"CORPSMAN -- Usually a young, long-haired, bearded, Marine- hatin'Sailor with certain medical skills who would go through the very gates of Hell to get to a wounded Marine."
From the book, Green Side Out, by Maj. Gene Duncan USMC Ret. Navy Hospital Corps If he yells "Corpsman Up!", today's infantryman knows that help is going to come. That
help
is in the form of the men and women of the US Navy Hospital
Corps. For every story a grunt has of someone's bravery in
battle, there
are two stories of a Doc who put it all on the line to help
a
wounded grunt. They carry weapons only for protection.
Protection
of those in their care first, and themselves second.
Hospital Corpsman's Pledge
I solemnly pledge myself before god and these witnesses
to
practice faithfully all of my duties as a member of the
Hospital Corps. I hold the care of the sick and injured to
be a privilege
and sacred trust and will assist the Medical Officer with
loyalty
and honesty. I will not knowingly permit harm to come to any
patient. I will hold all personal matters pertaining to the
private lives
of patients in strict confidence. I dedicate my heart, mind,
and strength to the work before me. I shall do all within my
power
to show in myself an example of all that is honorable and
good throughout my naval career.
Wherever you find hospital corpsmen, especially in time
of war, the expression "above and beyond the call of duty",
is commonly heard. What is the basis for this? Why have so
many members of the Hospital Corps been cited for performance
of duty and for gallantry giving their lives in an attempt
to save life? For a complete understanding of the espirt de
corps of the Hospital Corps, it is necessary to review the
past upon which this corps has been built and the traditions
which it has established.
From the very beginning of the Navy, it was found
necessary to make provisions for the care of the sick and
injured. An act of Congress in 1799 provided: “a convenient
place shall be set apart for the sick and hurt men, to which
they are to be removed,and some of the crew shall be appointed
to attend them."
That portion of the ship assigned for the care of
the sick was designated as the cockpit. It was usually located
in the forward part of the vessel, below the water line,
as a protection from shot and shell. The cockpit was also
referred to as the "sick berth."
In later years, it became known as the "sickbay" because
the rounded shape of the recess, or bay, was located in the
forward part of the ship between decks.
During the Revolutionary War there were apparently
no enlisted men trained in the care of the sick and
injured.
A number of the least necessary members of the crew
were assigned this duty. Most of the ships of this period
depending on size carried a surgeon and a surgeon's
mate.
In 1814, Navy Regulations referred to the "loblolly
boy" who was to serve the surgeon and the surgeon's mate.
It was, among many others, the duty of the loblolly boy
to go fore and aft the gun and berth decks ringing a
small bell to give notice to "Those slightly indisposed
and with ulcers" to attend the surgeon at the mainmast.
Both from old Navy Regulations and from authentic accounts
of shipboard life of that day, the loblolly boy,
before battle, was to provide the cockpit with water,
containers for amputated limbs, and braziers of
charcoal for heating tar with which to stop hemorrhage. He
was also to provide buckets of sand to catch the blood
from amputations and wounds and to pour over the blood on
the decks so that the surgeon might not slip while
working.
Gruesome and crude? Yes. But the methods in use
today may sound the same way to persons nearly 300 years
from now. It must be remembered that the customary treatment
for compound fracture of limbs at that time was
usually amputation. Boarding of vessels, hand-to-hand
combat with cutlasses, gun butts, and clubs, and the
use of cannons with round balls that did not explode,
but were heated red hot before being fired,
evidently resulted in many fractures that were
eventually amputated.
The Bureau of Medicine and Surgery was
established in 1842. An extract from a letter in this
bureau dated 5 May 1843 Reads as follows :
A circular is now under consideration to
allow a surgeon's steward to all hospitals and
vessels, without necessity to sign articles, but to
be appointed.
So far as can be determined, the surgeon's
steward replaced the loblolly boy. The pay of the
surgeon's steward is first listed as being $18 per month
and one ration.
A surgeon's steward is allowed at all hospitals
and Navy yards and on board every vessel having a
medical officer. As it is important that a respectable
class of persons should be employed in this capacity,
surgeons will endeavor to select such as have some knowledge
of pharmacy and ordinary accounts and are of industrious
and temperate habits (Instruction for Medical Officer,
U.S. Navy, 1857).
