Posted on 01/14/2006 9:30:11 AM PST by Sub-Driver
After 155 years, Marine sentries removed from Naval Academy to be sent to war Saturday January 14, 2006
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) A Naval Academy tradition that lasted 155 years has come to an end: The Marine Corps sentries who guarded the gates and the crypt of Revolutionary War Capt. John Paul Jones have been withdrawn and sent to war.
The four dozen Marines were released from their security duties in a ceremony on Friday and are being replaced by Navy enlisted personnel.
``Pray for them, for many of them are going into harm's way,'' a chaplain said in an invocation for the departing members of the Naval Academy Company, Marine Barracks.
The Marines have provided security at the gates and for dignitaries' visits and special events on the academy campus since before the Civil War. They also performed largely ceremonial duties, including standing guard outside the crypt of Jones, one of the founders of the Navy.
(Excerpt) Read more at wcbs880.com ...
ping for later
The intended meaning behind this story.
While I'm sure they take pride in their sentry job, what Marine wouldn't want to go and "get dirty" for change?
These guys are veterans of the Civil War! They were eligible for retirement what, in 1871?! I say we cut 'em some slack!
:-P
A 155-year tradition will come to an end at 0530 Sunday, when Lance Cpls. Edward Voumard and Kyle Boeser turn over their guard post at Gate 8 of the Naval Academy to sailors.
They will be the last Marines to guard the academy.
By Paul W. Gillespie -- The Capital
Capt. Andrew Frantz and Cpl. Ryan June at the ceremony deactivating their unit.
The storied company is being abolished and the Marines reassigned to bases in California and North Carolina. It marks the end of an era at a school that embraces its history and traditions - the unit is one of the few that has battle streamers from the Spanish-American War of 1898 and the Cuban Pacification from 1906 to 1909.
Marines have stood sentry at the crypt of John Paul Jones, patrolled the Yard and the naval station across the Severn River and guarded the academy gates from behind sandbags after the Sept. 11 attacks.
"These changes always bring some nostalgia," said retired Maj. Gen. Tom Wilkerson, CEO of the Naval Institute on the academy's grounds. "I love going through the gate every day and saying, 'Good morning, Marine.' "
At a ceremony at Memorial Hall this morning, the 48 members of the company faced a crowd of Marines, civilians, and Navy personnel. Vice Admiral Rodney. P. Rempt, the superintendent of the U.S. Naval Academy, congratulated the company on its professionalism, toughness, and ready smile.
But he said he understood they were needed elsewhere.
"In the global war on terrorism, it is these young men we put our trust in," he said in a speech followed by a standing ovation for the Marines.
While none of the Marines has been ordered to Iraq or Afghanistan, Col. T. M. Lockard, the commanding officer of the Washington Marine Barracks, said they were "in the queue."
"It is an end of an era, but because this nation is at war and Marines and sailors play a prominent role .... (it was) decided the marines were more needed elsewhere," he said.
The move is part of a Marine Corps initiative aimed at increasing the Corps' fighting strength.
The Marine guards stationed at the academy are infantry, but the sailors who will take over are military police, said 2nd Lt. Elle Helmer, a Marine spokesman in Washington. The Corps still will have a presence at the academy, as Marines will continue to serve as trainers and instructors.
The academy unit is the second oldest in the Corps, surpassed only by the guard posted at the Navy Yard in Washington. Marines have been assigned there for security since 1851, three years after the academy's founding.
During some eras they provided general security for the school and the naval station across the Severn River; at other times they have guarded the gates to the academy.
Marines at the academy constituted a detachment until the end of World War I, when the unit was redesignated Marine Barracks, Annapolis, according to the academy. In 1994, they were redesignated again, as the U.S. Naval Academy Company, Marine Barracks, Washington, D.C.
Two former commanding officers of the barracks went on to become commandants of the Marine Corps: Major Gens. John H. Russell and Ben H. Fuller.
Marines historically provided a number of services at the academy, including maintaining weapons and running the armory and physical fitness courses.
