Click here to go Home

About Us

League Officers

History of League

Current Events

Meeting Directions

Announcements

MCL Uniforms

Parris Island

Remembrance

Sgt. R. Lee Ermey

Marine Corps This & That

Brotherhood

Yearly Events

Four Chaplains Service

Iwo Jima

Toys for Tots

Gung Ho Gazette

Editor & Chief

January - February 2005

November - December 2004

 

Once a Marine, Always a Marine!

Join Now

 

 

 

 

 

 

Marine Corps League

Rockland County Detachment

History of the League

 

History of the Marine Corps League

THE MARINE CORPS LEAGUE was founded by Major General Commandant, John A. Lejeune, in 1923 and chartered by an Act of Congress on August 4, 1937. Its membership of nearly 50,000 is comprised of honorably discharged, active duty and Reserve Marines with 90 days of service or more, and retired Marines. It includes officer, enlisted, male and female members.
The Marine Corps League is headed by an elected National Commandant, with 14 elected national staff officers who serve as trustees. Day to day operations are under the control of an executive director who supervises the day-to-day performance of the national headquarters staff, located at 8626 Lee Highway in Fairfax, Virginia.
The prime authority of the League is derived from its charter and from its annual national convention held in August in different major U. S. cities throughout the nation. The National Commandant has operational control over the National Headquarters staff and the National Board of Trustees, who in turn coordinate the efforts of 45 department, or State entities, and the activities of over 780 community-based detachments located throughout the United States and overseas.
The League is classified as a veterans / military service organization and was formed for the purposes of promoting the interests of the U. S. Marine Corps; to provide camaraderie and assistance to Marines, as well as to their widows and orphans; and to preserve the traditions of the U. S. Marine Corps. It is a not for profit organization within the provisions of Internal Revenue Service Code 50l (c) (4), with a special group exemption letter which allows for contributions to the Marine Corps League, its Auxiliary and subsidiary units, to be tax deductible by the donor.
         
League members participate in:
The Veterans Administration Voluntary Service Program, an assistance program for hospitalized veterans
A national Service Program, which provides assistance to veterans in a wide area of matters relating to their military service
The League also:
Awards scholarships
Sponsors a National Youth Physical Fitness Program
Provides membership incentives
Participates in patriotic functions and provides representation to the U. S. Congress in legislative matters affecting the U. S. Marine Corps, national security and veterans benefits through its National Legislative Committee and its National Legislative Officer

FUN FACTS

Many of the Marines from our detachment were both trained and served at Parris Island, South Carolina.

Please click on the Photo below to see some historic photos of "THE ISLAND"

Tun Tavern (excerpt from Warrior Culture of the U.S. Marines, copyright 2001 Marion F. Sturkey)

   Ask any Marine.  Just ask.  He will tell you that the Marine Corps was born in Tun Tavern on 10 November 1775.  But, beyond that the Marine's recollection for detail will probably get fuzzy.  So, here is the straight scoop:

   In the year 1685, Samuel Carpenter built a huge "brew house" in Philadelphia.  He located this tavern on the waterfront at the corner of Water Street and Tun Alley.  The old English word tun means a cask, barrel, or keg of beer.  So, with his new beer tavern on Tun Alley, Carpenter elected to christen the new waterfront brewery with a logical name, Tun Tavern.

   Tun Tavern quickly gained a reputation for serving fine beer.  Beginning 47 years later in 1732, the first meetings of the St. John's No. 1 Lodge of the Grand Lodge of the Masonic Temple were held in the tavern.  An American of note, Benjamin Franklin, was its third Grand Master.  Even today the Masonic Temple of Philadelphia recognizes Tun Tavern as the birthplace of Masonic teachings in America.

   Roughly ten years later in the early 1740s, the new proprietor expanded Tun Tavern and gave the addition a new name, "Peggy Mullan's Red Hot Beef Steak Club at Tun Tavern."  The new restaurant became a smashing commercial success and was patronized by notable Americans.  In 1747 the St. Andrews Society, a charitable group dedicated to assisting poor immigrants from Scotland, was founded in the tavern.

   Nine years later, then Col. Benjamin Franklin organized the Pennsylvania Militia.  He used Tun Tavern as a gathering place to recruit a regiment of soldiers to go into battle against the Indian uprisings that were plaguing the American colonies.  George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, and the Continental Congress later met in Tun Tavern as the American colonies prepared for independence from the English Crown. English Crown.

