United States Marine Corps toy soldiers from W. Britain, King & Country, and the gloss-painted makers — hand-painted figures spanning the Corps' history from the Continental Marines of 1775 to the Pacific campaigns of World War II and the dress-blue ceremonial guard. Whether you're collecting Marine Raiders, the riflemen and corpsmen of Iwo Jima and Guadalcanal, or legends like Chesty Puller and Pappy Boyington, these 1/30 and 54mm miniatures bring USMC history to the display shelf with historical accuracy and craftsmanship.

  • W.Britain Marines Toy Soldiers

    W. Britain's 1/30 scale matte Marines — the riflemen, Raiders, and corpsmen of the Pacific war, led by legends like Chesty Puller and Pappy Boyington. Historically accurate single figures, ideal for display or building a USMC diorama.

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  • King & Country Marine Toy Soldiers

    King & Country's 1/30 scale Marines in their cinematic, diorama-ready style — figures in motion, vehicles, and command groups from the Corps' WWII campaigns. Matte-painted with K&C's signature realism and storytelling.

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  • Gloss Painted Marine Toy Soldiers

    Classic 54mm gloss-painted Marines in dress blues — the color guard and parade-ground ranks in the traditional toy soldier style. Bright, hand-finished figures that stand out on a shelf or in a display cabinet.

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About United States Marine Corps Toy Soldiers

The Marine Corps has one of the most collectible histories of any fighting force. Founded in 1775 at Tun Tavern in Philadelphia, the Corps fought as Continental Marines in the Revolution, served aboard ship through the age of sail, and earned its modern reputation in the twentieth century — at Belleau Wood in 1918, where the Germans are said to have called them "Devil Dogs," and across the Pacific in World War II at Guadalcanal, Tarawa, Saipan, Peleliu, and Iwo Jima.

Most of what I carry centers on that World War II Pacific story, because that's where the figures are strongest. W. Britain's USMC series covers the Marine Raiders, the riflemen, and the corpsman who actually won those islands, all in 1/30 scale matte. It also includes the two Marines most collectors want on the shelf: Chesty Puller, the most decorated Marine in history, and Pappy Boyington, the Black Sheep squadron ace. For collectors who prefer the parade-ground look, the gloss-painted dress blues figures are the classic recruiting-poster Marines in 54mm.

There's more range here than the page first suggests. Tradition of London's USMC 1917 set captures the Marines of Belleau Wood, and W. Britain reaches back to a Marine drummer of the early 1800s. If you're a Marine, the child of one, or you simply admire the Corps, a single well-painted King & Country Chesty Puller or a dress-blues color guard makes a display piece that means something.

I'm always adding to this section. If there's a specific Marine figure, unit, or battle you're after, email me — I can usually track it down. — Daniel