LIBERATION Guam Remembers
A Golden Salute for the 50th anniversary of the Liberation of Guam
Liberating Guam (continued)
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Marines take cover behind fallen coconut
trees until the Japanese snipers in the area could be located and picked
off.
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OROTE PENINSULA CAPTURED
At the Agat beachhead, patrols from the 9th Marines
moving south from Piti briefly contacted the 22nd Marines near Atantano.
The 4th Marines in the west and the 22nd Marines on the east attacked
Orote Peninsula on 26 July after fighting off determined Japanese
soldiers the night before.
"Thousands of saki-crazed Japanese dashed from the
mangroves in front of 3rd Battalion, 22nd Marines. Brandishing baseball
bats, sticks, broken bottles, and pitch-forks, along with the normal
complement of infantry weapons, the Japanese soldiers surged forward
frantically, bent on an honorable death. The Marine commanders called in
blocking fire to stop the advancing swarm. The area was saturated by
37mm guns, 81mm mortars, machine guns, rifles, and grenades. Between
midnight and two in the morning, 26,000 shells blanketed the mangrove
swamp area." ... Maj. O.R. Lodge, Recapture of Guam
"He was an extra-small Japanese soldier. His uniform
hung limp like a scarecrow's trappings. A marine on Orote Peninsula
asked him why he surrendered. 'My commanding officer told us to fight to
the last man,' the prisoner answered. 'Well?' queried the marine. A look
of wounded innocence spread over the Jap's face as he declared, 'I was
the last man!'" ... MTSgt Murray Marder, Semper Fidelis
The 22nd Marines were then delayed in a mangrove
swamp. However, by the 28th of July the 22nd Marines had reached the old
Marine Barracks at Sumay. Joined by tanks of the Army's 706th Tank
Battalion, the Marines finally secured all of Orote Peninsula by the
end of 29 July.
In a ceremony, at the old Marine Barracks, for the
first time in two and one-half years the American flag was officially
raised in Guam. Gen. Shepherd's words followed a "color
guard" salute: "On this hallowed ground, you officers and men of the
First Marine Brigade have avenged the loss of four comrades who were
overcome by a numerically superior enemy three days after Pearl Harbor.
Under our flag this island again stands ready to fulfill its destiny as
an American fortress in the Pacific."
12-13 November 1942
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Naval forces collide in the sea battle of Guadalcanal. The Japanese
battleships Hiei and Kirishima are sunk. The sinkings follow those of
the Japanese carrier Ryujo on 24 August, and the American carriers Wasp
on 15 September. and the Hornet on 27 October, Though losing ships, the
U.S. accomplishes a strategic victory as the battle demonstrates the
Japanese inability to resupply or reinforce troops at Guadalcanal.
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BATTLE FOR FONTE PLATEAU
On 24 July, the Marines still faced the Japanese in
the hills above Asan. While the 9th Marines had advanced rapidly beyond
Piti, the 21st Marines in the center had not reached Mount Tenjo Road
although the 3rd Marines to the east had seized a section of the
road.
However, the Japanese had planned and executed a
massive counterattack during the night of 25-26 July. On the west,
seven attacks were launched by the 10th Independent Mixed Regiment
against the 9th Marines resulting in 950 Japanese dead. In the
center, the 18th Infantry Regiment attacked the 21st Marines and reached
rear areas in hand-to-hand combat.
22 January 1943
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At Buna and Gona in New Guinea, U.S. and Australian troops catch
Japanese forces in retreat from a failed campaign to take Port Moresby.
The Allied counter-attack ends the Japanese threat to Australia; the
victory is the first decisive triumph on land for the Allies in the
Pacific.
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30 May 1943
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U.S. forces land and retake Attu, in the far western Aleutian islands,
from the Japanese, who occupied the island and nearby Kiska since 7
June 1942. (Kiska was taken 15 August 1943 without a battle because
Japanese had evacuated secretly under the cover of fog more than two
weeks earlier.
