

Interwar Period E95 From Riflemen to Warfighters: Training for a New Kind of War
This is our third episode covering how the interwar years quietly reshaped the Marine Corps into a force built for the future. We break down how the Corps invested in more innovative training, structured leadership development, and built up aviation, artillery, and reserves from the ground up. This is where the Fleet Marine Force was born.

Interwar Period E94 The Marines Rebuild: Readiness in the Quiet Years
In this episode, we follow the Marine Corps through one of its most important transitions. After WWI, Marines provided security in far-off places like China and the Caribbean while reinventing what it meant to be a Marine at home.
We cover how combat lessons became doctrine, how Marines went from peacekeepers to a modern expeditionary force, and how leaders like Lejeune, Butler, Neville, Fuller, and Holcomb fought for the soul and future of the Corps.

Interwar Period E93 Forged Between Wars: The Corps Transformed
When Marines returned home after World War I, they stepped into a country ready to celebrate them as heroes. Parades filled city streets, families welcomed them with open arms, and it seemed like America couldn't thank them enough. But this enthusiasm was short-lived. Within months, a sense of disillusionment set in, replacing cheers and excitement with a stark reality check on what the war had truly cost. Soon, that collective sense of pride turned into doubt, questioning whether the glory earned in combat was worth the terrible price Marines paid. This shift deeply impacted the Corps, leaving it struggling to fill its ranks and maintain morale as America moved toward isolation.
In this episode, we’ll explore how the Marine Corps fought to adapt in the face of a shrinking force, outdated promotion policies, and fading public support. From Hollywood's depiction of war's bitter realities to the Corps' desperate pivot toward sports and education, you'll see how the Marines grappled with a nation eager to leave war, and warriors, in the past.

WWI E92 A Corps Reborn: The New Mission After WWI
This episode closes the book on World War I with the moment Marines had been waiting for: the end. After years of brutal fighting, the armistice was real, and Marines on the Meuse were among the last to get the memo. Even as German officers crossed no-man’s-land with word of peace, Americans were still taking casualties.
We walk through the confusion, the celebration, and the quiet bitterness that followed. Then came the long march into Germany, the occupation, and finally, the return home. But not everyone made it back the same. This is the story of how the war ended and what came after.

WWI E91 Blanc Mont Ridge: The Forgotten Turning Point
This episode covers one of the Marine Corps’ most overlooked, but bloodiest battles of World War I: Blanc Mont Ridge.
After their success at Saint Mihiel, the 2nd Division was called up again, this time to break through heavily fortified German positions in Champagne. Lejeune fought to keep the division intact and led them into nightmarish terrain, even by WWI standards. We follow the 5th and 6th Marines as they charge uphill through open fields, tangled trenches, and relentless machine-gun fire. It was a brutal fight, with chaos, heroism, Medal of Honor moments, and a full-blown retreat.

WWI E90 Breaking the Salient: Marines at Saint-Mihiel
This episode covers how Marines rebuilt after Soissons and spearheaded a surprise assault that shattered German lines. We’ll look at how tight coordination, solid intelligence, and raw grit helped the 4th Brigade seize critical ground with minimal losses.

WWI E89 “I Will Hold”: Soissons and the Battle That Bled the Corp
This episode covers the Marines’ brutal second day at Soissons. After the 5th Marines took heavy losses on day one, the 6th stepped up to face entrenched German divisions across open wheat fields with almost no cover. What followed was chaos: shattered units, mounting casualties, and desperate pushes just to stay alive.
We track Marines like Cates, Overton, and Gulberg as they navigate the worst combat they’ve ever seen. By the end of the battle, more than half the 6th Regiment was gone, but the line held.

WWI E88 The Long March to Soissons
This episode picks up after Belleau Wood, as the Marines shift from defense to offense in the Aisne-Marne Offensive. With hard-won respect from Army and Allied commanders, the 4th Marine Brigade joined the push to crush Germany’s last major offensive. Planning was a mess. Units were scattered, orders came late, and Marines headed into battle with missing gear and barely any water. Still, they hit the line right on time, under cover of a short but brutal artillery barrage. A chaotic, multi-national charge follows through open fields, tangled forests, and fortified German positions. It’s Belleau Wood all over again, just bigger.

WWI E87 Belleau Wood: Where the Legend was Forged
This episode covers the battle that etched the Marine Corps into the history books: Belleau Wood. On June 6, 1918, Marines charged across open wheat fields into German machine guns, taking horrific losses. What followed was nearly a month of brutal, close-quarters fighting through tangled forest and fortified trenches.
We’ll walk through the chaos, the hand-to-hand combat, the infamous gas attacks, and the heroic actions of Marines like Dan Daly, Alfred Noble, and Edward Cole. You’ll hear how Belleau Wood became a proving ground for the Corps, and how its legend was forged, even if some parts, don’t hold up to history.

WWI E86 To the Trenches: The Marines Arrive in France
This episode marks the beginning of the Marine Corps’ legendary role in World War I. After months of training and frustration, the 4th Marine Brigade was finally called into action. We follow them through the trenches near Verdun, into the chaos of the German Spring Offensive, and up to the doorstep of Paris.
Outnumbered and outgunned, Marines held the line against Germany’s elite forces. As the Germans pushed hard toward Paris, the Marines dug in and counterpunched. What followed was Hill 142 and the opening of Belleau Wood, a brutal fight that would forever define the Marine Corps.