Front and Center Newsletter โ€“ Vol. 3, No. 3, March 2025

Share this post:
Carolina-Musuem-of-the-Marine

Meet the Marine. Be Inspired.
UNDER CONSTRUCTION!

FRONT AND CENTER

Vol. 3, No 3, March 2025

Mission

Honor, preserve, and teach the legacy of Carolina Marines and Sailors.
Showcase the Marine example to inspire future generations.

Message from the President and CE0

Dear Carolina Museum of the Marine Partners,

Construction of Carolina Museum of the Marine is progressing on schedule and within budget. With the beautiful building now standing and walls going in, we are shifting our focus toward bringing the museumโ€™s immersive experiences to life. We are actively negotiating with retailers and working closely with world-renowned firms Ralph Appelbaum Associates and Squint Opera to ensure that our exhibits and displays engage visitors in dynamic and meaningful ways.

As we prepare for opening day, our team is gradually expanding. We are pleased to welcome CWO3 Charles McCawley, USMC (Ret.), as our new Finance and HR Manager. Charles brings a wealth of experience in financial management, audit oversight, and data analytics. A retired Marine Corps finance officer, he has managed audits impacting over 75,000 personnel, developed financial training programs for Marines, and implemented cost-saving measures that significantly improved operational efficiency. Most recently, he earned a Master of Science in Data Analytics from Western Governors University, further enhancing his ability to optimize financial processes and decision-making. We are fortunate to have him on board.

It is an honor and a privilege to be part of this extraordinary project, working alongside a dedicated team and supporters who believe in our mission. Together, we are building something that will inspire generations to come.

Joe Shrader

Warm regards,
Joe Schrader
Major General, USMC (Ret)
President and CEO

Construction on schedule!

CMoTM-3d Visualizations-Renderings
Construction updates
State of NC

Champions of Service

The Carolina Museum of the Marine is more than just a building โ€” it is a promise to honor the courage, sacrifice, and enduring legacy of the Marines and Sailors who have served in and through the Carolinas. This mission has been championed by many, from dedicated citizens and business leaders to public officials who have fought to make it a reality.

Among them standย Senator Harry Brownย andย Senator Mike Lazzara, two leaders whose steadfast commitment helped secure the funding needed to move this project forward. In his final year in office, Senator Brown placed a crucial grant in the State of North Carolinaโ€™s budget, ensuring that construction could begin. When he retired in 2020, he passed the torch to Senator Lazzara, who worked tirelessly to push the effort across the finish line. Thanks to their leadership, the state grant was approved in late 2021, securing the museumโ€™s future.

We thank all who have kept this mission’s flame burning brightly and invite others to join us as we ensure the lasting legacy of Carolina Marines and Sailors

Ethics and the Marine Corps

Jim Danielson, PhD

iStock: Trifonov_Evgeniy

Part of the mission of the Al Gray Marine Leadership Forum at Carolina Museum of the Marine is to make available to the general public the knowledge of how to guide oneself for effectiveness in all domains of life that the Marine Corps has learned over nearly 250 years of service to the United States. Most Americans have not served in the military, and certainly not in the comparatively small Marine Corps, but all Americans, military or not, are human beings having in common the moral and intellectual natures of human beings, and thus the knowledge of human moral and intellectual development acquired by the Marine Corps is available to everyone.

 The mission of the Marine Corps requires that individual Marines are disciplined and concerned with improving as human beings as well as Marines. The first of the eleven principles of Marine Corps leadership is this: Know yourself, and seek self-improvement. We may observe that our minds are able to think in a practical way, reasoning from circumstances to decisions on actions that accomplish goals, and when we think in this way, the principle from which thinking proceeds, the first principle of practical reason, is that good should be done and pursued, and evil avoided.[i] When one seeks to know himself, an important good he is pursuing is the good of truth concerning himself, including personal strengths and weaknesses, and when someone seeks self-improvement, he seeks to grow by developing both where he is weak and where he is strong. In other words, growing as a human being is a moral enterprise, and one which the Marine Corps has attended to seriously for a long time. Thus we can learn from the studied experience of the Marine Corps how to proceed in the important effort to become the best person each of us can be.

We have commented here in the past on the assertion of Albert Jay Nock that if one wishes to contribute to the improvement of our society, he should โ€œpresent it with one improved unit.โ€ He meant of course that we contribute to our society by seeking, each of us, our own self-improvement. A good place to go to think about this is the student handout the Marine Corps has prepared for the course in ethics given to warrant officers going through their basic school.[ii] The study we are considering begins with a few important definitions.

