Empire Marine examines the role that Littleton W. T. Waller played in the development and growth of the Marine Corps within the emerging empire of turn-of-the-century America. The grandson of the governor of Virginia, Littleton W.T. Waller grew up during the post-Civil War years when his widowed mother struggled to provide for her sons. Unable to attend university or a professional military school, Waller secured a commission in the Marine Corps in 1880 and began a long and successful military career. Waller's service corresponded with the growth of the Marine Corps and the exportation of American imperialism in the 1890s and beyond. Particularly significant were the episodes of U.S. political and military expansion in South America, the Philippines, China, Panama, Cuba, and Haiti. Waller's experiences reflected the new emerging role that marines would play in the execution of American policy across the globe.
About the AuthorDr. Vernon L. Williams is a military historian and president of the Old Primero Historical Foundation. Williams grew up in an Air Force family, and his writings and documentary films record the stories of ordinary people who did extraordinary things in American military history.
Book InformationISBN 9780875658674
Author Vernon L. WilliamsFormat Paperback
Page Count 288
Imprint Texas Christian University PressPublisher Texas Christian University Press