Hey, CCs tell YOUR story! CCHQ is updating “Last To Know, First To Go”

Okay, CCs. When Gary Cameron’s “Last To Know, First To Go,” the unofficial history of our merry band, hit the streets in the late 1970s, a lot of us started bitching about names left out, happenings that didn’t, and why didn’t he include anything about the unit I was in and why didn’t he use this photo or that. Some of us liked it, some of us didn’t. Most of us have agreed since, that while a monumental effort, a sequel was needed to bring us up to present day and hopefully correct some of the problems of the original book.

Well, here’s your big chance. Thanks to Life Member Agostino “Omar” VonHassell (as general editor), Don Caetano and Life Member publisher, Dave Biesel, St. Johann Press, we’re going to try it again and this time we will get it right – with your help.

Noted writer Ed Breslin, who has worked with such luminaries as W.E.B. Griffin and Tom Clancy, has been named chief editor. The writers and photographers will be you. If you cooperate, Omar and Ed are promising a book that should have good market appeal, both to us and to the general public. Quite frankly: We hope to knock your socks off! (more…)

Conference site? Marines are no strangers in Hampton history

Don Knight left active duty as a sergeant in the public affairs field in 1952. Since then he has worked as a reporter/editor/feature writer for many newspapers and is currently a rotating reporter/editor for the National Press Club weekly newsletter. He is also serving as vice president of the USMCCCA.

Don Knight left active duty as a sergeant in the public affairs field in 1952. Since then he has worked as a reporter, editor, feature writer for many newspapers and is currently a rotating reporter/editor for the National Press Club weekly newsletter.

By Don Knight, USMCCCA vice president
Come September, U.S. Marine combat correspondents, past and present,  will land in strength at Hampton, VA, site of the next annual conference of the USMCCCA.  The city, on the shore of Hampton Roads, lies at the tip of a peninsula boasting some of the most historic acreage in the United States: Jamestown, Colonial Williamsburg, Yorktown and the neighboring port city of Newport News.
Many in Yorktown, just 10 miles north of Hampton,  may remember the last time a contingent of Marines showed up in strength. Oct. 19 is celebrated annually as Yorktown Day, the anniversary of the day in 1781 when British General Lord Cornwallis surrendered to American General George Washington, ending the long and hard-fought battle for independence: the American Revolution.