ENLISTED AT JUST 14 YEARS OLD: True Story of Marine Dan Bullock

Jun 18 , 2022

ENLISTED AT JUST 14 YEARS OLD: True Story of Marine Dan Bullock

On December 10, 1968, Dan Bullock joined the Marine Corps. Despite being fourteen at the time, Bullock enlisted in the Corps by claiming that he was eighteen.

At a time when many young men were avoiding the draft and military service in Vietnam, Bullock altered his birth certificate claiming that he was born on December 21, 1949, instead of December 21, 1953, in order to join the Marines.

Bullock was sent to Marine boot camp at Paris Island, South Carolina, and completed his basic training there on December 10, 1968, eleven days before his fifteenth birthday.

He was stationed at An Hoa Combat Base in Quang Nam Province. Bullock was assigned as a rifleman to Fox Company, Second Battalion, Fifth Marine Regiment.

Originally assigned cleaning duties that night at the base, Bullock was reassigned to take over an injured Marine’s assignment, guarding a Delta Airship. Bullock and other Marines were on guard that night when the Northern Vietnamese Army attacked the base.

Bullock was hit by several rounds of enemy fire and was instantly killed. He was one of four Marines that were also killed during the June 7th attack.

It wasn’t until reporters paid a visit to Bullock’s family that America came to know that Bullock was only 15 years old.

In honor of his bravery, in June 2003 the New York City Council renamed a section of Lee Avenue in Brooklyn, where Bullock had lived since he was 11 years old, in his honor.

PFC. Dan Bullock was the youngest American killed in combat during the Vietnam War.

Dan Bullock was the youngest member of the United States Armed Services to die in the Vietnam War. Bullock, a U.S. Marine, was fifteen years old at the time of his death.

Dan Bullock was born on December 21, 1953, in Goldsboro, North Carolina. Much of his early life is unknown but his mother died when he was eleven years old. Following his mother’s death, his father remarried and relocated his family from Goldsboro to Brooklyn, New York.

On December 10, 1968, Bullock joined the Marine Corps. Despite being fourteen at the time, Bullock enlisted in the Corps by claiming that he was eighteen. At a time when many young men were avoiding the draft and military service in Vietnam, Bullock altered his birth certificate claiming that he was born on December 21, 1949, instead of December 21, 1953 in order to join the Marines.

Bullock was sent to Marine boot camp at Paris Island, South Carolina and completed his basic training there on December 10, 1968, eleven days before his fifteen birthday. He arrived in Vietnam on May 8, 1969 and was stationed at An Hoa Combat Base in Quang Nam Province. Bullock was assigned as a rifleman to Fox Company, Second Battalion, Fifth Marine Regiment.

On June 7, 1969, Bullock was killed by a surprise attack by the North Vietnamese Army during the night. Originally assigned cleaning duties that night at the base, Bullock was reassigned to take over an injured Marine’s assignment, guarding a Delta Airship. Bullock and other Marines were on guard that night when the Northern Vietnamese Army attacked the base. Bullock was hit by several rounds of enemy fire and was instantly killed. Three other Marines were also killed during the attack.

Bullock’s body was returned to North Carolina and buried in the Elmwood Cemetery in Goldsboro without a headstone. Thirty-one years later in 2000, television talk show host Sally Jessy Raphael—upon learning the story of his involvement in South Vietnam and his age—donated a headstone. Shortly afterwards there was a memorial service for Bullock in Goldsboro. Both the New York Rolling Thunder and the North Carolina Rolling Thunder motorcycle clubs participated in a caravan through the town in his honor. In 2003, a portion of Lee Avenue in Brooklyn where he had lived as a child, was renamed after him. In 2017, a highway marker was installed in Goldsboro in his honor, commemorating his service to the United States.


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12 Comments

  • 18 Jun 2022 Donald Lee Johnson

    Even though he was only a child, he was one hell of a man.

  • 18 Jun 2022 Chuck

    Not to be hypercritical, but the Marine Corps Recruit Depot is referred to as Parris Island. While the man the piece of property is named after sometimes spelled his name Paris, he also used Parris. That sort of thing was common centuries ago when rules of grammar and spelling were more flexible. Looking at old church records from Prussia where my grandfather came from, I noted that the name was frequently spelled differently. However, the USMC has always used Parris Island for their recruit depot. Just a minor point.

    I appreciate the histories you have been posting on your site. Please continue. Chesty Puller was probably the ultimate Marine, even more revered by the grunts than Smedley Butler or Victor Krulak.



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