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8th and I , "Oldest
Post of the Corps"
Established
in 1801, Marine Barracks, Washington, D.C., is the "Oldest
Post of the Corps" and has been the
residence of every Commandant of the Marine Corps since 1806. The selection of the site for the
barracks was a matter of personal interest to President Thomas Jefferson, who rode through Washington
with Lieutenant Colonel Commandant Burrows in search of a suitable location. The site now occupied
was approved since it lay near the Navy Yard and within easy marching distance of the Capitol.
The early nineteenth-century barracks was arranged in a quadrangle as it is today, and the use of
the building was similar. The areas on the south and east side of the quadrangle were used for offices,
maintenance facilities and living spaces for troops, and a building on the west was the location
of the officers' quarters. The Commandant's House at the north end of the barracks was completed in
1806 and is the only original building still standing. It is the oldest public building
in continuous use in the Nation's Capital. The rest of the barracks was rebuilt between 1900 and 1907.
The training of new officers and recruits started at the barracks soon after it was established and continued
throughout the nineteenth-century. Until 1901, it was also the location of Marine Corps Headquarters.
Marines from the barracks participated in the defense of Washington in the War of 1812, and served in
the Indian Wars of 1826-37, the War with Mexico, the Civil War and the Spanish American War. Most recently,
Marines from the barracks deployed to Southwest Asia and participated in Operations Desert Shield and
Desert Storm.
The Marine Barracks has also been
home of the United States Marine Band since 1801. Shortly after its formation, the Band was requested
to play for President John Adams at the Executive Mansion. This White House engagement began a tradition
which became so established that today the names "Marine Band" and "President's Own" are synonymous.
It was at the barracks that John Philip Sousa, during the time he was the director of the Marine
Band, wrote many of his immortal marches.
Today's barracks Marines perform a variety of
tasks in support of our diverse missions. These include light infantry training, ceremonies, and
presidential support duty. A company of "8th and I" Marines
serves at Camp David; another serves at the U.S. Naval Academy. The barracks is also
home to the Marine Corps Institute - the Corps' distance training center, which
is responsible for all nonresident military education programs. |