FIRST OFFENSIVE: The Marine Campaign for Guadalcanal
by Henry I. Shaw, Jr.
September and the Ridge (continued)
On the morning of 13 September, Edson called his
company commanders together and told them: "They were just testing, just
testing. They'll be back." He ordered all positions improved and
defenses consolidated and pulled his lines towards the airfield along
the ridge's center spine. The 2d Battalion, 5th Marines, his backup on
Tulagi, moved into position to reinforce again.
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The
raging battle of Edson's Ridge is depicted in all its fury in this oil
painting by the late Col Donald L. Dickson, who, as a captain, was
adjutant of the 5th Marines on Guadalcanal. Dickson's artwork later was
shown widely in the United States. Captain Donald L. Dickson, USMCR
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The next night's attacks were as fierce as any man
had seen. The Japanese were everywhere, fighting hand-to-hand in the
Marines' foxholes and gun pits and filtering past forward positions to
attack from the rear. Division Sergeant Major Sheffield Banta shot one
in the new command post. Colonel Edson appeared wherever the fighting
was toughest, encouraging his men to their utmost efforts. The
man-to-man battles lapped over into the jungle on either flank of the
ridge, and engineer and pioneer positions were attacked. The reserve
from the 5th Marines was fed into the fight. Artillerymen from the 5th
Battalion, 11th Marines, as they had on the previous night, fired their
105mm howitzers at any called target. The range grew as short as 1,600
yards from tube to impact. The Japanese finally could take no more. They
pulled back as dawn approached. On the slopes of the ridge and in the
surrounding jungle they left more than 600 bodies; another 600 men were
wounded. The remnants of the Kawaguchi force staggered back toward their
lines to the west, a grueling, hellish eight-day march that saw many
more of the enemy perish.
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Edson's (Bloody) Ridge: 12-14 September 1942
(click on image
for an enlargement in a new window)
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Edson's or Raider's Ridge is calm after the fighting on
the nights of 12-13 and 13-14 September, when it was the scene of a
valiant and bloody defense crucial to safeguarding Henderson Field and
the Marine perimeter on Guadalcanal. The knobs at left background were
Col Edson's final defensive position, while Henderson Field lies beyond
the trees in the background. Department of Defense (USMC) Photo
500007
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Maj
Kenneth D. Bailey, commander of Company C, 1st Raider Battalion, was
awarded the Medal of Honor posthumously for heroic and inspiring
leadership during the Battle of Edson's' Ridge. Department of Defense
Photo 310563
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The cost to Edson's force for its epic defense was
also heavy. Fifty-nine men were dead, 10 were missing in action, and 194
were wounded. These losses, coupled with the casualties of Tulagi,
Gavutu, and Tanambogo, meant the end of the 1st Parachute Battalion as
an effective fighting unit. Only 89 men of the parachutists' original
strength could walk off the ridge, soon in legend to become "Bloody
Ridge" or "Edson's Ridge." Both Colonel Edson and Captain Kenneth D.
Bailey, commanding the Raider's Company C, were awarded the Medal of
Honor for their heroic and inspirational actions.
On 13 and 14 September, the Japanese attempted to
support Kawaguchi's attack on the ridge with thrusts against the flanks
of the Marine perimeter. On the east, enemy troops attempting to
penetrate the lines of the 3d Battalion, 1st Marines, were caught in the
open on a grass plain and smothered by artillery fire; at least 200
died. On the west, the 3d Battalion, 5th Marines, holding ridge
positions covering the coastal road, fought off a determined attacking
force that reached its front lines.
The victory at the ridge gave a great boost to Allied
homefront morale, and reinforced the opinion of the men ashore on
Guadalcanal that they could take on anything the enemy could send
against them. At upper command echelons, the leaders were not so sure
that the ground Marines and their motley air force could hold.
Intercepted Japanese dispatches revealed that the myth of the 2,000-man
defending force had been completely dispelled. Sizable naval forces and
two divisions of Japanese troops were now committed to conquer the
Americans on Guadalcanal. Cactus Air Force, augmented frequently by Navy
carrier squadrons, made the planned reinforcement effort a high-risk
venture. But it was a risk the Japanese were prepared to take.