This was the beginning of the selection of
specially qualified personnel. In 1863, an order of the Navy
department allowed male nurses on receiving ships in numbers
proportionate to the necessities of the case.
Surgeon's steward to rank next after master-at-arms
[who was the leading petty officer of the vessel], and
surgeon's stewards are never to be discharged without the
consent of the officer appointing them or their successor,
except by sentence of a court-Navy Regulations, 1865).
An order of the Navy Department dated 8 December
1866 reads in part:
The designation of persons serving as surgeon's
steward is changed to that of Apothecary, and they will be
appointed for duty in the Medical Department of the Navy,
ashore and afloat, in the same manner as surgeon's stewards
have theretofore been appointed. A candidate for examinat-
ion and first enlistment as apothecary must be a
graduate of some recognized college of pharmacy and must be
between 21 and 28 Years of age (U.S. Navy Regulations, 1896).
About the year 1873, the title of male nurse was
changed to that of bay man.
The surgeon's division shall consist of all junior
medical officers of the ship, the apothecary, and the bay
men. Bay men shall be given a course of instruction on board
the receiving ship or at a naval hospital before being
drafted for service on a sea going ship. Bay men [formerly
called nurses] are personal attendants on the sick (U.S.
Navy Regulations, 1893).
The Corps' Establishment in 1898
The Hospital Corps came into existent as an organized
unit of the Medical Department under the provision of an
act of Congress approved 17 June 1898. this act provided
for appointment to the warrant rank of pharmacist
and established the following ratings:
Hospital Steward (chief petty officer)
Hospital Apprentice First Class (third class
petty officer)
Hospital Apprentice
Under this act, the Secretary of the Navy appointed
25 senior apothecaries as pharmacists. These original 25
are tight fully referred to as the charter members of
the Hospital Corps. The dean of these was Cornelius O'
Leary, who was credited at date of appointment with almost
38 years as an apothecary.
In 1900, during the Boxer uprising in China, the
first member of the Hospital corps was awarded the Medal
of Honor the citation reads in part:
"Stanley, Robert, Hospital Apprentice, USN in action
with the relief expedition of the Allied Forced in China
during the battles of 13, 20, 21, and 22 June 1900. Through
this period and in the presence of the enemy, Stanley
distinguished himself by meritorious conduct."
Stanley retired from the Navy on 1 February 1939 with
the rank of Chief Pharmacist and died on 15 June 1942.
A total of Four Medals of Honor were awarded to
hospital corpsmen prior to World War I.
An act of congress approved 22 August 1912 Provided
that pharmacists, after 6 years from date of warrant
and after satisfactorily passing the prescribed
examinations, should be commissioned chief pharmacists.
The Hospital Corps was reorganized by an act of
Congress approved 29 August 1916. this act is considered of
sufficient importance to quote in part:
Hereafter the authorized strength of the Hospital
Corps of the Navy shall equal three and one-half per
centum of the
authorized enlisted strength of the Navy and Marine
Corps, and shall be in addition, thereto, and as soon
as the necessary transfers or appointments may be
effected, the Hospital Corps of the United States
Navy shall consist of the following rates:
Chief Pharmacist, Pharmacists, and enlisted men
classified as Chief Pharmacist's Mates; Pharmacist's
Mates, First Class; Pharmacist's Mates, Second Class;
Pharmacist's Mates, Third Class; Hospital Apprentice,
First class; Hospital
Apprentice, Second Class; Such classifications in
enlisted ratings
to correspond respectively to the enlisted rating, Seaman
branch.
*** Provided, That enlisted men in other rating in
the Navy and Marine Corps and men of that Corps shall be
eligible for transfer to the Hospital Corps and men of that Corps
to other rating in the Navy and Marine Corps. *** The Secretary
of the Navy is hereby empowered to limit and fix the numbers
in the various ratings. *** and emoluments of enlisted men
of the Hospital Corps shall be the same as are now, or may
hereafter,be allowed for respective corresponding ratings. ***
Hospital and ambulance service, with such commands and at such
places as many be prescribed by the Secretary of the Navy,
shall be performed by members of said corps, and the
corps shall be a constituent part of the Medical
Department of the Navy:
World War I and the Years Following
During World War I, 10 of the 13 chief pharmacists
were promoted to lieutenant in the Medical Corps of the Navy.
