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MAKING A MARINE U.S. MARINE CORPS 1950s RECRUITING FILM 82124 

PeriscopeFilm
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Dating to the Korean War era, this wonderful U.S. Marine Corps film begins with images of combat and an amphibious landing drill, probably at Camp Pendleton in California. At 1:40, the concept of "vertical envelopment" is described with helicopters deployed off of an aircraft carrier. At 1:45, a nuclear weapon goes off and Marines (at the nation's nuclear test site in Nevada as part of Upshot-Knothole ) observe the rising mushroom cloud. The cloud dissolves into the USMC logo at the Corp's recruiting depot in San Diego. The "making of Marines" is then described in Parris Island, South Carolina. Recruits are seen entering the depot and immediately being processed. At 3:30, a drill sergeant introduces them to the Corps, and the recruits walk past an Iwo Jima statue. At 4:16, the men strip and prepare for showers, and have their hair cut off at 4:30 (a la Full Metal Jacket). At 5:00 showers and then the men get new clothes. At 6:50, the men go to sleep, only to be awakened for physical exercise including the obstacle course and calisthenics. Close order drill is shown at 8:30. At 10:30, weapons are inspected by the Drill Sergeant. At 10:47, water training is shown and at 11:25, marksmanship and rifle practice with the M-1 Garand. Classroom instruction is shown at 13 minutes. At 14:30, Marines lift buckets as part of physical drills -- proving that you can use almost any heavy item for muscular benefit. At 15:00, hand to hand and bayonet drills are shown. At 17:44, final inspection is shown of the men who "made it" and are now able to proudly call themselves Marines. At 18:16 the final review march is shown at Parris Island. Semper Fi!
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6 фев 2018

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Комментарии : 99   
@dominickmatranga913
@dominickmatranga913 4 года назад
In 1954 I earned the title at P.I., now at age 84 the memory is as fresh as yesterday. The change IS for ever. May God bless all who are serving, have served and those who have given their all. SEMPER FIDELIS
@MrSilas-xo9np
@MrSilas-xo9np 3 года назад
Semper fi
@NgJackal1990
@NgJackal1990 3 года назад
Were you typing this comment yourself or someone else did it for you or you’re a phony behind the screen?
@netsat8977
@netsat8977 2 года назад
My grandfather was a marine at MCRD in 1954. He was discharged a few years later as a Corporal in Cherry Point, NC. He passed away about a decade ago and didn’t speak much about the Marine Corps.
@GeorgeCampbell1964
@GeorgeCampbell1964 2 года назад
Thankyou for your service, Marine!
@hankmaze7360
@hankmaze7360 2 года назад
I was in Plt 291, 1st Recruit Battalion, Parris Island, S.C. Graduated boot camp August 6, 1954
@puffykilled2pac
@puffykilled2pac 4 года назад
Imagine getting trained by WWII veterans. Had to have been brutal!
@marcusdelk7708
@marcusdelk7708 Год назад
My Grandfather enlisted in the Army at the age of 18 in 1950, and I know for a fact he was trained by some of the WWII Veterans. He went on to fight in the Korean War, and after his combat tour, he switched to the Marine Corps and made Sergeant. He came out of the Army as a Sp3 at that time, and when he left the armed forces, he began work at the Norfolk Naval Shipyard, and never spoke of his time in to his family due to the horrible sights and such he had seen. He passed away in March of 2007, and I was born in August of 2007. I earnestly wish I would’ve met him as a young man who aspires to enlist in the Marine Corps after high school, and hear the wisdom that he gained from his life of taking care of his family, and serving the country. This man inspires me even 16 years after his passing, meaning that he truly made an impact in his life. Thank you for posthumously teaching me how to be a man Grandfather ~Future U.S Marine Marcus Delk of KFHS ⚓️🌎🦅
@Chrisamos412
@Chrisamos412 3 года назад
My father had DI’s that just got back from the Korean War in 1956, he said they were TOUGH! After the Corps he served in the 7 yrs in the Air Force, then NSA as well as Army Special Forces reserves, retiring as a Warrant Officer 3. He passed away last summer at 82yrs old. Funny thing, I ended up going in the Navy. Miss him a lot, boy he was pretty tough but I deserved it lol
@NgJackal1990
@NgJackal1990 Месяц назад
You could’ve joined the seal 😗
@josemoreno3334
@josemoreno3334 3 года назад
My two brothers were Marines , I'm proud of both of them. Semper Fi .
