Safety Fundamentals
Signifcant Battles
Significant Battles x2
Significant Figures
Significant Figures x2
100

Force presevation does not have a single solution. This process is one in a range of tools to be used by personnel at all levels for minimizing risk. 

What is Risk Managment. 

100

Formation of the U.S Marine Corps

November 10th, 1775; Second Continental Congress meeting in Philly passed a resolution stating that "two battalions of marines be raised"; First amphibious raid into the Bahamas in March 1776 under Captain Samuel Nicholas; 1st Marines Commandant. 

100

Chosin Reservior 

During November of 1950 and pushing far into North Korea, Marines were cut off after the Chinese Communist Forces entered the war. The major significance of this retrograde movement was that Marines were able to bring out all operable equipment, properly evacuated their wounded and dead and maintained tactical integrity. 100,000 Chinese troops had infiltrated into North Korea.  

100

Brigadier General Archibald Henderson

Colonel (Brevet Brigadier General); 5th Commandant of the Marine Corps; Appointed Major, by Brevet, in 1814. On October 17th, 1820; (age 37/ LtCol) was appointed as the Commandant of the MC. Served over 38 years; longest of any officer to hold the position. 

100

Private Opha Mae Johnson

Worked at HQ Marine Corps on 13 August 1918 and holds the honor of being America's first woman Marine. PVT Johnson was assigned as clerk in the Quartermaster General, BG McCawley; was senior enlisted women with the rank of sergeant by the end of the war. 

200

Four Principles of Risk Management 

Accept Risk When Benefits Outweigh the Cost. 

Accept No Unnecessary Risk 

Anticipate and Manage Risk by Planning

Make Risk Decisions at the Right Level. 

200

Battle of Nassau 

March 3rd, 1776; Five Companies of Marines carry out the Corps first amphibious landing on foreign soil; seizing stockpiles of British gunpowder and munitions. 

200

Battle of Iwo Jima

19 Feb 1945, Marines landed on Iwo Jima in the bloodiest and largest all-Marine battle in MC history. MC suffered over 23,300 casualties. Admiral Chester W. Nimitz said "Among the Americans who served on Iwo Island, uncommon valor was a common virtue."

200

Sergeant Major John Quick 

Medal of Honor; Action during Battle of Cuzco, Cuba on 14 June 1898. Quick signaled the USS Dolphin on three different occasions while exposed to enemy fire. Quick died on 10 September 1922. 
200

Major Gregory R. "Pappy" Boyington

Recognized for Marine prowess in aerial dogfights. Commanded VMH-214; "Black Sheep" during WW2. By the end of the war, Maj. was recognized as MC "top flying ace with 28 victories'". 

300

Levels of Risk Management 

In-depth level

Deliberate level

Time critical 

300

Battle of Derna 

April 27th, 1805; Marines rescue the kidnapped crew of USS Philadelphia on the shores of Tripoli. Received the nickname "Leatherneck" due to the high collar they worse as protection against the sabers of pirates. 

300

Battle of Okinawa

April 1, 1945 ground forces began the Battle of Okinawa. Objective: secure the island, removing the last barrier standing between the US forces and Imperial Japan. Battle was one of the most ferocious of the ward with American causalities reaching 49,151; 12,500 of which were killed or missing. 23 members received a Medal of Honor; 13 went to Marines and HMs, 9 to Army troops and 1 to a Navy officer. 
300

Sergeant Major Dan Daly

Two Medals of Honor: Chinese Boxer Rebellion & First Caco War in Haiti. Best remembered for famous battle cry during the Battle of Belleau Wood in June 1918; (1st Sgt) "Come on, you sons of b---, do you want to live forever?" 
300

Hospital Apprentice First Class Robert E. Bush 

Landed with 1stMARDIV during the invasion of Okinawa on April 1st, 1945. On May 2nd, his platoon was pinned down by enemy fire. His LT was wounded, Bush moved into the open, administering life-giving aid to the Marine. Established an IV on his patient then used the Marines rifle to neutralize the threat. His actions earned him the Medal of Honor, the youngest Navy Man to do so in WW2.


