Signed by L.B. Puller with sentiment
He signed this photo in 1966
VERY RARE
$1995
SOLD
This 8"by10" vintage photo is a rare signed photo of
Chesty Puller
Puller signed 'anything' is extremely rare not to mention
a beautifully 8" by 10" b/w vintage photo signed with sentiment
To Wayne Atchinson with best wishes.
Live by the tradition of your father."
Signed,
L.B. Puller
See larger image here
Here is a letter of provenance from the source
Here is another signed Puller photo we sold a few years ago
See a signed Puller autobiography we sold here
and another signed Puller book here
An interesting article on Chesty Puller
Lewis Burwell Puller
'CHESTY' PULLER
Everyone Needs a Hero
Story by Staff Sgt. Kurt M. Sutton
HQMC, Washington
Marine Magazine, August 1998
Another fresh-faced kid entered the Virginia
Military Institute in 1917. In August 1918, he dropped out and
enlisted in the Marine Corps, hoping to join the fighting in
Europe during the World War. He never saw combat. Instead he
was appointed a Marine Reserve lieutenant, only to be placed
on the inactive list 10 days later due to post-war drawdowns.
Determined to be a Marine, he rejoined the Corps as an
enlisted man, hoping this time to take part in the fighting in
Haiti.
Born June 26, 1898, in West Point, Va., the
young man grew up hunting and listening to tales of the Civil
War told by his relatives. He also had a heavy appetite for
reading, pouring through count-less books of military tales
and history.
Lewis B. "Chesty" Puller would go on to earn
five Navy Crosses, the nation’s second highest award for
valor, and spend 37 years in the Corps, retiring at the rank
of lieutenant general.
Jungle Combat
Puller’s service in Haiti allowed him to cut his
"battle teeth," leading patrols and engaging the Caco rebels
in more than 40 engagements. He witnessed Haitian discipline
during drill and patrols, observations which no doubt
influenced his own distinct style of leadership.
After Haiti, Puller was again commissioned a
second lieutenant. In 1930, he and his Marines found new
action patrolling the jungles of Nicaragua with Guardia
Nacional troops against rebels led by Augusto Cesar Sandino.
His actions there earned him his first Navy Cross.
Puller’s growing reputation gained him a seat at
the Army Infantry School at Fort Benning, Ga. During one of
his classes, which was peppered with future notable Army and
Marine Corps generals, Puller engaged in a heated discussion
on volumes of fire with the instructor. One of his most famous
quotes came from that discussion, culminating with Puller
yelling, "You can’t hurt ‘em if you can’t hit ‘em."
In July of 1932, Puller returned to Nicaragua,
where the newspapers heralded his arrival with the headline:
"Marines Bring Back the Tiger of Segovia to Fight Sandino."
Sandino welcomed the news by putting a bounty of 5,000 pesos
on Puller’s head. Puller earned his second Navy Cross during
this tour in Nicaragua and was known thereafter as the "Tiger
of the Mountains."
To say that "Chesty" was already a Marine Corps
legend might be too strong. Certainly, he was very well known.
A San Francisco newspaper dated Feb. 11, 1933, was headlined
Most Decorated Marine Will Go to Shanghai."
In early 1933, Puller joined the China Marines
at the American Legation in Peiping. He served mainly as the
commander of the "Horse Marines," a unit of 50 men who rode
magnificent Manchurian ponies on patrol and parade duties.
While there, he had the opportunity to observe the Japanese
infantry in training and to learn the sport of polo.
After several more tours, including sea duty, he
was reassigned to China as commander of the 4th Marine
Regiment until August 1942.
Another War
Returning to battle in October 1942, Puller, now
a lieutenant colonel, commanded 1st Battalion, 7th Marines
during the battle for Guadalcanal. Nearly 1,400 Japanese were
killed and 17 truckloads of equipment taken while Puller’s
battalion defended a mile-long front against an estimated
3,000 attackers. Puller was awarded his third Navy Cross.
During the fighting, Puller could often be seen
at the front leading his Marines. He often disregarded enemy
fire while others chose to duck and cover. At one point, a
grenade landed within eight feet of Puller. While others hit
the ground, Puller is alleged to have said, "Oh, that. It’s a
dud."
Shortly after the battle for the ‘Canal,’ Puller
became the executive officer of the 7th Marine Regiment. In
January 1944, on the island of New Britian, he took command of
two battalions whose commanding officers had been taken out of
the fight, reorganized them while under heavy machine-gun and
mortar fire, and led the Marines in an attack against the
enemy’s heavily fortified position. These actions earned
Puller a fourth Navy Cross.
