UP THE SLOT: Marines in the Central Solomons
by Major Charles D. Melson, U.S. Marine Corps (Ret)
The Munda Drive and the Fighting Ninth
On 1 August, a Japanese air raid hit the torpedo boat
mooring basin at Rendova. Nearby on Tombusolo was Edwin Jakubowski with
9th Defense Battalion Special Weapons, firing at the attacking aircraft.
"A PT Boat was strafed and blew up next to my little island. Plywood
flying all over me and one of its torpedoes went by," he recalled.
Captain Theron A. Smith, commanding Battery F, had just inspected his
Number 3 Searchlight Section when the attack occurred and later wrote
"some Sunday, alerts and [Condition Reds all last night and most of the
day. Attacked by two dive bombers and Zeros (estimated 50) about 1600.
Two PTs destroyed, another sunk and beyond salvage." In a footnote to
the campaign, Lieutenant (jg) John F. Kennedy's PT 109 was rammed and
sunk early the next morning while operating from the Rendova base.
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Another defense battalion detachment went to Laiana,
where this emplaced 40mm gun of 1stLt Colin J. Reeves' battery merges
with the dense jungle growth
backdrop. Department of Defense Photo (USMC) 60096
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The
high ground at Munda airfield fell on 5 August 1943. This picture is
taken at the site of the former mission on Kokengolo Hill looking
towards Biblio Hill to the north. Department of Defense Photo (USMC)
57564
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Field artillery firing missions against the New
Georgia area continued to be conducted by Battery B until 3 August. The
tank platoon of the 10th Defense Battalion, reinforced by five tanks
from the 11th Defense Battalion and the surviving tank of the 9th
Defense Battalion, led the assault on Kokengolo and Biblio Hills on 4
and 5 August. After two days of heavy fighting, they routed the
defending forces. The Marine tanks then cleared the way to the principal
objective of the entire New Georgia campaign, the Munda airfield, which
was captured and occupied by XIV Corps Army troops on 5 August 1943.
Regiments of the 25th Infantry Division pursued the Japanese as they
withdrew north from Munda Point. On the night of 6 August a naval battle
was fought in Vella Gulf, where Japanese destroyers and barges bringing
in supplies and reinforcements were turned back.
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Wreckage and debris were soon pushed aside in the rapid
progress to open the field for American use. The captured airfield
included aircraft, in this case a Zero fighter in a coconut and coral
enclosure, that could not take off after the American landing.
Marine Corps
Historical Collection
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The
engineering effort pushed forward and built upon the Japanese
construction that remained. The work was completed within 10 days after
the airfield was captured. Department of Defense Photo (USMC)
60460
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The battle for Munda airfield over, the Zanana Beach
and Laiana Beach detachments moved on 6 August to participate in the
Munda defenses. The detachments destroyed 12 enemy planes while at these
locations. A day later, the 9th Defense Battalion began moving to the
Munda area. The moves were so organized that there was no more than a
quarter of the battalion's weapons out of action at any one time. The
battalion was transported largely by various types of landing craft,
which made the displacement a slow, laborious process. Captain Well's
Battery B of the 155mm Group moved to Kindu Point on New Georgia on 8
August and was assigned the mission with its large guns of guarding the
western approaches to Blanche Channel. On landing, Battery B and an Army
antitank platoon cleared the area of remaining Japanese stragglers.
At Munda Airfield, immediately after the area was
cleared of Japanese, construction units moved in to repair and enlarge
the "emergency" field built by the enemy. By the evening of 13 August,
this work had progressed sufficiently to permit four Army Curtiss P-40
Warhawks to make an unscheduled landing and to "christen" the field with
a brief fly-over. This was soon followed by the arrival of Marine air
units, including VMF-123 and -124. Other Marine squadrons soon arrived,
including the VMF-214 "Black Sheep" of Major Gregory Boyington, who
became a grudging admirer of the 9th's antiaircraft marksmanship and a
source of entertainment with his radio transmissions while flying over
Munda.
Instead of attacking the main Japanese force on
Kolombangara at Vila, the American force isolated the enemy by landings
on nearby Vella Lavella on 15 August. Admiral Halsey did not want
another slugging match like Munda. A landing force was built around the
uncommitted Army 35th Regimental Combat Team, commanded by the 25th
Infantry Division's assistant commander, Brigadier General Robert B.
McLure, and supported by the Marine 4th Defense Battalion. The Japanese
resisted in the air and sea, but enemy ground forces were too busy
withdrawing to put up a determined resistance. The 4th Defense
Battalion, led by Lieutenant Colonel Harold S. Fassett, defended the
beachhead against 121 attacks and downed 42 Japanese planes. The Allied
occupation of these positions and pressure from Arundel and New Georgia
put Vila on Kolombangara in a precarious position. In many ways, this
was a prelude to the Marine Bougainville campaign as it brought I Marine
Amphibious Corps and new units not involved in the fighting into the New
Georgia area. American fighter cover came from the Munda and Segi
Airfields.
