Major General Smedley Darlington Butler was a maverick Marine,
the emblem of the old corps, and one of the most controversial
figures in Marine history. He was a high school dropout who became
a major general; a Quaker and a devout family man who was one of
the toughest of the Marines; an aristocrat who championed the
common man; a leader who thought of himself as striving to help the
oppressed of the countries he occupied as the commander of an
imperial fighting force. This work is an annotated edition of his
letters covering the period from Butler's commissioning as a Second
Lieutenant in the U.S. Marine Corps to his retirement as a Major
General.
This is the first time the majority of these letters have been
made public, and the book offers the reader a first-hand look at
the motivations and attitudes of the American military as it
implemented U.S. foreign policy at the turn of the century. There
is extensive coverage of U.S. interventions in Nicaragua, Haiti,
and China from a man on the scene, offering an immediate
perspective to those events. General Butler won two Congressional
Medals of Honor, as well as numerous other U.S. and foreign medals,
including two Umbrellas of Ten Thousand Blessings from two Chinese
cities--honors never before given to a non-Chinese. Military and
diplomatic historians, as well as Marine and Navy enthusiasts, will
find this superbly edited and annotated collection of interest and
value.
General
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