Marines


Toys for Tots

MFR SEAL - FLAT - 2022
Information about the Marine Corps Reserve's Toys for Tots program
Please join us in bringing a message of hope to less fortunate children
About

In 1947, Marine Corps Reserve Major Bill Hendricks was preparing for the holidays with his family in Los Angeles, CA. His wife, Diane, was an altruistic mother with nimble fingers and a knack for handcrafting. She handmade a few dolls during the holidays that year and asked her husband to donate them to an agency that supported children in need. The agency he sought didn’t exist - not yet.

Hendricks returned to his wife with the disheartening news, but instead of fretting, she inspired him to “start one!” He proceeded to round up the Marines in his unit to create a way to donate the dolls to children in need. They collected and distributed 5,000 toys that year.

Seeing the impact it created, the Commandant of the Marine Corps, Gen Clifton B. Cates, directed all Reserve units to implement a Toys for Tots campaign in 1948, making the Program national.

Hendricks’ civilian job was as Director of Public Relations for Warner Brothers Studios, he used his connections to support the Program to expand its reach. As a favor to his friend Bill, Walt Disney created the first Toys for Tots poster that was adopted as the official logo.

More than seventy-five years later, Toys for Tots now distributes an average of 18 million toys and books to over 7 million less fortunate children across the Nation. 

Marines with Combat Logistics Regiment 45 conduct engineering projects at Camp Wilson
Staff Sgt. Lucas White, an engineer equipment electrical systems technician with Maintenance Company, Combat Logistics Battalion 451, Combat Logistics Regiment 45, 4th Marine Logistics Group, and Lance Cpl. Eli Sommers, a refrigeration and air conditioning technician with Utilities, CLR-45, 4th MLG, raise a floodlight during Integrated Training Exercise 4-18 at Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center Twentynine Palms, California, June 12, 2018. Marines with the Exercise Support Element of ITX 4-18 provided food service, arrival and departure processing, bulk fuel, camp engineering and camp sustainment services to over 5,500 Marines throughout the course of the exercise. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Samantha Schwoch/released)