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Seabees clear a Japanese tunnel at the base of Kokengolo
Hill for use in the face of the still present Japanese menace. This
threat made the discomfort of the cave, filled with refuse and corpses,
seem a small price to pay for the security of overhead cover from
artillery and air attack. Marine Corps Historical Collection
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Commander Aircraft New Georgia, BGen Francis P. Mulcahy,
expanded airfield operations on Munda with the construction of more
secure shelters than those the Japanese left behind. A heavily
sandbagged sickbay is on the left and the personnel office is in the
center. The frame of a prefabricated Quonset hut is being assembled to
the right rear. Department of Defense Photo (USMC) 71745
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By 15 August, the 9th Defense Battalion was set up
and emplaced in new dispersed positions. Three days later, another major
naval surface action occurred off Vella Lavella as the U.S. Navy
combatants intercepted destroyers and barges attempting to evacuate
Japanese troops. From 16 through 19 August, Japanese artillery on Baanga
Island shelled Munda Airfield and Kindu Point causing several casualties
and some minor damage. Friendly aircraft and artillery operated against
these elusive cannon and finally silenced them. The battalion suffered
no casualties from this shelling, though one gun crew's tent was
demolished by a direct hit and there were several hits on other
positions. The 9th's antiaircraft guns were now fully placed to protect
the airfield. Enemy air attacks on the Munda area, carried out at night
or in the early morning, continued throughout the rest of the month.
Captain Ervin's three Battery G 40mm positions seaward of the airfield
were straddled by a string of Japanese bombs that managed to just miss
everyone.
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The
first fighter plane to land on Munda was a VMF-215 Corsair flown by Maj
Robert G. Owens, Jr., on 14 August 1943. Flight operations began
immediately to cover the Vella Lavella landings. Department of Defense
Photo (USMC) 60270
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The
Munda drive moved into a final phase with attacks on 4 and 5 August
1943, again using Marine tanks in the lead. Tank commander Capt Robert
W. Blake examines some of the improvised antitank weapons faced by his
unit a Molotov cocktail and a magnetic mine. Marine Corps Historical
Collection
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The landing and occupation of Arundel Island, on 27
August, further tightened the noose around Kolombangara. Army troops
were supported by Captain Blake and tanks from the 9th, 10th, and 11th
Defense Battalions. Major General Collins, commanding the 25th Infantry
Division carrying out this assignment, commended the Marines "for the
whole-hearted co operation and assistance rendered this division" during
the operations against the Japanese in the Arundel Island campaign. They
performed all assigned tasks "in a splendid manner in support of the
27th Infantry, in its action...."
Captain Reichner's Battery A moved to Piru Plantation
on 29 August and two days later began shelling the Vila area of
Kolombangara. The move was made by landing craft and foot. Recalled
Captain William T. Box, with the artillery group's advance party, "we
hiked up from Munda using a native guide. I remember we hiked through
jungle most of the way. I remember I was scared. I remember I was glad
to see that open area with the supply parachutes" left by the Army. Soon
afterwards, Battery B moved to Piru and on 2 September participated in
the shelling of Vila. A Japanese defender there with the 8th Combined
Special Naval Landing Force wrote in his diary, with "the situation
as it is, one just can't help but distrust the operational plans of the
Imperial Headquarters."
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An
essential element in the defensive air war was the use of radar by the
Americans for surveillance, target acquisition, and ground-controlled
intercepts. This is one of the 9th Defense Battalion's SCR268s installed
on New Georgia.
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Close-in air defense around the airfield was
accomplished by regrouping defense battalion assets from Rendova,
Laiana, and Zanana, This "Twin-Twenty" is at Munda, and is on one of
several types of mobile mounts at New Georgia. Marine Corps Historical
Collection
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Dead
at his post, this Japanese soldier lies by a smashed 37mm antitank gun
near the airfield. As the tanks broke through, the infantry followed and
the fighting continued until the positions were overrun or buried in the
rubble. Marine Corps Historical Collection
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The artillery group used the services of spotter
aircraft, but because of enemy gunfire, switched from the light
observation planes to Grumman TBFs because their armor plating gave the
pilots greater protection. First Lieutenant Donald V. Sandager and
Sergeant Herschel J. Cooper flew these missions over Kolombangara. "We
both volunteered to a request from Major Hiatt. When we reported to
Munda Airfield we had no parachutes and were told each flier had to have
his own," recalled Sandager. "The pilots were inexperienced and flew up
from Guadalcanal each morning and we had to direct them to find the
battery and Kolombangara. Radio communication with the battery was bad."
Admiral Halsey noted the artillery group and Lieutenant Colonel O'Neil's
ability to "utilize air spotting and the accuracy of their fire which
stood out above other more experienced groups."
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Other Japanese defenses included this 25mm automatic
dual-purpose twin-barrelled gun in position on the airfield approaches.
