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My Summer of 1969

My Summer of 1969

DISCLAIMER

Recruit training in the Marine Corps has historically had a reputation for the use of obscene language and the physical abuse of recruits. What I am telling is what I saw and experienced. Another Marine of my generation or earlier would concur with what I re-live here. Some would say that what I tell has been overblown over time. All I can say is that I can’t make this up! For me, recruit training was the most stress filled experience of my life.

MAKING THE RACK

That mental videotape machine of mine did not record every minute I was at the recruit depot, just the moments that made an impression on me. And there were a lot of them.

I remember it was getting near dusk. The DI’s gathered the platoon together to show us how to make our bunks (rack) military style. After they demonstrated how to do it, they undid the bunk and then had a couple of recruits get in front of the platoon to try and do it. What a joke. They immediately began to screw it up and the DI’s start screaming at them.

One of these fellows starts to cry. I remember our Platoon Commander going over to this kid and acting like he was consoling him, when suddenly, he slaps him across the face! There was an immediate “gasp” that came from all of the recruits. I had heard that this sort of thing could/would happen, but to see it, that’s another thing. Then, our assistant DI, a thin wiry staff sergeant whose name I never cared to remember , looks at us with this evil grin and says “you ain’t seen anything yet! After your physicals, the real beatings begin.”

It’s time for lights out. After many attempts of jumping into our rack in a timely way to satisfy the DI’s demand for precision, they finely turn out the lights. I’m in a top bunk. I’d never slept in one before.

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Comments

Sgt T.K. Shimono - April 17, 2020

I look at Marine bootcamp as a proving ground for what your life can and will be after graduation. If you can’t take the punishments and yelling, etc., then you may not be Marine material. If you crack up under fire or a serious situation that requires an disciplined body and mind then ask to get out of Marine boot camp and join the Army, Navy, Air Force for boot camp. Not saying that these other military branches do not train their troops harder then Marines Boot camp, but the underling reason for the Marine Boot camp being so rough is that we are trained for one purpose, and that is to “engage our enemies and kill them with no questions asked and to immediately do the tasks we are given without question”. My time in the Marine Corps was from 1959 to 1968.

Sid Cooper - April 17, 2020

“Platoon Commander”? Don’t remember ever hearing those words during my training with PI’s Third Battalion in the summer of 69. Senior Drill Instructor is tattooed into my memory, but “Platoon Commander”?

Mike Scharwath - April 17, 2020

Just before graduation in early 1968, the platoon leader called us together and read us a directive that said they were to stop beating recruits effective Immediately. He laughed and said this must be for the Army. Even with all the physical stuff, Boot Camp was the best part of the Marine Corps experience for me.

Gene Battelle - April 17, 2020

Boot Camp at Parris Island – January to April 1965. The training was difficult, but the DI’s were trying to instill discipline in every recruit to keep them from being killed in Vietnam. Physical punishment was routine, but the mental part was far more difficult. I drank Wisk (liquid detergent} for telling a DI that “you” said to do something. Wrong words. “Ewe” was a female sheep and not the word to be used when addressing the DI. I was a tall, skinny recruit and received my share of physical punishment, but same out a far better man than I would have been without the training. Stayed in 9 years, on active duty, and made SSgt. Enjoyed my time in the Corps and still miss it to this day.

Gary Crittenden - April 17, 2020

The photo sure looks like Sgt. Jones and the recruits of platoon 366 in San Diego from April 1968 to June 1968.

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