During the war there were 94 temporary commissioned and warrant
officer, and 16,000 enlisted men in the Hospital Corps.
During World War I, the reputation of the Hospital
Corps for performance of duty especially in the field with
the Marine Corps was greatly enhanced. Many of the members
were cited for valor and performance of duty under fire,
by to the United States and France. Fifteen corpsmen were
killed in action, 2 died of wounds, and 146 were wounded or
gassed.
There were 460 major awards and citations, including 2
Medals of Honor, 55 Navy Crosses, 31 Distinguished Service
Medals, 2 U.S. Army Distinguished Service Medals, and 27
Letters of commendation.
In July 1922, all members of the corps holding
temporary commissions of warrants were reverted to their
respective permanent ranks or ratings.
From the period of World War I to World War II, the
Hospital Corps became one of the outstanding corps of the
military services. More schools were provided, qualifications
for advancement in ratings were raised, and a high degree
of technical skill and knowledge was demonstrated by
all members of the corps.
Commendation by Secretary Forrestal
The Honorable James Forrestal, Secretary of the Navy
during World War II, and later the first Secretary of Defense,
paid honor to the Hospital Corps of the United States Navy
for its singular attainments during that conflict.
Because his words ring so true today and tell so well
the role of the corpsmen not only in that conflict and the
conflicts that have followed, but also in times of peace, his
Commendation is repeated from the 1953 edition of the Handbook of
the Hospital Corps. Insofar as can be determined, this is
the first time in military history that a single corps has
been commended by the Secretary of the Navy.
Out of every 100 men of the United States Navy and
Marine Corps who were wounded in World War II, 97
recovered.
That is a record not equaled anywhere anytime.
Every individual who was thus saved from death
owes an everlasting debt to the Navy's Hospital Corps. The
Navy is indebted to the corps. The entire nation is its debtor for
thousands of citizens are living normal,
constructive, happy and productive
lives who, but for the skill and toil of the
Hospital Corps, might be dead or disheartened by crippling
invalidism.
So, to the 200,000 men and women of the Hospital
Corps, I say on behalf of the United States Navy:
"Well Done. Well done, indeed!"
Without your service, the Navy's Medical Corps
could not have achieved the life-saving record and the mind-
saving record its physicians and surgeons and psychiatrists
achieved. That others might live, your fellow corpsmen have given
their lives; 889 of them were killed or mortally wounded. Others
died as heroically from disease they were trying to
combat. In all, the Corps' casualty list contains 1,724 names, an
honor roll of special distinction because none among them bore
arms.
The hospital corpsmen saved lives on all the beaches
that the Marines stormed. Corpsmen were at the forefront of
every invasion, in all the actions at sea, on all carrier decks. You
were on your own in submarines and the smaller ships of the fleet,
performing emergency surgery at times when you had to
take the fearsome responsibility of trying to save a
life by heroic means or see the patient die. Your presence
at every post of danger gave immeasurable confidence to your
comrades under arms. Their bravery was fortified by the knowledge that the corpsmen,
the sailor of solace, were literally at their sides with the
skill and means to staunch wounds, allay pain and to carry them
back, if need be, to safe shelter and the ministrations of
the finest medical talent in the world.
You corpsmen performed fox-hole surgery while shell
fragments clipped your clothing, shattered the plasma bottles
from which you poured new life into the wounded, and sniper's bullets
were aimed at the brassards on your arms. On Iwo Jima, for
example, the percentage of casualties among your corps was greater
than the proportion of losses among the Marines. Two of
your colleagues who gave their lives in that historic
battle were posthumously cited for the Medal of Honor. One
of the citations reads: "By his great personal valor in
saving others at the sacrifice of his own life (he) inspired
his companions, although terrifically out numbered, to
launch a fiercely determined attack and repulse the enemy
force."
