Marine Barracks, Washington, D.C.
Established in 1801, Marine Barracks Washington, 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 Lt. Col. William Ward Burrows, the second commandant of the Marine Corps, in search of a suitable location. The site now occupied was approved due to its proximity to the Washington Navy Yard and because it was within easy marching distance of the Capitol.
8th and I
"The Oldest Post of the Corps"

May 17, 2008

Gunnery Sgt. Henry L. Baul was the guest of honor at the Marine Barracks Washington Evening Parade, May 16. Lt. Gen. Ronald Coleman, deputy commandant of Manpower and Reserve Affairs and the evening's hosting official, salutes during the pass-in-review with Col. W. Blake Crowe, Barracks commanding officer. In 1942, Baul was the ninth African American to join the Marine Corps, enlisting out of the Washington Navy Yard.

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