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The 2nd Battalion, 9th Marines were battered...The
Japanese attacked with all they had, cause they knew unless they broke
through, that the island, for all intents and purposes, would be lost,
unless they could get down to our beach...and disrupt our supplies, our
communications, possibly wreck our artillery, that they were done
for...They got into our Division hospital, they got into our
artillery..." ... Lt. John J. "Jack" Eddy, 9th Marine Regiment
In the book Liberation - 1944 by Don Farrell, a
Japanese survivor recalled that night: "We had been thinking that the
Japanese might win through a night counterattack ... but when the star
shells came over one after the other we could only use our men as human
bullets and there were many useless casualties and no chance of
success."
On the east, the 48th Independent mixed Brigade hit
the 3d Marines. By daylight the Japanese attack had been repulsed and
any surviving Japanese were fleeing into the hills. The Japanese lost
3,500 during the night attacks. The 3rd Marine Division suffered 645
wounded, 166 killed and 34 missing.
"It was estimated that it was no longer possible to
expel the American forces from the island after the results of the
general counterattack on the night of 25 July were collected in the
morning to about noon of the 26th. After this it was decided that the
sole purpose of combat would be to inflict losses on the American forces
in the interior of the island." ... Lt. Col. Takeda, Operations Officer
Japanese 29th Division.
Though defeated in the counterattack, the Japanese
still held the high ridge of Fonte, and it took three additional days
for the 3d and 9th Marines to clear out the Japanese including a last
group of Japanese in a depression on top of Fonte Plateau on 29
July.
Japanese General Takashina was killed by Marines as
he attempted to evacuate his troops from Fonte on the 28th.
30 June 1943
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With the Navy securing control of the Bismarck Sea in March,
MacArthur, landing in New Guinea, and Admiral William "Bull" Halsey, his
forces coming ashore in the eastern Solomons, put into motion Operation
Cartwheel, The operation, which establishes airfields from which to bomb
the major Japanese base of Rabaul, takes months to accomplish but dooms
the base.
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In the middle of a banana patch badly
mauled by shelling, bombs and gunfire, Marines dig in and establish
their position.
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THE FINAL BEACHLINE
On the 28th, the 9th Marines moving south fought
their way to the top of Mount Chachao.
"It had become increasingly evident that the
principal Japanese battle position now lay along the
Fonte-Chachao-Tenjo Ridgeline..." . . . Maj. O.R. Lodge, Recapture of
Guam
"On Mt. Chachao, the Japanese had constructed a
concrete emplacement in the center of the summit, with a series of
foxholes and machine-gun positions nested in the surrounding cliffs to
protect it. Circular gun pits at either end of the crest guarded the
trail running across the ridge and leading down the slope. Manned by a
company of troops, the Mt. Chachao fortification was formidable." ...
Maj. O.R. Lodge, Recapture of Guam
With artillery fire, American tanks, and hand
grenades, the crest was taken. The 9th Marines made contact with the
soldiers of the 77th Division on top of Mount Tenjo. After eight days of
fighting, the two beachheads were firmly linked up.
The positions on the Mount Tenjo ridge were then held
until the 31st of July while Orote Peninsula was secured and the
American line was organized to swing east across the island.
Concurrently, reconnaissance patrols were made of southern Guam by the
77th Infantry Division from 28 July to 2 August.
"Five patrols of about five men each, with native
guides, would penetrate six miles each way south and east of Alifan into
unknown territory." ... Guam Operations of the 77th Division
These patrols determined that there was no organized
Japanese resistance in the south and that the Japanese had withdrawn to
the north.
"Approaching Ylig the scouts met a small group of
Chamorros, who greeted them joyfully and reported that many Japanese
troops were to the north but that only small groups of 10 or 15 were
still in the southern area." ... Guam Operations of the 77th
Division
After the defeat at Fonte, Japanese General Takashina
ordered a general retreat to established positions along a Dededo to
Barrigada line. Upon the death of Takashina, General Obata assumed
command of the remaining Japanese forces and continued to follow the
defensive plan of Takashina.
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