores were located there. Hopkins hoped to obtain casks of gunpowder, desperately needed by Washington’s Army.
On March 3, 1776, Samuel Nicholas and his Marines executed the first amphibious landing in Marine history when they came ashore on New Providence Island. The landing was unopposed and Fort Montague was secured. At dawn, Captain Nicholas led his men to Fort Nassau, which was surrendered after a few cannon shots. The British colors were taken down and the Marines raised the Grand Union. When the Continental Navy sailed two weeks later, they took with them 3 captured British ships, 24 casks of gunpowder, cannons, and brass mortars. For his role in the New Providence raid, Captain Nicholas was promoted to the rank of major and ordered to raise four more companies of Marines. These men were to man the tops and the great guns of four new frigates.
By December 1776, a series of British attacks had Washington’s Army on the run. Told “the Enemy having overrun the Jerseys, & our Army being greatly reduced,” Nicholas was ordered to Trenton. He took with him a “battalion” of 131 Marines, and for the first time, Marines joined an American army in a land campaign. On New Year’s Day, 1777, Washington dispatched a force to delay any advance of the British Army, under the command of Major-General Charles Cornwallis. Fighting with the Philadelphia brigade, under the command of Colonel John Cadwalader, the Marines took up position along Assunpink Creek. There the British attempted to cross, but were stopped.
The delaying action gave Washington the time he needed. That night, in the bitter cold, the Continental Army left their campfires burning. They slipped around the left flank of Cornwallis’ army and marched toward Princeton. In the morning, Washington divided his forces into two columns. One column, to which the Marines were attached, was to cut the main road from Trenton to Princeton. That column, however, ran into three British regiments and was beginning to falter when Washington rode up and rallied the brigade for a charge against Cornwallis’s men. As reinforcement arrived, the tide of the battle turned. It was now the British who were on the run, retreating north. For the “soldiers of the sea,” their first land campaign was at an end. Washington’s forces moved to their winter quarters in Morristown, New Jersey. Nicholas’s “battalion” was down to 80 men.
As the Continental Navy grew, so did the Marines. By 1778, there were 11 detachments of Marines afloat. They fought from the rigging, firing muskets or dropping grenades onto British ships. Often, the Marines manned the great guns, serving as artillerymen. It was from the Marine detachments that boarding parties and raiding parties were formed, carrying the battles onto enemy ships or enemy-held shores.
On January 27, a 28-man detachment off the frigate Providence made a second amphibious assault on New Providence Island. The objective was the seizure of the British privateer Mary, which was being overhauled at Nassau. Led ashore in darkness by Captain John Trevett, the Marines slipped through a gap in Fort Nassau’s palisade. Guarded only by two watchmen, the Marines quickly secured the fort. Trevett informed Nassau’s town council his orders were to seize the Mary. The council decided not to intervene, and the Marines held Nassau for four days, then sailed with the Mary and four captured American ships they had discovered in the harbor.
Later that year, Continental Marines accompanied John Paul Jones on the raid of Whitehaven in the Solway Firth. Jones, a fiery Scot, commanded the Ranger. On the night of April 22, Jones and a landing party of 30 men rowed ashore. It was the first time since 1667 that a foreign enemy had landed on British soil. Scaling the wall of the fort that guarded the southern end of the harbor, they found the gunners asleep at their post. Jones took them prisoner and spiked the guns. After repeating the feat at the northern battery, Jones procured a torch from a public house and set alight the hold of a large ship. However, the townspeople, alerted that Yankee pirates were burning the shipping in the harbor, extinguished the fires, and Jones and his men made their escape back to the Ranger.
The Marines who landed at Penobscot Bay, Maine, the following year were not so fortunate. A large British force, including the Argyll Highlanders and three sloops-of-war, had moved down from Halifax to establish a fort at the mouth of the Penobscot River. The fort was to serve as an advanced base from which to strike American privateers and to protect a colony of Loyalists. The Massachusetts State Board of War assembled a large force to expel the British. Commanded by Captain Dudley Saltonstall, three ships of the Continental Navy set sail, along with the four brigs that comprised the Massachusetts navy. With them went a dozen privateers and some 20 merchantmen.