All that he had in his hands were the tools of mercy,
yet he won a memorable victory at the cost of his own
life.
No wonder men and women are proud to wear the emblem
of the Hospital Corps! It is a badge of mercy and valor, a
token of unselfish service in the highest calling the
saving of life in the service of your country.
Your corps' men and women toiled, often and dangerously,
never less vitally, in areas remote from battle: In hospitals,
on hospital ships, in airplanes, in laboratories and
pharmacies and dispensaries. They helped, and are helping (for the
task is far from over) in the salvage of men's broken bodies
and minds that is the grim product and perennial aftermath of war.
Some of you contributed skills in dental technology, some
engaged in pest control to diminish unfamiliar diseases, others
taught natives of distant islands the benefits of modern
hygiene, even to midwifery and everyday sanitation.
Scores of corpsmen, made prisoners of war, used their
skill and strength to retain life and hope in their fellow
captives through long years of imprisonment and deprivation.
Whatever their duty, wherever they were, the men and women
of the Hospital Corps served the Navy and served Humanity,
with exemplary courage, sagacity and effort. The performance
of their duties has been "in keeping with the highest
traditions of the United States Naval Service." That, to any man
or woman, is the highest of praise. The corps has earned
it and continues to earn it.
For, as I said, the task is not yet completed. Thousands
of the War's casualties will long need the ministrations
of physicians, nurses, and the Hospital Corps before they
can return to normal peacetime pursuits. Hundreds may have
to be cared for as long as they live; that these unfortunates
are so few is in large measure due to the prompt, skillful
aid accorded our wounded and stricken, by your corps.
Illness and accident will add to these numbers, of
course. There will always be the sick and injured, and there
will always be need for trained personnel to help restore
them.
The Navy's best laboratories are forever engaging in
research to combat disease, to speed the healing of torn flesh
and broken bones, to devise new aids for the maimed to lead
a normal life. And so I am impelled to address this message
not only to the men and women of the corps who have
completed their service to the Navy, but to those who are joining-
or rejoining-in that inspiring career.
It is no easy profession, even in peacetime. There is
danger in the test tubes and culture racks as menacing as in the
guns of an unvanquished enemy. The Hospital Corps is never at
peace.
It is forever on the firing line in the ceaseless war
against disease and premature death. That is why the corps'
emblem is truly "the red badge of courage," a designation to
all the world that the person who wears it has been self-
dedicated to the service of humanity.
Customarily the "Well done" signal is reserved for the
closing phrase of a message of congratulations, but I placed it
in the forefront where, in this instance, it most fittingly
belongs.
I repeat it, here with the postscript that in earning its
"well done" the Hospital Corps is assured no other unit in the
Navy did better in the degree of essential duty inspiringly
performed.
World War II and the Years Following
During World War II, a total of 15 Navy enlisted men
were awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor; of this
number, seven were hospital corpsmen. Members of the Hospital
Corps received 820 major awards and citations (an honor of
unique distinction since none of them bore arms). Other
personal medals-the Navy Cross, the Silver Star, the Bronze Star-
were awarded to hospital corpsmen by the tens and hundreds,
almost too numerous to count. On February 22, 1945, on the summit
of Mount Suribachi, Iwo Jima, along with six marines,
pharmacists mate John Bradley proudly participated in the raising
of our flag, a scene reproduced thousands of times. The
Marine Corps memorial symbolizes this event.
Women were first brought into the Hospital Corps
during World War II. On 12 January 1944, the first
Hospital Corps School for Women was opened. Accepted for
Volunteer Emergency Service (WAVES) was commissioned to the
U.S. Naval Hospital, National Naval Medical Center,
Bethesda, Maryland.
The first class consisted of 230 enlisted women.
Public Law 625 of the Eightieth Congress, approved 12
June 1948, made the WAVES an integral part of the Regular
navy.