@danielrousseau4842
@danielrousseau4842 6 лет назад
April, 1956 to June 25, 1956, in Platoon 115, First Bn, Able Company, next to the outdoor theater. Every night we would lie there in our racks, listening to the movies and wondering if we would ever leave the Island. A week after we arrived at PI, the tragedy occured at Ribbon Creek. Recently connected with one of my DI's, Sgt. Ralph Bowling, who is now 83 (I am 81). He was so squared away we swore he starched his 782 gear. I visited PI about five years ago. No more wooden squadbays, no more quonset huts. Iron Mike is there, as is the Iwo Jima statue, and the parade deck. It was interesting to watch DI's work a platoon that I was standing in. A lot has changed in the years since we carried M-1's and gobbled salt tablets and washed them down with a canteen full of warm water. No more DI's grabbing you by the snot-locker or choking you while you tried to scream out the answer to his question. We trained with pugil sticks, wearing only our boondockers, utilitiy trousers and scivvie shirts---no helmets, no padding, no facemasks. Just step up and pound or get pounded. Ah yes, the days of our youth. Semper Fi.
@PeriscopeFilm
@PeriscopeFilm 6 лет назад
Semper Fi Marine.
@jackroper8829
@jackroper8829 6 лет назад
What memories! Thanks for sharing. Time sure flies.
@arthurc1971
@arthurc1971 6 лет назад
Daniel Rousseau It seems like yesterday that I graduated from Parris Island...that was 30 years ago. I was a combat veteran at age 19. Semper Fi Marine and thanks for sharing.
@hankmaze4
@hankmaze4 6 лет назад
Daniel, I also went through Able Company, lst Bat., from 6 June 1954 and remained in 1st Bat for the next three years as Operations Clerk (S3) in HQ Bldg. I was unlucky enough to have to type the pretrial trial investigation done by my boss CPT F.S. Thomas. It was almost like being in boot camp for three solid years and they actually wanted me to ship over.
@NgJackal1990
@NgJackal1990 3 года назад
Aren’t you too old to use computer? Left alone memorize those events happened more than half century ago?
@donl5941
@donl5941 6 лет назад
Went through summer and fall 1972 and not much different from this film. I can still remember the wooden WWII buildings. After nearly 50 years I can still remember the smells: the newly-issued utilities, the nasty mud of the low country and the sweaty B.O. of the the other recruits.
@jackroper8829
@jackroper8829 6 лет назад
Went through MCRD in July, 1971. We had the old ww2 buildings also, and we were in the old metal quanset huts. Those were some days back then. I was still in the Marines in 1972, remember sitting outside the Squad Bay listening to the Chilites, and thinking some day, I will go home. That was 47 years ago!
@sherryjones4863
@sherryjones4863 3 года назад
My uncle was enlisted in Oct 1950 and served for 3 yrs. My brother enlisted in 1970 and I went to his first visitor's day bringing him his favorite raisin pie. Boy, what a grievous error that was! No description can capture what these Marines are or go through. This film helps me with my understanding.
@williambrownstone2346
@williambrownstone2346 4 года назад
An error was made in this film. The narrator said that the recruits were running the Confidence Course. They were running the Obstacle Course which my platoon ran twice a day in the Spring of 1965. Platoon 118, May, 1965.
@chrisvonhoene2883
@chrisvonhoene2883 4 месяца назад
My dad was a Hollywood Marine in late 50s, boy this vid reminded me so much of his year book
@MM-wr2rd
@MM-wr2rd 2 года назад
This was shot between 1956-1958... as someone else pointed out the campaign covers were not authorized for DI's until after Ribbon Creek in '56 and also the NCO's do not sport the crossed rifles under their chevrons, which were added in 1958.