On July 25, the Americans found the bay protected by the three sloops. In addition, a battery had been established and construction of a log fort begun on Banks Island. An interlocking field of fire covered the entrance to the harbor. The following day, Marines led by Captain John Welsh seized Banks Island and captured four light artillery pieces. The British ships began taking fire from the captured battery and withdrew upriver. Brigadier-General Solomon Lovell, commanding the landing force, wanted to put ashore on the southern side of the peninsula. Saltonstall disagreed, not wishing to enter the harbor until the fort was destroyed. Lovell’s force would, instead, land on the western shore of the peninsula. On July 28, the Marines came ashore under heavy musket fire and scrambled to the top of a steep cliff defended by British Marines and soldiers of the Hamilton regiment. The British were driven back to Fort George. The British commander stood ready to haul down his colors and surrender, but an attack never came. Brigadier-General Lovell refused to attack until the American ships were brought in close enough to add their firepower to the fray, and Saltonstall refused to bring the ships close to the British sloops-of-war. By August 13, a British fleet comprised of the 64-gun Raisonable, four frigates, and three sloops-of-war entered Penobscot Bay. Saltonstall signaled, “All ships fend for yourself.” Nineteen of the American vessels were captured, sunk, or burned. The soldiers and Marines ashore were left to escape into the Maine wilderness.
By 1779, John Paul Jones had a new ship, the Bonhomme Richard. A force of 137 Marines, Irish soldiers of the French Army’s Infanterie Irlandaise Regiment de Walsh-Serrant, manned the fighting tops. On September 23, Jones sighted a British convoy escorted by the Serapis and the Countess of Scarborough. Closing, Jones fired a starboard broadside into Serapis. Within an hour, the Marines had cleared Serapis’s tops. Jones had the two ships lashed together, bow to stern. Marine musketry prevented the British from cutting the grappling hooks. Both ships continued to fire at point-blank range, and soon the two ships were ablaze and in danger of sinking. It was the presence of Marines in the tops that turned the epic sea battle, for they kept Serapis cleared of defenders. A seaman then dropped a grenade from the yardarm of the Bonhomme Richard into an open hatch of the Serapis, exploding powder sacks on the deck below. The British captain, his ship ablaze, struck his colors and surrendered.
The last battle of the Continental Marines, however, was a defeat. Four American ships had been dispatched to bolster Charleston’s defenses. A large British force landed in February 1780 and put the American ships out of action. The Marine detachments were ordered to the city’s five waterfront batteries. There they fought valiantly but were outnumbered and finally surrendered on May 12. In 1783, the Treaty of Paris ended the Revolutionary War and the Continental Marines gradually disappeared. While the exact number of Marines who fought in the revolution is not known, it did not exceed 2,000.
The Official Founding of the Corps
Fifteen years later, on July 11, 1798, President John Adams approved “an Act for establishing and organizing a Marine Corps.” The new law established service at sea as the primary duty of the Marines, but also authorized “any other duty ashore, as the President, at his direction, shall direct.” The strength of the service was to number 33 officers and 848 men commanded by a major. The following day, Adams selected William Ward Burrows to command the newly formed Corps.
Burrows was adamant that the role of the Marine Corps as a separate service be established and its duties defined. He staunchly supported his officers in that effort, and demonstrated his support in 1799 after an incident aboard the Ganges. First Lieutenant Anthony Gale, commanding the Marine detachment, was involved in a verbal altercation over the treatment of a Marine, and was struck by a naval officer. The Ganges’ captain ignored the incident, but Gale did not. When the ship reached port, Gale challenged the offending officer to a duel and killed him. Burrows approved of Gale’s actions: “It is hoped that this may be a lesson to the Navy officers to treat Marines, as well as their officers, with some more Respect.”
In 1798, the Quasi-War with France began. A French policy of seizing any ship which was known to be trading with Britain or to be carrying goods of British manufacture had exacted a high price on American shipping. Over 300 American vessels were seized. In response to this, American warships were instructed to attack armed French vessels. This was a policy which led to the first Marine Corps landings on foreign soil. The first of these would occur on May 12, 1800, when the French privateer Sandwich was captured by Marines in Santo Domingo. A few months afterwards, in September, Marines landed in Curacao, a Dutch possession that had been invaded by French troops. Less than a week later, the Quasi-War had ended.
