dermot m. o-neill bio - brown

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Dermot M. O’Neill 1 Dermot M. O’Neill and The O’Neill System of Hand to Hand Combat Steven C. Brown July 3rd, 2010

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Page 1: Dermot M. O-Neill Bio - Brown

Dermot M. O’Neill

1

Dermot M. O’Neill and The O’Neill System of Hand to Hand Combat

Steven C. Brown

July 3rd, 2010

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Introduction

Who was Dermot M. “Pat” O’Neill? This article is not meant to be a

complete life story, but merely a brief look at one of close combat’s little known

pioneers. Unlike many of his contemporaries, like William E. Fairbairn (Get

Tough), or Rex Applegate, (Kill or Get Killed), O’Neill was a more elusive

subject. If you ask, any current judo player “Who was Pat O’Neill?” or “Have you

ever heard of Dermot M. “Pat” O’Neill?”, you’ll probably be greeted with a blank

stare. Considering the fact that O’Neill, per Richard Bowen, was a Godan or fifth

degree black belt in Kodokan Judo in 1947, when it was unheard of for a non -

Japanese to hold such rank, I found this response to be somewhat

disheartening. This same response is usually that of some current, so called,

hand to hand combat experts.

If however, you ask some “old school” judoka or a veteran of the World

War II unit, The First Special Service Force, you’ll probably get an entirely

different answer.

Ireland 1905-1925

Dermot Michael O’Neill was born in Newmarket, County Cork, Ireland in

1905. He was the sixth of nine children, with four brothers and four sisters

Dermot’s father, Francis O’Neill, was a district inspector of the Royal Irish

Constabulary, one of the most respected police forces of the British Empire.

Sometime shortly after his father’s death in 1919, Dermot, then a

teenager, signed on as a cabin boy on a tramp steamer bound for Asia.

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He would see Ireland again only two times in his lifetime, once in 1959

and again in the late 1970’s. (O’Neill, 2002). Working aboard the ship, he saw

much of the orient during this time. After a couple of years, he jumped ship in

Shanghai, China, where his older brother Frank had journeyed a couple of years

earlier and had taken a position as a bank teller.

Shanghai 1925 - 1938

As a 20 year old man he read an ad in the local newspaper for young

men to join the Shanghai Municipal Police. It is not known if this was the only job

he could get, or if it was because of his father’s link with the police, or just that he

was a young man in search of adventure. But in 1925, after an interview, and a

health check, Dermot took six weeks training as one of the newest recruits for

the SMP.

Besides being one of the most exciting cities in the world, Shanghai in

1925, was one of the world’s greatest seaports and the commercial metropolis of

China. (Encyclopedia Britanica, 1929:458) As a city, Shanghai was divided into

six major areas, The Old City, dated from the eleventh century, The International

Settlement, which was mostly under British control, The French Concession,

Chapei, a northern outer suburb, Pootung, an eastern suburb, and Nantou, a

southern suburb. (Encyclopedia Britanica, 1929:458) The city was a place

where fortunes were made and lost, on an almost daily basis. On the city’s

streets walked over 1.5 million people, including Chinese, Japanese, Russians,

British, American, and many other nationalities.

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Compared by some to 1920’s New York City or Chicago, as far as exciting

places, Shanghai also contained a criminal element of gangsters, drug lords,

embezzlers, and other unsavory types of criminals which would require a

rigorous law enforcer, the Shanghai Municipal Police.

This force was tasked with maintaining law and order in one of the

roughest seaports in the world. Its ranks consisted of over 5,000 men, organized

in four branches. The Chinese Branch, of 3,000 constables, the Sikh Branch,

which was used for traffic and crowd control, consisted of over 500. The

Japanese Branch worked in the Japanese community, with 267, and the Foreign

Branch, which consisted of British, Russian, and other nationalities, including

some Americans. (Thompson, 1982:64) The SMP had the job of enforcing the

law and protecting British and other government interests throughout Shanghai,

spreading the task among the fourteen police stations in the International

Settlement.

