Carlos Hathcock: The Forgotten History of the Iconic Marine Sniper Known as White Feather

Carlos Hathcock

Carlos Hathcock is not a name that is widely known, even in military circles, but he is one of the most successful and prolific snipers in American military history. Hathcock boasted 93 confirmed kills during his time in the United States Marine Corps. With his longest official kill clocking in at 2,500 yards and longest unofficial kill being estimated at 2,800 yards, he is something of a legend. The M21 variant Springfield Armory M25 White Feather incorporated the nickname bestowed upon him by the North Vietnamese Army. They called him “White Feather,” because of a white feather that he kept in the band of his hat.

The Early Life of Carlos Hathcock II

Carlos Norman Hathcock II was born in Little Rock, Arkansas, in 1942, and grew up in the town of Wynne, which is about an hour and a half away. He lived with his grandmother during the first 12 years of his life, as his parents were separated.

It was during a trip to visit family in Mississippi that Hathcock first became interested in guns and hunting. Part of this was simply a necessity; his family was very poor and he needed to help feed them by bagging game in the forest. Hathcock greatly enjoyed his time in the woods, often pretending that he was an American soldier hunting down the Japanese during World War II using his father’s Mauser from the war.

Fulfilling his lifelong dream to serve in the Marine Corps, Hathcock enlisted in 1959, at the age of 17. He married his wife, Jo (nee Broughton) Winstead, on the Marine Corps’ birthday, November 10, 1962.

Carlos Hathcock II Arrives in Vietnam

It wasn’t until 1966 that Hathcock deployed to Vietnam. Prior to deployment, he earned a name for himself as a top marksman by winning prestigious competitions, such as the Wimbledon Cup. Although Hathcock began his career in the Military Police CorpsCaptain Edward James Land urged him to move into the sniper’s position to ensure that every platoon had their own sniper.

It’s worth taking a minute to consider what a “confirmed kill” is. For snipers, kills had to be confirmed by an independent source other than the sniper and his spotter. It was very rare for snipers to have an independent third party present, so the “confirmed kill” number is necessarily far lower than the number of enemy soldiers actually killed by a sniper.

Hathcock personally estimated killing somewhere between 300 and 400 Vietnamese communists. So incensed were the Vietnamese communists by Hathcock, that they put a bounty on his head – to the tune of $30,000, which is worth about a quarter million dollars in today’s money. It was also wildly above the bounties typically offered for snipers, which ranged from a princely $8 all the way up to $2,000. Hathcock’s bounty held the record for the highest of all time, and he capably disposed of every North Vietnamese agent sent out to collect the bounty.

During this period, soldiers in the region began wearing Hathcock’s iconic white feather in their hats to confuse the enemy.

Hathcock’s Greatest Hits

Perhaps Hathcock’s greatest act of marksmanship was shooting a North Vietnamese sniper through his own scope. The counter-sniper was killed by the shot, which entered through his eye. The shot was so clean that it didn’t touch the sides of the scope. The sniper was known as “The Cobra” and has killed many American soldiers on his mission to neutralize Hathcock.

Indeed, The Cobra was known as the best sniper in the entire North Vietnamese Army. This became a matter of deep personal interest to Hathcock after he watched a Gunnery Sergeant die from one of The Cobra’s shots right outside of his hooch.

After catching a glint off of the scope, Hathcock fired and got his kill. He did this just before The Cobra would have had an opportunity to take his own shot. Hathcock retrieved the sniper’s rifle, hoping to keep it as a trophy, but it was stolen from the armory.

Hathcock was also responsible for killing a Vietnamese woman, known as “The Apache Woman,” who had a reputation for viciously torturing captured Marines.

Much like The Cobra, this was a personal mission. He couldn’t stand the idea of this woman operating in his backyard. On one occasion, he personally heard her severely torture a Marine Private – skinning him, cutting off his eyelids, removing his fingernails, and finally castrating him before releasing him. Hathcock rushed to his aid, but was unable to save the poor private, who was too far gone for medical attention.

This was a transformative event for Hathcock, who quickly made clapping The Apache Woman his top priority. He got her when she squatted to pee outside, which confirmed her identity as the woman in the platoon. He considered this the best shot of his entire Marine Corps career.

