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    Marine Corps to teach story of first black Marines

    OCEANSIDE, Calif. (AP) — Oscar Culp does not like to remember. His mind has erased the harshest details. But the pain still stings for the 87-year-old World War II veteran, who endured boot camp in a snake-infested North Carolina swampland as one of the first blacks admitted to the Marine Corps.

    He wipes a tear. Black Marines were barred from being stationed with whites at nearby Camp Lejeune. But what hurt worse, he says, was returning from the battlefield to a homeland that ordered him to sit at the back of the bus and drink out of separate fountains from the white Americans he had just put his life on the line to protect.

    "Excuse me," he says, pulling out a handkerchief. "Sometimes we get a little emotional about it."

    The story of the first black Marines is a part of history few Americans — and even few Marines — have learned. Unlike the Army's Buffalo Soldiers or the Army Air Corps' Tuskegee Airmen, the Montford Point Marines have never been featured in popular songs or Hollywood films, or recognized nationally.

    The Corps' new commandant intends to change that.

    Nearly 70 years after the Marine Corps became the last military branch to accept blacks under orders from President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1941, Congress will vote Tuesday on whether to grant the Montford Point Marines the Congressional Gold Medal, the nation's highest civilian honor.

    The Corps up until now has not actively broadcast the painful chapter in the 235-year-old history of an institution that still is largely white, especially in the higher ranks where less than 5 percent of officers are black.

    But Commandant Gen. James Amos — whose own 2010 appointment made him the first Marine aviator named to the Corps' top job — has made diversifying the staunchly traditional branch a top priority. Amos has ordered commanders to be more aggressive in recommending qualified black Marines for officer positions. The Corps this summer named the first black general, Maj. Gen. Ronald Bailey, to lead its storied 1st Marine Division at Camp Pendleton, Calif.

    The Marine Corps also plans to teach all Marines next year about Montford Point, the base near the coastal town of Jacksonville, N.C., that the Corps set up for blacks to keep them separate from white Marines. It operated from 1942 to 1949.

    "Every Marine — from private to general — will know the history of those men who crossed the threshold to fight not only the enemy they were soon to know overseas, but the enemy of racism and segregation in their own country," Amos said.

    Amos has spent the year lobbying Congress to grant Montford Point Marines the civilian medal, which was given to the Tuskegee Airmen in 2006. "It's long overdue," Amos recently told the last remaining Montford Point Marines.

    Most of the 19,000 Montford Point Marines have died, their fellow Marines say.

    "For the most part, we lost our history purposely," said Culp, who has only a few black-and-white photographs from those days. "They didn't want the world to know our history."

    Unlike the Tuskegee pilots — featured in the upcoming Hollywood film "Red Tails" to be released in January — the Montford Point Marines were not officers in the war. The Corps gave those promotions to whites, said University of North Carolina historian Melton McLaurin, whose book "The Marines of Montford Point" is being considered by Amos for his must-read list for Marines.

    "The Corps did not want these guys," McLaurin said. "The commandant of the Corps at the time said if he had a choice between 250,000 African-Americans — he used the term Negroes — and 5,000 whites, he would rather have the whites."

    Culp had just graduated from high school in Charlotte, N.C. at 18 when he volunteered to join in 1943 at the height of WWII.

    "The Marine Corps was advertised as the most elite military organization, and I wanted to be part of the best to prove, given the chance, that we can do whatever anybody else can do," he said.

    He was bused with the other black recruits and dropped at a small shed with a guard who led them into the woods to huts that would serve as their barracks.

    The white drill instructors let it be known they did not agree with the new policy forced on the Corps, with some calling it a disgrace.

    The Montford Point recruits were not allowed to enter Camp Lejeune unless accompanied by a white officer. The few times they went for a training exercise they had to wait to eat until the white Marines had finished.

    "Montford Point was hell really," Culp said. "The water was bad. The barracks were made out of some kind of cardboard. It was cold in the winter. There was ice on the deck where we would sleep."

    He saw drill instructors beat those who did not march correctly.

    "You just had to take it, take a rifle snapped across your head or be kicked. It didn't happen to me but I saw it happen to other people," Culp said. "I really try to forget about the worst things that happened."

    He was sent to the Pacific where his all black ammunition company dodged gunfire as they ferried supplies to the front lines and carried back the dead and wounded. He oversaw the care of white Marines in the brig.

