Wayne County Marine Corps League Detachment #1343

Wayne County Marine Corps League Detachment #1343 Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Wayne County Marine Corps League Detachment #1343, Nonprofit Organization, Meetings: 2nd Tues of the Month 1901 CR-12, Wooster, OH.

04/07/2026

Cheers to National Beer Day and to SSgt Reckless, a decorated warhorse who served during the Korean War.🍻

📸: LtCol Andrew Geer shares a beer with Reckless in August 1953, the night before Geer left Korea. Camp Pendleton Archives.



🍺 Fun Fact: Popular in the 17th to 19th centuries, clear-bottom tankards helped drinkers spot the “King’s Shilling,” a hidden coin recruiters used to trick people into joining the Royal Navy.

Dakota Meyer Medal of Honor Recipient:     In 2009, during the war in Afghanistan, Marine Corps Sgt. Dakota Louis Meyer ...
04/07/2026

Dakota Meyer Medal of Honor Recipient:

In 2009, during the war in Afghanistan, Marine Corps Sgt. Dakota Louis Meyer spent hours traversing an active combat zone to rescue dozens of trapped men and recover the bodies of four U.S. service members. Despite disobeying orders to do so, Meyer's actions led him the Medal of Honor.
Shortly before dawn on Sept. 8, 2009, the 21-year-old Meyer was working security at a patrol rally point in Kunar Province while other unit members and two platoons of Afghan soldiers walked into the village of Ganjgal for an early-morning meeting with its elders.
It was a trap. As the unit moved in, the village's lights suddenly went out, and the patrol was ambushed. More than 50 Taliban fighters broke the morning silence by firing machine guns, rocket-propelled grenades and mortars from houses and other fortified positions on the slopes above the town.
Meyer and Staff Sgt. Juan Rodriguez-Chavez were about a mile away when the chaos was broadcast over the radio. When they heard that four U.S. team members — Meyer's friends — were surrounded, he asked for permission four times to go in and help. Each time, he was told no — it was too dangerous.
Meyer chose to go in anyway. He hopped into a nearby Humvee and, with Rodriguez-Chavez driving, took the gunner's position as they drove through steeply terraced terrain into the fight.
“They were defying orders, but they were doing what they thought was right," President Barack Obama later said during Meyer's Medal of Honor ceremony.
Suddenly, the intense insurgent fire was focused on them. Even though Meyer's entire upper body was exposed, he ignored the intense fire around him. Using mounted machine guns and a rifle, he took out several insurgents, including some at point-blank range. Meyer and Rodriguez-Chavez made several trips like this into the ambush area.
During the first two trips, the pair were able to evacuate two-dozen Afghan soldiers, many of whom were wounded. According to Meyer's Medal of Honor citation, when one of his Humvee's machine guns stopped working, he directed Rodriguez-Chavez to go back to the rally point to exchange vehicles.
On their third trip into the ambush area, Meyer used his fire power to help more trapped men fight their way out. By then, their vehicle was riddled with bullets and shrapnel.
“Those who were there called it the most intense combat they'd ever seen," Obama later said. "Dakota and Juan would have been forgiven for not going back in. But as Dakota says, you don't leave anyone behind."
Meyer had suffered a shrapnel wound to his arm, but he disregarded the pain and made two more trips into the ambush area to recover more Afghan soldiers, this time with support from other friendly vehicles.
By their fifth trip into the ambush area, cover fire from a UH-60 Black Hawk had finally arrived to offer air support, according to a 2011 Associated Press article. The helicopter reported that it could see what appeared to be four bodies, so Meyer went to that area to search for his missing team members.
“He kept going until he came upon those four Americans, laying where they fell, together as one team," President Obama said. "Dakota and the others who had joined him knelt down, picked up their comrades and — through all those bullets, all the smoke, all the chaos — carried them out, one by one. Because, as Dakota says, 'That's what you do for a brother.'"
For his commitment and courage during those harrowing six hours, Meyer received the Medal of Honor on Sept. 15, 2011, during a White House ceremony.
Rodriguez-Chavez, who fought with Meyer in Ganjgal, received the Navy Cross for his valor.

04/07/2026

🩺 NEXUS LETTERS- Schedule through website -Dr. Prashant Sharma - Physician - Board-certified Psychiatrist📧 Website: ConcisePsych.com*Paid Partnership*Veter...