Another highlight of Hathcock’s career in Vietnam, was the time he took out an entire company of green recruits by dropping four of their officers as they walked through a rice paddy. He used a .50-cal gun, specifically designed for the Navy’s Seabees, to clear an area around a mountain that was crawling with communists. It took him three days to zero his rifle, but after he did, the communists were sitting ducks for the White Feather. Finally, there was the time that he dropped a Vietnamese sniper using a recoilless 105mm M40 rifle.This Vietnamese sniper had been harassing GIs in the area, but he was unwise and didn’t move his position, which meant he was firing from the same spot.

During his entire tour of duty in Vietnam, Hathcock only removed his feather once upon crawling two miles to kill a North Vietnamese general. Hathcock remained awake for four days straight, slowly inching his way through the jungle. During his two-mile crawl, he was attacked by a bamboo viper. Fortunately, he was able to avoid both the attack and keep his position hidden from the enemy. When the general exited the camp, Hathcock dropped the general with a single chest shot.

Hathcock then spent another three days slowly crawling out of the area as North Vietnamese soldiers searched for whoever had shot their general. They had precisely zero luck in doing so, perhaps because of Hathcock’s chameleon-like quality. His commanding officer, Edward Land, once commented that Hathcock “became part of the environment…he totally integrated himself into the environment. He had the patience, drive, and courage to do the job. He felt very strongly that he was saving Marine lives.”

Following this mission, Hathcock returned to the United States in 1967. Missing the Marine Corps and his time overseas, Hathcock returned to Vietnam in 1969, this time leading an entire platoon of snipers.

The End of Hathcock’s Sniper Career

Everything came to a quick and crushing end for Hathcock when his transportation drove over an anti-tank mine. Hathcock rescued seven Marines from the wreckage, undeterred by the third-degree burns he suffered to his face, neck, arms, and legs. Someone had to pull him away from the burning vehicle and throw him in water, as Hathcock was completely unaware of how badly he was burned.

While recovering, Hathcock received the Purple Heart, but he had to wait 30 years to get his Silver Star. Hathcock was evacuated to Tokyo, along with the seven Marines that he rescued from the burning tank. He was eventually transferred to the burn center at Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio, Texas.

Before going further with Hathcock’s life story, it’s important to note that he never fully recovered from the burns that he suffered while saving the lives of his fellow Marines. He was in constant pain and was eventually diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 1975, which only increased his health problems.

None of this stopped him from being a model Marine during his final days with the Corps. He was instrumental in establishing the Marine Corps Scout Sniper School at the Marine base in Quantico, Virginia. He continued to teach Marine snipers until he was medically discharged from the Marine Corps, just 55 days shy of his 20-year enlistment date, which would have made him eligible for a Marine pension.

Hathcock was now eligible for disability pay, which meant he received 100 percent of his salary. Had he retired, he would have received half of his pay in perpetuity. This might sound like a great deal, but it irked Hathcock and drove him into a deep depression. He felt that he had been shown the door and forced out of the Corps, rather than leaving on his own terms.

He was able to fight off his deep depression in large part to adopting the hobby of shark fishing in his retirement. He also continued to teach shooting to police departments and elite military units, including Navy SEAL Team Six.

Hathcock attributed his success to a monklike state of concentration that he called his ability to “get in the bubble.”

A friend once presented him with an Ernest Hemingway quote, “Certainly there is no hunting like the hunting of man, and those who have hunted armed men long enough and like it, never really care for anything else thereafter.” This resonated with Hathcock, who said, “He got that right. It was the hunt, not the killing.” He also wrote in his memoirs that “I like shooting, and I love hunting. But I never did enjoy killing anybody. It’s my job. If I don’t get those bastards, then they’re gonna kill a lot of these kids dressed up like Marines. That’s the way I look at it.”

He passed away in 1999, due to complications of his MS.

The Legacy of Carlos Hathcock II

Hathcock’s legacy continued when his son, Carlos Hathcock III, entered the Corps. The younger Hathcock retired from the Marines as a Gunnery Sergeant and became a member of the Board of Governors of the Marine Corps Distinguished Shooters Association.

