SALISBURY, Md., Aug. 12, 2014 – The Marines at Recruiting
Sub-Station Salisbury here work over 60 hours every week to recruit
highly qualified men and women into the Marine Corps. When they are
not out canvassing the local community looking for future Marines,
they are in the office making phone calls, interviewing applicants
and processing paperwork.
Their office frequently receives
visitors who do not want to join the Marine Corps -- they just want
to talk about it. These are former Marines, most of whom served
before the recruiters were even born, who stop by the office to talk
about their Marine Corps experiences.
The recruiters will
turn away from their computer screens and listen to stories about
the “Old Corps.” Many of these Marine veterans even bring in books
and keepsakes from their time in the service and initiate impromptu
show and tell sessions in the recruiting office. Once they are
finished sharing their fond memories of being one of the few and the
proud, they thank the recruiters for their time, shout “OO-RAH!” or
“Semper Fi!” as they leave, usually to return with a new story to
share.
One of these storytellers is Robert Thomas. Recently,
the 73-year-old Salisbury native came by the recruiting office with
his dress blues jacket from when he served many years ago. He was
not there to show off his uniform, but he had a favor to ask of the
Marines. It was a favor that turned out to be a story 50 years in
the making.
Marine Corps Staff Sgt. Max G. Neighbors, a canvassing recruiter
with Recruiting Station Baltimore, and Robert L. Thomas and his
Marine Corps dress blues jacket at Recruiting Sub-Station Salisbury,
Md., July 21, 2014. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Sgt. Bryan J.
Nygaard)
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Thomas was born and raised in the rural farmlands of Cambridge,
Maryland. While he was a senior in high school, he decided to join
the Marines, much to the chagrin of his mother.
“I knew at
the time when I graduated I did not want anything to do with
college,” Thomas said. “I was not ready for it and would probably
have been a disaster if I had gone.”
His mother
eventually conceded and signed the parental consent papers, allowing
him to enlist. Thomas arrived at Marine Corps Recruit Depot Parris
Island, South Carolina, in July 1959 and graduated the following
October. His parents were at his graduation ceremony and had
purchased him a set of dress blues. During that time, Marines were
not issued dress blues at recruit training like they are today. Each
Marine had to purchase them from the clothing and uniform store at
their respective base.
Thomas was trained to be a combat
engineer and was assigned to 2nd Pioneer Battalion [now known as 2nd
Combat Engineer Battalion] of the 2nd Marine Division, based out of
Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune, North Carolina.
“We built
things, we blew up things with C4, we laid out mine fields, used
detonating cord and dug up mines ... that sort of thing,” Thomas said.
In November 11200, Thomas went out to sea on what would be one of
many “cruises.” He was attached to Task Force 88, an amphibious
ready group, which embarked on a goodwill tour known as Solant Amity
Cruise I. During this expedition, Thomas and his fellow Marines
crossed the equator eight times, sailed in three different oceans
and set foot on more than a dozen countries located throughout the
continents of Africa, Europe and South America.
One of the
more notable events of the tour came in January 1961 when elements
of the task force landed in Matadi, the chief seaport of the
Democratic Republic of the Congo, to assist in the evacuation of
western nationals and United Nations troops. The country, which had
recently been liberated from Belgium, had fallen into civil war,
prompting the Congolese government to request military assistance
from the U.N. During the early 11200s, the U.S. Navy assisted the
U.N. several times in stabilizing the newly independent nation,
according to Thomas.
After being out to sea for more than six
months, Thomas came home in June 1961, and married his high school
sweetheart, Nancy. Thirty days after getting married, he left on
another cruise to Vieques, Puerto Rico.
On October 26, 1962,
Thomas and the rest of his unit were told to grab their gear and to
write up their wills. They boarded the USS Monrovia and sailed
south. This was during the tenuous 13 days in October 1962 known as
the Cuban Missile Crisis. The Monrovia served as part of the U.S.
blockade around Cuba following the discovery that the Soviet Union
had placed nuclear missiles there.
“I thought we were going
to war,” said Thomas, whose wife was three months pregnant at the
time. “It got serious for us when we started firing machine guns off
the stern of the ship. We thought something might come out of it. I
was with a good group of people. I think we all knew our jobs and we
were ready to do what our country called us to do.”
