Herbert J. Sweet
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Herbert Joseph Sweet | |
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October 8, 1919 – January 18, 1998 (aged 78) | |
4th Sergeant Major of the Marine Corps (1965-1969) |
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Place of birth | Hartford, Connecticut |
Place of death | Arlington, Virginia |
Allegiance | United States of America |
Service/branch | United States Marine Corps |
Years of service | 1937-1969 |
Rank | Sergeant Major |
Unit | 21st Marines 2nd Marines 5th Marines 6th Marine Corps Reserve 3rd Marine Division |
Commands held | Sergeant Major of the Marine Corps |
Battles/wars | Battle of Iwo Jima Battle of Bougainville Korean War |
Awards | Bronze Star Navy Commendation Medal Purple Heart (4) |
Sergeant Major Herbert Joseph Sweet (1919-1998) was the 4th Sergeant Major of the Marine Corps. He fought and was wounded in World War II and the Korean conflict.
Herbert Sweet was born on 8 October 1919 in Hartford, Connecticut, and the following year moved to Troy, New York where he grew up and received his schooling. As a child, Sweet made his home with his uncle, Harold J. Nash of Troy.
Sweet enlisted in the United States Marine Corps on 26 February 1937. Following recruit training at Parris Island, South Carolina, he saw duty with Marine detachments at Quantico, Virginia; at the 1939 World's Fair in New York; and in Trinidad.
Throughout World War II he served with the 21st Marines, 3rd Marine Division moving with the unit to New Zealand and Guadalcanal for training. He saw combat on Bougainville where he was promoted to platoon sergeant then gunnery sergeant. He was wounded in action during the landing on Guam in July 1944 and, following hospitalization, rejoined the 21st Marines for the Iwo Jima campaign. There he earned the Bronze Star with Combat "V" for exposing himself to enemy fire in order to rescue his wounded company commander, two other Marines and a corpsman. Wounded twice, he was evacuated twice.
On his return to active duty, he served as First Sergeant of the 4th Recruit Training Battalion, Parris Island; on the Marine Detachment at the Naval Ordnance Plant, Macon, Georgia; and on the Marine Detachment of the USS Missouri. He also served two separate tours at Camp Lejeune, first as an infantry chief, and following the Korean conflict, as Regimental Sergeant Major of the 2d Marines and Field Sergeant Major of the 2nd Marine Division, respectively.
He requested duty in Korea on the outbreak of hostilities there, and in 1951 saw combat as rifle company First Sergeant with the 5th Marines. He was wounded in action that October and earned the Navy Commendation Medal with Combat "V".
He returned from Korea in July 1952 and served thereafter as Assistant to the Professor of Naval Science, NROTC Unit, Columbia University, New York City for two years. Following his second tour of duty at Camp Lejeune he was stationed in the Philippine Islands as Barracks Sergeant Major, Subic Bay from 1958 to 1960. Then he served as Sergeant Major of the 6th Marine Corps Reserve and Recruitment District, Atlanta, Georgia. In July 1964 he was named Division Sergeant Major, 3rd Marine Division, Fleet Marine Force in the Far East. While serving in this capacity, he was selected as the 4th Sergeant Major of the Marine Corps by a board convened in Washington and assumed his new post on July 16, 1965.
Sergeant Major Sweet died 18 June 1998 of respiratory failure at his home in Alexandria, Virginia. He was buried with full military honors in Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington, Virginia.
Contents |
[edit] Awards and decorations
His personal decorations include: the Bronze Star with Combat "V"; Navy Commendation Medal with Combat "V"; Purple Heart with three bronze stars in lieu of the forth award; Navy Achievement Medal; and the Combat Action Ribbon.
[edit] See also
- Former Sergeants Major of the Marine Corps
- List of Korean War veterans who are recipients of the Bronze Star
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- Herbert Joseph Sweet, Sergeant Major, United States Marine Corps. Arlington National Cemetery profile. Retrieved on 2006-10-14.
Preceded by Thomas J. McHugh |
Sergeant Major of the Marine Corps 1965—1969 |
Succeeded by Joseph W. Dailey |