US Marine Corps Recruit Depot - Yearbook (Parris Island, SC)

 - Class of 1981

Page 10 of 124

 

US Marine Corps Recruit Depot - Yearbook (Parris Island, SC) online collection, 1981 Edition, Page 10 of 124
Page 10 of 124



US Marine Corps Recruit Depot - Yearbook (Parris Island, SC) online collection, 1981 Edition, Page 9
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US Marine Corps Recruit Depot - Yearbook (Parris Island, SC) online collection, 1981 Edition, Page 11
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Page 10 text:

SERGEANT MAJOR FREDRICK G. CANFIELD, USMC SERGEANT MAJOR, RECRUIT TRAINING REGIMENT SERCEANT MAJOR FREDRICK G. CANFIELD assumed the duties as Ser- geant Major of the Recruit Training Regiment on 15 October 1979. Sergeant Major of the First Recruit Training Battalion prior to his new assignment, Sergeant Major CANFIELD has over 28 years active service, including a tour in Korea and two combat tours in Vietnam. Sergeant Major CANFIELD enlisted in the Marine Corps on 7 February 1952 and received recruit training at Parris Island, South Carolina. His first assign- ment was with Guard and Police Unit, Camp Barrett, Virginia, followed by duty with the 22nd Regimental Combat Team in Quantico, Virginia. Sergeant Major CANFIELD later served as a Squad Leader and Platoon Guide with C Company, First Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, Ist Marine Division in Korea. Returning to the continental United States in March of 1955, he was assigned duties with the M-35 Section, Service Battalion, Marine Corps Base, Quantico, Virginia, In April 1956 he attended Drill Instructor School at Parris Island, South Carolina and served there as a junior Drill Instructor and Senior Drill Instructor for 34 recruit platoons. Transferred to Camp Lejeune, North Carolina during january 1960, he served as an Infantry Platoon Sergeant and Training NCO for the 6th Marines, 2nd Marine Division and in 1961 as a Military Police Supervisor with Marine Corps Base. Transfered to Marine Barracks, Quonset Point, Rhode Island, he served as Platoon Sergeant, Guard Chief of the Marine Barracks from 1962 to 1964. Returning to Camp Lejeune, he was assigned duties as 81mm Mortar Platoon Sergeant, Ist Battalion, 8th Marine Regiment, 2nd Marine Division with Tem- porary Additional Duties as a Platoon Commander at the Infantry Training Regiment. Transferred in 1964 to the 3rd Marine Division, Okinawa, and assigned duties as Company Gunnery Sergeant, A Company, Srcl AntiTank Battalion and as advisor to the 39th Ranger Battalion, Army of the Republic of Vietnam. Returning to Camp Lejeune, North Carolina in 1965, he served as the Non- Commissioned Officer in Charge of Weapons Section, Infantry Training Regi- ment and as 1st Sergeant of W Company Infantry Training Regiment, Marine Corps Base. Transferred to Officer Candidate School, Marine Corps Base, Quantico, Virginia during 1967, he served as Company Gunnery Sergeant and as lst Sergeant for A and B Companies. Returning to Vietnam in 1968, he served as Ist Sergeant, C Company, Ist Battalion, 9th Marines and B Company, 3rd Reconnaissance Battalion, 3rd Marine Division. In 1969, upon returning from overseas, he was assigned as Ist Sergeant, Inspector Instructor Staff in Harris- burg, Pennsylvania, During 1978 he was transferred to the Ist Marine Aircraft Wing, Iwakuni, japan as Sergeant Major of VMA-211. Returning from overseas in 1974, he was assigned as Sergeant Major, 8th Engineer Support Battalion, Force Troops, FMF Atlantic. In january 1976, he assumed duties as Sergeant Major, Marine Corps Air Station, Kenehoe Bay, Hawaii until july 1979 when he was assigned to Marine Corps Recruit Depot, Parris Island, South Carolina. As the Sergeant Major, First Recruit Training Battalion prior to assuming his present assignment. Sergeant Major CANFIELD is married to the former Anne Marie GIROUX of St. Albans, Vermont. The CANFIELD's have four children, Fredrick, Deb- orah, Ricky and Randy.