The late 1920’s and early 1930’s streets of Shanghai were a proving

ground for pioneering techniques in policecraft, combat shooting, and hand- to-

hand combat. Under the leadership of Asst. Commissioner William E. Fairbairn,

the SMP would develop the usage of ballistics, body armor, dogs, realistic

training scenarios, and what some historians consider to be the first special

weapons and tactics (SWAT) team, called the Shanghai Municipal Police

Reserve Unit. (Thompson, 1982:96)

O’Neill’s first six weeks of police training consisted of police rules and

regulations, math, local laws, jiu jitsu and use of the .45 Cal. Pistol. (Sergeant,

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1990:148) He would also receive weekly foreign language instruction, proficiency

in Chinese was a required point to remain a member of the SMP . Additional

language training was offered to SMP recruits, including: German, French,

Japanese, Russian, and Hindustani. Proficiency would bring an additional

$16.95 per language, this would supplement a salary of SH$300 per month.

(Sergeant, 1990:149)

On O’Neill’s first day as a member of the Shanghai Municipal Police, he

would be involved in a shootout with Chinese gangs that ran through the streets

of Shanghai. As he exchanged fire with the gang members, he would recount

later, he thought, “What have I gotten myself into?”. (Ashton, 2001)

During his 14 years with the Shanghai Police, O’Neill would rise to the

rank of Sub-Inspector, become a member of the Special Branch, which was the

intelligence gathering arm of the SMP, and also a member of the Shanghai

Municipal Police Reserve Unit, which was led by William E. Fairbairn. It was also

during this time that O’Neill would learn combat shooting from Fairbairn’s partner

and friend, Eric A. Sykes, who led the Sniper Unit of the Riot Squad. (Ashton,

2001)

Although he is considered by many to have been Fairbairn’s

protege,(Smith,1999:145) O’Neill had very strong opinions of his mentor, he told

an interviewer later that he felt Fairbairn wrongfully appropriated a lot of Sykes

work on combat shooting as his own and took the credit for the design of the

world famous Fairbairn-Sykes Commando Knife. (Ashton, 2001)

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Being a policeman in Shanghai also provided daily practice in hand-to-

hand combat, which O’Neill discovered early on he had a talent for. O’Neill

started studying Judo in 1929 under Patrolman Shigeichi Yamada of the

Japanese Consulate-General in Shanghai and was often selected as a member

of the SMP judo team which regularly competed in Japan. O’Neill was awarded

his third dan in 1934 after a competition in Tokyo, the only foreign non-resident

of Japan to hold a third degree ranking at the time. (North-China Herald

1935:265)

Judo and Jiu Jitsu were the staple martial arts of members of the SMP.

Fairbairn himself was a second dan in Judo. (Pittman, 1997:46) While in

Shanghai, O’Neill would study Judo, Jiu Jitsu, and the different forms of Chinese

Boxing available, including Chinese foot fighting. These became which would

become the basis of what would become known years later as “The O’Neill

System of Close Combat”.

Japan 1938 - 1941

In 1938, after fourteen years as a member of the SMP, O’Neill would

leave the force to take a position in Tokyo as Security Chief at the British

Embassy. His associates, Fairbairn and Sykes would leave the SMP shortly

afterwards and head back to Britain, where their services would be used in

training Home Guard and newly formed Commando units.

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Also in 1938, O’Neill would receive his fourth dan in judo from the

Kodokan, giving him the honor of being one of the highest ranking non-Japanese

judoka anywhere in the world.

As news of an impending attack on the United States reached O’Neill, he

made the decision to leave Japan before the attack on Pearl Harbor. He

smuggled himself aboard a fishing boat bound for the Philippines on October 5th

,

1941, there he jumped another ship and was made an auxiliary sailor and took

part in the evacuation of women and children from numerous places in the

former Dutch East Indies and New Guinea. (Aldeman 1963:1) Later, he made

way for Australia, where he would venture to Sydney and stay with his older

brother, Frank and his sister in law.

In early 1942, as the United States had now entered World War II, O’Neill

remained in Australia, until receiving a telegram from his mentor, William

Fairbairn, who was now working in Canada and the US, developing close combat

training programs at Camp X in Canada, and, with a young Lt. Rex Applegate

similar programs at Ft Richie in Maryland, for the Office Of Strategic Services.

United States 1942

O’Neill came to the US in early May 1942. At this same time, Lt. Col.

Robert Frederick was forming a multinational force to parachute into Nazi-held

Norway, Romania, and Northern Italy. Frederick would receive orders from the

War Department and the support of General Marshall to form and train a

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combined force of Canadians and Americans, 1800 in all, which would become

the First Special Service Force.