@marcusdelk7708
@marcusdelk7708 Год назад
My Grandfather enlisted in the Army at the age of 18 in 1950, and I know for a fact he was trained by some of the WWII Veterans. He went on to fight in the Korean War, and after his combat tour, he switched to the Marine Corps and made Sergeant. He came out of the Army as a Sp3 at that time, and when he left the armed forces, he began work at the Norfolk Naval Shipyard, and never spoke of his time in to his family due to the horrible sights and such he had seen. He passed away in March of 2007, and I was born in August of 2007. I earnestly wish I would’ve met him as a young man who aspires to enlist in the Marine Corps after high school, and hear the wisdom that he gained from his life of taking care of his family, and serving the country. This man inspires me even 16 years after his passing, meaning that he truly made an impact in his life. Thank you for posthumously teaching me how to be a man Grandfather ~Future U.S Marine Marcus Delk of KFHS ⚓️🌎🦅
@kalon227
@kalon227 2 года назад
1954 MCRD San Diego March thru June (platoon 337) Great time to be in the Marines. Served two terms to 1962. Now 84 almost 85. Life lessons learned. Semper fi.
@italianstallion9148
@italianstallion9148 5 лет назад
I really enjoyed this film. I have been looking for a 1950s video of the U.S. Marine Corps. I was curious on how much different the Corps was in the 50s compared to today. I am enlisting in 2019! Semper Fidelis = Always Faithful
@PeriscopeFilm
@PeriscopeFilm 5 лет назад
Thanks for your note and best of luck in the USMC = point of the spear. God Bless You and yours!
@deejin25
@deejin25 2 года назад
The modern military is infinitely more deadly, survivable, can vaporize anything anywhere, is also bloated, top heavy, and seems to endlessly engage in interventions we can and should be avoiding. I'd rather we move towards results oriented planning and training than blind tradition, have far fewer wars that we never lose, than interventions and occupations that either never and or we eventually pull out of because we can't sustain them.
@kelseymathias3881
@kelseymathias3881 2 года назад
@@deejin25 just hope that President Trump is elected again.
@carlhursh9692
@carlhursh9692 3 года назад
1957, MCRD San Diego, Platoon 384. D.I.s SSgt Bays, SSgt Showalter, Sgt Mason. SSgt Showalter was a Marine’s Marine. First thing issued was a Bucket.
@johnmonaghan1800
@johnmonaghan1800 6 лет назад
Don L, I went through PI summer '60 lived in old wooden barracks of the 1st. Bn., as I remember they were constructed for WWi
@platoon1026
@platoon1026 4 года назад
1:20 on USS Princeton circa 1960 YN is HMR 261, flying HUS helicopters. I was on board. 9:38 on beautiful 8 man squad drill, ended sadly in 1960. Drill looks like Squads Left and Squads Left About. This was in use when I went through Parris Island. Semper fi Do or die
@jimalexander1896
@jimalexander1896 4 года назад
The video does not let you hear the DIs and how they really talked back in the day!... I went threw in 66 at MCRD SD...believe me it was not as depicted!.
@jaxong.2701
@jaxong.2701 3 дня назад
I so wish I had done this. It would be awesome if they had something like this (by choice of course) for people who are still really fit and 40, like myself.
@drob437
@drob437 4 года назад
The recruits that qualified expert were allowed to qualify with the pistol.
@danielrodriguez2285
@danielrodriguez2285 2 года назад
A bit late to the party…. stepped on those yellow footprints 2008. I thought it was hell while I was there, but god do I miss it.
@DonDonP1
@DonDonP1 3 года назад
Hello. Cool. Two-thirds of this film were shot before the rank of Techincal Sergeant was replaced with that of Gunnery Sergeant.
@macandcheese495
@macandcheese495 3 года назад
My great grandfather was a Marine in the 50s. His military career was cut short because they found out he was blind in one eye.
@Beaguins
@Beaguins 3 года назад
It's interesting how much is the same today. No Crucible back then, though.
@danielrousseau4842
@danielrousseau4842 4 года назад
Scenes in this film are AFTER the summer of 1956. The clue? Until then, DI's did not wear campaign covers. They were worn by range officers, but not DI's. It was after the McKeon's trial during the summer of '56 that the Commandant issued an order authorizing the wearing of campaign covers by DI's. So, this film covers boot training in the latter half of the 1950's.
