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Semper
Fidelis” (“Always
Faithful”)
is the motto of the Corps. That Marines have lived up to
this motto is proved by the fact that there has never been a mutiny,
or even the thought of one, among U.S. Marines.
Semper Fidelis was adopted about 1883 as the motto of the Corps. Before that, there had been three mottoes,
all traditional rather than official. The first, antedating the War of 1812, was “Fortitudine” (“With
Fortitude”). The second, “By Sea and by Land,” was obviously a translation of the Royal
Marine’s “Per Mare, Per Terram.” Until 1848, the third motto was “To the Shores
of Tripoli,” in commemoration of O’Bannon’s capture of Derna in 1805. In 1848, after
the return to Washington of the Marine battalion that took part in the capture of Mexico City, this motto
was revised to: “From the Halls of the Montezumas to the Shores of Tripoli" – a line now
familiar to all Americans. This revision of the Corps motto in Mexico has encouraged speculation that
the first stanza of “The Marines’ Hymn” was composed by members of the Marine battalion
who stormed Chapultepec Castle.
It may be added that the Marine Corps shares its motto with England’s Devonshire Regiment, the
11th Foot, one of the senior infantry regiments of the British Army, whose sobriquet is “the Bloody
Eleventh” and whose motto is also Semper Fidelis.
Reference Section
History and Museums Division
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