FIRST OFFENSIVE: The Marine Campaign for Guadalcanal
by Henry I. Shaw, Jr.
October and the Japanese Offensive (continued)
In the lull before the attack, if a time of patrol
clashes, Japanese cruiser-destroyer bombardments, bomber attacks, and
artillery harassment could properly be called a lull, Vandegrift was
visited by the Commandant of the Marine Corps, Lieutenant General Thomas
Holcomb. The Commandant flew in on 21 October to see for himself how his
Marines were faring. It also proved to be an occasion for both senior
Marines to meet the new ComSoPac, Vice Admiral William F. "Bull" Halsey.
Admiral Nimitz had announced Halsey's appointment on 18 October and the
news was welcome in Navy and Marine ranks throughout the Pacific.
Halsey's deserved reputation for élan and aggressiveness promised
renewed attention to he situation on Guadalcanal. On the 22d, Holcomb
and Vandegrift flew to Noumea to meet with Halsey and to receive and
give a round of briefings on the Allied situation. After Vandegrift had
described his position, he argued strongly against the diversion of
reinforcements intended for Cactus to any other South Pacific venue, a
sometime factor of Admiral Turner's strategic vision. He insisted that
he needed all of the Americal Division and another 2d Marine Division
regiment to beef up his forces, and that more than half of his veterans
were worn out by three months' fighting and the ravages of
jungle-incurred diseases. Admiral Halsey told the Marine general: "You
go back there, Vandegrift. I promise to get you everything I have."
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During the lull in the fight, a Marine machine gunner
takes a break for coffee, with his sub-machine gun on his knee and his
.30-caliber light machine gun in position. Department of Defense (USMC) Photo
13628
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When Vandegrift returned to Guadalcanal, Holcomb
moved on to Pearl Harbor to meet with Nimitz, carrying Halsey's
recommendation that, in the future, landing force commanders once
established ashore, would have equal command status with Navy amphibious
force commanders. At Pearl, Nimitz approved Halsey's
recommendationwhich Holcomb had draftedand in Washington so
did King. In effect the, the command status of all future Pacific
amphibious operations was determined by the events of Guadalcanal.
Another piece of news Vandegrift received from Holcomb also boded well
for the future of the Marine Corps. Holcomb indicated that if President
Roosevelt did not reappoint him, unlikely in view of his age and two
terms in office, he would recommend that Vandegrift be appointed the
next Commandant.
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On
the occasion of the visit of the Commandant, MajGen Thomas Holcomb, some
of Operation Watchtower's major staff and command officers took time out
from the fighting to pose with him. From left, front row: Col William J.
Whaling (Whaling Group); Col Amor LeRoy Sims (CO, 7th Marines); Col
Gerald C. Thomas (Division Chief of Staff); Col Pedro A. del Valle (CO,
11th Marines); Col William E. Riley (member of Gen Holcomb's party);
MajGen Roy S. Geiger (CG, 1st Marine Aircraft Wing); Gen Holcomb; MajGen
Ralph J. Mitchell (Director of Aviation, Headquarters, U.S. Marine
Corps); BGen Bennet Puryear, Jr. (Assistant Quartermaster of the Marine
Corps; Col Clifton B. Cates (CO, 1st Marines). Second row (between
Whaling and Sims): LtCol Raymond P. Coffman (Division Supply Officer);
Maj James C. Murray (Division Personnel Officer); (behind Gen Holcomb)
LtCol Merrill B. Twining (Division Operations Officer). Department of Defense
(USMC) Photo 53523
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This new of future events had little chance of
diverting Vandegrift's attention when he flew back to Guadalcanal, for
the Japanese were in the midst of their planned offensive. On the 20th,
an enemy patrol accompanied by two tanks tried to find a way through the
line held by Lieutenant Colonel William N. McKelvy, Jr.'s 3d Battalion,
1st Marines. A sharpshooting 37mm gun crew knocked out one tank and the
enemy force fell back, meanwhile shelling the Marine positions with
artillery. Near sunset the next day, the Japanese tried again, this time
with more artillery fire and more tanks in the fore, but again a 37mm
gun knocked out a lead tank and discouraged the attack. On 22 October,
the enemy paused, waiting for Maruyama's force to get into position
inland. On the 23d, planned as the day of the Sendai's main
attack, the Japanese dropped a heavy rain of artillery and mortar fire
on McKelvy's positions near the Matanikau River mouth. Near dusk, nine
18-tom medium tanks clanked out of the trees onto the river's sandbar
and just as quickly eight of them were riddled by the 37s. One tank got
across the river, a marine blasted a track off with a grenade, and a
75mm half-track finished it off in the ocean's surf. The following enemy
infantry was smothered by Marine artillery fire as all battalions of the
augmented 11th Marines rained shells on the massed attackers. Hundreds
of Japanese were casualties and three more tanks were destroyed. Later,
an inland thrust further upstream was easily beaten back. The abortive
coastal attack did almost nothing to aid Maruyama's inland offensive,
but did cause Vandegrift to shift one battalion, the 2d Battalion, 7th
Marines, out of the line to the east and into the 4.000-yard gap between
the Matanikau position and the perimeter. This moved proved providential
since one of Maruyama's planned attacks was headed right for this
area.
