Country Zest & Style Winter 2021 Edition

Page 40

Semper Fi:

S

By John Toler

egregation in the U.S. military did not end until 1948, with President Harry Truman’s Executive Order 9981, fully integrating the armed services. Until then, everything from training, military assignments and quartering was determined by race. While many are familiar with the story of the Tuskegee Airmen, the African American fighter pilots and ground crews whose story was told in books and the 2012 movie, Red Tails, less is known about the Montford Point Marines, their counterparts in the U.S. Marine Corps. Fauquier County natives Roland I. Tapscott and his younger brother Stanley were Montford Point Marines. They lived in the Warrenton-Catlett area when the U.S. entered World War II. In early 1942, Roland was drafted by the Army and ordered to report to Fort Myer for a physical. When he got off the bus in Washington, he stopped by a kiosk manned by a Marine recruiter and signed up. What he didn’t know was that only since 1941 were African Americans allowed to serve in the USMC. A month later, Tapscott arrived at Montford Point, a segregated training facility outside Camp Lejeune, N. C. The unit was designated the 51st Composite Defense Battalion, a unique designation that allowed the men to be trained separately from White Marines. Conditions were deplorable. Barracks were dilapidated former Civilian Construction Corps huts, in which 40 men were quartered. Initially, there were no latrines, which recruits had to build. Worse was the overt racism, from the civilian communities around the base and White officers and NCOs assigned to train them. Making a raw recruit into a Marine was tough, but added to that were open hostility and constant questioning of the Montford Point trainees’ capabilities. “It was clear that they didn’t want Blacks in the Marine Corps,” Tapscott said in an interview in 2012. “It was disgraceful.” Adequate training also was lacking. Tapscott’s platoon spent only three days on the rifle range, firing .22 caliber rifles instead of the M-1 rifles they were expected to carry into battle. In spite of his brother’s experiences at Montford Point, Stanley Tapscott enlisted in the USMC, arriving for training in December, 1944. “By then there were Black drill instructors, and they had to be tougher than White DIs if they wanted to keep their jobs,” he recalled. “Every movement in camp was to be done at a run, and anyone caught walking was subject to punishment.” Before completing training, Stanley suffered a serious bacterial infection, and was separated from

40

The only time Pvt. Tapscott got to wear his Marine Corps dress blue uniform was for this portrait, taken in July 1943 while he was on the only leave he took while in the Corps. the Marine Corps and sent home. He is still mystified by the action, and the fact he was given an honorable discharge, rather than a medical discharge. Initially, those who completed training were enlisted in the Marine Reserve and assigned to inactive duty. That changed with the critical shortage of manpower as the war progressed. Of approximately 20,000 African Americans trained at Montford Point during WWII, nearly 13,000 were sent to fight in the Pacific. The remainder served stateside as stewards at various headquarters or worked

Go Green Middleburg | Winter 2021

at supply or ammunition depots. From Montford Point, Pvt. Roland Tapscott was assigned to the Marine base at San Diego, and from there to New Caledonia in the South Pacific as a member of the 1st Marine Division’s 21st Replacement Company. On August 13, 1943, his unit landed at Guadalcanal, which was still unsecured. Leaving their transport ship in two smaller boats, they were headed to Banika, about 60 miles away in the Russell Islands, when Japanese aircraft attacked. They were strafed by Japanese fighters,


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Articles inside

Matt Hannan: A Perfect Fit at Long Branch

3min
page 45

Doing It All at Middleburg Tennis Club

2min
page 44

At Shiloh Baptist, From Military to Ministry

3min
page 43

Oatlands Diary Details Once Lost Descendants

3min
page 42

Semper Fi: The Montford Point Marines

4min
pages 40-41

I Hereby Do Resolve To...

2min
page 37

At Station No.. 3, They're Always Fired Up

3min
pages 34-35

For Jackson, It’s Teach and Treat

3min
pages 32-33

Latitudes: Weaving a Way to Empower Women Worldwide

3min
pages 30-31

Pablo & Dilly Are At Home On The Farm

1min
pages 28-29

Candlemaker’s Quest Leads to Start-Up Home Business

2min
page 26

The Cold War Comes Alive at Vint Hill Museum

2min
page 25

England Blooms in Paris

2min
page 24

Country Zest & Style Winter 2021 Edition

3min
page 22

Picture Perfect

3min
page 20

Country Zest & Style Winter 2021 Edition

1min
page 18

He’ll Take Paris, The Historic Virginia Village

6min
pages 16-17

Perspectives on Childhood, Education and Parenting Wait: The Art and Science of Delay by Frank Partnoy

2min
page 15

At Teddy’s, It’s All About the Dough

2min
page 14

Frank Drew: A Samaritan’s Life Spectacularly Lived

4min
page 13

Diamonds Were These Girls' Best Friend

1min
page 12

Fauquier Habitat Building For the Future

2min
page 11

At Nick’s Deli, It’s Time to Celebrate

1min
page 10

PSO Still Spreading the Sweet Sound of Music

3min
pages 8-9

Remembering a Long Ago Middleburg Officer Down

2min
page 7

A Community Center For One and All

2min
page 6

ON THE COVER

2min
page 4
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