Dad and Son ... Graduates From Same MCRD
Company
by U.S. Marine Corps Lance Cpl. Michelle Brudnicki October
8,
2022
Over twenty two years ago, Lt. Col. Matthew
A. Lamb graduated recruit training at Marine Corps Recruit Depot San
Diego with India Company, Platoon 3069. Now, on October 7, 2022, his
son Hayden M. Lamb, graduated with India Company, Platoon 3069 at
Marine Corps Recruit Depot Parris Island.

U.S. Marine Corps Lt. Col. Matthew A. Lamb, Recruit Training
Regiment Executive Officer, Marine Corps Recruit Depot
Parris Island with his son Pfc. Hayden M. Lamb (top) and their family
(bottom) during his son's graduation activities on Marine Corps Recruit Depot Parris Island SC
on October 6, 2022. Both Marines graduated from India Company, platoon 3069, twenty-two years apart. (Image
by USA Patriotism! from U.S. Marine Corps photos by Lance Cpl. Michelle Brudnicki.)
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Lt. Col Lamb, who
currently serves as the Recruit Training Regiment Executive Officer,
could not be more proud of his son.
“He didn’t want anything
to come back on me,” Lt. Col. Lamb said. “He was very cognizant of
the fact that the staff knew who his father was, but he didn’t want
the recruits making that connection or anyone else. He just wanted
to be Recruit Lamb, and I really admire him for that.”
Lt.
Col. Lamb went on to explain how his son was fully committed to
earning his own title just like any other recruit. His son did not
want to cut any corners on his recruit training experience.
“Never once did he reach out or do something a recruit shouldn’t
do,” Lt. Col. Lamb said assuredly. “He was all about being a
recruit, and I was the regimental executive officer, not ‘dad’”.
Pfc. Hayden Lamb has been a part of the Marine Corps family his
entire life, and has always had a desire to earn the title for
himself. Growing up around Marines, he has seen Quantico, San Diego,
the Pentagon, and Parris Island throughout his childhood, prior to
coming to recruit training.
Pfc. Lamb, though proud of his
lineage, wanted to forge his own path. He was granted a legacy
waiver and was able to attend recruit training on Parris Island
instead of at San Diego, despite shipping from Indiana. He did not
want to go to recruit training in the same place his father did, he
wanted to start his legacy on Parris Island.
“I wanted it to
be my title that I earned,” Pfc. Lamb emphasized. “Not just given to
me because my dad’s a lieutenant colonel.”
This worry stuck
with Lamb throughout his recruit training experience.
“I
remember at the Eagle, Globe, and Anchor ceremony asking myself over
and over “Did I really earn it?’,” Pfc. Lamb said earnestly. “And
while my dad was the one to give me my EGA, my senior drill
instructor got to me, and he didn’t have any emblems left, but he
turned to me and he said ‘You earned it, don’t ever let anyone tell
you differently,’ and for me that was the affirmation in my heart
that I truly did it.”
Pfc. Lamb said he is getting to realize
a dream he’s been waiting on for years–to follow in his dad’s
footsteps. However, he said he is going to make that dream his own.
“I’ve always wanted to be a Marine, ever since I can remember,”
Pfc Lamb said. “For me, it’s basically been 18 years of waiting and
now I finally have it. I know I’m nowhere near done and that I have
so much more to do and prove, but it’s just so fulfilling for me.
Everything I’ve ever wanted is now happening.”
For the Lambs,
the bond they share will forever go beyond their relationship as
father and son. They will be brothers in arms.
“Having that
connection, not just being father and son, but both being Marines
and having that common bond of being India Company Platoon 3069,
it’s something we’ll talk about until the end of our days,” Lt. Col.
Lamb said with a smile. “Because I don’t think there's many other
instances of a father and son being able to share in that level and
depth of a relationship. It’s really pretty cool.”
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