Reising Gun
The Reising gun was designed and developed by noted
gun inventor Eugene Reising. It was patented in 1940 and manufactured by
the old gun-making firm of Harrington and Richardson of Worcester,
Massachusetts. It is said that it was made on existing machine tools,
some dating back to the Civil War, and of ordinary steel rather than
ordnance steel. With new machine tools and ordnance steel scarce and
needed for more demanding weapons, the Reising met an immediate
requirement for many sub-machine guns at a time when production of
Thompson M1928 and M1 sub-machine guns hadn't caught up with demand and
the stamped-out M3 "grease gun" had not yet been invented. It was a
wartime expedient.
The Reising was made in two different models, the 50
and the 55. The Model 50 had a full wooden stock and a Cutts compensator
attached to the muzzle. The compensator, a device which reduced the
upward muzzle climb from recoil, was invented by Richard M. Cutts, Sr.,
and his son, Richard M. Cutts, Jr., both of whom became Marine brigadier
generals. The other version was dubbed the Model 55. It had a folding
metal-wire shoulder stock which swivelled on the wooded pistol grip. It
also had a shorter barrel and no compensator. It was intended for use by
parachutists, tank crews, and others needing a compact weapon. Both
versions of the Reising fired .45-caliber ammunition, the same cartridge
as the Colt automatic pistol and the Thompson.
In all, there were approximately 100,000 Reising
sub-machine guns produced between 1940 and 1942. Small numbers of the
weapons were acquired by both Great Britain and the Soviet Union.
However, most were used by the U.S. Marine Corps in the Solomon Islands
campaign. The Model 55 was issued to both Marine parachute battalions
and Marine raiders, seeing service first on Guadalcanal. After its
dubious debut in combat it was withdrawn from frontline service in 1943
due to several flaws in design and manufacture.
The Reising's major shortcoming was its propensity
for jamming. This was due to both a design problem in the magazine lips
and the fact that magazines were made of a soft sheet steel. The
weapons' safety mechanism didn't always work and if the butt was slammed
down on the deck, the hammer would set back against the mainspring and
then fly forward, firing a chambered cartridge. The design allowed the
entry of dirt into the mechanism and close tolerances caused it to jam.
Finally, the steel used allowed excessive rust to form in the tropical
humidity of the Solomons. Nevertheless, at six pounds, the Reising was
handier than the 10-pound Thompson, more accurate, pleasanter to shoot,
and reliable under other than combat conditions, but one always had to
keep the muzzle pointed in a safe direction. The Model 50 was also
issued to Marines for guard duty at posts and stations in the United
States.John G. Griffiths
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Although patrols had encountered no Japanese east or
south of the jungled perimeter up to the 24th, the Matanikau attempts
had alerted everyone. When General Maruyama finally was satisfied that
his men had struggled through to appropriate assault positions, after
delaying his day of attack three times, he was ready on 24 October. The
Marines were waiting.
An observer from the 1st Battalion, 7th Marines,
spotted an enemy officer surveying Edson's Ridge on the 24th, and
scout-snipers reported smoke from numerous rice fires rising from a
valley about two miles south of Lieutenant Colonel Puller's positions.
Six battalions of the Sendai Division were poised to attack, and
near midnight the first elements of the enemy hit and bypassed a
platoon-sized outpost forward of Puller's barbed-wire entanglements.