On 2 April 1948, the nomenclature of the Hospital corps
ratings were changed to read: Hospital Recruit; Hospital
Apprentice; Hospitalman; Hospital corpsman Third Class;
Hospital Corpsman Second Class; Hospital Corpsman First Class; Chief
Hospital Corpsman ; Warrant officer and Commissioned
Warrant officer, Hospital Corps.
In June 1956, the Warrant and Commissioned Warrant
officer, Hospital Corps, were redesignated as Medical Service
Warrant and Chief Medical Service Warrant.
Also in 1948, those Hospital corpsman classified as
dental technicians were changed to that rating. The
rating structure outlines the dental rating as follows:
Dental recruit; Dental Apprentice; Dentalman; Dental Technician
Third Class; Dental Technician Second Class; Dental Technician
First Class; Chief Dental Technician.
Medical Service Warrant, Chief Medical Service Warrant
and Medical Service Corps officer, so qualified and
assigned, performed administrative and technical duties in
dental activities.
At this same time, the rating insignia of the Hospital
corps was changed from the Red Cross so long familiar, to the
caduceus. Dental Technicians have the "D" Superimposed
over the caduceus.
Korea and the Years Following
With the advent of the Korean conflict, the Hospital
Corps once again responded to the call of duty. Members of
the corps, individually and collectively, added a brilliant
chapter to the history of the corps. During the Inchon-Seoul
operation,for example, medical units attached to the 1st Marine
Division cared for 2,844 casualties during the period of 15
September to 7 October 1950. Hospital corpsmen were at the forefront
of all the fighting, saving lives on the beaches as the Marines
stormed in. They performed on-the-spot emergency and first aid
treatment, as Secretary Forrestal described it "*** while shell
fragments ripped clothing from their bodies and shattered plasma
bottles in their hands." Indeed, the percentage of casualties
among Medical Department personnel in Korea, as in World War
II, was greater than that of the marines they supported.
These highly trained technicians played a vital and
demanding role in the care and treatment of those evacuated to the
hospital ships of the U.S. Navy serving in Korean waters.
These ships handled some 20,000 battle casualties, 30,000 non-
battle casualties, and around 80,000 outpatients. To narrate
the individual exploits of the many who were cited for
valor, resourcefulness, and courage would require a
separate volume.
It is a great tribute to the corps that the seven
Congressional Medals of Honor conferred upon Navy
personnel during the Korean conflict; five were bestowed upon
hospital corpsmen.
The years that have followed Korea have also proved
to be eventful. For example, in 1954, approximately 190,000
Vietnam refugees were transported from North Vietnam to
South Vietnam on U.S. Navy ships. The corpsmen assigned to this
operation had ample opportunity to demonstrate the ability and
initiative that has always characterized them. In 1957, hospital
corpsmen served in Mexico during the hurricane and floods at
Tampico. In 1961, in Texas and Louisiana, they aided victims of
Hurricane Carla.
Lest the impression be left that corpsmen distinguish
themselves only in times of war and disaster, it should be added
that their role in "quiet" times is equally as illustrious. They
serve around the world in Navy hospitals, aboard ships and
submarines, and with Marine Corps units of all Fleet Marine Forces.
Often on duty independent of a medical officer, they bear the
full responsibility for medical care of their shipmates,
maintaining the health of the Navy, rendering first aid, and caring
for the sick with competence that that has earned them the respect
of all. Their methods of medical management are constantly
reviewed and revised to reflect the latest technologies in treatment.
In addition, since 1958, they have received special and
intensive instruction in the management of the mass
casualties that might follow in the wake of a chemical, biological,
or radiological (CBR) warfare attack. Also, hospital corpsmen
often have had opportunities to serve in the latest
scientific projects. For example, Thomas R Thorne, HM3, participated
in Project Mercy. For his role in the biomedical support of
the free world's first manned space flight, he received in
June 1961 a letter of appreciation from the Director of
Bioastronautics.
Vietnam and the Years Following
With the escalation of the Vietnam conflict between
1963 and 1975, hospital corpsmen were called to serve in Southeast
Asia.