The First Special Service Force, headed by Frederick, set up training in

Helena, Montana. If the Force was to complete training in the planned time of

seven months, all members would have to become proficient parachutists,

skiers, weapon handlers, and demolitions experts. They would receive hand to

hand combat training from a variety of instructors, including a professional

wrestler and another instructor who taught them how to throw their new knife, the

V42 stiletto.

The First Special Service Force 1942-1944

O’Neill had grown bored as an instructor for the O.S.S. and volunteered

as a civilian instructor for the First Special Service Force in August of 1942. This

move was approved for a temporary assignment of two months to the FSSF by

the higher ups at the O.S.S. He would receive $12.50 a day for about three

hours work. (O’Neill, 2002)

There were no gymnasiums or formal training facilities at Ft. William

Henry Harrison, so O’Neill made the decision to train the troops outside, on open

ground. Although O’Neill had a strong background in Judo, he knew that Judo

required several years of hard training to acquire the necessary skill to throw a

man who was resisting and fighting back. He elected to teach a basically simple

system, based on what he called Chinese Foot Fighting. (USMC 1966:1)

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Starting training with groups of officers, O’Neill would begin with a brief

lecture, then a demonstration, then allow the officers to practice techniques on

one another, while keeping a watchful eye. Officers and enlisted men would be

trained separately. (Moore 2002)

The First Special Service Force would receive thirty to forty hours of

training at the hands of O’Neill. Striking and kicking, disarming techniques, and

sentry elimination were the topics of the day. O’Neill also included instruction in

the quick draw use of the .45 automatic pistol and the hip shooting methods he

had learned in Shanghai. (Story 2001)

Although O’Neill is remembered by friends in the force to have been fun to

be around with a good sense of humor, O’Neill was no nonsense when it came

to teaching the force the unpleasantries of unarmed combat. “I’m not here to

teach you to hurt”, he’d say, “I’m here to teach you to kill”. (Springer, 2002) His

unarmed system stressed kicks to the groin and lower body movements, along

with finger tip jabs to the eyes and throat. His instruction in the disarming of

knives and bayonets started with sheathed weapons first, then progressing to

live blades. One officer recounted to me that he was nervous at first with the

knife and bayonet disarms, “but by the time you were working with real blades,

you had the confidence in the techniques”. (Moore 2002)

O’Neill’s system of hand-to-hand combat would be proven in the bars of

Helena, Montana, and later, in the battlefields of Italy and France against the

Germans, and any French or Italian locals who thought that the Americans were

easy marks.

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While in Helena, O’Neill would meet, and after a brief courtship, marry a

local schoolteacher named Mary Frances Hardin at the Helena Cathedral on

March 12, 1943. (Mero, 2002)

In 1943, after several months of training, the FSSF would board a train

headed for the U.S. Navy’s Amphibious Training base near Norfolk, Virginia,

where they would set records for disembarking from ships into landing craft with

full combat gear. As O’Neill was a citizen of a neutral country, and not a member

of the FSSF, he had to actually sneak onto the base, wearing fatigues, and mix

with the regular troops. His stay was brief however, as he was escorted off the

base by Naval Intelligence about a week later after being discovered. After

amphibious training was completed, the next stop for the force was Ft. Ethan

Allen, in Burlington, Vermont. (Aldeman, 1963:2)

The Office of Strategic Services was now requesting for O’Neill to be

released and report back to Maryland. O’Neill was enjoying the camaraderie he

had with the force and Frederick, had no intention of releasing the Irishman back

to the O.S.S. (Aldeman and Walton, 1966:78)

Through Frederick’s channels and contacts, O’Neill received a field

commission to the rank of captain in the United States Army on June 19, 1943, a

remarkable feat considering that O’Neill was neither a U.S. citizen or in the U.S.

Army at all. For an interview later, O’Neill would joke that he “was Shanghaied by

the F.S.S.F. from the O.S.S.” (Aldeman, 1963:2)

In August of 1943, the force would see action in the Aleutian Islands.

O’Neill was originally chosen to stay behind in a support role, not accompanying

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the force into battle. After speaking with Frederick and General Adams, O’Neill

would now be part of Frederick’s personal group in the field. This arrangement

would stay in effect throughout the force’s campaign in Southern Italy. O’Neill’s

desire to accompany the men he had helped train into battle would nearly prove

fatal, as the Irishman and another officer were swept out to sea by the strong

currents around Kiska, where they had to be picked out of the sea with cargo

nets, wet and paralyzed, after about a day. Despite this incident, the force’s first

mission was considered a success, and they would next to report for action to

the Mediterranean.

