OPENING MOVES: Marines Gear Up For War
by Henry I. Shaw, Jr.
The Stage is Set
On 22 November 1941, General Holcomb spoke to the
American public on NBC radio as part of a Navy public relations program.
In his brief remarks, he summed up the Corps' situation in the context
of the country's readiness. He noted that there were 61,000 Marines in
uniform and that:
Beyond the continental limits of the United States,
Marines do duty as the frontiersmen of the nation's huge new defense
network. The existing stations from the Philippines to the Virgin
Islands have had their garrisons increased. The Navy's new bases
Iceland, Newfoundland, Bermuda, Santa Lucia, Antigua, Trinidad, Jamaica,
British Guiana, Dutch Harbor, Samoa, Kodiak, the Hawaiian Island group,
and other outlying stations all are garrisoned and guarded, at
least partially, by United States Marines.
|
Every Marine in the prewar era was required to qualify
annually with his T/O weapon and generally spent two weeks in preparing
to fire for record. Here, West Coast FMF troops are at the La Jolla
rifle range in 1940 for their weapons training. Photo courtesy of C. M.
Craig
|
On the same day, he wrote to Brigadier General John
Marston, commanding the 1st Provisional Brigade in Iceland, telling him
that it was "important to get the Brigade home" and promising "you can
be sure that we will leave no stone unturned to accomplish it." Its men
were wanted back in the 2d Marine Division and the arrival of U.S. Army
reinforcements in strength in Iceland gave the Marine Corps strong
argument for the recovery of its forces. The fact that the Marines had
come under Army command did nothing to lessen the urgency of the
situation.
|
Marine recruits are drilled on the parade ground at
Paris Island in the early 1940s. Note the sun helmets on the troops as
they march to the cadence of the DI. Sketch by Vernon H. Bailey, Navy Art
Collection
|
In his radio report, the Commandant did not mention
the Marines stationed in China, perhaps because the decision had been
made to withdraw them. In September, the American Consul-General at
Shanghai, the Navy commander of the Yangtze River Patrol, and the
Commanding Officer, 4th Marines had jointly recommended that all U.S.
naval forces in China be pulled out of Japanese-controlled territory, a
recommendation heartily endorsed by the Commander, Asiatic Fleet. The
authorization for the evacuation was delayed by State and Navy
Department negotiations until 10 November and it was the 27th before the
first of two chartered passenger liners, the President Madison,
loaded half the 4th Marines and its equipment and departed Shanghai. The
next day, the rest of the regiment boarded the President Harrison
and sailed.
Helmets of World War II
One of the most noticeable changes in the Marine
Corps uniform at the outset of World War II was the transition from the
M1917A1 helmet reminiscent of World War I to the familiar M1 helmet of
World War II, Korea, and Vietnam.
At the outbreak of World War II, Marines were wearing
a modernized version of the helmet first introduced to Marines serving
in France during World War I. The American M1917 helmet was nearly
identical to the British "Brodie Pattern" helmet. In 1939, this helmet
was superceded in the Marine Corps by the improved M1917A1 helmet (as
shown below, worn by men of the 6th Marines in Iceland). The padded
leather liner and two-piece canvas chinstrap of this updated version of
the "tin hat," as it was then called, made it far more comfortable and
sturdier than its predecessor. The steel helmet shell remained the same.
In the Marine Corps, the helmet was worn both with and without insignia
and, while most Marines wore the helmet in the rough olive drab paint,
some units, most notably those in China, burnished, waxed, and polished
theirs. Less than two years after the Marine Corps' adoption of the
M1917A1, a U.S. Army research team at Fort Benning under of Major Harold
Go Sydenham, began working on a new design for a two-piece helmet which
offered far more protection for the wearer. Adopted by the government as
the M1 helmet on 9 June 1941, the Hadfield manganese steel helmet was
first made by the McCord Radiator Company of Detroit, Michigan, while
the fiber liner was manufactured by the Hawley Products Company. At the
suggestion of General George S. Patton, the liner's suspension system
was patterned after a design by John T. Riddell that was used in
contemporary football helmets. The new helmet was issued to the Marine
Corps in the spring and early summer of 1942 and, by the time of the
Guadalcanal campaign later that summer, had all but supplanted the old
"dishpan" helmet.
-Kenneth L. Smith-Christmas
|
Photo courtesy of
Col Tames A. Donovan, USMC (Ret.)
|
|
The destination of both liners was the naval base at
Olangapo in the Philippines where the 4th was to join the naval forces
defending the islands, in particular the 1st Separate Battalion at
Cavite. The ships arrived on 30 November and 1 December. The
President Harrison, as planned, was unloaded quickly in order to
return to China and pick up the Marines stationed at Peiping and
Tientsin, but it was too late. The Japanese Pearl Harbor attack force
was already well on its way to its target.
The embassy guard detachments in China were
assembling their gear to ship out through the all-weather port of
Chinwangtao. The small Marine camp there was named Camp Holcomb, a fact
that annoyed the Commandant somewhat as he believed no Marine facilities
should be named after living persons. He pointed out in his 22 November
letter to General Marston that the camp still bore his name "but it will
be a thing of the past in a few days." The Commandant was obviously
referring to the impending evacuation of the embassy Marines, but in
fact these men, trapped in a hopeless situation, less than 200 in
number, were captured on the first day of the war.
|
Scene at Camp Elliott in spring 1941. The new base, near
San Diego, was activated in mid-1940. It housed west coast FMF units and
also served for advanced training. Photo courtesy or Col James A. Donovan, USMC
(Ret)
|
|
In
1940, Fleet Marine Force units stationed at the San Diego fields of the
Mission Bay area, in khaki uniforms with the Recruit Depot conducted
some small unit training in the open 1903 Springfield rifle, and wearing
World War I helmets. Photo courtesy of Col James A. Donovan, USMC
(Ret)
|
|