Created in 1798 the Marine Corps Band was called "The President’s Own" by President Jefferson during his inaugural ball. Since then, the band has played at every presidential inauguration. Here they are in 1893.
In the early 1900s, Marine forces were active in China and the Philippines. This photo from 1907 shows Marines posing in front of the Great Sphinx in Egypt.
WWI marked the beginning of trench warfare and poison gas. Mortars were useful in muddy trenches because a mortar round could be aimed to fall directly into trenches unlike artillery shells. These Marines are posing with a German trench mortar captured in France in 1918.
This 1918 picture shows Marines in France with gas masks hanging from their necks.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdHere Marines are practicing how to carry a wounded soldier during combat training in western Germany circa 1918. Around 2,400 Marines died in WWI.
Experimental Marine Corps aviation began in conjunction with the Navy around 1919. This photo from 1930 shows a Marine flying a Grummn FF-2 Navy plane. Within a decade the Marines had their own aircraft wing which is now based in Okinawa, Japan.
Japan's surprise attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941 triggered America's entrance into WWII. This photo shows a Marine holding a piece of shrapnel removed from his arm following the attack.
In the months following Pearl Harbor, Japanese forces expanded throughout the Western Pacific, prompting deployment of Marines to the tropical island of Guadalcanal. This 1943 photo shows two armed Marines waiting for “Chow Call,” or mealtime.
Surrounded by a sea of mud, Marines stationed in the South Pacific island of Bougainville haul ammunition to the front line.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdMarines from the Navajo tribe used their native language to send coded radio transmissions to units overseas. Here are Navajo Code Talkers from 1943 that were said to be faster and more accurate than Morse Code. Intercepted Navajo codes were never successfully deciphered by the enemy.
Wearing hardly any protective gear, Marine artillerymen plug their ears after launching a 155mm Howitzer in northern Iwo Jima.
This 1944 photo shows a Navy corpsman giving a wounded Marine blood plasma on an island in the Pacific. Marines captured the island in 24 hours with help from the heaviest naval and air bombardment ever at that time.
Iwo Jima was prime real estate for Americans to launch air raids against Japan, but the island was heavily guarded by Japanese forces. Amphibious Marines are seen here battling at the foot of Mount Suribachi.
Marines raise the American flag at the summit of Mt. Suribachi during the battle for Iwo Jima in 1945. This enduring image is actually of the second flag raised on the mountain that day. The first flag was taken down because it was too small to be seen easily.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdAfter hearing the news of Japan's surrender, Marines joyfully pose atop an amphibian tractor to celebrate the end of WWII and "Victory over Japan Day" in 1945.
The North Korea invasion of South Korea prompted American's entry in the Korean War. This photo from 1950 shows both Marine air and ground units supporting this operation.
Meanwhile in America, women began training at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot in Parris Island in 1949. Today, all female recruits are still trained and transformed at Parris Island.
Marines line up at this makeshift Post Exchange in Korea to receive simple comfort items like candy, cigarettes, and soft drinks.
Lasting two decades long, the Vietnam War was the next major U.S. conflict. This Marine truck passes under a welcome banner at the entrance of the Vietnamese city Danang back in 1965.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdA Marine First Lieutenant takes a minute to converse with a local Vietnamese woman in this photograph from 1965.
Marines scatter as a CH-46 helicopter explodes after it was shot down during combat in Vietnam. At least 13 Marines were reported killed in the crash and another three more badly burned.
This Marine fills out his absentee ballot for the 1968 Presidential election while deployed in Vietnam.
Khe Sanh, in southern Vietnam, had the heaviest rocket and artillery attacks from the North Vietnamese troops. Here is a message from a Marine stationed there in 1970.
In 1983 the United States Embassy in Beirut was bombed by Islamic terrorists. It was the deadliest attack on a U.S. diplomatic mission up to that time. This photo shows a U.S. Marine wearing a gas mask while digging through the rubble to find survivors.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdMarines cover each other with M16A2 assault rifles as they prepare to enter one of Saddam Hussein's palaces in Baghdad during Operation Iraqi Freedom in 2003.
Here a Marine watches as a statue of Saddam Hussein falls in central Baghdad's Firdaus Square on April 9, 2003.
Marines rush across a danger area in Fallujah in later 2004. Fallujah, the "City of Mosques," was the location of the single greatest battle for Marine in Iraq, as several battalions swept through the city. It was the only battle in the history of the Marine Corps in which fliers were dropped to alert the enemy when the Marines would begin their sweep. The fliers were intended to give civilians a chance to make their exodus, as well as to unnerve the enemy.
The "Darkhorse" Marines in the 3rd Battalion, 5th Regiment suffered the highest casualty rate of any Marine unit deployed to the Helmand province in southern Afghanistan following the heavy Marine-led assault on Marjah. Here is a photo of them in under enemy sniper fire in 2010.
Built in 1861, the Marine Corps Recruit Depot in Parris Island, S.C., consists of 8,095 acres of various types of terrain all for the recruits to use as their learning facililty. About 20,000 recruits are transformed here every year.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdEvery recruit recieved at Parris Island is transformed by legendary Marine Drill Instructors like the one pictured here. Marine recruits are typically younger than other sister service branches and each DI wants to guarantee recruits can survive mentally and physically in combat.
Today there are more than 205,000 U.S. Marines serving America by air, land and sea. During the graduation ceremony at the Naval Academy this Marine takes his oath.
You've seen the history of the Marine Corps ...