Hathcock left a legacy far beyond his progeny. The Gunnery Sergeant Carlos Hathcock Award is awarded every year by the National Defense Industrial Association. It recognizes outstanding achievements in operations and small arms that have significantly contributed to the capabilities and readiness of law enforcement and the military.

The Marine Corps League, the only Congressionally chartered Marine Corps veterans organization, presents the Gunnery Sergeant Carlos N. Hathcock II Award to Marines who have made outstanding contributions to the training methods of marksmen in the United States Marine Corps. There is also a sniper range at Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, named after Hathcock.

Carlos Hathcock is not simply noteworthy because of his prolific career as a Marine Corps sniper, but also because he is an example of raw American grit. It takes a special kind of man to permanently disfigure and disable himself while he saves the lives of his comrades. It takes an even stronger man to return to action doing whatever he can to serve his country despite living in constant pain. We’re also hard pressed to think of a badder hobby than fishing for sharks.

Thus, one doesn’t have to be a Marine or an aspiring Marine to take inspiration from Carlos Hathcock. He is a model of manly virtue who can – and should – be emulated by anyone facing a trying, life-or-death situation.

For Marines, Hathcock represents the best traits that the Corps attempts to instill in its men. He would do anything to get the job done, and “the job” was always saving the lives of his fellow Marines.

Carlos Hathcock: The Forgotten History of the Iconic Marine Sniper Known as White Feather originally appeared in The Resistance Library at Ammo.com.

Author: Sam Jacobs

Sam Jacobs is the lead writer and chief historian at Ammo.com. His writing for Ammo.com's Resistance Library has been featured by USA Today, Reason, Bloomberg's Business Week, Zero Hedge, The Guardian, and National Review as well as many other prominent news and alt-news publications. Ammo.com believes that arming our fellow Americans – both physically and philosophically – helps them fulfill our Founding Fathers' intent with the Second Amendment: To serve as a check on state power. That the rights codified in our Bill of Rights were not given to us in a document, but by our Creator. That an unalienable right is God-given. It isn't granted by a president, a king, or any government – otherwise it can be taken away.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
39 Comments
hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
May 22, 2022 4:54 pm

comment image

The man, the myth, the legend.

Colorado Artist
Colorado Artist
  hardscrabble farmer
May 22, 2022 5:17 pm

Another one, Finnish sniper Simo Hayha. 505 confirmed Soviet commies killed.
He was counter-sniped but survived and continued on. Notice the open sights.
He didn’t use a scope.
comment image

comment image

Colorado Artist
Colorado Artist
  Colorado Artist
May 22, 2022 5:57 pm

His story is quite interesting too. “The White Death”

Harrington Richardson: Gimme Sachwerte!
Harrington Richardson: Gimme Sachwerte!
  Colorado Artist
May 22, 2022 6:54 pm

We usually think of a sniper as using a scoped rifle. Simo used the Suomi submachine gun for many of his kills. He would ambush Russian patrols and light them up with the 72 round drum of 9mm in the Suomi. He was also a very small man. Just a tad over 5 feet tall. As the saying goes it’s the size of the fight in the dog, not the size of the dog in the fight.

Anthony Aaron
Anthony Aaron
  Colorado Artist
May 22, 2022 8:41 pm

Russia had about 2,000 or so women snipers in WW2 — one , Lyudmila Pavlichenko, with a record 309 kills, is apparently still recognized as the most successful female sniper in history.

Thunder
Thunder
  hardscrabble farmer
May 22, 2022 9:53 pm

Notice the rare side mount scope, it allows proper comfort by aligning the physical offset of the eyes to the face cheek and keeps the head low. He would have used long sub sonic center fires as well as that suppressor so his position was not compromised by sound. The barrel would have a 1:7 twist rifling. Nice set up for wild boar as those buggers are flighty

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Thunder
May 22, 2022 10:13 pm

Sub-sonic? B.S. ballistics are ballistics. Most likely a flash supressor.

PSBindy
PSBindy
  Anonymous
May 22, 2022 11:22 pm

Ya guessed wrong on that one ninny. Sub-sonic refers to the velocity of the bullet not the sound made from firing.

Most rifle bullets are super sonic. The bullet has a distinct and sharp crack (sonic boom) . The crack/bang can be an aid in determining the range of the shooter.