Peace, however, was shortlived. For years, the Barbary States of North Africa had demanded exorbitant tributes and ransoms from American merchantmen sailing the Mediterranean. Nearly a million dollars was paid to the Barbary pirates, but in May 1801, the Pasha of Tripoli declared war on America. In October 1803, the fast frigate Philadelphia was dispatched to blockade Tripoli. The ship, however, went aground on an unchartered reef. The captain tried in vain to free the vessel, while the Philadelphia was surrounded by gunboats. The captain struck his colors. The ship and her crew, including 43 Marines, were captured and held hostage. In February 1804, eight Marines joined a volunteer raiding party led by Navy Lieutenant Stephen Decatur. They entered Tripoli Harbor, then boarded the Philadelphia and set her ablaze. Not a single man was lost. British Admiral Horatio Nelson would later praise the American raid as “the most bold and daring act of the age.”
It was, however, another bold assault that would capture the attention of the American public. In the spring of 1805, an overland expedition, led by William H. Eaton, set out to overthrow the Pasha. With Eaton went seven Marines led by a young lieutenant named Presley O’Bannon. Their 600-mile (966-km) trek across the Libyan desert and subsequent attack on the city of Derna became the stuff of Marine Corps legend. On June 3, Yusef Karamanli, Pasha of Tripoli, concluded a treaty with the United States. The captured crew of the Philadelphia was released and all claims to tribute were waived for a payment of the sum of $60,000. The Barbary War had finally been brought to an end.
By 1812, the United States was once again at war with Great Britain. The reasons for the conflict were primarily maritime in nature. The U.S. objected to the restriction of “neutral” American trade, and to the impressment of Americans into the Royal Navy. More than 6,000 American sailors had been seized under the pretense that they were British-born subjects of the king. When the war began on June 18, the majority of the Marine Corps’ 493 men were serving aboard ship. Great sea battles marked the beginning of the conflict. On August 19, the Marines aboard U.S.S. Constitution were the first to see action when the American warship met the Guerrière. Marine musket fire cleared the deck of the British ship. The commander of the Marine detachment, Lieutenant William Bush, was lost when he leapt to the rail, shouting, “Shall I board her, sir?” The British response was musket fire. The battle continued until the Guerrière’s masts were shot away. Defeated, the British surrendered and the ship was burned. Four months later, the United States captured the Macedonian. In December, Marines played a major role when the Constitution met the frigate Java in battle off the coast of Brazil. Commanded by First Lieutenant John Contee, the Marine detachment proved their skills as sharpshooters. As the two ships closed, British Captain James Lambert led his boarding party against the Constitution. He was mortally wounded by a Marine firing the Model 1808 U.S. musket. In the three-hour battle, Marine musket fire ripped through Java’s crew. British casualties numbered 48 killed, another 102 wounded. Finally, her decks awash with blood, the Java surrendered. The British, who had described the American Navy as a “handful of firbuilt frigates with bits of striped bunting at their mastheads, manned by bastards and outlaws,” had lost three frigates to this fleet.
The next major action brought defeat to the Americans, but even then the Marines fought valiantly. On June 1, 1813, the American frigate Chesapeake sailed out of Boston harbor to engage the Shannon. Forty-four Marines were aboard, but otherwise her crew was inexperienced and untried. As the two ships closed, they fired broadside to broadside. Chesapeake was heavily damaged, her captain mortally wounded. British fire cut through the crew and many of Chesapeake’s sailors fled below. The British boarded, facing only the surviving Marines and a few sailors battling with clubbed muskets. In a quarter-hour battle, half of Chesapeake’s crew were casualties. Thirty-four Marines went down fighting.
In 1814, Napoleon was defeated in Europe and exiled to the island of Elba. War with France was over and Britain focused her full attention on the United States. On August 3, a British expeditionary force of 4,000 men, led by Major-General Robert Ross, sailed for the Chesapeake Bay. Sixteen days later, Ross made his way up the Patuxtent River and landed his force at Benedict, Maryland. Unopposed, the British marched to Marlboro and rendezvoused with the forces of Rear Admiral George Cockburn, which included two battalions of Royal Marines. They then turned north and began to advance on Washington. Defense of the capital was the responsibility of Brigadier-General He...