@hankmaze7360
@hankmaze7360 2 года назад
Wrong!!! D.I.s were wearing campaign covers before Ribbon Creek. At least mine were.
@danielrousseau4842
@danielrousseau4842 2 года назад
@@hankmaze7360 Hank, when I outposted on 25 June, 1956, DI's on Parris Island were not wearing campaign covers. The U.S. Marine Corps authorized the issue of campaign covers to DI's in 1956 by order of Commandant General Randolph M. Pate. The cover was issued on 20 July 1956. If you will look at the platoon pictures from 1956, you'll see the platoons that graduated during the first half of '56 shows their DI's wear regular barracks covers or the "piss-cutter." Later platoon photos show DI's wearing the newly issued campaign covers. Semper Fi.
@rachellyons8712
@rachellyons8712 2 года назад
There's no way Stanley Kubrick didn't watch this while researching for Full Metal Jacket. A...That guy at the beginning that greets all the recruits sounds exactly like R. Lee Ermy, but with less colorful language. B...That "By the Numbers" thing. It keeps getting repeated during the film and the first time it's said all I could hear was "You will learn, Private Pyle! By the numbers! I will teach you!" Great film...both this and FMJ. As the daughter of a retired Marine and Vietnam War Vet, this is nostalgic af. EDITED to ADD: And there are several scenes in this that are almost EXACT frames for FMJ. Like the one with the DI checking rifles, when they first talk about the Rifle Creed. It's almost point for point the scene where Gunnery Sergeant Hartman is doing the same thing in Kubrick's film. Anyway...maybe I've watched that movie too many times lol
@MG-wk2eh
@MG-wk2eh Год назад
I have no doubt Stanley Kubrick did his research, but R. Lee Ermey, the man who played GySgt Hartman in FMJ was a US Marine who served in Vietnam and as a Drill Instructor himself and he was allowed to ad lib and go off script a bit, he used his knowledge and experience to make the role realistic. A lot of the stuff he's famous for saying, like the abuse, etc wasn't his own invention. He learned it at DI School. He was actually originally brought in as an advisor for another actor who was supposed to play the role but convinced Stanley Kubrick he'd be better off just playing the role himself.
@semperfical
@semperfical 23 дня назад
I believe Emory was actually a Staff Sgt not a Gysgt in the Corps. He was trained at DI school SD by my former plt cmdr of 3314 in 1968 Gysgt Troy Hensley now USMC SgtMaj ret.
@mcoleman6893
@mcoleman6893 2 года назад
"Directly from the bus to the building."? What about the yellow footprints?
@USMC_LAterZ
@USMC_LAterZ 4 года назад
Chuck Taylor Go Fasters!
@codyhilton1750
@codyhilton1750 2 месяца назад
MCRD San Diego 1958. Semper Fi.
@PeriscopeFilm
@PeriscopeFilm 2 месяца назад
Thanks for your service to our great nation.
@semperfical
@semperfical 23 дня назад
MCRD San Diego plt 3314 1968
@arthurc1971
@arthurc1971 6 лет назад
11:09 - The MSM would never allow Americans to hear that except maybe on Fox News. I arrived on the island in 1989 and not much has changed. Semper Fi
@PeriscopeFilm
@PeriscopeFilm 6 лет назад
Thanks for your service to our great nation Marine!
@VMA225
@VMA225 2 года назад
Plt. 253; 2nd Battalion; June - Sept. 1960. Aye; Aye; Sir !!!
@tom-lg2qd
@tom-lg2qd 2 года назад
GOD BLESS THE USMC.. your worst enemy and your best friend.. GOD BLESS CHESTER PULLER..
@s.t.l.3213
@s.t.l.3213 5 лет назад
What....no yellow footprints??
@roberttaylor914
@roberttaylor914 2 года назад
I went through in 67 and I dont seem to remember yellow footprints.. Maybe they had em outside Receiving Barracks but no where else
@semperfical
@semperfical 23 дня назад
MCRD San Diego has those infamous prints.