Colorado Artist
Colorado Artist
  PSBindy
May 23, 2022 1:49 am

A sub sonic round flies at under the speed of sound (750 ft/sec) thus not breaking the sound barrier and making a very loud CRACK as it exits the barrel. The sub sonic 300 Blackout was designed to be very silent when shot through a suppressed rifle. I’ve used it many times at night for coyote and boar with a thermal sight. It’s extraordinarily deadly because it’s so quiet but only at very short range, perhaps 150 yards max. No effective sniper rifle uses sub sonic rounds. The ranges are too limited because the round is so slow. BTW, The .45 ACP is is VERY quiet through a suppressor because it is SLOW .

i forget
i forget
May 22, 2022 5:24 pm

Well, “the job,” was makework, sacrificing pawns to, ostensibly, prevent the commie dominoes (comminoes?) from falling, but actually to keep the mulct-trough filled for bankers, the mic, the nwo, etc. The racket, per that other Marine, with the 2 MOH’s, Butler. Good stories of skill & heroism do not alchemize the waste.

Small is good, tho. Solo, or a 2-person team. Not platoons, communes, etc.

Stephen Hunter’s stories are mostly pretty good. “Bob Lee Swagger” is based on Hathcock. (The flicks, Wahlberg, Phillippe, are junk.)

JimN
JimN
May 22, 2022 5:25 pm

What is admirable, let alone worth glorifying, about being a sniper?

Colorado Artist
Colorado Artist
  JimN
May 22, 2022 5:53 pm

You could ask the same about a fighter pilot, artillery gunner, lancer, grenadier,
legionnaire, indian brave, gurkah, samurai, or any other
position as a warrior whose job it is to kill other warriors in protection of his people.
It’s a very old profession.

Colorado Artist
Colorado Artist
  Colorado Artist
May 22, 2022 7:14 pm

I would add one more thing, JimN.
Do you know the history of the peoples who didn’t have warriors?

Me neither, because they didn’t survive long enough to have a history.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Colorado Artist
May 22, 2022 10:15 pm

So is the synonymous prostitution.

PSBindy
PSBindy
  Anonymous
May 22, 2022 11:24 pm

Yer on a roll ninny.

Fleabaggs
Fleabaggs
  Colorado Artist
May 22, 2022 10:44 pm

“position as a warrior whose job it is to kill other warriors in protection of his people.”

That’s the question right there.

“I think it’s timely that I waited this long to write this. We haven’t learned from watching this new group of our youth coming home perhaps even more messed up than we were. We seem hell bent on sending even more “over there” to make the world safe. Our own country is nearing civil war and I read comments online of a kind of eagerness to see it that troubles me.

I don’t think that group of people knows what that will be like. Killing a fellow human being is incredibly hard, ugly and messy. It will follow you forever and if you do it because you could instead of because you had to, which many will do. I can only pray that it won’t be one of you reading this. There is a fine line between defense and just meanness because you know you can get away with it.”

Excerpt from an article on TBP.

Colorado Artist
Colorado Artist
  Fleabaggs
May 23, 2022 1:28 am

Warriors are very distinct from those who don’t fight but order them to fight.
Conflating the two is a logical fallacy. Warriors are absolutely essential to a society’s
survival. Without them, your society perishes in the face of those who have them.
Axiomatic.

Fleabaggs
Fleabaggs
  Colorado Artist
May 23, 2022 7:11 am

Nobody conflated the two. The way I read it you conflated Nam with a noble attempt to save someone’s society other than the Banksters.

My opening sentences.
“position as a warrior whose job it is to kill other warriors in protection of his people.”

That’s the question right there.”

How many tours did he do over there. The story above says he missed the excitement and went back.

Colorado Artist
Colorado Artist
  Fleabaggs
May 23, 2022 7:56 pm

Perhaps my writing wasn’t clear.
I strive for clarity but don’t always succeed.
No confrontation with you intended.
My responses were directed at JimN who seemed to
disparage warriors. Those that order warriors into battle
for most of human history, are venal assholes who did it for
personal gain.

James
James
  JimN
May 22, 2022 6:03 pm

Two part question so here goes:

#1Whatever your job,if it includes saving members of your own team /country doesn’t matter whether sniper/doc/cook.

