MAJOR GENERAL
RANDOLPH C. BERKELEY, USMC (DECEASED)

 

Medal of Honor Citation 

Original General Order 

Major General Randolph Carter Berkeley, who earned the Medal of Honor at Vera Cruz, Mexico, in 1914, died 31 January 1960 in Beaufort, South Carolina. 

Commissioned a Marine second lieutenant during the Spanish-American War, MajGen Berkeley completed over 40 years' active duty in the Marine Corps, including service at sea and in the Philippines, Cuba, Panama, China, Haiti, Nicaragua and Guam. In addition to the Medal of Honor, he was awarded the Navy Cross as commander of the 11th Regiment in Nicaragua in 1927, and the Navy Distinguished Service Medal as Chief of Staff of the 2d Marine Brigade in that country in 1928-29. 

Major Berkeley was commanding the 1st Battalion of the 2d Advanced Base Regiment when he took part in the action which earned him the Nation's highest decoration on 21-22 April 1914. Relations between the United States and the Huerta government of Mexico had been strained for some time, and a landing force of Marines and sailors was ordered ashore at Vera Cruz after a Huerta officer had arrested several U.S. Naval personnel at Tampico. The 2d Regiment was the first ashore, meeting resistance from Mexican troops about noon on 21 April. Maj Berkeley was awarded the Medal of Honor for distinguished conduct and leadership in that battle. 

Randolph C. Berkeley was born on 9 January 1875, in Staunton, Virginia, where he attended grade and high school. He graduated from Potomac Academy in Alexandria, Virginia, in 1891, and was appointed a Marine second lieutenant on 8 August 1898, for service during the Spanish-American War. He was stationed at the Navy Yard, Washington, D.C., until he was honorably discharged on 9 January 1899. He returned to the Corps in April 1899, when he was appointed a first lieutenant. His subsequent promotions included: captain, July 1900; major, October 1910; lieutenant colonel, August 1916; colonel, July 1918; brigadier general, July 1930; and major general on retirement, February 1939. 

In addition to his service at posts in the United States, he served on a variety of assignments at sea and abroad before the action at Vera Cruz. He served aboard the USS Oregon from October 1899 to March 1901; in the Philippines from April to June 1901; aboard the USS Helena from July 1901 to August 1902; on expeditionary duty in Panama from December 1904 to August 1906; on expeditionary duty in Cuba in September and October 1906; aboard the USS Kentucky as commander of its Marine detachment from December 1907 to November 1908, and in the Philippines and China from December 1908 to October 1910. 

Major Berkeley took command of the 1st Battalion, 2d Advanced Base Regiment, in December 1913, in Pensacola, Florida, and sailed with it for Vera Cruz in March 1914. He returned to the United States in December 1914, and was stationed in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, until June 1915, when he sailed for Guam to command the Marine Barracks on that island. Returning from Guam in November 1917, he served at the Marine Barracks, New York, New York, and Charleston, South Carolina, during the next two years. 

Colonel Berkeley was again ordered to expeditionary duty in October 1919, serving for two years with the 1st Provisional Brigade in Haiti. After he returned from that country in November 1921, he served at New York, New York, and Norfolk and Quantico, Virginia. He completed the Field Officers Course at Quantico in August 1925, and a year of study at the Army War College, Washington, D.C., in June 1926, returning from there to Quantico as commander of the 1st Regiment. He served in that capacity for the next two years, except for the period from May to August 1927, when he was commanding the 11th Regiment in Nicaragua. 

He was ordered to Nicaragua again in May 1928, serving there for a year as Chief of Staff of the 2d Marine Brigade. After his return to the United States in April 1929, he commanded the Marine Barracks at the Norfolk Navy Yard, Portsmouth, Virginia. He served in that capacity until August 1930, when he was ordered to Quantico, Virginia. There he commanded the Marine Corps Schools until November 1931, when he was again ordered to Nicaragua - this time as commander of the 2d Marine Brigade. 

He returned to the United States in January 1933, and from then until May 1936, commanded the Marine Barracks in Parris Island, South Carolina. He was then ordered to Marine Corps Headquarters, Washington, D.C., where he was President of the Marine Corps Examining and Retiring Boards until December 1938. He reached the statutory retirement age in January 1939 and was placed on the retired list the following month as a major general. 

In addition to the Medal of Honor, Distinguished Service Medal and Navy Cross, MajGen Berkeley's medals and decorations include: the Spanish Campaign Medal, Philippines Campaign Medal, Cuban Campaign Medal, Mexican Campaign Medal, Haitian Campaign Medal, World War I Victory Medal, Second Nicaraguan Campaign Medal, the Marine Corps Expeditionary Medal, and three Nicaraguan decorations - the Presidential Medal of Merit, the Medal of Distinction, and the Medal of Merit. 

Following his retirement, General Berkeley lived in Beaufort and Port Royal, South Carolina, until his death at the U.S. Naval Hospital, Beaufort, on 31 January 1960.  He was buried in Arlington National Cemetery on 4 February 1960.

Vera Cruz 1914 Medal of Honor