The
Marine Corps League perpetuates the traditions and spirit of all
Marines and Navy Fleet Marine Force (FMF) Corpsmen, who proudly
wear or who have worn the eagle, globe and anchor of the
Corps. The Marine Corps League is the outgrowth of Marine Clubs established by Marines returning to the U.S. from the trenches of France in 1918. As those clubs grew in size and number, they became more active in the pursuit of objectives that were of interest to their members and in support of the Corps. Founded in 1923 by World War I hero, then Major General
Commandant John A. Lejeune, it takes equal pride in its Federal
Charter approved by an Act of the Seventy-Fifth Congress of the
United States of America and signed into law by President
Franklin D. Roosevelt on 4 August 1937.
The League is the only Federally Chartered Marine Corps-related
veterans organization in the country. Since its earliest days,
the Marine Corps League has enjoyed the support and
encouragement of the active duty and reserve establishments of
the United States Marine Corps. Today, the League boasts a
membership of nearly 61,000 men and women, officer and enlisted,
active duty and reserve Marines, honorably discharged Marine
Veterans and qualified Navy FMF Corpsmen. The Marine Corps
League is one of the few Veterans Organizations that experiences
continual increases in its membership each year. The prime authority of the League is derived from its Congressional charter and from its annual National Convention held each August in different major U.S. cities throughout the nation. It is a not-for-profit organization within the provisions of the Internal Revenue Service Code 501(c) (4), with a special group exemption letter which allows for contributions to the Marine Corps League, its Auxiliary and subsidiary units, to be tax deductible by the donor.