‘Kicked upstairs’
From the Boy Scouts to the Montford Marines, Montco’s
Richard Washington Paved the Way for Blacks in the Pre-Civil
Rights Eras
by
MICHAEL J. MISHAK
As Americans celebrate the 60th anniversary
of the end of World War II this year, one group of distinguished
veterans is proudly marking another occasion: the breaking
of the color barrier in the U.S. Marine Corps.
Among them is Richard V. Washington, one of
nearly 20,000 black Marines who served in the war after training
at Montford Point, a segregated military camp in North Carolina.
More than two decades before the Civil Rights Act was signed
into law, the Montford Point Marines opened a door that had
been closed to the black community for 167 years.
For Washington, who was living in Mt. Airy
at the time, enlisting in the Marine Corps was just one milestone
in a life of firsts. “There are far more opportunities
now than there were then,” Washington said in an interview
last week. “But in 1942, the country needed shaking
up.”
Many of the Montford Point veterans called
Philadelphia home after the war, including Frederick C. Branch,
the Marine Corps’ first black commissioned officer,
and Cecil B. Moore, the legendary civil-rights firebrand.
In 1965, a group of local veterans founded the Montford Point
Marine Association here and staged their first reunion in
Center City that year. The group has grown to 28 chapters
nationwide.
For the most part, Washington, who now resides
in Montgomery County, said he has been reluctant to talk about
his experiences, but cornered last week by a Local reporter
at Springfield Residence, the assisted-living facility near
Chestnut Hill where he’s staying for two weeks while
his family tours Europe, the sharp-witted 95-year-old veteran
had little choice. “Talking too much can get you in
trouble in the Marine Corps,” he quipped. “But
they’ve got me held captive here.”
Born in 1910, Washington was raised in a Center
City row home on Saint James Street, just around the corner
from the Philadelphia Free Library, which was then located
at 13th and Locust streets. Though his parents were devout
Baptists, they took their son to the neighborhood Episcopal
church because it was closer. Washington learned his work
ethic from his father, a maintenance worker at a hosiery factory
who often worked seven days a week but was paid for only five.
“He was married to that building,” Washington
said.
Life in a segregated society held little opportunity
for blacks, but one man in Washington’s life saw fit
to change that. E. Stanton Smith, a black Boy Scout master,
enrolled Washington, along with two other black Scouts, in
a summer camp program at Treasure Island, an exclusive reservation
on the Delaware River. Smith “conveniently forgot”
to include the young boy’s last name, instead using
his Dutch-sounding middle name “Vanderlippe,”
Washington said.
When the three scouts arrived it was apparent
that they were the first black Scouts to set foot on Treasure
Island. “Those people never said anything in words,”
Washington said. “But they were whispering among themselves.”
Separated from the white Scouts, the boys were ushered into
the mess hall and served lemonade while camp officials huddled
nearby, he said. The camp’s chef, and its only black
employee, emerged from the kitchen to talk with the Scouts.
“The whole time I was saying to myself, ‘Something
is wrong,’” Washington said.
One camp administrator noticed Washington’s
bugle and was surprised to learn the young Scout could play
98 different calls. The talent, which Washington developed
by practicing to a record his father bought from a second-hand
store, earned him an extra week’s stay as the camp’s
bugler. For Washington, the event was one in a series of firsts.
Graduating from Thomas Durham Elementary
School in the top of his class, Washington was selected as
one of the few blacks admitted to the city’s prestigious
Central High School, where he said he “walked very carefully.”
Still, he insists that he was treated “very decently”
by most of the student body and that his race mattered little
to the school’s professors, who would “break off
a piece of chalk and sail it by your head like a bullet if
they caught you daydreaming.” Then, when his mother
took ill from a heart condition in his sophomore year, Washington
dropped out to work full-time as a waiter at the Stenton Hotel.
While the extra income helped to supplement
the $10 a week his father earned, his parents didn’t
take the news well. They marched him back to Central, and
though he had only missed a month of classes, the school’s
president deemed it too long of a gap to readmit him. Washington
was devastated, saying his decision to drop out resulted in
many sleepless nights and ultimately stomach ulcers.
He spent the next few years finishing his education
at night while holding a day-job as a warehouse worker for
the Philadelphia Board of Education. By the early 1930s, Washington
had graduated with honors from Central and sought a promotion.
“[The school board] told me there were no coloreds in
the administration,” Washington said. It was the first
of several such encounters with the discriminatory policies
of his employer.
Washington traces his interest in the Marine
Corps back to September 1926 when, at 16-years-old, he read
that world heavyweight boxing champ Jack Dempsey refused to
fight ex-champ Jack Johnson, or any other black fighter. “Dempsey
said blacks should not be in the business of fighting,”
Washington said. “He called us ‘wild animals.’
That always left a bad taste in my mouth.” That month,
in Philadelphia, ex-Marine Gene Tunney wrested Dempsey’s
title by a unanimous 10-round decision. Washington was thrilled.
“I thought, ‘Damn! A Marine did that,’”
he said.
But the U.S. Marine Corps was an exclusive
group. While other branches of the military had opened the
door for blacks — albeit as chefs, stewards and messmen
— the Marines upheld a policy of exclusion until June
1941 when President Roosevelt issued Executive Order No. 8802,
which provided for the full participation of all citizens
in the armed services regardless of race. The Marine brass
resisted but were ordered the following year to open their
enlistment rolls to blacks, breaking a 167-year-old barrier.