   On November 10, 1775, the Continental Congress commissioned Samuel Nicholas to raise two Battalions of Marines.  That very day, Nicholas set up shop in Tun Tavern.  He appointed Robert Mullan, then the proprietor of the tavern, to the job of chief Marine Recruiter -- serving, of course, from his place of business at Tun Tavern.  Prospective recruits flocked to the tavern, lured by (1) cold beer and (2) the opportunity to serve in the new Corps of Marines.  So, yes, the U.S. Marine Corps was indeed born in Tun Tavern.  Needless to say, both the Marine Corps and the tavern thrived during this new relationship.

   Tun Tavern still lives today.  And, Tun Tavern beer is still readily available throughout the Philadelphia area.  Further, through magazines it is advertised to Marines throughout the world.

  Marines' Hymn:  Marine Warriors stormed Derna and gave us "the shores of Tripoli."  Marine Warriors fought their way into the castle at Chapultepec and gave us the "halls of Montezuma."  Marines exist for the sole purpose of war fighting.  That is their role in life.  They "fight for right and freedom" and "to keep our honor clean."  They fight "in the air, on land, and sea."  Truly, Marine Corps is Valhalla for Warriors.

  Ironically, no one knows who wrote the hymn, which was in widespread use by the mid 1800's.  Col. A.S. McLemore, USMC, spent several years trying to identify the origin of the tune.  In 1878 he told the leader of the Marine Band that the tune had been adopted from the comic opera Genevieve de Barbant, by James Offenback.  Yet, other research supports the view that the tune originated from a Spanish folf song.  But, regardless of its origin the Marines' Hymn has remained a revered icon of the United States Marine Corps for almost 200 years.

  In 1929 the Marines' Hymn became the official hymn of the Corps.  Thirteen years later in November 1942, the Commandant approved a change in the words of the first verse, fourth line.  Because of the increasing use of military aircraft in the Corps, the words were changed to "In the air, on land, and sea."  No other changes have been made since that time:

From the Halls of Montezuma,
  To the Shores of Tripoli;
We Fight our country's battles
  In the air, on land, and sea;
First to fight for right and freedom
  And to keep our honor clean;
We are proud to claim the title
  Of UNITED STATES MARINES.

Our flag's unfurled to every breeze

  From dawn to setting sun;
We have fought in every clime and place
  Where we could take a gun;
In the snow of far off northern lands
  And in sunny tropic scenes;
You will find us always on the job --
  The UNITED STATES MARINES.

Here's health to you and to our Corps

  Which we are proud to serve;
In many a strife we've fought  for life
  And never lost our nerve;
If the Army and Navy
  Ever look on Heaven's scenes;
They will find the streets are guarded
  By UNITED STATES MARINES.

Marine Corps Motto:  (excerpt from Warrior Culture of the U.S. Marines, copyright 2001 Marion F. Sturkey) 

The Marine Corps adopted Semper Fidelis as its official motto in 1883 (Semper Fidelis is also the title of the official musical March of the Marine Corps).  Translated from Latin, Semper Fidelis means "Always Faithful."  U.S. Marines use an abbreviated verbal version, "Semper Fi," to voice loyalty and commitment to their Marine comrades-in-arms.  Previous mottos of the Marine Corps were (1) To the Shores of Tripoli, adopted in 1805; (2) Fortitude, adopted in 1812; (3) From the Halls of Montezuma to the Shores of Tripoli, adopted in 1848; and (4) By Sea and by Land, adopted in the 1850's.

 

E-Mail Us:

or Mail us at

PO Box 191

Haverstraw, NY 10927

Incorporated by an act of Congress in 1937, the Marine Corps League perpetuates the traditions and spirit of ALL Marines who proudly wear or who have worn the eagle, globe and anchor of the Corps.

 

 

 

 

Additional Link's

Links & Sponsors

Marine FrontPage News

NYC Marines

Buddy Finder (Military. COM)

V-Mail (WWII)

Veterans Service Organizations - Marine Corps League

Marine Corps League Detachments on Line

Marine Forces Reserve

Marine Corps Law Enforcement Foundation

The American Legion

Vietnam Veterans Of America

Desert Strom Memorial

Tools & Resources

Currency Exchange Rates

What Time is it around the World ?

Zip code lookup

Area code lookup

 

Disclaimer: The Marine Corps League Rockland County Detachment is NOT responsible for technical inaccuracies or typographical errors. Links to sites outside of the Rockland County Detachment web site domain do not constitute endorsement by the Rockland County Detachment. The Rockland County Detachment does not exercise any editorial control over the information you may find at these locations.

Web Design by Joyce Power