@v9927
@v9927 3 года назад
The training seems to be easier compare to today
@georgegalan329
@georgegalan329 2 года назад
Yea right
@lol-un6nl
@lol-un6nl 2 года назад
it seems to be literally the same
@CrossOfBayonne
@CrossOfBayonne 3 года назад
The only rifle their not using are M1 Carbines but USMC still had them in the later 50s.
@goldendreams3437
@goldendreams3437 6 лет назад
This looks very hard
@HerbWalker
@HerbWalker 6 лет назад
Gets easy after the 1st 8 weeks..... LOL
@goldendreams3437
@goldendreams3437 6 лет назад
Herb Walker lols!
@arthurc1971
@arthurc1971 6 лет назад
Herb Walker For me it got easier after 13 weeks lol, we had one week of receiving and four weeks for each phase of training. Marine combat training at Lejeune wasnt bad but we pt’ed our asses off at Tank School so we could be strong enough to work on those tanks. Ahh, the good ole days...Semper Fi
@jmcd3970
@jmcd3970 2 года назад
Jerry Mcdonogh Paris Island September 16, 1956 semper fi I graduated from PI As a private first class one of only four to receive stripe
@robertsuskie3168
@robertsuskie3168 6 лет назад
Went thru boot camp 1955 platoon 62 depot honor platoon ssgt ugene chism was my di
@PeriscopeFilm
@PeriscopeFilm 6 лет назад
GB SSGT Ugene Chism and thank you for your service.
@MoparAdventure
@MoparAdventure 2 года назад
OOOOORAH SEMPER FI MARINES, TUNN TAVERN, OPHA MAE JOHNSON!!!!
@bitterchew
@bitterchew 2 года назад
I think I got an unrealistic impression watching Gomer on TV
@roberttaylor914
@roberttaylor914 2 года назад
Ya thinik?
@keeper0523
@keeper0523 6 лет назад
Ah the good ol days. Now they admit to psychologically attacking their own citizen.
@thetreblerebel
@thetreblerebel 6 лет назад
Yellow and red shorts eeeewwww. Today's pts ain't much better.
@arthurc1971
@arthurc1971 6 лет назад
Stevie Jo We had yellow shirts with USMC on them, a red pair of sshorts and a green set of cotton shorts. We only used the yellow ones in first phase I think. We were the first Marines to graduate in blues. That was January 1990. Semper Fi
@HerbWalker
@HerbWalker 6 лет назад
US Army Ft Polk LA. 1974 was JUST like these Marines did it.
@hankmaze4
@hankmaze4 6 лет назад
I went thru both Marine boot camp and Army basic. No comparison at all.
@hankmaze7360
@hankmaze7360 2 года назад
I went thru both and believe me Herb, there was a BIG difference between Marine and Army boot camp.
@user-fr5hm8ot8e
@user-fr5hm8ot8e 2 месяца назад
There generation didn’t need fat camp 😂😂
@sleepthinker5466
@sleepthinker5466 2 года назад
i wonder why you call DIs "sir", when sergeants after basic training make such a big deal out of saying "don't call me SIR, i work for a living". maybe because you have such limited exposure to COs in basic, and they want to get you in the habit of treating superior officers with respect?
@Raptured_and_back
@Raptured_and_back 4 месяца назад
you're not a marine yet as a recruit, thus you don't call them by their ranks. Sir is also much quicker to say than the rank, as each drill instructor has a different rank.
@jaxong.2701
@jaxong.2701 3 дня назад
My dad was 3rd black marine sgt in the 50s. I always wondered why he would say "DO NOT CALL ME SIR!" never explained it.. rip Blyden. Thank you for this. 40 years of wondering what the heck he was saying lol
@Katmando376
@Katmando376 Год назад
Not many Black or Hispanic Recruits!
@MuslimsAreEvil626
@MuslimsAreEvil626 Месяц назад
Okay and? This is a white majority country.
@Katmando376
@Katmando376 Месяц назад
@@MuslimsAreEvil626 Stop being Racist Trump supporter👎
@Funnyweirdediter
@Funnyweirdediter 9 месяцев назад
This is propaganda. Too bad it doesn’t show DI’s beating up recruits or the blanket parties.
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