USMC Mascot
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Thanks
to the German Army, the U.S. Marine Corps has an unofficial
mascot. During World War I
many German reports had called the attacking Marines "teufel-hunden,"
meaning Devil-Dogs.
Teufel-hunden were the vicious, wild, and ferocious mountain dogs
of Bavarian folklore.
Soon afterward a U.S. Marine recruiting poster depicted a
snarling English Bulldog wearing a Marine Corps helmet.
Because of the tenacity and demeanor of the breed, the image took
root with both the Marines and the public.
The Marines soon unofficially adopted the English Bulldog as
their mascot.
At the Marine base at Quantico, Virginia, the Marines obtained a
registered English Bulldog, King
Bulwark. In a formal
ceremony on 14 October 1922, BGen. Smedley D. Butler signed documents
enlisting the bulldog, renamed Jiggs,
for the "term of life." Pvt.
Jiggs then began his official duties in the U.S. Marine Corps.
A hard-charging Marine, Pvt. Jiggs did not remain a private for
long. Within three months
he was wearing corporal chevrons on his custom-made uniform.
On New Years Day 1924, Jiggs was promoted to Sergeant.
And in a meteoric rise, he got promoted again -- this time to
Sergeant Major -- seven months later.
SgtMaj. Jiggs' death on 9 January 1927 was mourned throughout the
Corps. His satin-lined
coffin lay in state in a hangar at Quantico, surrounded by flowers from
hundreds of Corps admirers. He
was interred with full military honors.
But, a replacement was on the way.
Former heavyweight boxing champion, James J. "Gene"
Tunney, who had fought with the Marines in France, donated his English
Bulldog. Renamed as Jiggs
II, he stepped into the role of his predecessor.
Big problem! No
discipline! Jiggs chased
people, he bit people. He
showed a total lack of respect for authority.
The new Jiggs would have likely made an outstanding combat
Marine, but barracks life
did not suit him. After one
of his many rampages, he died of heat exhaustion on 1928.
Nonetheless, other bulldogs followed.
During the 1930s,
1940s, and early 1950s they were all named Smedley, a tribute to Gen.
Butler.
In the late 1950s the Marine Barracks in Washington, the oldest
post in the Corps, became the new home for the Corps' mascot.
Renamed Chesty to
honor the legendary LtGen. Lewis B. "Chesty" Puller Jr., the
mascot made his first formal public appearance at the Evening Parade on
5 July 1957. In his canine
Dress Blues, Chesty became an immediate media darling, a smash hit!
After the demise of the original Chesty, the replacement was
named Chesty II. He became
an instant renegade. You
name it, he did it. He even
escaped and went AWOL once. Two
days later he was returned in a police paddy wagon.
About the only thing he ever managed to do correctly was to sire
a replacement.
In contrast to his father, Chesty III proved to be a model
Marine. He even became a
favorite of neighborhood children, for which he was awarded a Good
Conduct Medal. Other
bulldogs would follow Chesty III (bulldogs don't live long).
When Chesty VI died after an Evening Parade, a Marine detachment
in Tennessee called Washington. Their
local bulldog mascot, LCpl. Bodacious Little, was standing by for PCS
orders to Washington, they reported.
Upon arrival at the Marine Barracks in Washington, LCpl. Little
got ceremoniously renamed Chesty VII.
He and the English Bulldogs who followed him epitomize the
fighting spirit of the U.S. Marines.
Tough, muscular, aggressive, fearless, and often arrogant, they
are the ultimate canine warriors.
English Bulldogs. Teufel-hunden.
Devil Dogs. They
symbolize the ethos of the Warrior Culture of the U.S. Marines. Marine Corps Motto: (excerpt from Warrior Culture of the U.S. Marines, copyright 2001 Marion F. Sturkey) |
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