In December, the force achieved a feat that would be one of the defining

moments in its history. Led by the Second Regiment, the force scaled Monte La

Difensa, a seemingly impenetrable mountain which had protected German

artillery and had stalled the Fifth Army from advancing towards Rome. The force

captured in a few short hours, what had been denied to three separate 5th

Army

Divisions, and numerous other British and American regiments for weeks. (First

Special Service Force Association, 1993:2) O’Neill was there as a member of

Colonel Frederick’s team acting as both an intelligence officer and a bodyguard

for Frederick.

Through early 1944, the force continued to fight and advance through

German troops and mountain peeks in Italy, until being called on to assist

Darby’s Rangers in defending the Anzio beachhead and 13 kilometers of the

Mussolini Canal. Though under strength, the force managed to maintain its

position for over three months by conducting night raids behind the German

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lines, demoralizing the Germans by taking prisoners, and leaving leaflets and

stickers on the bodies of unfortunate German sentries saying in German, “The

Worst is Yet to Come”. O’Neill would occasionally accompany the raiding parties,

assisting in gathering intelligence information. When he didn’t participate, the

raiding parties would cut off the German patches and search the bodies for

important information that would be given to O’Neill, who would pass it on to

Military Intelligence Group of the Fifth Army. (Springer, 2002)

On March 16, 1944, O’Neill, along with several members of the First

Special Service Force, became a United States citizen, after being sworn in, in a

farmhouse in Southern Italy. (Aldeman, 1963:6) Something he was especially

proud of, even into his later years.

By June 1944, the Force would lead the way into Rome and in August,

would be helping the 7th

Army advance into Southern France. While there,

O’Neill would become Provost Marshal of Monte Carlo, with orders from

Frederick to keep U.S. servicemen out of casinos and out of trouble. O’Neill set

up his “headquarters” in the Metropole Hotel, being dubbed “mayor” of Monte

Carlo by his friends. (Aldeman, 1963:8)

On December 5, 1944, the First Special Service Force would be

deactivated, as the Canadians would be recalled to reinforce Canadian units

elsewhere in Europe. The remaining Americans would be split as replacements

in the 82nd

and 101st Airborne Divisions and the 474

th Infantry Regiments.

Despite the Force’s short history, it would set the records that all of the

modern military’s Special Warfare units would be compared against.

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Back to the Far East 1945-1946

After the force was deactivated in France, because of his background in

the Far East, General Frederick arranged for O’Neill to return to the United

States early in 1945, assigned to the Provost Marshal’s Section of the 10th

Army, where he received orders that he would be going to Okinawa, as a

member of the Far East Command.

O’Neill would remain in Okinawa as a liaison officer for several months

until the Japanese surrendered in September of 1945, O’Neill then being

assigned to SCAP Headquarters as a member of General MacArthur’s staff.

O’Neill remained in Japan, now coming full circle, one of last out and one

of the first back to Japan, until he was discharged in February 1946, with the

rank of Major, with several combat decorations including the Bronze Star.

(National Personnel Records Center, 2002)

At the end of World War II, several wartime marriages, for various

reasons ended up in divorce. Sadly, such was the case with Dermot and Mary

O’Neill. After just a few months of being back in the states, O’Neill and his wife

separated, with O’Neill returning to Japan.

Japan 1946-1961

O’Neill returned to Japan to work as a police investigator of the Public

Safety Division of SCAP Headquarters. In a few short months of being back in

Japan, he was promoted to Fifth Degree Black Belt in Judo. In 1947, he would

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help organize a group of martial arts instructors to standardize the training of

Japan’s Police forces in combatives and arresting techniques. (Cestari, 2002)

Although O’Neill continued his judo training, he also studied other martial

arts as well, developing a particular liking for Aikido and its circular movements,

which he likened somewhat to Judo. Also in Aikido, O’Neill was drawn to the

study of Ki and the fascinating things that some of the Aikido notables could

demonstrate using Ki.

Throughout the 1950’s, O’Neill worked in Japan for the State Department,

who were busily keeping a watchful eye on the Communists in the Far East.

