Dec 13 , 2025
Daniel Daly, Brooklyn Marine Who Led the Charge at Peking
Sgt. Major Daniel Joseph Daly stood in the choking dust of Peking, the foreign streets shaking with gunfire and fury. When his men faltered, he didn’t hesitate. With rifle raised and voice roaring across the chaos, he led the charge—alone if he had to—because courage is contagious. In that blistering crucible during the Boxer Rebellion, Daly proved why legends don’t just happen.
The Blood and Backbone of Brooklyn
Born in 1873, Brooklyn bred a fighter—hard-nosed, relentless, sharp as a razor’s edge. Daniel Daly grew up with blue-collar grit shaped by the rough streets and factory smoke. A Catholic boy with a soldier’s soul, he found the Marine Corps calling early and answered with a fierce heart.
Faith anchored him. Not the polite faith of sermons, but the fierce, tested kind—the kind that grips you tight when men fall beside you and the world bleeds raw. Daly lived James 1:2-3:
“Consider it pure joy, my brothers and sisters, whenever you face trials of many kinds, because you know that the testing of your faith produces perseverance
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