Montford Point Marines
honored at Marine Barracks Washington
June 28, 2012
Approximately 400 Montford Point
Marines received their bronze replica Congressional Gold Medals at a
special ceremony held at Marine Barracks Washington June 28.
The Montford Point Marines were presented the official gold medal, as an
organization, during a ceremony held on the United States Capitol
grounds a day earlier.
The Congressional Gold Medal is awarded by Congress and is the highest
civilian award in the nation. The award comes more than seven decades
after the Montford Point Marines broke the militarie's last color
barrier.
“After taking a trip with SgtMaj. Kent, who was the 16th sergeant major
of the Marine Corps, to a Montford Point Marine reunion at Camp
Pendleton’s base theatre,” said Gen. James F. Amos, commandant of the
Marine Corps. “I walked out that day, not knowing the history of
Montford Point Marines. I looked at SgtMaj. Kent and said, ‘We’ve got to
do something about this.’ We are not done today; there are a host of
things happening in the Marine Corps to anchor what (Montford Point
Marines) have done for our Corps.”
In
1942, President Roosevelt established a presidential directive giving
African-Americans an opportunity to be recruited into the Marine Corps.
But the African-Americans who were recruited at that time would not
train alongside their white counterparts. Instead a separate camp was
established at Montford Point in North Carolina. The nearly 20,000
African-American Marines who trained there from its opening in 1942 to
its closure in 1949 were not welcomed by the Corps. The African-American
Marines of that era were met with open prejudice, segregation and
mistreatment.
Today’s ceremony was another step by the Corps to help recognize the
numerous contributions made by the Montford Point Marines and ensure
their legacy is not forgotten.
“There are not words in my vocabulary or anyone else, to tell you the
joys I feel with this medal,” said Stanley Porter, 1942 Montford Point
graduate. “This day is marvelous, just marvelous.”