Chesty Puller was a US lieutenant general who served during the World War II
@United States Marine Corps Lieutenant General, Career and Childhood
Chesty Puller was a US lieutenant general who served during the World War II
Chesty Puller born at
Puller married 29-year-old Virginia Montague Evans in 1937 in Saluda, Middlesex County, Virginia. She accompanied him to China, Hawaii, and across the United States during his service in those places. At the outbreak of the World War II, she moved back to Saluda to raise their three children: daughter Virginia and twins Martha and Lewis Jr. After Puller’s retirement from the Marine Corps, the couple settled down in the house where Mrs. Puller had been raised.
As an officer of the Marine Corps, Puller was blunt, profane and demanding. He always had a smoking pipe with him and was intensely loyal to his service and country. He despised weakness in men. The most decorated marine in American history, he inspired loyalty in his subordinates unlike any other.
He still is one of most enduring legends of the Marine Corps folklore, a perfect blend of truth and exaggeration. According to some accounts, he was given the nickname “Chesty” because of his big, thrust-out chest. The myth was that his real chest had been shot away and replaced with a steel one.
Born on June 26, 1898, in West Point, Virginia, U.S., Chesty Puller was one of the four children of Matthew and Martha Puller. He had two sisters, Pattie and Emily, and a brother, Samuel. Puller’s father passed away when he was ten years old. Growing up, he loved listening to old Civil War stories and considered the Confederate general Thomas Jonathan "Stonewall" Jackson as his idol.
His childhood aspirations culminated into a deep desire to join the military. In 1916, during the Border War with Mexico, Puller expressed his interest in joining the US Army but was denied because he was too young and his mother did not provide him with parental consent.
However, that did not deter him from enrolling at the Virginia Military Institute in 1917. The following year, he left the school to “go where the guns are!” After enlisting in the Marine Corps as a private, he received training at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot, Parris Island, South Carolina.
He later went to their non-commissioned officer school and Officer Candidates School (OCS) at Quantico, Virginia. On June 16, 1919, he graduated and was designated as a second lieutenant in the reserves. Subsequently, he was rendered inactive due to the reduction in force from 73,000 to 1,100 officers and 27,400 men and was ultimately appointed as a corporal.
Chesty Puller was sent to Haiti as part of the Gendarmerie d'Haiti as a lieutenant. This was his first exposure to combat. During his five-year service there, he was involved in more than 40 engagements with the Caco rebels. He came back to the US sometime in the early 1924 and was appointed as the second lieutenant on March 6, 1924. In the next few years he was posted in marine barracks across America, including in Norfolk, Virginia; Quantico, Virginia; Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, and San Diego, California.
In 1928, he went to Nicaragua as part of the Nicaraguan National Guard detachment. Between February 16 and August 19, 1930, Puller helmed five successive operations against the armed bandit forces that had superior numbers. This earned him his first Navy Cross.
He went back to the US for a year-long Company Officers Course at Fort Benning, Georgia in July 1931, before heading to Nicaragua again in September 1932. He earned his second Navy Cross for commanding American Marines and Nicaraguan National Guardsmen in the last battle against the Sandinista rebels on December 26, 1932.
After his tenure in Nicaragua, Puller was stationed as part of the marine detachment at the American Legation in Beijing, China, where he served as the commander of an entire unit of Chinese Marines. After that, he was stationed aboard the USS Augusta, a cruiser in the Asiatic Fleet. He then got the assignment of an instructor at The Basic School in Philadelphia, where he oversaw the training of Ben Robertshaw, Pappy Boyington, and Lew Walt.
In May 1939, he served aboard Augusta once more and then went back to China. After his return to stateside in August 1941, he was assigned as the commander of 1st Battalion, 7th Marines (1/7) of the 1st Marine Division, stationed at New River, North Carolina (later Camp Lejeune).
The 7th Marines were deployed to protect Samoa as part of the 3rd Marine Brigade at the beginning of the Pacific theatre. They landed on May 8, 1942. They were sent back to Guadalcanal as part of the 1st division in September. Puller marshalled his battalion with characteristic brilliance in fierce action along the Matanikau. He made his way to the shore, signalled USS Ballad and then instructed the Navy destroyer to send in rescue teams for his men while providing cover fire.
It was later in Guadalcanal that Puller won his third Navy Cross and Purple Heart medal for the ‘Battle for Henderson Field’. He was appointed as the executive officer of the 7th Marine Regiment in 1943 and commanded his men in a successful attack against the heavily fortified Japanese defensive positions. On February 1, 1944, he was made colonel and later was promoted as the commander of the 1st Marine Regiment.
The Marine regiment fought the protracted battle in Peleliu. It was one of the bloodiest battles in the history of the US Marine Corps. They lost 1,749 out of about 3,000 men. Despite this, Puller ordered the Marines to commit to frontal assaults against a well-entrenched enemy.
Following the end of the war, he was assigned to the post of the Director of the 8th Reserve District at New Orleans, and later helmed the Marine Barracks at Pearl Harbor.
When the Korean War broke out, Puller returned to serve in the 1st Marine Regiment. He was present during the landing at Inchon on September 15, 1950.