400

5 Step Process of Risk Management 

Identify Hazards

Assess Hazards

Make Risk Decisions

Implement Controls

Supervise

400

Battle of Chapultepec 

An assault by American forces on the small contingent of Mexican forces holding the strategically located Chapultepec Castle outside of Mexico City. Battle was fought on 12-13 Sept 1847 during the Mexican American War. Assault on the castle included 40 Marines with over 90% casualties. Mexican forces surrenders at 0900 on 13 September 1847, opening the way into Mexico City. 

400

Amphibious Operations in the Pacific

Between 7 and 9 August 1942, Marines landed on the beaches of Guadalcanal and Tulagi in the Solomon Islands. Makred the 1st Allied land offense in the Pacific and was the first amphibious assaults against the enemy forces by the 1st Marine Divsion. Amphious landing followed on the remaining Solomon Islands including New Georgia, Bougainville and Choiseul. 

400

Women in the Marine Corps

Permanent part of the regular MC on 12 June 1948 when Congress passed the Women's Armed Service Integration Act (Public Law 625). MC Women's Reserve est. in Feb 1943; Before WW2 ended, total of 23,145 officer/enlisted women reservists served in the Corps. By June 1944, women reservists made up 85% and almost 2/3 of the personnel manning in all major posted in the US and Hawaii.  

400

Montford Point Marines

June 1, 1942; MC began to recruit qualified "colored male citizens between the age of 17 and 29". MC est. a separate cantonment at Camp Lejeune for AA recruits called Montford Point Camp. First recruits arrived on August 26, 1942. January 1943, 1,000 AA would enter the MC each month. First AA MC Combat unit was the 51st Defense Battalion activated on 18 August 1942. Total of almost 20K AA served in Montford Point united during WW2. 12,738 were deployed overseas in defense battalions. 

500

Loss of the ability to accomplish the mission

Death/permanent toal disability 

Major Facility damage

Unnacceptable collateral damage

What is severity category 1

500

Battle of Belleu Wood

June 1, 1918; Marine forces launch a last-ditch close combat assault against German soldiers and shred the defensive counterattack. Surviving German soldiers nicked their adversaries "Devil Dogs" due to their relentless fighting spirit. 

500

Pearl Harbor

7 December 1941, massive surprise attack by the Imperial Japanese Navy; "like a thunderclap from the clear sky". Japanese carrier attack planes numbering 353 aircraft from 6 aircraft carriers attacked the US Pacific Fleet at Pearl Harbor in 2 waves. The enemy sank 5 battleships, damaged 3; sank a gunnery training ship, three destroyers, damaged a heavy cruiser, 3 light cruisers, two destroyers, two seaplane tenders, two repair ships and a destroy tender. 188 Navy, Army and MC planes were destroyed. 

Killed/Wounded: 

Navy: 2,008/710

MC: 109/69

Army:218/364


500

LT General Lewis B. "Chesty" Puller

Served in Nicaragua through several periods of political unrest and rebellious activity. Puller and a force of about 32 Marines became famous for their ability to engage rebel groups while scouring the jungles from Nicaragua to the Honduran border. Puller became known as the "Tiger of the Mountains" in 1930; The MC mascot, an English Bulldog is named Chesty, in honor of this Marine. 

500

LT Vincent R. Capodanno

December of 1965, Father Capadanno received his commission as a LT in the Navy Chaps Corps. Assigned to 1stMARDIV in Vietnam in April 1966. On 4 Sept 1967, While assigned to 3/5, during combat with enemy forces in Quang Tin Province; he left the relative safety area of the Company post and ran into open fire, administering last rites to the dying and giving medical aid to the wounded. A mortar round caused multiple injuries on him but he continued to provide encouragement. He lost his life while providing assistance and comfort to Marine causalities. He was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor.

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