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View Full Version : Chuck Taliano, Rose Garden Poster



CplMotivate
09-23-10, 09:29 AM
I'm trying to find out what platoon number Sgt Chuck Taliano went through during bootcamp, and what platoon he was in as a Drill Instructor during his tour here on Parris Island. I'm doing a historical display at 2nd Battalion and need his information. Any help is greatly appreciated. BTW, if it helps any, he is the Drill Instructor in the "Rose Garden" poster.

Old Marine
09-23-10, 09:33 AM
Google Search?????

Wikiepedia Search???????

CplMotivate
09-23-10, 09:35 AM
Tried it....It's like trying to find a specific recruit with only the descriptions of bald, wearing BCG's, and lacking of common sense.

Old Marine
09-23-10, 11:44 AM
Just guessing, but it looks like everything you need is in his obituary. Anything else, check with the ISO Office at the Island, if it concerns his time on the drill field.

Ed Palmer
09-23-10, 12:00 PM
Sgt Charles "Chuck" Taliano
Memorial Photos Flowers Edit
Birth: May 9, 1945 Cleveland
Cuyahoga County
Ohio, USA
http://image1.findagrave.com/photos/2010/160/53495799_127617962072.jpg
Death: Jun. 4, 2010
Beaufort
Beaufort County
South Carolina, USA

Military Icon. His glaring face became the image of the US Marine Corps in a famous advertisement campaign that ran for nearly 20 years. Raised in Cleveland, he joined the Marine Corps in 1963, served at Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, and was deployed to Santo Domingo during the 1965 Dominican Republic crisis. Chosen as a drill instructor, he was assigned to Company D, Second Recruit Training Battalion, Marine Corps Recruit Depot, Parris Island, South Carolina, the same unit in which he had been a recruit. Toward the end of his tour of duty, a reservist snapped a photo of Taliano giving an "attitude adjustment" to a private, and published it on the cover of a book he wrote about boot camp. Taliano left the Marine Corps in 1969 at the end of his service obligation, moved to New Jersey, and spent over 30 years in the publishing industry, but throughout the 1970s and 1980s he became a symbol of the Marine's search for "a few good men" on countless recruiting posters, and in television spots which were played over the background of Lynn Anderson's 1970 hit "I Never Promised You a Rose Garden". Retiring to Beaufort, South Carolina, in 2001, he was active in the American Legion and the Marine Corps League, served on the board of the Parris Island Historical and Museum Society, and ran the museum gift shop aboard Parris Island until his death from multiple myeloma. (bio by: Bob Hufford)


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Burial:
Beaufort National Cemetery
Beaufort
Beaufort County
South Carolina, USA

Maintained by: Find A Grave
Originally Created by: Bob Hufford
Record added: Jun 10, 2010
Find A Grave Memorial# 53495799