#2 While I do not believe it was glorifying in article just noting that this guy had the nerves of steel to keep going into fire to save comrades/friends,if ever needed I hope I have even half the guts this guy did in this situation,I do will help a lot of people.

While not entirely we have become to a large degree a nation of wimps,as this article points out,you do not need to be a sniper/guy facing burning vehicles,just someone who shows some grit as this country is in challenging times at moment and soon will be in very desperate times,folks with Hathcocks determination will be desperately needed,hope this helps Jim.

Mountainrat
Mountainrat
  JimN
May 22, 2022 6:10 pm

The man repeatedly entered a burning vehicle to save the lives of seven fellow marines and getting badly burned in the process. What have you done that is admirable, asshole?

Red River D
Red River D
  Mountainrat
May 22, 2022 10:18 pm

He recently switched to Geico and saved 13.82 for the year on his car insurance.

Pretty admirable, no?

i forget
i forget
  JimN
May 22, 2022 6:58 pm

Quigley Down Under accuracy is an admirable skill. Beyond that, it’s context.

Was Lon Horiuchi military trained? Apparently so. But many “war fighters” will be brought to bear against “civilians” if the SHTF. And their rationales will all be same/similar: defending my buddies/team, etc.

Posse comitatus (act) was just another fig leaf, with official writing on it, same as all the other leaves on the treeson tree….

LoneStar42
LoneStar42
  i forget
May 22, 2022 7:30 pm

Horiuchi murdered a boy chasing his dog and the boy’s mother holding her youngest child while leaning on a door jamb. He was also on scene for the Branch Davidian trashing of mothers and children.
Both the boy and his mother were under 100 yards away.
Mr. Hancock engaged real targets at greater distances, with honor.
Horiuchi has no honor.

Colorado Artist
Colorado Artist
  LoneStar42
May 23, 2022 1:31 am

Lon Horiuchi is a cowardly murderer.
And should be considered as such if one ever encounters him……

mark
mark
  JimN
May 22, 2022 10:02 pm

JimN,

“What is admirable, let alone worth glorifying, about being a sniper”?

Nothing…because God did not intend us to do what we do to one another in our sin.

Our greatest ‘organized sin’ in my opinion is war…no matter your role…you are in human hell.

Sherman was right.

I don’t care what side you were on or what your motives were…there will be a never ending cost…even if you survive physically unscathed from the trauma…WAR IS TRAUMA ON A TREADMILL, unless you are one of the 2% sociopaths and love it.

I was with a sociopath, he earned a Silver Star (first man I ever thought of murdering) second was a drug addict brother-in law…never did either…but I’m a killer…not a murderer.

BIG DIFFERENCE.

War will haunt you the rest of your life to various degrees…depending on many factors. Age, conduct, sensitivity, what you saw, what you did, what you didn’t do. It’s a long list.

There is a massive difference from killing and murdering…and both can happen in the same firefight in split Nano seconds…and anyone who has been in close combat (not the safe pristine distance MOS versions) knows that.

I have no idea where this Nam killing machine sniper was spiritually…that will decide where he is spending eternity…and everything else compared to that for him is meaningless.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  mark
May 22, 2022 10:20 pm

Paul will be in Heaven when he is awakened, hang in there. You’ll get to meet him.

mark
mark
  Anonymous
May 22, 2022 11:51 pm

Thanks No Name…but I am in no doubt of my salvation or my eturnal destination.

I have been a Born Again Christain since May 21st, at exactly 3:00 Am…1993.

The Duke of New York
The Duke of New York
May 22, 2022 5:50 pm

Sniper, with Tom Berenger, was based on Hatcock, the man was larger than life and a true hero

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
May 22, 2022 6:50 pm

Does he have any protégés who might be in the neighborhood of Davos next week? Asking for 7 billion interested friends.

mark
mark
May 22, 2022 6:59 pm

I was a 19 year Grunt in 69, humped and fought all around Hill 55 and Hill 37 during Hathcock’s second tour. My squad took out sniper teams, and picked them up four or five times…maybe him, I don’t know. It was never brought up. I never had a conversation or even a word with one of the teams. To say the sniper teams I was around were silent and aloof from us would be an understatement. We always had a 2nd Louie leading when we took them out, could be a long hump, and the snipers and the Louie would often be bent over a map and compass in many huddles.

