Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune

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Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune
Jacksonville, North Carolina

MCB Camp Lejeune Insignia
Type Military base
Built 1941
In use 1941–
Controlled by USMC
Garrison II Marine Expeditionary Force
Marine Special Operations Command
A Mk 47 Stryker being tested in 2002 at Camp Lejeune
A Mk 47 Stryker being tested in 2002 at Camp Lejeune

Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune is near Jacksonville, North Carolina, on the Atlantic seaboard of the United States.

Camp Lejeune is home to the U.S. Marine Corps' II Marine Expeditionary Force, 2nd Marine Division, three other major Marine commands and a Naval hospital. As of the early 2000s, Onslow County's population was 143,491 of which 43,100 were active service members.

The base occupies 246 square miles (637 km²)[1]. The base's 14 miles (23 km) of beaches make it a major area for amphibious assault training, and its location between two deep-water ports (Wilmington and Morehead City) allows for fast deployments.

The main base is supplemented by four satellite facilities: Camp Geiger, Stone Bay, Courthouse Bay, Camp Johnson, and the latest addition to the facility, the Greater Sandy Run Training Area. When added to the main base and MCAS Cherry Point, they make up the largest concentration of Marines and U.S. Navy sailors in the world.

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Bermuda Regiment soldiers board a USMC CH-46 Sea Knight helicopter at Camp Lejeune.
Bermuda Regiment soldiers board a USMC CH-46 Sea Knight helicopter at Camp Lejeune.

In April 1941, construction was approved on an 11,000-acre (45 km²) tract in Onslow County, North Carolina. On May 1 of that year, Lt. Col. William P. T. Hill began construction on Marine Barracks New River, N.C. The first base headquarters was in a summer cottage on Montford Point, then shifted to Hadnot Point in 1942. Later that year it was renamed in honor of the 13th Commandant of the Marine Corps, John A. Lejeune.

One of the satellite facilities of Camp Lejeune served for a while as a third boot camp for the Marines, in addition to Parris Island and San Diego. That facility, Montford Point, was established after Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order 8802. Between 1942 and 1949, a brief era of segregated training for black Marines, the camp at Montford Point trained 20,000 African-Americans. After the military was ordered to fully integrate, Montford Point was renamed Camp Gilbert H. Johnson and became the home of the Marine Corps Combat Service Support Schools.

In 1982 it was discovered that Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) had found their way into the drinking water supply at Camp Lejeune. VOC contamination of groundwater can cause birth defects and other ill health effects in pregnant and nursing mothers. This information was not made public for nearly two decades when the government attempted to identify those who may have been exposed.

Today MCB Camp Lejeune boasts 11 miles of beach capable of supporting amphibious operations. There are 78 live-fire ranges, 98 maneuver areas, 34 gun positions, 540 tactical landing zones and a state-of-the-art Military Operations in Urban Terrain training facility. Military forces from around the world come to MCB Camp Lejeune on a regular basis for bilateral and NATO-sponsored exercises.

From at least 1957 through 1987, Marines and their families at Lejeune drank and bathed in water contaminated with toxins at concentrations up to 40-times permitted by safety standards, and at least 850 former residents filed claims for nearly $4 billion from the military. The main chemicals involved were trichloroethylene (TCE) and perchloroethylene (PCE); however, more than 70 chemicals have been identified as contaminants at Lejeune. [2] The base's wells were shut off in the mid-1980s, after which the water met federal standards.[2][3]

In 2007, Jerry Ensminger, a retired Marine master sergeant, found a document dated 1981 that described a radioactive dump site near a rifle range at the camp. According to the report, the waste was laced with strontium-90, an isotope known to cause cancer and leukemia.[2] According to Camp Lejeune's installation restoration program manager, base officials learned in 2004 about the 1981 document.[2] Ensminger served in the Marine Corps for 24 and a half years, and lived for part of that time at Camp Lejeune. In 1985 his 9-year-old daughter, Janey, died of cancer.[2]

An advocacy group called The Few, The Proud, The Forgotten was created to inform possible victims of the contamination at Lejeune.

The military prison at Camp Lejeune has been in operation since 1968 and currently has a maximum capacity of 280 inmates who are locked up between 30 and 90 days.

The Base Realignment and Closure Commission (BRAC) recommended in 2005 that the brig be closed, and the Secretary of Defense has to implement the commission's recommendations at the latest on September 15, 2011. A new brig is scheduled to be built in Chesapeake, Virginia. Instead a small detention facility will be built at Camp Lejeune to hold detainees awaiting court martial.

This article incorporates text in the public domain from the United States Marine Corps.
  1. ^ Camp Lejeune History. USMC. Retrieved on 2007-10-01. “A tobacco barn, farm house and temporary tent cities have grown into a 246-square mile premier military training facility”
  2. ^ a b c d e Thompson, Estes (2007-07-10). EPA investigating whether radioactive waste was buried at pollution-plagued Camp Lejeune. ABC News, Associated Press. Retrieved on 2007-09-29.
  3. ^ Camp Lejeune Water Study - US Marine Corps

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