    Montford Point Marines participated in the seizure of Okinawa and came under heavy fire at Iwo Jima, winning praise from some white officers for their actions. They were sent to Japan to clean up the ash after the atomic bomb was dropped over Nagasaki.

    But after the war, the Corps discharged all but 1,500 of them.

    Culp remained, driven by the injustice that "they wanted us to get out."

    "Even after the war they wanted it to be lily white again," he said. "They did certain things to try to get the African-Americans out and show they were not needed anymore. But we had proven that we could do anything the whites could do and sometimes even better."

    Carrel Reavis, 88, was among those who were discharged. But he took a bus from Camp Pendleton across country to Baltimore, Md., where he signed up again.

    The Corps continued to resist desegregation even after President Harry S. Truman's 1948 order, historians say. It wasn't until the Korean War that black Marines fought alongside their white counterparts.

    Moving up the ranks remained difficult. Reavis stayed the same rank for 10 years while he watched the Corps promote white corporals over him to staff sergeant in a couple of months. "We resented things like that and that's what happened to us," he said, "but who could we go to correct it or stop it? Nobody."

    Montford Point Marines pushed each other. Those with college degrees taught the ones without education how to read and write.

    "The perseverance we had was all the same," said Reavis, who stayed in the Corps for 21 years and whose oldest son fought as a Marine in Vietnam, losing his left leg. "We were like a brotherhood."

    Reavis, who served in Korea, said they formed their own organization in 1965, the Montford Point Marine Association, to preserve their legacy.

    Culp left in 1966 as a master gunnery sergeant at Camp Pendleton. He settled in Oceanside, a Pacific coast military town bordering the base, where he opened a furniture store with another Montford Point Marine. Their business card reads: "Two people you can trust."

    Current Marines and their spouses browse through the store, unaware of the two men's place in history. Their offices are adorned with black-and-white Marine Corps photos, including one of Culp among a sea of white faces at Twentynine Palms Marine base in the 1950s.

    He remains close friends with both white and black Marines. Joining the Corps, he says, was his life's "proudest" accomplishment.

    "If all of the Montford Point Marines had to go through what they had already gone through again to protect our country, they would," he said.