Ethics

โ€œA set of standards or a value system by which free, human actions are ultimately determined as right or wrong, good or evil.โ€

Morals

โ€œPertaining to or concerned with right conduct or the distinction between right or wrong. Morality covers the extensive field of personal and social behavior.โ€

Professional Ethics

โ€œRefers to and deals with additional ideals and practices that grow out of oneโ€™s professional privileges and responsibilities. Professional ethics apply to certain groups, e.g., the military, and are an attempt to define situations that otherwise would remain uncertain and to direct the moral consciousness of the members of the profession to its peculiar problems. For example, the military defines situations and prescribes correct behavior for its members in documents such as the Code of Conduct and the Law of Land Warfare.โ€ Of course, this definition of professional ethics is useful in other professions as well.

Following these definitions, the Marine Corps acknowledges the important truth that there are numerous approaches to the study of ethics, and declares, โ€œHere we advocate Virtue Ethics.โ€ The reason for this is given thus: โ€œThe Virtue Ethics approach focuses on the character of the person as opposed to specific moral rules or moral actions.โ€ For example, consequentialist moral theories determine the rightness of an act by the consequences it produces. Deontological moral theories, like that of the 18th century German philosopher Immanuel Kant, evaluate the moral quality of an act by its conformity with moral duty, independent of consequences. Notice that in both consequentialist and duty-based moral theories, the focus is on acts being performed and not on the character of the persons performing the acts. Virtue ethics focuses on the character of the person, and this is why the Marine Corps can say as its first principle of leadership that we should know ourselves and seek self-improvement.

 There are many virtues which human beings can develop, but in the tradition of virtue ethics there are four cardinal virtues: prudence, justice, courage, and temperance. Having identified the approach to ethics advocated by the Marine Corps, the course observes that the virtues that constitute the core values of the Marines are honor, courage, and commitment. Each of these virtues embraces subsidiary virtues that one expresses when embodying honor, courage, and commitment.

Honor

โ€œThe Marine Corps is a unique institution, not just to the military, but to the nation and the world. As the guardians of the standards of excellence for our society, Marines must possess the highest sense of gallantry in serving the United States of America and embody responsibility to duty above self,โ€ฆโ€ This understanding of honor requires that one embody also integrity, which is rooted in a commitment to the value of human life and dignity; responsibility, which includes owning the results of oneโ€™s decisions and actions; honesty, the ground of trustworthiness, or, as is written in the ethics course, โ€œMarines do not lie, cheat, or steal, nor tolerate those who doโ€; tradition, which includes not only demonstrating respect for the courtesies and customs of Marine Corps tradition, but showing respect for the traditions of others encountered in the line of duty.

Courage

โ€œMoral, mental, and physical strength to resist opposition, face danger, and endure hardship,โ€ฆโ€ This definition of courage includes such subsidiary virtues as: self-discipline, which includes all areas of life because self-discipline is vital to self-improvement; patriotism, devotion to country and to the defense of the Constitution; loyalty, steadiness and reliability in doing oneโ€™s duty; valor, defined as โ€œBoldness and determination in facing danger in battle, and the daily commitment to excellence and honesty in actions small and large.โ€

Commitment

โ€œThe promise or pledge to complete a worthy goal by worthy means which requires identification with that goal and demonstrated actions to support that goal,โ€ฆโ€ The virtue of commitment includes also competence which, interestingly, is more than technical and tactical proficiency, but the devotion to a standard of excellence in oneโ€™s actions; teamwork, which seeks always to support others in accomplishing a teamโ€™s mission; selflessness, expressed as placing the welfare of Corps and country above self; concern for people, which we may say is an important element of integrity; spiritual heritage, which is the recognition that we are created by God with inalienable rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.

The outline of this course in ethics for warrant officers, and the focus on virtue ethics, demonstrates the Marine Corpsโ€™ understanding that good Marines must be good human beings. The understanding that ethics, or the lifelong engagement in growth and development, is the theme running unmistakenly through the western tradition in moral philosophy, and it is a theme running through Marine Corpsโ€™ reflection on self-improvement.

[i] People may discuss what the words โ€œgoodโ€ and โ€œevilโ€ mean, but we should not slip into the error of thinking that since people disagree, there are no operative definitions of these words. One basic, and ancient, understanding is that โ€œgoodโ€ describes those things to which we are naturally drawn, and โ€œevilโ€ describes that from which we are naturally repelled.