As commander of the 1st Marine Regiment, he led
his Marines in one of the bloodiest battles of the war on
Peleliu during September and October 1944. King Ross remembers
Puller vividly.
"I was a radio operator on Peleliu with the 3rd
Battalion. During the battle, we’d captured a Japanese machine
gun. He walked up to us and asked ‘What the hell is that?’ We
told him, and he asked us if we could get him one," recalled
the 71-year-old Ross. "Two days later we got him his machine
gun.
"We had all heard that he had issued an order
that all officers would eat after the enlisted. We got the
idea that he never forgot that he was a sergeant. That’s why
we all would have gone to hell with him if he’d asked us,"
said Ross, "and we just about did!"
In the battle for Peleliu, Puller’s regiment
sustained a 56 percent casualty rate while going up against
the toughest section of the island, a series of hills, caves,
and jungle known as "Bloody Nose." Puller’s battered and
bloodied 1st Marines had to be removed from the fight and
replaced by the 7th Marines.
In his speech notes from 1978, retired Brig.
Gen. Edwin Simmons, director emeritus, Marine Corps Historical
Division, described seeing ‘Chesty’ for the first time when
Puller came to talk to officers candidates at Quantico, Va.,
in 1942.
"This was the man we were going to hear speak
... not very tall, he stood with a kind of stiffness with his
chest thrown out, hence his nickname ‘Chesty.’ His face was
yellow-brown from the sun and atabrine, the anti-malaria drug
that was used then. His face looked, as someone has said, as
though it were carved out of teakwood. There was a lantern
jaw, a mouth like the proverbial steel trap, and small,
piercing eyes that drilled right through you and never seemed
to blink."
Puller was then 44 years old. The four-time Navy
Cross recipient would not see combat again during World War
II; instead, he was assigned back to the United States in
November 1944.
He was sent to Camp Pendleton, Calif., in August
1950 to take command of his old unit, the 1st Marines, which
was gearing up for Korea.
Cold Hell
Puller landed with the 1st Marines at Inchon,
Korea, in September 1950. Aboard his landing craft was Lt.
Carl L. Sitter, who would earn the Medal of Honor, the
nation’s highest award for valor, for his actions during Nov.
29-30, 1950, at Hagaruri.
"I was on his landing craft that day. I’d been
given responsibility for the headquarters section and later
acted as liaison with the 5th Marine Regiment. Sometime after
we were at Tent Camp 2, I had to go to his tent to talk to
him. When I went inside, it was dark, and it took my eyes
awhile to adjust. When they did, I noticed him sitting on the
ground snapping in with his pistol; he was pointing it right
at me.
"He was ramrod straight with a stubby pipe in
his mouth all the time. He was approachable. He’d often say
‘Hello son, how are you doing?’ when he came across a Marine."
While "attacking in a different direction" at
the Frozen Chosin Reservoir Dec. 5-10, 1950, Puller earned his
fifth and final Navy Cross. Ten Chinese Divisions had been
sent to annihilate them, but the Marines smashed seven of the
divisions during their retrograde to the sea. Facing attack
from all sides, including two massive enemy attacks on the
rear guard, Puller’s direct leadership ensured all casualties
were evacuated, all salvageable equipment was brought out, and
ensured there was enough time for the column to reach its
destination.
In addition to the Navy Cross for his actions
during the breakout, he was awarded the Army’s equivalent —
the Distinguished Service Cross. In January 1951, Puller was
promoted to brigadier general and appointed as assistant
commander of the 1st Marine Division.
Promoted to major general in September 1953,
Puller assumed command of the 2nd Marine Division at Camp
Lejeune in July 1954. It was here he suffered what was
originally described as a mild stroke. After many
examinations, Puller was declared fit for duty by his military
doctors aboard the base.
But Puller’s state of health remained a
controversial subject and led to his forced retirement.
Thwarting tradition, he had a sergeant major who had worked
for him in more glorious days, pin on his third star before he
retired Nov. 1, 1955.
His 14 personal decorations, excluding those
from foreign governments, certainly are part of Puller’s
enduring lore, but perhaps the stories of his leadership,
courage, honor, and fighting ability are his most important
legacy. They serve as reminders and inspiration to generations
of Marines that leading by example is the most important trait
we can possess.
Lewis B. "Chesty" Puller died Oct. 11, 1971, at the age of 73.