A 31-year-old Washington jumped at
the chance to enlist, a remarkable reaction for a black man
in a country where Jim Crow laws and lynching were still very
much alive. “Most of my friends thought I was crazy,”
Washington said. “But I’m an opportunist.”
He sought change from within the institution.
“My kind of colored people, we don’t complain.
I thought, ‘Let them gripe. What is there that I could
be doing? There’s some good in segregation. I just have
to find it.’”
Living in Mt. Airy at the time, Washington
took and passed the Marines entrance exam. But, “when
the time came to go, there was nowhere to go,” he said.
Pending the completion of segregated training facilities at
Montford Point, near Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, the military
issued Washington a deferred-enlistment card. He would flash
the card countless times in appearances before the local draft
board over the next year. He was repeatedly told to enlist
in the Army or quit his job with the school board for one
that was war-related, he said.
In an effort to satisfy the demands, Washington
enrolled in a mechanical drafting course, one of many war-training
classes that was offered at Dobbins Vocational School at the
time. There, he met Carrissima, the only other black student
in the class and the woman he would marry four years later.
At 95, Washington recalls their first meeting as if it were
yesterday. “Wednesday, July 22, 1942, 7 p.m.,”
he said. “She had a red Hibiscus flower in her hair
and the look on her face said, ‘Don’t you dare
speak to me.’”
It took months to work up his nerve, but Washington
rose to the occasion during a power blackout after class one
evening. In the darkness, he walked Carrissima from the school
to her trolley stop at 15th Street and Lehigh Avenue. The
relationship blossomed but was cut short when Washington received
word that he was to report for duty. Though the couple had
known each other only for a matter of months, Washington promised
his girlfriend he would marry her once the war had ended.
For the next three years, Carrissima wrote
him letters almost daily, always enclosing either a stick
or chewing gum or a dime, Washington said. Before his departure,
she gave him a religious token, which he placed behind his
military identification card and still carries to this day.
In 1943, Washington reported to Montford Point
in North Carolina where he and his platoon were among the
first Marines to be trained by black drill instructors. The
camp had graduated its first class the previous year and blacks
gradually replaced white officers. Washington trained under
a black instructor, who older recruits said was more vicious
than the “redneck” officer that had trained them,
he said. “Those were tough times,” Washington
said. But recruits were aware of the significance of their
service and felt pressure to perform, he said.
While most of his platoon was eventually assigned
to a depot company in the South Pacific, Washington was selected
for officer candidate school. “Most of those guys were
buried in the South Pacific,” Washington said. “My
head was buried in books.” Assigned to a military police
unit, he was promoted to the rank of corporal and later ran
the base’s bureau of identification, where he was responsible
for taking field photographs and producing identification
cards for all the facility’s personnel.
He earned the nickname “the good corporal”
among the troops, but discouraged soldiers from using it for
fear of reprisals from his superiors. “The sergeants
were watching me,” Washington said.
Though he was among those who were offered
further promotion for extending their service, Washington
chose to return to Philadelphia when the war ended in 1945.
A job and a fiancée were waiting for him.
Washington had hoped his military service would
convince the city’s school board to move him from a
warehouse detail to the business office. Add B. Anderson,
the board’s business manager and chief powerbroker,
was hardly impressed.
Donning dress blues, Washington met with Anderson
and asked for an administrative assignment. After all, the
veteran said, he had completed two years of accounting coursework
at Temple University. Holding a stack of recommendation letters
from Washington’s college professors and Marine commanders,
Anderson seemed annoyed, Washington said. “Open the
door to the business office,” the administrator told
him. “Look to the left and to the right, then we’ll
talk about it.” Washington took a quick look and shut
the door. “There are no colored people in the business
office,” Anderson said. “I don’t know why
you still don’t understand that.”
Straining to maintain composure, Washington
remained silent. Eventually Anderson issued a letter that
placed Washington behind a desk issuing tools to maintenance
workers. He stayed there for 17 years. In 1962, after Anderson’s
death, Washington said he was “kicked upstairs”
to the school board’s accounting department in the wake
of the school reform movement headed by Richardson Dilworth.
There, Washington quickly rose to the level of supervisor
and ran the department’s maintenance and operations
division until his retirement in 1979.
It was also in the 1960s that Washington was
appointed to the draft board, a distinction shared by three
blacks statewide at the time, he said.
After retiring from what became the School
District of Philadelphia, Washington landed an accounting
job with the federal Interstate Commerce Commission until
the agency folded in 1995. He worked for another three years
in the passport office of the U.S. Custom House at 2nd and
Chestnut streets, the place where he had taken his Marine
Corps entrance exam more than a half-century earlier.
Now, residing in Laverock, Pa. with Carrissima,
his wife of nearly 60 years, Washington remains active in
his church and keeps an eye out for the next opportunity.
“I resent the fact that I get up
every morning ready to go by 6:45 a.m. and I just have a cup
of coffee,” Washington said. “I wish I were taking
the R7 into town and doing the New York Times crossword puzzle.”
Flashing a smile, he said, “If you know of a job that
will have me, please give me a call.”