The snipers had their own hooch’s in their own area on Hill 55, and no one in my platoon ever mingled with them or them with us. They kept completely to themselves as far as I could tell.

When we took them out we would move to a predetermined location just before dusk…during twilight and set in. Then move to another location (short distance) right after dark… I mean slow snoop’in and poop’in move to the after dark sniper drop off point. Then the sniper team would move once more. Sometime we would move again…but not far. It was always hairy taking them out.

We would sometimes come back two or three days later and pick the same team up at a different location and all head back to hill 55. We never were told anything about what had happened by anyone.

They all had brass balls. We admired them…but there was a feeling on one patrol, the sniper team made a couple of comments…that left us knowing they looked down on us grunts…and I understood as at that time we had taken a lot of causalities the month before…and the squad taking them out was filled with Fuck’in Nicky New Guys making way too much noise.

Nobody was ever happy with FNGs in the bush…for good reasons.

Fleabaggs
Fleabaggs
  mark
May 22, 2022 10:54 pm

Darn buddy. Never thought it would happen to me. They scrubbed my war off the net except TBP and took the pics out and eliminated the line about bankers wars. Sunny Beeches.

mark
mark
  Fleabaggs
May 22, 2022 11:39 pm

No shit Flea…sorry to hear that. Your story was a powerful written voice!

I have had a couple of short stories and some poetry published (‘National Vietnam Veterans Review’ in the 80’s). Did an article in the VFW Magazine once, but nothing of significance or importance past a small poetry anthology by Nam Vets I had four poems in…and there was some other voices in it I really related to and was proud to be among.

Everything I wrote was cathartic…I think it saved my life at the time. Once I vomited it out on paper I was able to move on.

Jim Webb and I connected in the 80’s through two mutual friends who knew one another. He was Secretary of the Navy at the time, and he liked one of my short stories and actually tried to get it published. I was faltered. I related to and was a big fan of his first novel ‘Fields of Fire’.

I was disappointed when Webb became a Democrat Senator…but his Nam Grunt Combat Creds are undisputable, and he is an outstanding writer/novelist.

This is the only place I post past a tight inner circle…and this thread brought back some Hill 55 memories I hadn’t thought about in many years.

I will never forget the multiple shades of green rings view from the top of Hill 55…or the three buddies I was with who were KIA patrolling around it.

What a fuck’in waste of good young men.

The Banksters and their enforcers the snake heads of the MIC better pray to their little g demon god I don’t ever get close. I still hump some 7.62…don’t have an M-60 anymore…reduced to an M1A…but I can still ring the bell.

Fleabaggs
Fleabaggs
  mark
May 23, 2022 12:34 am

The story is there but the bankers wars was edited out and the two pictures gone. Went to yandex and same thing.

Those shades of lush green still in my memory. I often tell people how much some of us missed the incredible peaceful bliss when coming up on a small village by the river in between the fighting. Kids were still squealing in delight and a girl or mama san would be singing and it was so lush and beautiful.

Harrington Richardson: Gimme Sachwerte!
Harrington Richardson: Gimme Sachwerte!
May 22, 2022 7:02 pm

My only squabble with the author is that Carlos Hathcock is very widely known. I’ve been reading about him for well over forty years, there are documentaries and History channel productions about him. Springfield Armory makes a high Dollar M-21 sniper rifle called the White Feather that Hathcock Provided input for. I have at least one book he wrote around here somewhere too.

PSBindy
PSBindy

Agree, HR.

Oldtoad of Green Acres
Oldtoad of Green Acres
May 22, 2022 7:16 pm

JimN
What is admirable, let alone worth glorifying, about being a sniper?
Oldtoad,
Snipers bring a tangible sense of uncertainty, unease to enemy on the battlefield, a wildcard if you will. A very valuable asset to the battle mix.
They are also viewed as unsettling by fellow soldiers, a breed apart.

mark
mark
  Oldtoad of Green Acres
May 22, 2022 10:07 pm

Some were also be ‘haughty’ in their skills to the line Grunt…I know that for a fact.

overthecliff
overthecliff
May 23, 2022 12:42 am

He did what he thought was right. He did it really well. RIP Carlos.