Nuclear
war was averted on October 28, of that year when the United States
and the Soviet Union reached an agreement that called for the
removal of all nuclear missiles from Cuba in exchange for the U.S.
removing all nuclear missiles from Turkey. After the missiles were
removed from Cuba, the blockade formally ended on November 20 and
Thomas returned home in December.
On June 26, 1963, Cpl.
Thomas was honorably discharged from the Marine Corps. Five days
later, he checked into the Maryland State Police Academy. He would
serve as a Maryland State Trooper for 31 years, rising to the rank
lieutenant colonel.
Barely two years had passed when Thomas
heard his nation's call once more. He decided to come back to the
Marine Corps. In 1965, President Lyndon Johnson ordered two
battalions of Marines to protect the American air base in Da Nang,
South Vietnam, furthering the buildup of U.S. forces there. Thomas
and another state trooper, also a former Marine, went to the Marine
recruiting station in Annapolis to see if they could get back in.
The recruiter turned him away after Thomas told him he was married
with a child and had another on the way.
“That is probably
just as well,” said Thomas, noting that his wife probably would have
shot him before he departed.
And with that, Thomas was
undoubtedly done with the Marine Corps. He credits his four years in
the Marines with preparing him for life.
“The Marines do an
excellent job about building character and instilling responsibility
in people,” Thomas said. “You learn to look out for people. You
learn to take care of yourself -- to be prepared for eventualities
that take place and to be adaptable so that when something raises
its ugly head you can deal with it.”
Recently, Thomas read on
a website dedicated to the Marines of the Solant Amity cruise that
he was authorized to wear two different medals on his dress blues in
addition to his Good Conduct Medal. He, like countless other
veterans from World War II through Vietnam, left the service without
knowing what medals and ribbons they were eligible to wear.
In order to verify that he actually was allowed to wear these
medals, Thomas contacted the military awards branch of Marine Corps
Manpower and Reserve Affairs. They were able to confirm what medals
he was allowed to wear and then mailed them to him.
The first
was the National Defense Service Medal. President Dwight D.
Eisenhower established this medal in 1953 for service during a
national emergency, war or armed conflict. It has only been
authorized for four different time periods: the Korean War), the
Vietnam War, the Persian Gulf War and the Global War on Terrorism.
Thomas was made eligible to wear this medal because he served from
1959 to 1963.
The second medal he is allowed to wear is the
Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal, established by President John F.
Kennedy in 1961 for service in any military campaign in which no
other service medal is authorized. The first campaign the medal was
issued for was the Cuban Missile Crisis. It was later made
retroactive for actions that took place in the Republic of the
Congo.
Those two medals along with Thomas' Good Conduct
Medal, which is awarded to a Marine for every three consecutive
years of good behavior, made up the three medals that he was allowed
to wear on his dress blues. There was only one problem -- Thomas did
not know how to put them on his uniform or the order of precedence
in which they were to be arranged. So he went to the one place he
knew he could find help.
Marine Corps Sgt. Randall Dobbs, a
recruiter at the Salisbury station, was in the office when Thomas
came by with his dress blues jacket. Dobbs looked up the order in
which the medals were to be mounted, then found an old ribbon bar in
his wall locker, set the medals on it and mounted the bar on the
dress blues jacket.
“It felt good to do that for him,” said
Dobbs, a native of Macon, Georgia. “He thinks the world for what we
did for him, but that was just a five-minute project.”
That
project represents Thomas' four years of service during a perilous
time when the U.S. was engaged in the Cold War with the Soviet
Union. Even though he never engaged enemy forces in a combat
situation, he was involved in two major events of that period.
“I was not there for any conflict -- nobody was shooting at me,
which was a good thing,” Thomas said. “I gave them four years to
start something and because they did not, it was not my fault.”
Although he does not exactly fit into his dress blues anymore,
he says it is important to show his friends and family what he
earned.
“My family members were always supportive of me being
a Marine anyhow, but the Marine with the medals now, they think is
kind of neat,” Thomas said.
By Sgt. Bryan J. Nygaard
American Forces Press Service Copyright 2014
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