O’Neill even traveled to Viet Nam in the late 50’s, he told an interviewer. (Ashton,

2001)

United States 1961-1985

In 1961, after returning to the United States, O’Neill took a position as a

combatives trainer at Hurlbert Field in Ft. Walton Beach, Florida. His job now

was to teach pilots at the Air Commando School the basic hand-to-hand combat

skills required if they were shot down behind enemy lines.

His system he had now modified from the 35-40 hours he had taught the

First Special Service Force, to between 8 and 12 hours of training, which

emphasized kicks to the lower body and pokes to the throat and eyes. These

techniques would find their way into the U.S. Army’s Basic Training curriculum in

the early 60’s, eventually being outlined in U.S. Army Field Manual 21-150,

Combatives, December 1971.

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After O’Neill completed his stay at Hurlbert Field, he took an instructor’s

position at the International Police Academy in Washington DC, again teaching

combatives in the mid 1960’s. It was here that he came to the attention of Major

George Otott, of the United States Marine Corps Physical Fitness Acadamy at

Quantico, Virginia, who had been to The International Police Academy to deliver

a presentation on the physical training that was given at the Academy. Ottot

approached O’Neill about coming to Quantico to set up a new hand-to-hand

combat program for instructors. Until that time, the Marine Corps combat training

that was taught at the Basic School for Officers was primarily based on Judo,

which O’Neill said was fine unless your opponent wasn’t wearing a gi or judo

uniform.

O’Neill became the Head of Development and Instruction of Close

Combat at the Academy and was instrumental in laying out the groundwork for

the techniques that appeared in Proposed Fleet Marine Field Manual 1-4, Hand

to Hand Combat, November of 1966. The manual was written in about six

weeks, and although O’Neill refused to pose for any of the photos in the manual,

he did make suggestions and approve all the techniques and photos within.

(Jasper, 2002)

In this same year, the book, The Devil’s Brigade, by Robert Aldeman and

George Walton would be published, and later, turned into a movie of the same

name starring William Holden, Cliff Robertson, and Vince Edwards. The part of

O’Neill was played by actor Jeremy Slate. After seeing the movie, many

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members of the First Special Service Force, including O’Neill, estranged the

movie, and the way the American troops were portrayed as misfits.

In September of 1967, O’Neill managed to get an old acquaintance from

Japan, Koichi Tohei, to give a demonstration of Aikido at the Marine Corps

Physical Fitness Academy. Tohei was here in the US on a tour promoting his

book, Aikido in Daily Life, at the time. O’Neill had been a student of Aikido in

Japan and had learned the use of ki from Tohei. O’Neill would occasionally

demonstrate the use of ki with the unbendable arm trick, or asking young marine

officers to attempt to lift him off the ground, and using his ki, O’Neill could not be

budged. (Otott, 2002)

O’Neill remained at Quantico until the late 1960’s and although his system

was still being taught to the marines, his methods were never officially adopted

for widespread training.

O’Neill returned to the International Police Academy resuming his position

as a combatives instructor until his retirement in the early 1970’s. After that, he

would act as a consultant on combatives and defensive techniques to the

International Police Academy and several other police agencies.

O’Neill lived a transient type lifestyle, especially after his apartment in

Washington DC was sold in the mid 1970’s.

With the help of some friends, O’Neill found another apartment in the DC

area in 1980, where he would remain until 1985, when he was hospitalized after

he suffered a fall in his kitchen. After numerous other health problems,

pneumonia took Pat O’Neill on August 11, 1985.

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Mr. O’Neill’s ashes were interred at Arlington National Cemetery at a small

service attended by over forty friends, veterans, and associates from the First

Special Service Force and the State Department on December 5, 1985.

O’Neill is remembered by friends and family as a courteous, soft spoken,

fun to be with sort of fellow, who spent his later years reminiscing and swapping

war stories with other veterans in his apartment building. He didn’t smoke, and

never cursed or used any sort of profanity around women.

O’Neill led an almost monkish type of lifestyle, and had very few material

possessions. An extremely private man, he very seldom opened up to family

members about his life or experiences. Although he knew he would forever be

remembered for his combatives work, his real love, which he revealed to an

associate at a reunion of the First Special Service Force, was intelligence work.

(Dawson,2001)

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The O’Neill System of Hand to Hand Combat

O’Neill’s system of hand to hand combat appears to have evolved from

the Defendu, that is, William E. Fairbairn’s system, which he taught to members

of the Shanghai Municipal Police in China, to his own methods, based on

Chinese foot fighting, that he would teach the First Special Service Force, and

later, other Armed Services, government agencies and police.