[ii] A copy of the handout may be found here:  https://www.trngcmd.marines.mil/Portals/207/Docs/TBS/W210001XQ-W310001XQ-W410001DM Ethics I, II and Combat Ethics Discussion.pdf

Do What is Right

iStock: mohd izzuan

Welcome to our New Monthly Feature: 

Returning Good Citizens

A Marine as Citizen: Angus Alberson

Angus-Alberson-US-Marine

Angus Alberson of Hartford, Alabama served in the Marine Corps from 1966 until 1970. He graduated from boot camp at Parris Island after which he was trained as an aircraft mechanic. Alberson was given a choice of duty station owing to excellent performance in training, and chose MCAS Beaufort, South Carolina where he was attached to VMFA-451.[i]  Interestingly, he worked on the flight line rather than the engine shop because the squadron needed Marines with his training there. Alberson liked the work, saying of it: โ€œIt was a good job, probably the best Iโ€™ve ever had.โ€

Angus Alberson married in 1969, and left the Marine Corps in 1970, but remained in the Beaufort area because his wife, Johnette, wanted to stay near home. The day Alberson separated from the Corps, he went to a nearby tool and die shop and asked for a job. The man with whom he spoke, Turner Tootin, told him to be back at the shop Tuesday morning to start work at a job Alberson would hold for eight years. Over the years, Angus Alberson and Turner Tootin became friends, and Tootin eventually helped Alberson start his own business, American Machining and Manufacturing Company in Varnville, South Carolina.[ii] Alberson said of his experience at that time that โ€œThe Lord put me in the right place at the right time and put me with the right people.โ€ Yet Alberson understood that having these advantages was not quite enough. โ€œHowever, I realized over the years that when people ask you to do a job, they donโ€™t want excuses; they want the job done, and I feel that realizing that had made a big difference.โ€

Alberson tells the interesting story of a visit he had some years ago from a Lieutenant and a Sergeant from Parris Island who wanted his company to make pull-up bars for use by Marine recruits. โ€œSo we sketched it up here about 20 years ago and have been making it for them ever since.โ€ Staff Sergeant Justin Lundy of the Enhanced Marketing Team with the 6th Marine Corps District said that Albersonโ€™s pull-up bars โ€œare used throughout the Marine Corps and enable us to inspire a competitive nature while visiting high school students, county fairs, and large national events. Having an interactive element at an event provides the public with more than just a conversation.โ€ Alberson said of the use of his companyโ€™s pull-up bars by the Marine Corps that โ€œI really see [them] as my way to give back to the Marine Corps. I think the Marine Corps really gave me the drive, enthusiasm, the ability to stick to itโ€”to all of this stuff. I look at it like the Marine Corps is still giving after all these years. The Marine Corps is one of the best things I have ever done for myself in order to get my head together.โ€

[i] Material for this article is taken from an essay titled โ€œThe Pleasure of Knowing a Marine.โ€ A copy of the essay may be found here:  https://www.mcrc.marines.mil/In-the-News/Stories/Article/Article/3197054/the-pleasure-of-knowing-a-marine/

[ii] Varnville, South Carolina is the town of Greenbow, Alabama in the movie โ€œForest Gump.โ€

Pull Up Bars

Please join us in supporting the mission of

Carolina Museum of the Marine.

When you give to our annual campaign, you help to ensure that operations continue during construction and when the doors open!

Stand with us
as we stand up the Museum!

Copyright, March 2025. Carolina Museum of the Marine

2023-2024 Board of Directors

Executive Committee

LtGen Mark Faulkner, USMC (Ret) – Chair
Col Bob Love, USMC (Ret) – Vice Chair
CAPT Pat Alford, USN (Ret) – Treasurer
Mr. Mark Cramer, JD – Secretary
In Memoriam: General Al Gray, USMC (Ret)
MajGen Jim Kessler, USMC (Ret)
Col Grant Sparks, USMC (Ret)
MajGen Joe Shrader, USMC (Ret), President and CEO, Ex Officio Board Member

Members

Col Joe Atkins, USAF (Ret)
Mr. Mike Bogdahn, US Marine Corps Veteran
Mr. Keith Byrd, US Marine Corps Veteran
MGySgt Osceola “Oats” Elliss, USMC (Ret)
Mr. Frank Guidara, US Army Veteran
Col Bruce Gombar, USMC (Ret)
LtCol Lynn “Kim” Kimball, USMC (Ret)
CWO4 Richard McIntosh, USMC (Ret)
LtGen Gary S. McKissock, USMC (Ret)
Ms. Sandra Perez
The Honorable Robert Sander, Former General Counsel of the Navy
Mr. Billy Sewell
Col John B. Sollis, USMC (Ret)
GySgt Forest Spencer, USMC (Ret)

Staff

MajGen Joe Shrader, USMC (Ret), President and Chief Executive Officer
Ashley Danielson, Civilian, VP of Development
SgtMaj Steven Lunsford, USMC (Ret), Operations Director
CWO5 Lisa Potts, USMC (Ret), Curator
Kristen Honaker, Exhibitions Manager
Carlie Lee, Archivist and Historian
Sarah Williams, Docent and Volunteer Manager