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The
Pagoda at Henderson Field, served as headquarters for Cactus Air Force
throughout the first months of air operations on Guadalcanal. From this
building, Allied planes were sent against Japanese troops on other
islands of the Solomons. Department of Defense (USMC) Photo
50921
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On 18 September, the long-awaited 7th Marines,
reinforced by the 1st Battalion, 11th Marines, and other division
troops, arrived at Guadalcanal. As the men from Samoa landed they were
greeted with friendly derision by Marines already on the island. The 7th
had been the first regiment of the 1st Division to go overseas; its men,
many thought then, were likely to be the first to see combat. The
division had been careful to send some of its best men to Samoa and now
had them back. One of the new and salty combat veterans of the 5th
Marines remarked to a friend in the 7th that he had waited a long time
"to see our first team get into the game." Providentially, a separate
supply convoy reached the island at the same time as the 7th's arrival,
bringing with it badly needed aviation gas and the first resupply of
ammunition since D-Day.
The Navy covering force for the reinforcement and
supply convoys was hit hard by Japanese submarines. The carrier
Wasp was torpedoed and sunk, the battleship North Carolina
(BB-55) was damaged, and the destroyer O'Brien (DD-415) was hit
so badly it broke up and sank on its way to drydock. The Navy had
accomplished its mission, the 7th Marines had landed, but at a terrible
cost. About the only good result of the devastating Japanese torpedo
attacks was that the Wasp's surviving aircraft joined Cactus Air
Force, as the planes of the Saratoga and Enterprise had
done when their carriers required combat repairs. Now, the Hornet
(CV-8) was the only whole fleet carrier left in the South Pacific.
As the ships that brought the 7th Marines withdrew,
they took with them the survivors of the 1st Parachute Battalion and
sick bays full of badly wounded men. General Vandegrift now had 10
infantry battalions, one understrength raider battalion, and five
artillery battalions ashore; the 3d Battalion, 2d Marines, had come over
from Tulagi also. He reorganized the defensive perimeter into 10 sectors
for better control, giving the engineer, pioneer, and amphibian tractor
battalions sectors along the beach. Infantry battalions manned the other
sectors, including the inland perimeter in the jungle. Each infantry
regiment had two battalions on line and one in reserve. Vandegrift also
had the use of a select group of infantrymen who were training to be
scouts and snipers under the leadership of Colonel William J. "Wild
Bill" Whaling, and experienced jungle hand, marksman, and hunter, whom
he had appointed to run a school to sharpen the division's fighting
skills. As men finished their training under Whaling and went back to
their outfits, others took their place and the Whaling group was
available to scout and spearhead operations.
Vandegrift now had enough men ashore on Guadalcanal,
19,200, to expand his defensive scheme. He decided to seize a forward
position along the east bank of the Matanikau River, in effect strongly
outposting his west flank defenses against the probability of string
enemy attacks from the area where most Japanese troops were landing.
First, however, he was going to test the Japanese reaction with a strong
probing force.
He chose the fresh 1st Battalion, 7th Marines,
commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Lewis B. "Chesty" Puller, to move inland
along the slopes of Mt. Austen and patrol north towards the coast and
the Japanese-held area. Puller's battalion ran into Japanese troops
bivouacked on the slopes of Austen on the 24th and in a sharp firefight
had seven men killed and 25 wounded. Vandegrift sent the 2d Battalion,
5th Marines, forward to reinforce Puller and help provide the men needed
to carry the casualties out of the jungle. Now reinforced, Puller
continued his advance, moving down the east bank of the Matanikau. He
reached the coast on the 26th as planned, where he drew intensive fire
from enemy positions on the ridges west of the river. An attempt by the
2d Battalion, 5th Marines, to cross was beaten back.
About the time, the 1st Raider Battalion, its
original mission one of establishing a patrol base west of the
Matanikau, reached the vicinity of the firefight, and joined in.