The entire basis of his system was that no matter how big or strong an

opponent was, his weakest points were his eyes, throat, groin and knees, and

that your legs were stronger and longer, than your opponents arms. His students

were advised to poke the eyes, and strike the throat, to essentially grab anything

above the waist and throw your opponent to the ground, where he would be

finished by kicks/stomps to the head. Any target below the waist, would be

kicked or stomped on. A major advantage of the O’Neill system was that it could

be used in close quarter fighting while carrying weapons. (Conge 2002)

There has been much speculation of late to just why O’Neill taught the

methods he did, that is, what he referred to as Chinese foot fighting, instead of a

judo/jujutsu type system that he had a lot of experience with. I believe the

answer to this lies in Mr. O’Neill’s knowledge that a judo/jujutsu type system

requires several years of training, a luxury that during wartime, just wasn’t

available

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In O’Neill’s address to Marine Corps brass in 1966, he identified five key

points in evaluating or testing any form of hand to hand combat, which are as

true today as they were nearly forty years ago.

1. It must be effective and this must be apparent to those taking the

training.

2. It should be easy to learn thus, avoiding all complicated movements

that are easily forgotten.

3. Special equipment and training areas should not be necessary.

4. Hand to hand combat should be taught in a reasonably short training

period, but kept alive by including it in the physical fitness program so

that it will not be a one-shot affair given in basic training and then

forgotten.

5. Size and weight are immaterial - flexibility, speed and know how

should be the aim. (O’Neill 1966)

A typical training session at the Marine Corps Fitness Academy would consist of

the following -

1. Exercises - Deep knee bends, inverted V exercises, and wrist

exercises

2. Drills - The On Guard, parrying weapons, elbow blows, finger jab, side

kick, pivot kick, falling correctly and the on guard on the ground.

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3. Miscellaneous - The On Guard in a clinch, defenses against kicking,

rear take down with neck lock, defense against the bayonet, correct

use of the club and other weapons, defense against clubs, knives,

machetes, etc.

4. Police Tactics - Pistol disarming, knife defense, defense against holds,

wrist break and throw, come along holds, etc. (Conge 2002)

Again from O’Neill’s speech to the Marine Corps in 1966 -

“The aim of hand to hand combat”, O’Neill said, “is to make every man a

dangerous man, armed or unarmed”. “Hand to hand combat training” he

continues, “helps to build up the confidence to close with the enemy rather than

take a passive position, the result of poor training or no training in this subject.”

(O’Neill 1966)

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References

Aldeman, Robert. D. M. “Pat” O’Neill Interview. 9 pages, 1963. Robert Aldeman

Papers, Hoover Institution Archives, Stanford University.

Aldeman, Robert and George Walton. The Devil’s Brigade. Radnor, PA., Chilton

Publications. 1966.

Brown, Steven C. Dermot M. O’Neill: One of the Twentieth Century’s Most

Overlooked Combatives Pioneers. Journal of Asian Martial Arts, Volume 12

Number 3, 2003.

Buerlein, Robert A. Allied Military Fighting Knives and The Men Who Made

Them Famous. Richmond, Virginia, American Historical Foundation. 1984.

Dept. of the Army. FM 21-150. Combatives. Washington DC, Headquarters,

Dept of the Army. 1971.

Encyclopedia Britannica. Shanghai. 14th

Edition, Volume 20. 1929. 455 - 458

First Special Service Association. The Devil’s Brigade. The First Special Service

Force, History and Highlights. The First Special Service Force Association

Archives.1993.

The North China Herald (1935, May 15:265) Judo Surprise for Yokohama

Police.

O’Neill, D. M. Introductory Remarks to Mr. O’Neill’s Course in Hand to Hand

Combat. (Transcript of O’Neill lecture) Quantico, Virginia. United States Marine

Corps Basic School, 1966.

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Pittman, Allen. William E. Fairbairn: British Pioneer In Asian Martial Arts. Journal

of Asian Martial Arts. Volume 6 Number 2, 1997, 44 - 55.

Sergeant, Harriet. Shanghai, Collision Point of Cultures. New York. Crown

Publishers, 1990.

Smith, Robert W. Martial Musings. A Portrayal of Martial Arts in the 20th

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