THE RIGHT TO FIGHT: African-American Marines in World War II
by Bernard C. Nalty
Change Comes to the Marine Corps
On 25 May 1942 the Commandant of the Marine Corps
issued formal instructions to begin on 1 June to recruit qualified
"colored male citizens of the United States between the ages of 17 and
29, inclusive, for service in a combat organization." Given the nature
of American society in 1942, that organization would be racially
segregated, the blacks in the ranks being commanded by whites. Those
black volunteers whom the Marine Corps accepted would, as most wartime
white recruits, enter the reserve for the duration of the war plus six
months, but their active duty would be delayed until the completion of a
segregated training camp, scheduled for 25 July. Some of the new
recruits would serve as specialists, everything from cooks to clerks,
who would see to the day-to-day operation of a racially exclusive
training camp.
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A
black American served with the Marines when Gen George Washington fought
the Battle of Princeton in January 1777. Painting by Col Charles H.
Waterhouse, USMCR (Ret.)
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The task of forming and training even one battalion
of African-Americans seemed a formidable challenge, for it involved
giving raw recruits their basic skills, further honing the fighting
edge, and finally creating a combat team. General Ray A. Robinson, in
1942 a colonel in charge of the Personnel Section, Division of Plans and
Policies, at Marine Corps headquarters, confessed during an interview in
1968 that the admission of blacks "just scared us to death." Although
the draft did not become the normal source of recruits for all the
services until December 1942, and the first draftees did not enter the
Marine Corps until January 1943, Robinson sought help from the Selective
Service System, where a black officer of the Army Reserve, Lieutenant
Colonel Campbell C. Johnson, had been called to active duty as an
administrator. Johnson indicated that he would do what he could and
joked about passing the word that Marines die young, so that only those
African-Americans willing to risk their lives would join. Robinson
acknowledged that the Corps "got some awfully good Negroes" over the
years and believed that Johnson was at least partly responsible.
Despite Johnson's interest in the black Marines, the
Corps had to rely throughout 1942 on volunteers, and recruiting proved
sluggish. By mid-June, only 63 African-Americans had enlisted and
recruiters were becoming desperate, since the training camp for blacks
neared completion. This lack of immediate results reflected the fact
that the Marine Corps, after excluding African-Americans since the
American Revolution, was attempting to sign up recruits in a black
community that had no tradition of service as Leathernecks. Recruiters
found it especially difficult to sign up the truck drivers, cooks, and
typists to support the battalion, even though black educators assured
the Marine Corps that an adequate pool of such specialists existed. When
a recruiter in Boston told Obie Hall that he could enter the Marine
Corps immediately if he had the right specialty, Hall said he was a
truck driver. Although he "no more could drive a truck than the man in
the moon," he wanted to go and had no hope of passing himself off as a
cook or typist.
The number of African-Americans who shared Hall's
enthusiasm slowly increased. Some of those who joined up looked on
serving in the Marine Corps as an opportunity denied blacks for a
century and a half. Others saw this service as a personal challenge. By
the end of September, about half of the 1,200 recruits needed to man the
battalion and render administrative, housekeeping, and transportation
support had enlisted. The Presidential decision on 1 December 1942 to
make the Selective Service System the normal source of recruits for all
the services ensured that, beginning in January 1943, 1,000
African-Americans would enter the Marine Corps each month. This influx
resulted from the fact that the draft law prohibited racial
discrimination in its administration; in practical terms, this meant
that the Army and Navy could establish quotas for black recruits but not
arbitrarily exclude them.
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Cpl
Edgar R. Huff drills a platoon of recruits at the Montford Point Camp.
He enlisted in the Marine Corps in June 1942. Huff became a legend among
the Marines who were trained here. He retired in 1972 as a sergeant
major at New River. National Archives Photo 127-N-5337
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While preparing to absorb the African-Americans
provided by the Selective Service System, the Marine Corps reaffirmed
its commitment to racial segregation, but it proposed to carry out this
policy without channeling blacks into meaningless assignments that had
little to do with winning the war. Lacking recent experience with
blacks, the Marines sought to profit from the example of the Army, which
avoided placing blacks in charge of whites. Applying this lesson,
General Holcomb in March 1943 issued Letter of Instruction 421, which
declared it "essential that in no case shall there be colored
noncommissioned officers senior to white men in the same unit, and
desirable that few, if any, be of the same rank." LOI 421 was a
classified document and did not become public during the war, but the
African-American Marine who could not earn promotion because a white
noncommissioned officer blocked his path immediately felt its impact. To
remove this racial roadblock while adhering to the policy of
segregation, white noncommissioned officers would be removed as promptly
and completely as feasible from the newly organized black units, forcing
the Marine Corps to create in a matter of months a fully functioning
cadre of black sergeants and corporals.
At best, the Commandant had mixed feelings about the
black recruits whom the Roosevelt administration had forced on him. "All
Marines," he proclaimed, "are entitled to the same rights and privileges
under Navy Regulations," but even as he announced this idealistic
principle, he felt compelled to remind the African-Americans that they
should "conduct themselves with propriety and become a real credit to
the Corps" and to require periodic reports on their status. The black
Marines clearly faced a struggle for acceptance within the Corps before
they got the opportunity to fight the Japanese.
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