04/07/2026
On This Day in Marine Corps History:  Marines chose 8th and I Streets in D.C. for the site of the Marine BarracksIn 1801...
03/31/2026

On This Day in Marine Corps History: Marines chose 8th and I Streets in D.C. for the site of the Marine Barracks

In 1801, the site at 8th and I Streets in Washington, D.C. was selected as the home of what would become Marine Barracks Washington. The decision was a personal interest of President Thomas Jefferson, who rode through the city with Lt. Col. William Ward Burrows, the second Commandant of the Marine Corps, to find a suitable location.

The site was approved because of its close proximity to the Washington Navy Yard and its easy marching distance to the U.S. Capitol. Established that year, the Barracks soon became a center for training new officers and recruits and later served as Marine Corps Headquarters until 1901.

Today, Marine Barracks Washington stands as the oldest continuously active Marine Corps installation in the United States, recognized as a National Historic Landmark and long associated with the Marine Corps’ history, traditions, and the service of Marines across generations.

Marine Corps Capt. Everett Pope was a seasoned officer by the time he landed on the small Pacific island of Peleliu duri...
03/31/2026

Marine Corps Capt. Everett Pope was a seasoned officer by the time he landed on the small Pacific island of Peleliu during World War II, but little prepared him for what it took to survive there. His leadership, while fighting devastating odds, earned him the Medal of Honor.
Pope was born July 16, 1919, and grew up in Massachusetts, where he graduated from high school. He then attended Bowdoin College in Brunswick, Maine, and spent his junior year studying abroad in France. By October 1939, he returned to the United States, fully aware of the increasing crisis in Europe.
“We could see what [war] could do. It was devastating, the world the French were living in at that point," Pope recalled in an interview with the Library of Congress' Veterans History Project. "I didn't want to hang around and be drafted."
So, four days after graduating from college in 1941, Pope joined the Marine Corps as an officer candidate. He got his commission just before the Pearl Harbor attacks and, a few months later, was sent off to the Pacific to fight.
Of the 70 men who went up the hill with him, only eight came back down.
“A lot of brave Marines died on that hill," Pope said. "I can never forget it."

CAPTAIN EVERETT P. POPE
UNITED STATES MARINE CORPS
for service as set forth in the following CITATION:
For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty while serving as Commanding Officer of Company C, First Battalion, First Marines, First Marine Division, during action against enemy Japanese forces on Peleliu Island, Palau Group, on 19–20 September 1944. Subjected to point-blank cannon fire which caused heavy casualties and badly disorganized his company while assaulting a steep coral hill, Captain Pope rallied his men and gallantly led them to the summit in the face of machine-gun, mortar, and sniper fire. Forced by widespread hostile attack to deploy the remnants of his company thinly in order to hold the ground won, and with his machine-guns out of action and insufficient water and ammunition, he remained on the exposed hill with twelve men and one wounded officer, determined to hold through the night. Attacked continuously with grenades, machine-guns, and rifles from three sides and twice subjected to suicidal charges during the night, he and his valiant men fiercely beat back or destroyed the enemy, resorting to hand-to-hand combat as the supply of ammunition dwindled and still maintaining his lines with his eight remaining riflemen when daylight brought more deadly fire and he was ordered to withdraw. His valiant leadership against devastating odds while protecting the units below from heavy Japanese attack reflects the highest credit upon Captain Pope and the United States Naval Service
/S/ FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT

03/30/2026
03/30/2026

Did you know?

Gene Hackman served in the U.S. Marine Corps from 1946 to 1951, enlisting at age 16 by lying about his age. He served over four years as a field radio operator, including deployments in China (Qingdao and Shanghai) and Hawaii, attaining the rank of Corporal (sometimes reported as Pfc).

Hackman was part of Operation Beleaguer in China, assisting with the repatriation of Japanese/Korean nationals and protecting American interests, which included destroying military equipment.
He worked as a radio operator and a disc jockey for the Armed Forces Radio in the Pacific. He was known to have trouble with authority, being demoted to private three times for leaving his duty post without permission.
Following his discharge in 1951, he used the G.I. Bill to study journalism.
He narrated the National Museum of the Marine Corps film, "We, the Marines".

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Meetings: 2nd Tues Of The Month 1901 CR-12
Wooster, OH
44691

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