These proved to be deadly against both American air and ground
forces. Department of Defense Photo (USMC) 69975
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The peak of enemy air activity over Munda Airfield
occurred the night of 14-15 September when enemy planes kept gun crews
at battle stations all night. The 90mm group expended 3,378 rounds,
downing one plane and causing most of the enemy planes to jettison their
bombs over the jungle or the sea. At Vila, a Japanese commander
reported, "it had become very difficult to fire the antiaircraft guns as
the enemy places their artillery upon our position immediately after we
commence firing upon the aircraft." At Piru, Japanese counter-battery
fire hit the artillery group throughout September and the first two days
of October. A number of the enemy artillery projectiles failed to
detonate and there were no casualties from the shelling.
On 15 September, General Sasaki was ordered to
evacuate his remaining 12,400 men from Kolombangara. The next month on 3
October, while flying his assigned air spotter missions, Lieutenant
Sandager reported Vila evacuated; the Japanese had pulled out.
Lieutenant Colonel Scheyer was pleased to state that for the "first time
in this war the enemy had been driven from his base by bombing and
artillery fire." He concluded that at Kiska it was bombing and ship's
gunfire, at Kolombangara it was naval gun fire, bombing, and artillery
fire that turned the tide. The final action of the campaign was a sea
battle on 6-7 October when U.S. Navy destroyers intercepted Japanese
evacuation ships during the Battle of Vella Lavella.
The Japanese air effort slackened considerably in
October, and came to an abrupt halt in November 1943. While at Munda
Airfield, the 9th Defense Battalion accounted for eight more enemy
planes. Numerous alerts, conditions red, and general quarters stand-tos
that began an hour before dawn and an hour after sunset, had occurred
daily for all gun crews. In early November, Battery A moved to
Nusalavata Island and Battery B to Roviana Island where the 155mm guns
covered Munda Bar and the eastern approach to Blanche Channel
respectively. Lieutenant Colonel Scheyer remained in command of the 9th
until 3 November, when he was assigned to I Marine Amphibious Corps and
the command was turned over to Lieutenant Colonel Archie E. O'Neil.
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This
1 August 1943 bombing attack struck Marine positions on Rendova, only
wounding one Marine, but destroying a height finder with flying
coral. Department of Defense Photo (USMC) 58411
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On 22 November, the 9th Defense Battalion was
attached to VI Corps Island Command for occupation duties. On 31
December, the battalion, with the exception of one radar crew and two
search light sections, was relieved of the Munda Airfield defenses by
the Army 77th AAA Group. The 9th Defense Battalion spent several weeks
in camp in the Munda area waiting for transportation. These weeks were
not idle as central camps for the several groups had to be set up and
improved. Training schedules, begun in the later stages of the campaign,
were carried out. Transport ships were available for the trip to the
Russell Islands beginning on 13 January 1944 and continued until the
entire battalion move was completed on 25 February.
Flight Clothing and Equipment
Flight clothing was considered naval aviation
equipment rather than a purely Marine Corps uniform and was strictly
functional. Basic items included leather boots, leather gloves, goggles,
a cloth helmet that contained headphones, and a one-piece cotton khaki
flying suit. Captain John M. Foster, flying from Munda, stated he wore a
flying suit and then slung a "leather shoulder holster containing my
45-caliber automatic over my neck and buckled the belt, strung with my
hunting knife, first-aid kit, extra cartridges and canteen, around my
waist." He also wore a baseball cap and carried his flying helmet,
goggles, and gloves. In addition, the pilots carried 65 pounds of
parachute, rubber raft, and " jungle pack."
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Drawing by Kerr
Eby, U.S. Navy Combat Art Collection
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The fighting by the 9th Defense Battalion contributed
considerably to the victory of the land forces on New Georgia, and
demonstrated the value of advance base defense. The 9th was in action
against Japanese aircraft on 59 different days, for a total of 159 fire
missions and 249 alerts, with 46 enemy planes downed. Not counted in
these statistics were aircraft damaged or diverted from their intended
targets and forced to under take less accurate nighttime bombing
missions. The fire of 155mm guns destroyed a number of enemy artillery
positions and troops on Munda, Baanga, and Kolombangara. Numerous pill
boxes and machine gun positions were destroyed and enemy troops killed
by the tank platoon on New Georgia Island. Although the firing batteries
and tanks were the most active elements of the battalion, other
components of the battalion were deeply involved in the fighting also.
The battalion also destroyed a machine gun position and killed three
Japanese on Rendova and killed another 22 enemy and captured two
prisoners at Zanana.
Battalion losses throughout the campaign were
remarkably few: 13 dead, l missing, over 50 wounded in action, and other
non-battle casualties. Malaria caused a number of the Marines to be
evacuated. General Griswold summarized the battalion's performance by
concluding that every "officer and man of the organization has reason to
feel proud of its accomplishment." The I Marine Amphibious Corps
commander, Lieutenant General Alexander A. Vandegrift, said "how proud I
am to belong to the same outfit as they do."
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