     
    • EDDIE  •  St. Louis, United States  •  6 mths ago
      I judge a person by deeds not color. It takes a special person to complete Marine basic. I am what most refer to as white trash but by God I earned the title " United States Marine ".
      • Zephyr 6 mths ago
        Right on, MARINE!
      • THE BORG 6 mths ago
        Good Job Marine...Semper Fi
    • rational thinker  •  Nashville, United States  •  6 mths ago
      And yet again, the racists in the Country simply don't get it. For all this Country's good points, and there are many, you can't erase the fact that there were and are so many people that have and still do treat people differently based on the color of their skin. As a youth in the South, I was put off the bus and refused access to the bathroom simply because of my color. Do I blame anyone or hold a grudge about it, NO! But the fact of the matter is, it did happen and that memory will remain with me. For any of those idiots who have negative comments about this Marine's story, until you have walked in his shoes and experienced the bite of color hatred, keep your stupid comments to yourselves as you only show how far this Country has slipped back into the twilight zone.
    • dadofjay  •  Bainbridge, United States  •  6 mths ago
      OORAH--one MGYSGT to another
    • Zephyr  •  Marietta, United States  •  6 mths ago
      About time these MARINES were recognized!
    • Guy  •  Oakland, United States  •  6 mths ago
      My Senior D.I. Staff Sgt Long was a Montford Pt. Marine, Served in WW2 & Korea.
      Gave us all some good advice on our last day in Boot Camp (before going to ITR at Camp Pendleton) He told us three things:
      1 Keep your mouth shut, and your ears and eyes open.
      2 Remember that every swingin' di*k in the CORPS puts his pants on one leg at a time.
      3 Watch out for "flag wavers" ...they'll get you killed.
      That last one I didn't understand at the time, however I do now.
      • Don D 6 mths ago
        Guy, my senior Drill Instructor was SSgt Long also, went to boot camp in June of '63. He used to say don't swing your wristes. Also had a SSgt Gooch, who was an #$%$What Plt were you?
      • Guy 6 mths ago
        Semper Fi Don ...
        I was in Plt 116 1st Recruit Traning BN. Ours was what I call now a seseme st. platoon, Our Sr. D.I. is Black, and two E5 assistant D.I., one white, one hispanic.
        Or as Sgt Hollenbach (Our D.I. from Alabama) The Marine Corps is NOT
        prejudiced! EVERYBODY in the Marine Corps is one Fv
      • Elizabeth 6 mths ago
        What does "Watch out for the flag wavers" mean?
    • WADDELL R  •  Irvine, United States  •  6 mths ago
      DM said it correctly. This is still my country with all it's faults. Semper Fi.
    • Ernie A  •  Los Angeles, United States  •  6 mths ago
      I had a black DI in boot and he taught us that we were all green. We'll bleed green, we'll sleep green and we'll fight green. I'm proud to have served with the thought we were one color because of the barrier that was broken these few of which I call brothers.
      • Kllrrr 6 mths ago
        Wish I had the same experience. The barrier was made by violent racist blacks.
    • CAROLYN  •  Raleigh, United States  •  6 mths ago
      These soldiers should have been recognized for their valor and service at the end of the war along with the others. However, the United States, the country for which they put their lives on the line, chose to ignore these soldiers until the majority of them were dead. They were drafted, asked to fight for their country, and then relegated to the same inferior position of citizenship they left at the war's onset unlike their counterparts. One commenter suggested they are being given medals because they are Black, but I disagree. The remaining veterans are finally being recognized for their service 66 years after the conclusion of World War II.
      • scott 6 mths ago
        caroyln,marines,not soldiers,lol there is a diffrence
    • Gary  •  Indianapolis, United States  •  6 mths ago
      SEMPER FI - It's about time!!
    • Arthur Dority  •  Phoenix, United States  •  6 mths ago
      To all of my fellows Marines where ever you are , happy veterans day , ooh rah and semper fi !!!!!!!!! Mgy/sgt. Arthur j. Dougherity ( u.s.m.c. ret. )
    • Art M  •  Parsippany, United States  •  6 mths ago
      As a Navy veteran myself we should be aware and ashamed of this history, for those men I say Semper Fi and Hoo-Yah !!! I salute you all.
      • Nam Vet 4 Peace 6 mths ago
        Racism is an illness...Just gotta try to protect yourself from it
    • Erick  •  Denver, United States  •  6 mths ago
      Thank you for your service to our country! I salute you.
    • Honest Abe  •  6 mths ago
      Thank you gentlemen for your dedication and service. Semper Fi and God Bless.
    • Elizabeth  •  6 mths ago
      I am glad this story is being told. People should be promoted due to performance and not race.
    • Shelley C  •  6 mths ago
      Thank you sir for opening the door. For telling your story and bringing color to the yard. My son is a black Marine. Thanks to you and yours - he will get the respect and a chance at promotion that he will earn and deserve. Semper Fi! God Bless you and the men you fought and men who died.
    • Donella  •  Gardner, United States  •  6 mths ago
      It may seem hard when went through the things you did then. If you only realized you helped opened doors for so many. But the said thing is not just African Americans that were effected, Native American Indian people had it hard too. The sad truth is it still going on now.
    • rocco  •  Las Vegas, United States  •  6 mths ago
      its about time, they sever there country and years later there being thanks,so many Vet, out there that dont talk about war time, the V/nam war change that,
    • sedim  •  6 mths ago
      It has been my privelage to know some old marines from back when they were the toughtest SOBs on earth, and those marines had it harder because they faced racist hatred on top of everything else. That old man is a MARINE!
    • tomcat  •  Tulsa, United States  •  6 mths ago
      simper fi ....always faihful .... atten,, hut! ~salute~
    • D.Chocolate  •  San Jose, United States  •  6 mths ago
      WHAT YOU DO IN THE DARK WILL SURELY COME TO LIGHT, AMEN!!! Wow, this is unbelievable, but we do live in America. I am so sick of all the racism, yet and you wonder why we always have to work harder to prove that we can do the same job if not better. My father was a retired Air Force after 25yrs and I tell you, the stories he told me were just unbelievable, sad and just a nightmare for black in the military. I am glad that this man at this age lived long enough for us to find out once again the stories hidden deep by the government. What next? If you know any other people in there 70's, 80's or 90's you better start asking now. Our elderly have a lot to talk about and can tell you the truth now. Getting to old to remember how to lie.....
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