Marines On Parris Island 130 Years
by U.S. Marine Corps Sgt. Dana Beesley October
25,
2021
For 130 years, Marines have been on Parris
Island.
On June 26, 1891, a Marine guard consisting of one
sergeant, two corporals, and ten privates were assigned to Port
Royal, thus establishing the first Marine posting. The base itself
overlooks Port Royal Sound, one of the biggest deep-water harbors
along the eastern seaboard. The post eventually became known as
Marine Barracks, U.S. Naval Station Port Royal, S.C.
 One of the first images of Marine Barracks, U.S. Naval Station Port Royal, S.C., circa 1920's.
(Image courtesy of U.S. Marine Corps)
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It would be another two years before these
Marines had barracks lodging, and any access to the base itself had
to be by boat. At the turn of the 20th century and beyond, fresh
water had to be shipped in to the Marines and eventual recruits
because of the high salt content that harmed the well system on
base.
In 1909, Naval Station Port Royal became the location
of Marine Corps Officer Candidates School. By 1911, a recruit depot
became officially operational as a secondary function of OCS – which
eventually transitioned to Norfolk, VA after the Department of the
Navy indoctrinated Port Royal as a disciplinary installation.
In 1915, the Marine Corps bought the land and entitlements from
the United States Navy for one dollar, thus making Parris Island the
Second Oldest Post in the Marine Corps. It was here where a massive
expansion of the depot began to take place. During this construction
is when the local government eventually dubbed the installation
Marine Barracks Parris Island on May 3, 1919.
During World War I, recruit training was
eight weeks long, as opposed to the current 13 weeks. The recruits
who came to Parris Island after 1923 were lucky to witness the
construction of the causeway that now divides Parris Island from the
towns of Beaufort and Port Royal.
Between the years of 1918
and 1941, Parris Island was home to multiple units such as an
Advanced Training Seagoing Depot, Field Music School and various
aviation elements. In the first months of World War II, the intake
of recruits to the depot was simply too much for the base to hold,
and the only solution was to shorten training programs and ship new
Marines off Parris Island quicker than before. This process
eventually waned to better prepare Marines for combat, establish a
full-fledged Drill Instructor School, and welcome women reservists
to train aboard the depot.
After the Integration Act of 1948 came into
effect, women began training in full-sized platoons. By the next
year, both African American and female recruits were fully
integrated into recruit training aboard Parris Island. During World
War II, approximately 138,000 Marines were made on Parris Island;
this number grew to nearly 200,000 as the Vietnam War began. The
depot was instrumental in providing Marines in every major conflict
since 1915, including 138,000 troops during the Korean War.
 Aerial view of Marine Corps Recruit Depot Parris Island, commonly known as just Parris Island, is an 8,095-acre U.S. Marine Corps training
facility located within Port Royal, South Carolina, near Beaufort, the community that is typically associated with the installation. About 16,000 Marines pass through basic-training "boot camp" here every year. (Library of Congress photo by Carol Highsmith - May 1, 2017)
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Parris Island became re-designated as
“Marine Corps Recruit Depot/Eastern Recruiting Region, Parris
Island, S.C.” on April 1, 1976. With the introduction of the
Crucible in 1996, values-based training and inclusion became the
norm.
Today, Parris Island graduates 18,000 Marines each year.
During its illustrious history, the depot continues to make Marines
and carry on the traditions that began at the depot’s founding.
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