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Corporal Elton Mackin
WWI Marine, 1918 |
Born in 1898 in
Lewiston, New York, Elton Mackin enlisted in the United States Marine Corps in 1917. After training at
Parris Island, South Carolina, Mackin was sent to Europe, where he served as a battalion runner for the
67th Company 1st Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, United States Army Regulars. This highly decorated Marine fought in every Marine Brigade battle from
Belleau Wood to the crossing of the Meuse on the eve of the Armistice.
Mackin was awarded the United States Army Distinguished Service Cross, the Navy Cross, and two Army Silver Star citations. He was honorably discharged from the United States Marine Corps in May 1919.
Mackin moved to
Norwalk, Ohio in 1935. He began writing a memoir of his WWI experience. Excerpts from his manuscript, "Flashes and Fragments," appeared in
Leatherneck Magazine. Essays that appeared later in the
American Heritage magazine caught the eye of Marine Corps historian George B. Clark. Believing that Mackin's memoir provided a unique viewpoint of the war - "an enlisted man's viewpoint" and that of a "young man who suffered." Clark sought out the Mackin family. Although Private Mackin had passed away in 1974, his son, Wallace Mackin, shared the memoir and the taped oral interviews. The oral account assisted Clark in developing annotations for the manuscript that was eventually published in 1993 as
Suddenly We Didn't Want To Die: Memoirs of a World War I Marine.
Elton Mackin’s oral interview was conducted by the late Carl D. Klopfenstein, Professor of History at Heidelberg College. The interview was conducted at Mackin’s home at 116 Milan Avenue, Norwalk, Ohio on June 29, 1973. Following the interview, a rough draft transcription was produced. Using the draft and the audiotapes that are part of the
Elton Mackin Collection at the Hayes Presidential Center, the digitized transcription was created.
It is available by following this link. Due to the poor quality of the audiotapes, errors exist.