Over the years, they lived in various barracks and aboard at least seven ships on the Severn River, said James W. Cheevers, Naval Academy Museum senior curator.
As part of their ceremonial duties, the Marines guarded the Naval Academy Museum and the crypt of John Paul Jones until the early 1990s, when they were needed for war in Iraq, Mr. Cheevers said.
The Marines also have been a colorful part of local history, and one of their more memorable leaders was Lt. Col. McLane Tilton, who grew up in Annapolis and served in the Civil War and in the 1871 invasion of Korea.
Col. Tilton was known for keeping a coffin in his house on Maryland Avenue.
"The story is that he would hop into it sometimes, to make sure it still fit," said longtime Annapolis resident Elaine Spencer Underwood, who owns the house now.
When Col. Tilton died, his children declined to bury him in the homemade affair, painted battleship gray, opting for something presumably nicer.
Published January 13, 2006, The Capital, Annapolis, Md. Copyright © 2006 The Capital, Annapolis, Md.
http://www.hometownannapolis.com/cgi-bin/read/2006/01_13-50/NAV
January 13, 2006
Academy commemorates 155 years of Marine Corps service
by JO2 Matt Jarvis
Trident Staff Writer
The Naval School was established in 1845 and became the U.S. Naval Academy in 1850. In 1851, the United States Marine Corps made its first appearance on the school's grounds.
Now after 155 years of service on the Yard, the United States Naval Academy Company, Marine Barracks, Washington, as it is now known, will be disestablished in a ceremony today in Memorial Hall at 10 a.m.
The ceremony will commemorate the service of excellence Marines have provided for so long, said Marine Corps Capt. Andrew Frantz, company commander of Naval Academy Company, Marine Barracks, Washington.
"We have been part of the academy for a long time," said Frantz. "Just the fact that a Marine Barracks or a Marine security unit has been here for that long is remarkable. We are the second oldest post as far as duty stations in the Marine Corps and that is pretty significant when it just goes away."
Since 1851, Marines have been quartered aboard seven different ships and in three of their own buildings. The ships include the training vessels USS Preble, Macedonian, Savannah, Constitution and Winnepec and the station ships, USS Santee and Reina Mercedes.
A new building or Marine Barracks was built in 1881, along with a house for the senior Marine officer, on the first Porter Row. It was razed when the Naval Academy was completely rebuilt between 1899 and 1908.
Halligan Hall, near Gate 8, was built in 1903 as the new Marine Barracks, and the three yellow brick houses across the road as Marine officer's quarters. Later, this Marine Barracks became the site of Navy's Postgraduate School, and a new Marine Barracks was built at North Severn in 1918, and later named Fuller Hall for Maj. Gen. Ben H. Fuller, who graduated from the academy and served as commandant of the Marine Corps from 1930 to 1934.
In 1919, the Marine Barracks, Annapolis, Md., was reformed and quartered aboard USS Reina Mercedes until it was renamed as Marine Detachment, USS Reina Mercedes in 1931 until reformed again as the Marine Barracks, U.S. Naval Station, Annapolis Md., in 1947.
In the early years the company was called "Marine Guards" which was formerly established on Aug. 31, 1865. The term "Marine Barracks, Annapolis Md.," came into use after the Marines moved ashore for the first time during the 1880s.
Only a few Marine Barracks had members participate in the Spanish-American War of 1898, the Cuban Pacification from 1906 to 1909, World War I and World War II. The unit at the academy was one of them. The barracks was awarded battle streamers for each conflict and victory streamers for the two World Wars, along with the National Defense Service streamer with one Bronze Star.
"We don't carry the streamers only because that was earned by Marine Barracks, Annapolis which was disestablished in 1994," said Frantz. "It is our lineage but those aren't our streamers as a unit here. We don't fly them because we don't rate them technically as a company. That is all going to the Marine Corps Museum."
Marine Barracks, Annapolis Md., retired its colors Feb. 19, 1994, becoming known by its current name, United States Naval Academy Company, Marine Barracks, Washington. With the name change, the unit became part of the oldest post in the Marine Corps, Marine Barracks, 8th & I, in Washington, D.C.
