• At an 1851 celebration in Salem, Massachusetts, the Boston Cadet Band gave the new clipper ship
Witch of the Wave a lively sendoff by striking up "A Life on the Ocean Wave" as the
SS R. B. Forbes towed the new clipper out to set sail for Boston. • In 1882, the Deputy Adjutant General of the
Royal Marines requested that the Bandmaster of each Royal Marine Division (
Portsmouth,
Plymouth,
Chatham) submit an arrangement for a new regimental march for the Corps, if possible based on a naval song. Kappey, the Bandmaster of the Chatham Division, submitted an arrangement of "A Life on the Ocean Wave", with an eight bar trio from "The Sea" by
Sigismund Neukomm, which was authorised for use as the regimental quick march of the Corps of Royal Marines in 1882. • The tune, slightly altered, provides the music for the 1905
Latter-day Saint hymn "Who's On The Lord's Side?" • They use the song from the 1945 Disney short film
No Sail. • In the United States, it is the official march of the
U.S. Merchant Marine Academy. • The tune is traditionally performed by the
United States Merchant Marine Academy Regimental Band during presidential inauguration parades. • In Portugal, it was adopted as the theme of the
Armed Forces Movement (MFA) that overthrew the
Estado Novo dictatorship on
25 April 1974. • The tune, played by the Band of the Royal Marines, is played over the opening credits of the 1992
BBC television film
An Ungentlemanly Act, about the first days of the
invasion of the Falkland Islands in 1982. ==References==