The Measure of Authentic Leadership: Major Samuel Nicholas
In November 1775, the Continental Congress commissioned Major Samuel Nicholas as the first officer of the newly formed Continental Marines. A native of Philadelphia and a man of deep integrity, Nicholas embodied what North Carolinians later enshrined as their state motto: Esse Quam Videri — To Be, Rather than to Seem.
Nicholas’s leadership was not born of appearance, but of substance. He organized the first Marine companies from among seafaring men and patriots who understood the risks of service before a single battle was fought. His command at the Battle of Nassau in 1776—the first amphibious landing in Marine Corps history—revealed a leader who led by example, not by rank alone. His men trusted him because he was what he appeared to be: disciplined, fair, and unwavering in his devotion to duty.
Authentic leadership, as Nicholas lived it, requires humility and courage—the willingness to act rightly even when recognition is uncertain. His quiet steadfastness set a precedent that would define generations of Marines who followed. In Nicholas, we see the earliest expression of a Corps built not on the pretense of honor, but on the daily practice of it.
To be, rather than to seem—Major Samuel Nicholas lived this truth more than two centuries ago. His legacy reminds us that genuine leadership begins not in command, but in character.

