First Black Marines On Path To Receive Congressional Gold Medal

 

first black marines set to receive medal

 

After years of discrimination, mistreatment and near invisibility postwar, African-American Marines of World War II are on the verge of getting the Congressional Gold Medal, the Detroit Free Press reports.

It’s about time, too, Robert Hassler, 86, told the paper. Hassler says he lied about his age to enlist 70 years ago. “It’s always bothered me — every year for Black History Month, they talk about the Tuskegee Airmen,” Hassler said. “Nobody knows about the Montford Point Marines.”

A Congressional Gold Medal, America’s highest civilian honor, could change that.

More than 16 million Americans answered the call to arms in World War II. Of those, 600,000 were the few, the proud, the Marines.

In 1941, President Franklin D. Roosevelt ordered the armed forces to accept African Americans into their ranks, and the Marine Corps was the last to fall in line. Even then, segregation remained as the black recruits and draftees were trained in their own facility — a patch of land adjacent to Camp Lejeune, N.C., called Montford Point. They were forbidden from entering Camp Lejeune without special authorization.

via First Black Marines On Path

One Response to First Black Marines On Path To Receive Congressional Gold Medal

  1. Taunya Baker Curry November 7, 2011 at 10:06 pm

    It still amazes me to this day how they had no problem with blacks getting out there and dying for “their” country but they couldn’t even train with the rest of the soldiers.

    Reply

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