9th Marine Regiment (United States)
- ️Thu May 22 2008
Infobox Military Unit
unit_name= 9th Marine Regiment
caption= 9th Marines Insignia
courtesy of www.military-graphics.com
dates=*Nov 10,
*January 1, 1943 — Dec. 31, 1945
*Oct 1, 1947 — Oct 17, 1949
*March 17, 1952 — July 21, 1994
country=United States
allegiance=
branch=USMC
type= Infantry regiment
role= Locate, close with and destroy the enemy with fire and maneuver
size=
command_structure=3rd Marine Division
III Marine Expeditionary Force
current_commander=
garrison= Deactivated
ceremonial_chief=
colonel_of_the_regiment=
nickname= Striking Ninth
patron=
motto=
colors=
march=
mascot=
battles= World War II
* Battle of Bougainville
* Battle of Guam
* Battle of Iwo Jima
Vietnam War
* Operation Dewey Canyon
Operation Desert Storm
notable_commanders= Lemuel C. Shepherd
Robert H. Barrow
anniversaries=
The 9th Marine Regiment was an infantry regiment of the United States Marine Corps. Formed during World War II, it served until the early 1990s when it was deactivated to make room for three light armor reconnaissance battalions. Battalions of the Ninth Marine Regiment began to be reactivated in 2007 as part of the Marine Corps' plan to increase its end strength by 27,000 in the over the following five years.
Current Units
The regiment was composed of three infantry battalions and one headquarters battalion:
* Headquarters Battalion 1st Marines (HQ/9)
* 1st Battalion 9th Marines (1/9) attached to 8th Marine Regiment
* 2nd Battalion 9th Marines (2/9) attached to 6th Marine Regiment
* 3rd Battalion 9th Marines (3/9) attached to the 2nd Marine Regiment
History
Early years
The 9th Marines were activated at Quantico, Virginia on November 20, 1917. A month later, they deployed to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba and were attached to the 3rd Marine Brigade. That same month, they redeployed with the brigade to Galveston, Texas in case of any German operation in the Caribbean or in Mexico. After World War I, the regiment was deactivated in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on April 25, 1919.cite book
last = Rottman
first = Gordon L.
authorlink =
coauthors =
title = U.S. Marine Corps World War II Order of Battle – Ground and Air Units in the Pacific War.
publisher = Greenwood Press
year = 2002
location = Westport, Connecticut
url =
doi =
id = ISBN 0-313-31906-5] cite web|accessdate=2008-05-22
url=http://www.iimefpublic.usmc.mil/public/infolineMarines.nsf/(ArticlesRead)/76EFB3A16405EF8C8525743A005F4F45?OpenDocument
title=Lineage: 3rd Battalion, 9th Marines
publisher=II MEF, USMC |year=2008] On December 1, 1925, the regiment was reactivated as a reserve organization whose mission was to train and maintain at a high degree of preparedness a group of “civilian” Marines.
World War II
The 3rd Battalion 9th Marines was reactivated at Camp Elliot, San Diego on February 12, 1942. In the following months, the rest of the battalions were also reactivated on January 1, 1942 when the regiment officially re-formed. They attached to the 3rd Marine Division at Camp Pendleton on September 16, 1943. The Regiment was deactivated at Camp Pendleton on December 31, 1945 .
Vietnam War
On March 8, 1965, 9th Marines came ashore at China Beach as the first conventional ground combat unit in South Vietnam. [O'Neil "Top Secret", p.225.] Their mission was to defend the air base at Da Nang. The first significant contact was in April 1965. The regimental headquarters arrived in country in July of that year.
The Regiment saw action in Vietnam’s I Corps, primarily in Quang Tri and Thua Thien provinces, although a number of its earlier operations were also conducted in the southern I Corps provinces of Quang Nam, Quang Tin, and Quang Ngai. The 9th Marines served as a vital stop to the North Vietnamese penetrations across the DMZ and from along the Ho Chi Minh Trail in Cambodia.
Some of its early operations included Double Eagle, Macon and Prairie. In April and May 1967, elements of the regiment defeated two NVA Regiments in the Hills north of Khe Sanh. In Operation Buffalo, elements of the 1st Battalion, 9th Marines made contact north of Con Thien with regimental-size NVA forces in an engagement that lasted through May, accounting for over 1300 enemy dead.
