OUTPOST IN THE NORTH ATLANTIC: Marines in the Defense of Iceland
by Colonel James A. Donovan, U.S. Marine Corps (Ret)
On 22 September 1941, President Roosevelt ordered the
Marine brigade to report for duty under Major General Charles H.
Bonesteel, U.S. Army, the newly designated Commanding General, Iceland
Base Command. Historic prejudices and differences of methods and
discipline, and Major General Commandant Thomas Holcomb's memory of
service in France where the Fourth Marine Brigade served under the Army,
prompted him to protest this new arrangement to the Chief of Naval
Operations. But command relations where changing world-wide and the
Iceland Marines were directed to carry out their orders.
The law provided that Marines could be ordered by the
President to detached duty with the U.S. Army. When this occurred, the
detached Marine organizations became an operational part of the Army.
They were then subject to the Articles of War and were no longer
governed by the Articles for the Government of the Navy. The Marines had
to convert to the Army courts-martial and legal systems which tended to
conflict with traditional Marine Corps disciplinary procedures. The
brigade did not relish the new arrangement.
Army Chief of Staff General George C. Marshall
directed the Marines to adapt to he Army's administrative system as
well. General Bonesteel made a point of expressing the Army's gratitude
for the Marines' "splendid assistance in the preparation of the various
campsites and numerous other ways prior to and during our arrival in
Iceland. The amount of hard and extended labor involved is fully
recognized and deeply appreciated."
Nissen Huts
The Nissen hut was fairly simple to assemble. The
ends of each hut were made in three wooden sections constructed so that
they could be assembled in a few minutes. The deck consisted of wooden
panels resting upon a frame of two-by-fours, while the roof and sides
were made of corrugated metal. Two layers of metal were used on the
lower sides and a single layer about on the roof, and the whole
supported by curved I-beam steel ribs. The interior was lined with
sheets of insulation board. Each hut was issued with a complete kit of
tools and hardware. The only on-site fabrication was production of the
concrete or lava block foundation piles. A crew of six or more men could
erect a hut in a few hours, and teams specializing in various parts were
even faster. The Quonset hut of the Pacific War was the more deluxe and
larger American offspring of the Nissen hut.
Living in the Nissen huts was basic and simple for
all ranks. The tin-roofed buildings had a few small windows and doors
with wind-baffle vestibules at the end or on one side. Insulation board
lined the interiors. The huts had bare wooden decks and the outside
foundation was banked with dirt and sod. Interior lighting was furnished
by kerosene lanterns until eventually all camps had gasoline generators
which provided electricity to light the few bulbs in each hut. Heat was
provided by small British coke-and-coal stoves until later when the U.S.
Army brought some larger potbellied stoves to Iceland. At no time was it
ever warm enough to dispense with the stoves. They provided heat for
wash water and to help dry clothing strung on lines. Each camp had its
supply pile of large, coal-filled bags. Wooden kindling for firing
stoves was at a premium because there was no natural source of wood in
Iceland. All boxes and shipping crates were carefully saved and hoarded
for fire-making.
There were about 24 men assigned to a hut. They had
wood and canvas folding cots, a thin cotton mattress pad, mattress
cover, and two woolen blankets. The primary furniture was wooden boxes
collected by all ranks for toilet gear and bunkside storage. There was
nothing to sit on except the cots and a few folding canvas chairs which
accompanied company and battalion field desks.
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Marines constructing Nissen huts mix cement in an old
mixer for their foundations. LtCol Harold K. Throneson Collection
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To
weatherproof the Nissen huts, Marines banded sod up to heights of four
feet around the foundations and tied down the tin roofs with barbed
wire. Despite these precautions, huts shuddered and shook when the
winter's gale winds blew. Department of Defense Photo (USMC)
185076
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Iceland's long, warm summer days allowed Marine to hang
their laundry on lines outside the huts to dry, except during Iceland's
frequent rain showers. In the winter, with short days and bad weather,
drying clothes outdoors was impossible. Marine Corps Historical
Collections
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The
wind blows very cold in Iceland. Contemporary sketch by the author
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By late September, Marine leaders saw problems
arising from a combination of short, dark days, bad weather, and troops
bored and confined to quarters. One lieutenant wrote to his mother
suggesting that the ladies in her church might be interested in sending
the troops some playing cards, board games, dice, checkers, and similar
items. Within weeks the lieutenant was overwhelmed with the requested
games and supplies, plus large parcels of cookies and candies.
In October, as the days grew shorter, it rained,
temperatures dropped, and the wind blew incessantly. The ability to
accomplish any meaningful field, tactical, or weapons' training lessened
as the weather deteriorated. Many units were still busy improving their
camp facilities and preparing for a wet, muddy winter. Officers spent
hours censoring their men's mail and the men spent hours writing
letters. Most junior officers had time-consuming extra duties and the
troops were assigned to seemingly unending working parties. Tactical
plans, trenches, emplacements, wire obstacles, and defense range cards
for sectors of responsibility, had all been prepared during the early
and balmy weeks of fall.
When the weather permitted, the Marines played
baseball and otherwise tried to keep in good physical condition by
long-distance hikes and some cross-country runs on the grassy fields
with their strange hummocks, rocks, and pools of mud. Marines who fell
in the muck amused their comrades who needed all the laughs they could
get. The brigade held no field maneuvers or large staff exercises until
Major General Bonesteel arrived. He attempted to conduct some field
exercises with the brigade units located near Reykjavik and the air
base. The 3d Battalion was too far away at Brauterholt peninsula to
participate and was just about completely immobile by the lack of any
wheeled transport.
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A
6th Marines staff noncommissioned officer conducts bayonet training in
Iceland's mud. Note the galoshes and heavy wool socks worn by all hands.
With the approach of bad weather Marines were unable to conduct
meaningful training. LtCol Robert J. Vroegindewey Collection
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Marines on expeditionary duty in Iceland in 1941 pause
during their field training in the months before the winter weather made
heavier clothing a necessity. These Marines wear the polar bear shoulder
patch on their forest green uniforms. Department of Defense Photo (USMC)
185021
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Officers of the 1st Battalion, 6th Marines, in Iceland,
commanded by LtCol Oliver P. Smith (front row, fifth from left). He was
to become assistant division commander of the 1st Marine Division on
Cape Gloucester, division commander in the Korean War, and a four-star
general at retirement. Two other officers of the battalion would become
generals: Lt William K. Jones (second row, extreme right) and Lt Michael
P. Ryan (last row, third from right). Three battalion officers were
killed in the Pacific in World War II. These were the "Old Breed" with
whom the Corps went to war. LtCol Harold K. Thronesen Collection
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