Navy Sailors will take over all the security operations that the Marines currently hold, said Frantz.
"There is not going to be any difference except for the fact it is Sailors instead of Marines," said Frantz. "We have been working with these Sailors for over a month now. They are just as much of a professional group of Sailors as we have been a professional group of Marines. There isn't going to be any difference as far as security is concerned. The Sailors are a motivated bunch and are very well trained."
Marines assigned to the Naval Academy have maintained a standard of excellence and professionalism with selfless dedication to duty, said Frantz. This is the legacy of the Marine Corps unit in Annapolis that the Navy security personnel from Naval District Washington will have no problem living up to.
"The Navy guards who are here will make their own history. They will be fine," said Frantz. "I don't think there is going to be any problems at all. The only thing that is going to change is the pattern of the camouflage and the emblem on the uniform. I think the same professionalism will be maintained at the gates that the Marines had.
"Security-wise, everything will be the same. The protection level here at the Naval Academy and security won't be diminished by any means just because the Marines aren't here."
Marines will continue to be assigned to the Naval Academy to support the educational aspect of the academy in such capacities as the deputy commandant of midshipmen, director of the humanities and social sciences division, faculty members, company officers, senior enlisted advisors and drill instructors.
The Marine Company is being disestablished as part of a Marine Corps-wide initiative to realign its forces to better support Marine Corps combat units. Half the Marine Company will report to 29 Palms, Calif., and the other half will go to Camp Lejeune, N.C.
The Marines are ready to go, said Frantz.
"Gunny tends to run them pretty hard. They are more ready than they think they are. They are all excited to go out there. Mentally, the Marines are certainly all ready to go to the fleet. All they talk about is going to Iraq. They are excited."
Marine Barracks, 8th & I, in Washington, D.C., will still provide the academy with ceremonial support.
http://www.dcmilitary.com/navy/trident/10_47/features/39126-1.html
Academy ends a 155-year tradition
The mission of the unit has also changed over time. The Marines began guarding the gates in 1987 after a long hiatus. They had not manned the gates since the Spanish-American War. After the Sept. 11 attacks, they began focusing exclusively on security measures to deter potential attacks. The Marine guards began requiring identification for all who entered the academy. That policy led to a confrontation between a Marine guard and then-Superintendent Richard J. Naughton at Gate 3 on New Year's Eve 2003, which triggered a military probe that led to Naughton's resignation.
When the decision was announced last April, Annapolis officials mourned the Marines' parting. U.S. Rep. Benjamin L. Cardin, a Democrat who represents Anne Arundel County, said he was "extremely disappointed by the decision."
Annapolis Mayor Ellen O. Moyer also expressed disappointment. "I would feel a lot better if the Marines were there guarding the base," she said.
In the late 70's I had a buddy who was a Marine guard at the Academy... he messed with the midddies something awful.
Let's hope they don't have to parachute in.
'that thing is called an airplane ?'
The Navy is taking on more and more of it's own security functions as the Marines are going off to do their own thing.
Marine ping!
Saddle up Marines, do your duty, make us proud, heads on a swivel and happy hunting.
I wish I were 25 years younger....dang it makes me proud to think about those fine young men.
Many years ago it was fun to drive through gates guarded by Marines at various naval installations. Especially if we were with a Navy guy in a sports car the rule was to pull your skirt up as high as it could go and hold onto a brown paper bag that supposedly had a bottle of alcohol in it. Very bad - but fun!
martin_fierro,
GREAT POST!
"But these 48 Marines are integral in increasing the fighting strength of the Corps ?
Seems like a weak reason for this stand-down."
You have to realize that since the 1993 "Bottoms Up Review" the force structure has been cut nearly in half. Non core mission jobs such as these strain the residual force. You don't see many Marines at the gates of Navy bases these days.
I remember driving through the gates of the Naval Academy with fond memories. Wonder if that is why my Midshipman took his commission in the Marine Corps? They always looked dashing!
Great post.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.