Vandegrift sent Colonel Edson, now the commander of the 5th Marines,
forward to take charge of the expanded force. He was directed to attack
on the 27th and decided to send the raiders inland to outflank the
Japanese defenders. The battalion, commanded by Edson's former executive
officer, Lieutenant Colonel Samuel B. Griffith II, ran into a hornet's
nest of Japanese who had crossed the Matanikau during the night. A
garbled message led Edson to believe that Griffith's men were advancing
according to plan, so he decided to land the companies of the 1st
Battalion, 7th Marines, behind the enemy's Matanikau position and strike
the Japanese from the rear while Rosecran's men attacked across the
river.
Signalman First Class Douglas Albert Munro
The President of the United States
takes pleasure in presenting
the Medal of Honor posthumously to
Douglas Albert Munro
Signalman First Class
United States Coast Guard
for service as set forth
in the following citation:
For extraordinary heroism and conspicuous gallantry
in action above and beyond the call of duty as Officer in Charge of a
group of twenty-four Higgins boats engaged in the evacuation of a
battalion of Marines trapped by enemy Japanese forces at Point Cruz,
Guadalcanal, on September 27, 1942. After making preliminary plans for
the evacuation of nearly five hundred beleaguered Marines, Munro, under
constant strafing by enemy machine guns on the island and at great risk
of his life, daringly led five of his small craft toward the shore. As
he closed the beach, he signalled the others to land and then in order
to draw the enemy's fire and protect the heavily loaded boats, he
valiantly placed his craft, with its two small guns, as a shield between
the beachhead and the Japanese.
When the perilous task of evacuation was nearly
completed, Munro was instantly killed by enemy fire, but his crew, two
of whom were wounded, carried on until the last boat had loaded and
cleared the beach. By his outstanding leadership, expert planning, and
dauntless devotion to duty, he and his courageous comrades undoubtedly
saved the lives of many who otherwise would have perished. He gallantly
gave up his life in defense of his country.
/s/Franklin Roosevelt
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Painting by Bernard D'Andrea. Courtesy of U.S.
Coast Guard Historical Office.
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The landing was made without incident and the 7th
Marines' companies moved inland only to be ambushed and cut off from the
sea by the Japanese. A rescue force of landing craft moved with
difficulty through Japanese fire, urged on by Puller who accompanied the
boats on the destroyer Ballard (DD-660) [sic: should be
DD-267; DD-660 USS Ballard was not commissioned until the
following yeared.]. The Marines were evacuated after
fighting their way to the beach covered by the destroyer's fire and the
machine guns of a Marine SBD overhead. Once the 7th Marines companies
got back to the perimeter, landing near Kukum, the raider and 5th
Marines battalions pulled back from the Matanikau. The confirmation that
the Japanese would strongly contest any westward advance cost the
Marines 60 men killed and 100 wounded.
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Shortly after becoming Commander, South Pacific Area and
Forces, VAdm William F. Halsey visited Guadalcanal and the 1st Marine
Division. Here he is shown talking with Col Gerald C. Thomas, 1st Marine
Division D-3 (Operations Officer). Department of Defense (USMC) Photo
53523
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The Japanese the Marines had encountered were mainly
men for the 4th Regiment of the 2d (Sendai) Division;
prisoners confirmed that the division was landing on the island.
Included in the enemy reinforcements were 150mm howitzers, guns capable
of shelling the airfield from positions near Kokumbona. Clearly, a new
and stronger enemy attack was pending.
As September drew to a close, a flood of promotions
had reached the division, nine lieutenant colonels put on their
colonel's eagles and there were 14 new lieutenant colonels also.
Vandegrift made Colonel Gerald C. Thomas, his former operations officer,
the new division chief of staff, and had a short time earlier given
Edson the 5th Marines. Many of the older, senior officers, picked for
the most part in the order they had joined the division, were now sent
back to the States. There they would provide a new level of combat
expertise in the training and organization of the many Marine units that
were forming. The air wing was not quite ready yet to return its
experienced pilots to rear areas, but the vital combat knowledge they
possessed was much needed in the training pipeline. They, toothe
survivorswould soon be rotating back to rear areas, some for a
much-needed break before returning to combat and other to lead new
squadrons into the fray.
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Japanese Model 4 (1919) 150mm Howitzer
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