The first African American in Marine Corps history to be promoted to the rank of Sergeant Major.

FROM MONTFORD POINT TO VIETNAM: In honor of #BlackHistoryMonth, the Veterans Legacy Program (VLP) honors the remarkable life and legacy of Edgar R. Huff.


The first African American in Marine Corps history to be promoted to the rank of Sergeant Major.

Born in Alabama in 1919, Huff joined the Corps in 1942, making him a member of the renowned Montford Point Marines.

After service in the Pacific Theater, Huff went on to serve as Gunnery Sergeant with the 1st Marine Division in Korea. He became the first Black Sergeant Major in the history of the US Marine Corps in 1955.

Huff later served two tours in Vietnam. During the Tet Offensive, Sergeant Major Huff was awarded the Bronze Star Medal with combat ‘‘V’’ for valor for saving the life of his radio operator.

Despite decades of enduring injustice and mistreatment due to his skin color, Huff would later remark:

“I never let any of these things make me prejudice right back. Especially in combat. Especially in Vietnam. I am the sergeant major. I take care of all my men, black and white.”

Following his second tour in Vietnam, Huff retired on September 30, 1972. Reflecting on his service, he said:

“When I retired, I had been Sergeant Major longer than anyone on duty at the time in all the services. I was the senior enlisted man in the whole United States Armed Forces.

I could look back to becoming the first black Sergeant Major in the Marine Corps…including Vietnam, when it was the largest marine force ever assembled.”

Huff died on May 2, 1994, at Camp Lejeune Naval Hospital and is interred in Plot A-69 of Coastal Carolina State Veterans Cemetery, a VA Grant Funded Veterans Cemetery. Please take a moment to remember his service today.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

RIGHTEOUS AMONG THE NATIONS:US Army Master Sergeant Roddie Edmond.

Perched atop the deck of a ship in the year 1910, a sailor shares a moment of companionship with the ship's cat and its tiny kitten.

🇺🇲WWII uncovered: Honoring the Service of First Sergeant Floyd Talbert of Easy Company♠️

One day, a math teacher from Minnesota gave her students the following assignment:

🇺🇲 WWII uncovered: Three War Veteran: Colonel Ed McMahon of the US Marine Corps:

🇺🇲A Salute to Melvin E Biddle. Recipient of Congressional Medal of Honor and Hero of the Battle of the Bulge.

On this day 10th March 1945.

See A Woman Who Has Four Legs And Two Privates Parts.

Reg Curtis, No. 2 Commando, 11th SAS, 1st Parachute Battalion:

1944: The Hurtgen Forest - slaughter of the U.S army on German soil...