
Ask a Marine what the Corps is, and you’ll get a look before you get an answer. It’s not just a uniform or a job—it’s a language, a rhythm, and a stack of stories told in chow halls and on midnight watch. From rituals that predate the country itself to clever hacks that outfox high-tech sensors, Marine lore is equal parts discipline and ingenuity.
If you’ve ever wondered what makes Marines… well, Marines—start here.
1. Older Than America
The United States Marine Corps stood up on November 10, 1775—eight months before the Declaration of Independence. The country wasn’t official yet, but the Marines were already on the roster. Every year, they still celebrate that November birthday like it’s sacred (because it is).
2. Beating the Bot: How Marines Fooled an AI
During a modern camouflage test, a squad of Marines slipped past an AI-powered camera that was trained to spot humans. The methods? Two somersaulted their way across 300 meters, a pair shuffled along disguised as a cardboard box, and one turned himself into a convincing “bush.” The machine saw nothing. Fieldcraft: 1, Algorithm: 0.
3. A Reading List That Ranges from Clausewitz to Ender’s Game
The Commandant’s reading list isn’t just history and doctrine. Alongside the Constitution and battle studies, you’ll find novels like Ender’s Game—because thinking like a strategist sometimes starts with a story.
4) No Umbrellas… Until 2019
For decades, male Marines in uniform couldn’t carry umbrellas, rain or shine. That changed in 2019, when regulations finally allowed them. The Corps still prefers sharp lines and free hands, but a dry Marine is a ready Marine.
5. The Navy’s Army—With Its Own Air Force
The Marine Corps is part of the Department of the Navy, but it fields its own aviation arm—big enough to rank among the world’s largest air forces by aircraft count. Jets, tilt-rotors, helicopters: close air support isn’t a phone-a-friend; it’s family.
6. Birthday Cake, Passed from Oldest to Youngest
On November 10th, Marines everywhere cut a cake. The first slice goes to the oldest Marine present, who hands it to the youngest—tradition literally passing from one generation to the next. Then comes the timeless reading of Commandant Lejeune’s Birthday Message. Goosebumps, every year.
7. Combat Skateboards (Yes, Really)
Urban warfare is noisy, tight, and unpredictable—so the Corps once tested ordinary skateboards for a very specific purpose: maneuvering inside buildings to detect tripwires and sniper fire. Rolling quietly across hallways was safer than walking headlong into danger. It may sound like something out of a video game, but for a time, skateboards were considered a tactical tool.
From 18th-century taverns to AI-era trickery, the Marine Corps runs on tradition and adaptation in equal measure. The gear changes. The battles shift. But the mindset—improvise, adapt, overcome—stays the same.