Item Description
Original Item: Only One Available. This is a nice M1917 helmet that was issued to a United States Marine during the Great War. This very nice example is complete with liner and chin strap, but has been repainted green sometime after the war. Most notably the helmet features a P1917 EGA (Eagle Globe Anchor) cap badge, although this make of EGA was meant for Bell Crown Caps, the darker variants being meant for helmets. The hole in the helmet is punched, so it was likely worn by a Marine during the First World War, with the current EGA being added later.
The shell is maker-marked with a stamping on the underside of the rim, but due to the overpaint we cannot tell what it is. However, we are able to tell that it’s a U.S. produced shell by the solid rivets used to retain the chin strap bales.
The liner is stamped Size 7, and the chinstrap is well-retained with some cracking and crazing.
This is a nice and seldom seen piece of Marine Corps history. Comes ready to be proudly displayed! Semper Fi Marines.
Starting in boot camp, all Marines study the actions of those who have served before them. The history of the Marine Corps is a rich tapestry weaving together the contributions of all Marines. Over the past two centuries, certain aspects of the Corps’ history have taken on an almost legendary status. Below are examples of some of the stories, terms, and traditions that have come to be known as the “Lore of the Corps.”
According to Marine Corps tradition, German soldiers facing the Marines at Belleau Wood called them teufelhunden. These were the devil dogs of Bavarian folklore - vicious, ferocious, and tenacious. Shortly thereafter, a Marine recruiting poster depicted a dachshund, wearing an Iron Cross and a spiked helmet, fleeing an English bulldog wearing the eagle, globe and anchor.
A tradition was born. Although an “unofficial mascot,” the first bulldog to “serve” in the United States Marine Corps was King Bulwark. Renamed Jiggs, he was enlisted on 14 October 1922 for the “term of life.” Enlistment papers were signed by Brigadier General Smedley D. Butler. Although he began his career as a private, Jiggs was quickly promoted to the rank of sergeant major. His death at the age of four was mourned throughout the Corps. His body lay in a satin-lined casket in a hangar on Marine Corps Base Quantico until he was buried with military honors.
Other bulldogs followed in the tradition of Jiggs. From the 1930s through the early 1950s, the name of the bulldogs was changed to Smedley as a tribute to Major General Butler. In the late 1950s, the Marine Barracks in Washington became the new home for the Marine Corps’ bulldog. Chesty, named in honor of the legendary Lieutenant General Lewis B. “Chesty” Puller, Jr, made his first public appearance on 5 July 1957.
Today the tradition continues. The bulldog, tough, muscular and fearless, has come to epitomize the fighting spirit of the United States Marine Corps.
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