4: The 1st Marine Division at Camp Pendleton, CA The 2nd Marine Division at Camp Lejune, NC The 3rd Marine Division at Camp Butler, Japan The 4th Marine Division(reserve units) in New Orleans, Louisiana
I think that answer would be the 1st because its one of the most active in thw whole entire USMC Corp. Also its main place would be in California as other divisions are mainly in other countries. That is my opinion so yeah.
There are 3 active marine divisions but there is also a 4th marine division for reserves.
18 to 22 thousand men depending on attached support units
how many divisions are in a corps
The Marine Corps had six divisions and 5 air wings when it was at itslargest in WW-2 and all saw active combat.
The Marine Corps reached a peak strength of over 700,000. There were six Marine Divisions, all infantry, and all fought in the Pacific. There were also a few Air Wings, and some tank battalions. The WWII Marine Corps was about one-tenth the size of the US Army, and fielded about one-fifteenth as many divisions.
6 months in the Marine Corps Reserve, and 23 years as a Civil Servant with the Marine Corps
There were no British divisions in the Canadian Corps, only Canadian divisions
none, once a marine, always a marine.
5
Sergeant Major of the Marine Corps - there's only one in the entire Marine Corps.
A corps is two or more divisions. Frequently in the armies of both sides in WWI a corps had three divisions, but it could have more, There is no set number, just however many divisions seems best to the army commander. (A field army is two or more corps). So the answer depends on the size of the divisions fielded by the country of whose army the corps is a part. British, French and German divisions were around 12-15,000 men at full strength. US divisions of WWI were huge, more than 26,000 men. So, a US corps with only two divisions was bigger than any other nation's corps with three.
there are many corps that have died in Haiti It depends. Marine Corps is a Corp but i don't exactly know what your saying.
A member of the Marine Corps Reserves.
Marine Corps translates into German as Marine-Infanterie.