Tun Tavern
(excerpt from Warrior Culture of the U.S. Marines, copyright 2001 Marion F.
Sturkey)
Ask any Marine. Just ask. He will tell you that the Marine Corps was born in Tun
Tavern on 10 November 1775. But, beyond that the Marine's recollection for
detail will probably get fuzzy. So, here is the straight scoop:
In the year 1685, Samuel Carpenter built a huge "brew house" in Philadelphia. He
located this tavern on the waterfront at the corner of Water Street and Tun
Alley. The old English word tun means a cask, barrel, or keg of beer. So, with
his new beer tavern on Tun Alley, Carpenter elected to christen the new
waterfront brewery with a logical name, Tun Tavern.
Tun Tavern quickly gained a reputation for serving fine beer. Beginning 47 years
later in 1732, the first meetings of the St. John's No. 1 Lodge of the Grand
Lodge of the Masonic Temple were held in the tavern. An American of note,
Benjamin Franklin, was its third Grand Master. Even today the Masonic Temple of
Philadelphia recognizes Tun Tavern as the birthplace of Masonic teachings in
America.
Roughly ten years later in the early 1740s, the new proprietor expanded Tun
Tavern and gave the addition a new name, "Peggy Mullan's Red Hot Beef Steak Club
at Tun Tavern." The new restaurant became a smashing commercial success and was
patronized by notable Americans. In 1747 the St. Andrews Society, a charitable
group dedicated to assisting poor immigrants from Scotland, was founded in the
tavern.
Nine years later, then Col. Benjamin Franklin organized the Pennsylvania
Militia. He used Tun Tavern as a gathering place to recruit a regiment of
soldiers to go into battle against the Indian uprisings that were plaguing the
American colonies. George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, and the Continental
Congress later met in Tun Tavern as the American colonies prepared for
independence from the English Crown.
On November 10, 1775, the Continental Congress commissioned Samuel Nicholas to
raise two Battalions of Marines. That very day, Nicholas set up shop in Tun
Tavern. He appointed Robert Mullan, then the proprietor of the tavern, to the
job of chief Marine Recruiter -- serving, of course, from his place of business
at Tun Tavern. Prospective recruits flocked to the tavern, lured by (1) cold
beer and (2) the opportunity to serve in the new Corps of Marines. So, yes, the
U.S. Marine Corps was indeed born in Tun Tavern. Needless to say, both the
Marine Corps and the tavern thrived during this new relationship.
November 10, 1775
...The celebrated birthday of the US Marines. After several attempts by the
American colonies to work out some sort of reconciliation between the Crown and
the American people, the Colonial Congress decides to take a sterner attitude.
In a popular Philadelphia inn known as the Tun Tavern, a congressional committee
drafts a resolution to create a new military unit, called the Continental
Marines. John Hancock, president of the Continental Congress, appoints Captain
Samuel Nicholas to be commandant. The owner of the Tun tavern, Robert Mullan, is
named a Marine Captain. Their first mission is to recruit marines. With the
offer of good ale and a good cause, the US Marines are born.