Warned by the outpost, Puller's men waited, straining to see through a
dark night and a driving rain. Suddenly, the Japanese charged out of the
jungle, attacking in Puller's area near the ridge and the flat ground to
the east. The Marine replied with everything they had, calling in
artillery, firing mortars, relying heavily on crossing fields of machine
gun fire to cut down the enemy infantrymen. Thankfully, the enemy's
artillery, mortars, and other supporting arms were scattered back along
the Maruyama Trail; they had proved too much of a burden for the
infantrymen to carry forward.
A wedge was driven into the Marine lines, but
eventually straightened out with repeated counterattacks. Puller soon
realized his battalion was being hit by a strong Japanese force capable
of repeated attacks. He called for reinforcements and the Army's 3d
Battalion, 164th Infantry (Lieutenant Colonel Robert K. Hall), was
ordered forward, its men sliding and slipping in the rain as they
trudged a mile south along Edson's Ridge. Puller met Hall at the head of
his column, and the two officers walked down the length of the Marine
lines, peeling off an Army squad at a time to feed into the lines. When
the Japanese attacked again as they did all night long, the soldiers and
Marines fought back together. By 0330, the Army battalion was completely
integrated into the 1st Battalion, 7th Marines'; lines and the enemy
attacks were getting weaker and weaker. The American return
fireincluding flanking fire from machine guns and Weapons Company,
7th Marines' 37mm guns remaining in the positions held by 2d Battalion,
164th Infantry, on Puller's leftwas just too much to take. Near
dawn, Maruyama pulled his men back to regroup and prepare to attack
again.
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Five
Japanese tanks sit dead in the water, destroyed by Marine 37mm gunfire
during the abortive attempt to force the Marine perimeter near the mouth
of the Matanikau River in late October. Many Japanese soldiers lost
their lives also. Marine Corps Personal Papers Collection
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With daylight, Puller and Hall reordered the lines,
putting the 3d Battalion, 164th, into its own positions on Puller's
left, tying in with the rest of the Army regiment. The driving rains had
turned Fighter One into a quagmire, effectively grounding Cactus flyers.
Japanese planes used the "free ride" to bomb Marine positions. Their
artillery fired incessantly and a pair of Japanese destroyers added
their gunfire to the bombardment until they got too close to the shore
and the 3d Defense Battalion's 5-inch guns drove them off. As the sun
bore down, the runways dried and afternoon enemy attacks were met by
Cactus fighters, who downed 22 Japanese planes with a loss of three of
their own.
As night came on again, Maruyama tried more of the
same, with the same result. The Army-Marine lines held and the Japanese
were cut down in droves by rifle, machine gun, mortar, 37mm, and
artillery fire. To the west, an enemy battalion mounted three determined
attacks against the positions held by Lieutenant Colonel Herman H.
Hanneken's 2d Battalion, 7th Marines, thinly tied in with Puller's
battalion on the left and the 3d Battalion, 7th Marines, on the right.
The enemy finally penetrated the positions held by Company F, but a
counterattack led by Major Odell M. Conoley, the battalion's executive
officer, drove off the Japanese. Again at daylight the American
positions were secure and the enemy had retreated. They would not come
back; the grand Japanese offensive of the Sendai Division was
over.
About 3,500 enemy troops had died during the attacks.
General Maruyama's proud boast that he "would exterminate the enemy
around the airfield in one blow" proved an empty one. What was left of
his force now straggled back over the Maruyama Trail, losing, as had the
Kawaguchi force in the same situation, most of its seriously wounded
men. The Americans, Marines and soldiers together, probably lost 300 men
killed and wounded; existing records are sketchy and incomplete. One
result of the battle, however, was a warm welcome to the 164th Infantry
from the 1st Marine Division. Vandegrift particularly commended
Lieutenant Colonel Hall's battalion, stating the "division was proud to
have serving with it another unit which had stood the test of battle."
And Colonel Cates sent a message to the 164th's Colonel Bryant Moore
saying that the 1st Marines "were proud to serve with a unit such as
yours."
Amidst all the heroics of the two nights' fighting
there were many men who were singled out for recognition and an equally
large number who performed great deeds that were never recognized. Two
men stood out above all others, and on succeeding nights, Sergeant John
Basilone of the 1st Battalion, 7th Marines, and Platoon Sergeant
Mitchell Paige of the 2d Battalion, both machine gun section heads, were
recognized as having performed "above and beyond the call of duty" in
the inspiring words of their Medal of Honor citations.
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