Page 9 text:

1.11 i -A-W . . 3 ig? aw fe . fwk i 3 Sth COLONEL J. T. BOWLIN COMMANDING OFFICER, RECRUIT TRAINING REGIMENT Colonel BOWLIN was born in Great Falls, Montana on 25 july 1933. He graduated from Great Falls High School in 1951 while on active duty in the Marine Corps. Having enlisted in the Marine Corps Reserve in May 1949, he attended recruit training and served on active duty during the Korean War until released from active duty in May 1952 as a Sergeant, He received a Bachelor of Science Degree from the University of Montana in june 1956 and was commisioned a Second Lieutenant upon graduation. Between 1956 and the Vietnam War, Colonel BOWLIN's assignments in- cluded service with the Third Marine Division, MCRD, San Diego, California, Marine Barracks 8th 81 I, Washington, D.C., and Second Force Reconnaissance Company, Camp Lejeune, North Carolina. He also attended the Army's Air- borne Course at Fort Benning, Georgiag the Special Forces Officer's Course at Fort Bragg, North Carolina: and the Amphibious Warfare School at the Marine Corps Development and Education Command, Quantico, Virginia. In july 1966, Colonel BOWLIN reported to Headquarters, Military Assis- tance Command Vietnam and served as an Advisor to the Popular and Regional Forces in Quang Tri Province. He completed his tour in july 1967 as Assistant Province Advisor and reported to the NROTC Unit, University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, New Mexico as the Marine Officer Instructor, In August 1969, he attended the Armed Forces Staff College, Norfolk, Virginia. Upon graduation in February 1970, he was assigned to the Second Marine Division, Camp Lejeune, North Carolina where he served from Febru- ary 1970 until june 1972 as Executive Officer and later Commanding Officer of the Third Battalion, 8th Marines, He was assigned to Headquarters, III Marine Amphibious Force in Okinawa during july 1972 and performed duties in the G- SXG-5, Operations and Plans Section and shortly thereafter became the Staff Secretary. In August 1973, Colonel BOWLIN reported to the Commandant of Britain's joint Warfare Establishment at Old Sarum located in Salisbury, England and served for three years as the U, S. Marine Corps Representative, Between August 1976 and june 1977, Colonel BOWLIN attended the Naval War College in Newport, Rhode Island. In August 1977, he reported to Headquarters Marine Corps, Washington, D. C. where he was assigned duties in the Plans Division, Plans, Policies and Operations Department, as an Action and Plans Officer in joint Chiefs of Staff matters, Colonel BOWLIN's personal decorations include the Legion of Merit, the Bronze Star Medal with Combat V and Cold Star in lieu of a second award, the Navy Commendation Medal and the Combat Action Ribbon. He is married to the former Colleen Mary Carroll of New York and they have three children, Sean, Kevin, and Mary.



Page 11 text:

THE MENTAL AND MORAL QUALITIES ofthe United States Marine have been tested constantly since the birth of the nation. All through the long history of the Marine Corps there are examples, both in war and peace, of his versatility, trustworthiness, singleness and tenacity of purpose, cour- age, faithfulness and self-sacrifice. The rich tradition of the Corps dates back to November 10, 1775, when it was established by the Contintental Con- gress. In the Revolutionary War, the Marines fought against the British Fleet on the ships of john Paul jones, and made their first amphibious landing on the beaches of the Baha- mas in 1776. Marines ended their war with the Mediterra- nean pirates when they planted the Stars and Stripes over the pirate stronghold of Derne, in Tripoli, after a six- hundred-mile march across the desert of North Africa. In the War of 1812, they fought on Lake Champlain and Lake Erie, and were with General jackson behind the barricades at New Orleans. They defeated the Seminole Indians in the dense swamps of Florida in 1836, and fought under General Scott in the Mexican War of 1846-48. Their first visit to japan came in 1854 as guard detachments from the ships of Commodore Perryls fleet. Under the command of Colonel Robert E. Lee, U.S.A., Marines captured john Brown at Harper's Ferry in 1859. They fought savages in Formosa in 1867, and stormed the barrier forts of Korea in 1871. During the Spanish-American War, a single battalion of Marines held the naval base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, against 6,000 Spaniards, while oth- er Leathernecks distinguished themselves at the Battle of Santiago and with Dewey at Manila. They helped quell the Boxer Rebellion in China in 1900, and from then on until World War I, men of the Corps campaigned in the Philip- pines, Cuba, Mexico, Haiti, and Santo Domingo to protect American lives and property. On the battlefields of France, Marines were called H Devil Dogsu by the Germans because of their courage and tenaci- ty of attack. In the first World War, the Fourth Brigade of Marines took part in five operations as part of the famed Second Division of the A. E. F. - Belleau Wood, Soissons, St. Mihiel, Chapagne, and the Meuse-Argonne. Marine units were decorated six times by the French during these campaigns. The interim between world wars found the Marines en- gaged in developing the technique of amphibious warfare and in their traditional pursuits around the globe, from guarding the U.S. mails to fighting bandits in Nicaragua. World War II saw the men who wear the eagle, globe, and an anchor valiantly defend Wake Island and Bataan and then spearhead the amphibious landings across the Pacific . .. in the Solomons, at Tarawa, Saipan, Guam, Iwo Jima, and Okinawa, to name a few. Following the war, Marines found a new type of service - duty with United Nations Forces in Korea, The United States Marine Corps, rich in tradition and world-famed for its battle record and esprit de corps, plays an important role as the nation's Kforce-in-readinessn to help keep the peace throughout the world today.

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