In one of the most successful operations of the war, the regiment conducted Operation Dewey Canyon in the A Shau Valley, cut by the Song Da Krong river. The 9th Regiment exacted a deadly toll on the NVA. These actions precluded another build-up and assault from Route 622 from Laos into South Vietnam as the NVA had the year before during the Tet Offensive.
Operation Dewey Canyon netted, among other weaponry, 16 artillery pieces, 73 anti-aircraft guns, hundreds of thousands of rounds of ammunition, 92 trucks, and hundreds of thousands pounds of rice.
In the words of Gen Stillwell in his report to Gen Abrams on Operation Dewey Canyon:
“...this ranks with the most significant undertakings of the Vietnam conflict in the concept and results...” The 9th Marines were redeployed from Vietnam in August 1969 as part of the first redeployments.
Reactivation
As part of the effort to expand the Marine Corps to 202,000 Marines by the end of 2011, battalions of the 9th Marines began reactivation in 2007.cite news|accessdate=2008-05-24
url=http://www.marinecorpstimes.com/news/2008/05/marine_threenine_052408w/
title=Battalion stands up — but where will it go?
author=Talton, Trista
work=Marine Corps Times
date=May 24, 2008] The 1st Battalion, 9th Marines (1/9) reactivated on April 18, 2007.cite web
url=http://www.usmc.mil/maradmins/maradmin2000.nsf/37f49138fc3d9c00852569b9000af6b7/1930745bb2d089c18525723d006167c7?OpenDocument
title= MARADMIN 582/06 - Publication of Fiscal Years 2007 through 20013 Tables of Organization and Equipment (T/OE)
publisher=U.S. Marine Corps
accessdate=2007-01-08] The 2nd Battalion reactivated in July 2007, while the 3rd Battalion reactivated in May 2008.cite web|url=http://www.strategypage.com/htmw/htamph/articles/20061221.aspx |title=Marines: 9th Marines Returns From the Dead|publisher=Strategy Page|accessdate=2007-01-08] cite web
url=http://www.usmc.mil/maradmins/maradmin2000.nsf/37f49138fc3d9c00852569b9000af6b7/1930745bb2d089c18525723d006167c7?OpenDocument
title= MARADMIN 582/06 - Publication of Fiscal Years 2007 through 20013 Tables of Organization and Equipment (T/OE)
publisher=U.S. Marine Corps
accessdate=2007-01-08] cite news|accessdate=2008-05-24
url=http://www.marinecorpstimes.com/news/2008/05/marine_threenine_052408w/
title=Battalion stands up — but where will it go?
author=Talton, Trista
work=Marine Corps Times
date=May 24, 2008] Each battalion falls under existing regimental headquarters — 1/9 with the 8th Marine Regiment, 2/9 with the 6th Marine Regiment and 3/9 within 2nd Marine Regiment.cite news|accessdate=2008-05-24
url=http://www.marinecorpstimes.com/news/2008/05/marine_threenine_052408w/
title=Battalion stands up — but where will it go?
author=Talton, Trista
work=Marine Corps Times
date=May 24, 2008]
Medal of Honor recipients
8 Marines from the 9th Marine Regiment have received the Medal of Honor:
*Thomas E. Creek
*John H. Leims
*Wilson D. Watson
*Louis H. Wilson
*Frank P. Witek
*Wesley L. Fox
*William D. Morgan
*Alfred M. Wilson
*John P. Bobo
Unit awards
A unit citation or commendation is an award bestowed upon an organization for the action cited. Members of the unit who participated in said actions are allowed to wear on their uniforms the awarded unit citation. During its existence 9th Marines were presented with the following awards:
* Presidential Unit Citation with one bronze star
* with one bronze star
*
*
* with one Bronze Star
*
*
*
See also
* List of United States Marine Corps regiments
* Organization of the United States Marine Corps
Notes
References
;Bibliography
*cite book
last = O'Brien
first = J.T.
coauthors =
year = 2004
chapter =
title = Top Secret - A Ready Room History of Electronic Warfare and Photo Reconnaissance in Marine Corps Aviation from 1940 until 2000
publisher = Equidata Publishing Co.
location = Anaheim, California
id = ISBN 0-97141-853-5
*cite book
title=U.S. Marine Corps World War II Order of Battle - Ground and Air Units in the Pacific War, 1939 - 1945.’’
author=Rottman, Gordon L.
year=2002
publisher=Greenwood Press
id=ISBN 0-313-31906-5
;Web
* [http://1stbattalion3rdmarines.com/marine-units-histories/9th-marines.htm Early history of the 9th Marines]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.