They served in Marine Corps and Navy air/ground forces,
naval support activity hospitals (Saigon and Denang), hospital
ships (USS REPOSE and USS SANCTUARY), Riverine Warfare ("Brown
Water Navy"), and Navy ships on the "Gun Line" off the
coast of North Vietnam,. They served in Cambodia and supported
troops from places like the Marine Corps Air Station ("Rose
Garden")
in Thailand. Like their predecessors, they performed
emergency treatment in all kinds of combat conditions.
They were assigned to small medical teams that provided care
and health advice to Vietnamese civilians. Some were
assigned as
medical advisors to Vietnamese military units, which
required that they live in
small, poorly defended villages. Hospital corpsmen
truly felt the brunt of the Vietnam conflict. Six hundred twenty
were killed or mortally wounded and another 3,353 were
wounded in action. Awards for gallantry and intrepidity in action
included 3 Medals of Honor, 29 Navy Crosses, 127 Silver Stars, 2
Legions of Merit, 290 Bronze Stars, and 4,563 Purple Hearts.
Hospital Corpsmen Today
Since the fall of Saigon in April 1975, hospital
corpsmen continue to serve in the many "hot spots" around the
world. Fifteen hospital corpsmen were killed in the line of duty
when the Marine Barracks in Beirut, Lebanon, was bombed and
destroyed by terrorists. Hospital corpsmen were present at sea and
ashore when the United States took Military action in Grenada.
Today's hospital corpsmen perform as assistants in the
prevention and treatment of disease and injury. They assist with
physical examinations, provide patient care, and
administer medicinal.
They perform general laboratory, pharmacy, and other
patient support services. They assist in the administrative,
supply, and accounting procedures within medical departments
ashore, afloat, and with the Marine Corps. They instruct medical
and no medical personnel in first aid, self-aid, personal
hygiene, and medical records maintenance. They assist in the
maintenance of environmental health standards, and they are prepared
to assist in the prevention and treatment of CBR casualties
and in the transportation of sick and injured. Senior
hospital corpsmen perform technical planning and management
functions in support of medical readiness and quality health care
delivery. In addition to their general assignments, hospital
corpsmen trained as technicians perform specialized functions
within the operational forces, clinical specialties, and
administrative department, and they may be assigned duties
independent of a medical officer.
These complex duties require that each hospital corpsman
have broad-based training and versatility neither demanded
nor expected of other enlisted rating in the Navy.
Wherever you find the Navy, Wherever you find the Marine
Corps, there you will find the Navy hospital corpsman. In times of
peace, he or she toils increasingly, day and night, providing
quality care to numerous beneficiaries. In times of war, he is on
the beaches with the Marines, employed in amphibious
operations, in transportation of wounded by air, on the battlefield,
and on all types of ships, submarines, aircraft carriers,
and landing craft. In short, wherever medical services may
be required, the hospital corpsman is there, not only
willing but prepared to serve his country and his fellow man
aboveand beyond the call of duty. *************************************************************************************************************************
This page is dedicated to John William “Doc” Foster and to the many outstanding men and women who, past and present, have given their all to the Marines, God Bless those Dixie Cups and their courage along with a steadfast devotion to saving lives.
Some Things To Consider from our Late Corpsman John W. "Doc" Foster:
The most destructive habits.............Worry and Assumption
The greatest Joy........................Giving
The greatest loss...................Loss of self-respect
The most satisfying work................Helping others
The ugliest personality trait............Selfishness
The most endangered species..............Dedicated leaders
Our greatest natural resource..............Our youth
The greatest "shot in the arm".............Encouragement
The greatest problem to overcome.............Fear
The most effective sleeping pill............Peace of mind
The most crippling failure disease...........Excuses
The most powerful force in life..............Love
A dangerous pariah...........................A gossiper
The world's most incredible computer.........The brain
The worst things to be without.... .......... Hope and Humor
The deadliest weapon..........................The tongue
The two most power-filled words................"I Can"
The greatest asset.................................Faith
The most worthless emotion.......................Self-pity
The most beautiful attire........................A SMILE!
The most prized possession...................... Integrity
The most powerful channel of communication.........Prayer
The most contagious spirit.......................Enthusiasm
"Corpsman Up"
by ben!
Waco TX
USA