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Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego

Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego
San Diego, California
MCRD WRR small.jpg
Marine Corps Recruit Depot Historic District
Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego is located in San Diego County, California
Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego
Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego is located in California
Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego
Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego is located in the US
Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego
Location S of jct. of Barnett Ave. and Pacific Hwy., San Diego, California
Coordinates 32°44′31″N 117°11′50″W / 32.74194°N 117.19722°W / 32.74194; -117.19722Coordinates: 32°44′31″N 117°11′50″W / 32.74194°N 117.19722°W / 32.74194; -117.19722
Area 110 acres (45 ha)
Architect Goodhue,Bertram G.; Dawson Construction Co.
Architectural style Mission/Spanish Revival
NRHP Reference # 90001477
Added to NRHP January 31, 1991
Type Military base
Site information
Controlled by  United States Marine Corps
Site history
Built 1919
In use 1919–present
Garrison information
Current
commander
BG William M. Jurney
Garrison Recruit training
Drill instructor training
Recruiter training

Marine Corps Recruit Depot (commonly referred to as MCRD) San Diego is a United States Marine Corps military installation in San Diego, California. It lies between San Diego Bay and Interstate 5, adjacent to San Diego International Airport and the former Naval Training Center San Diego. MCRD San Diego's main mission is the initial training of enlisted male recruits living west of the Mississippi River. Over 21,000 recruits are trained each year. The Depot also is the home to the Marine Corps' Recruiter School and Western Recruiting Region's Drill Instructors School.

Marines made an amphibious landing in San Diego in 1846 from USS Savannah and USS Congress during the Mexican–American War. Marines made a presence in San Diego again in July 1914, but ground was not broken for a permanent base until March 2, 1919. The initial proposal for the base came from Congressman William Kettner, who also proposed construction of Naval Training Center San Diego. The Marine base only became a reality due to the perseverance of its first commanding officer, Colonel Joseph Henry Pendleton (later a general and the namesake of Camp Pendleton). Before the commissioning of the base on Dutch Flats, the Marines were based in Balboa Park. The structures were designed by architect Bertram Goodhue in the Spanish Colonial Revival style, and they echo the style used for the buildings of the 1915 Panama–California Exposition (also inspired by Goodhue). The base and its original buildings are now on the National Register of Historic Places listings in San Diego County, California. By 1921, the base was formally commissioned, and in 1923 it became the Marine Corps' recruit training center for the western United States. During World War II, the flow of recruits into the base surged, with 18,000 recruits arriving in one month. In 1948, the base was formally named Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego.


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