A DIFFERENT WAR: Marines in Europe and North Africa
by Lieutenant Colonel Harry W. Edwards, U.S. Marine Corps (Ret)
Assignment to London
It is interesting to note that, when the 1st
Provisional Brigade went ashore at Reykjavik, Iceland, it was met on the
dock by Major Walter I. Jordan and members of his 12th Provisional
Marine Company. These 11 Marines were survivors of the torpedoing and
sinking of the Dutch transport, SS Maasdam, by a German submarine
300 miles south of Iceland on 26 June. They were rescued and taken to
Iceland on the SS Randa. The men had formed an advance detail of
Major Jordan's unit, en route from the Marine Barracks in Washington for
assignment in London. Reembarked on the SS Volendam, they finally
reached London on 15 July, there to join forces with 48 other Marines,
including three officers, Captain John B. Hill and First Lieutenants Roy
J. Batterton, Jr., and Joseph L. Atkins. These three officers had been
embarked on another Dutch transport, the SS Indraporia, which
made the crossing without mishap. The 59-man organization was designated
the Marine Detachment, American Embassy. A second echelon arrived about
six months later.
The table of organization for this detachment had
been prepared in London sometime earlier by Major John C. McQueen, at
the request of Admiral Robert L. Ghormley, Assistant Chief of Naval
Operations, who was in England at the time.
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A
Marine duty NCO checks in visitors to the American Embassy in London,
while other Marines stand guard at the entrance and the check-in
point. Photo courtesy of Col Roy J. Batterton, USMC
(Ret)
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Major McQueen had been sent to London in the prewar
period in 1940. He traveled in civilian clothes on a ship, Duchess of
Richmond, and arrived in London during a German air raid. After
reporting to the American Embassy, he went to Inveraray, Scotland, to
observe the training of Royal Marines and especially to study the
landing craft in use by the British. Marine Major Arthur T. Mason
accompanied McQueen on this visit. Mason benefited from these contacts
in his subsequent duty assignment to the combined operations section on
the staff of the Supreme Commander Southeast Asia, Admiral Lord Louis
Mountbatten.
While McQueen was in London, he was concerned about
the lack of security at the American Embassy at 1 Grosvenor Square and
made some comments to that effect. The American Ambassador, John Winant,
was so impressed that he gave McQueen the job of embassy security
officer.
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London Marines also served as fire wardens during the
Nazi air raids on the city, and were prepared to put out fires on the
roof of their detachment quarters in Grosvenor Square in 1942. They were
to remain here for the rest of the war. Photo courtesy of Col Roy J.
Batterton, USMC (Ret)
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Before leaving to return to Washington, he was
entrusted with a classified instrument to be delivered to the Office of
Naval Intelligence (ONI). He had some anxious moments en route home
through the Azores, since it was considered to be a den of spies at that
time. Upon arrival in New York, he was met, unexpectedly, by strangers
in civilian clothes. He thought surely they were out to waylay him, only
to learn that they were ONI security men. He was relieved when he
delivered his precious cargo to Washington: a top-secret radar device
invented by the British and specifications for its manufacture. It was
greatly superior to equipment then in development in the United
States.
McQueen was but one of a succession of Marine
officers ordered to London during this period before the war and
continuing throughout the war. Most of them held the title of "assistant
naval attache" (ANA) or "special naval observer" (SNO). The ANA
designation enabled one to travel on a diplomatic passport and to enjoy
many of its privileges, including immunity from arrest in the host
country. An attache was a member not only of the official staff of the
American Ambassador to Great Britain, but also of the diplomatic corps,
composed of all of the foreign governmental representatives resident in
London. An attache also could be accredited to the London embassy while
being designated as ANA in other countries. This was the case with
several Marine officers, who were accredited to London and assigned to
Cairo and other capitals.
Once established in London, the Marine Detachment,
American Embassy, under command of Major Walter I. Jordan, with Captain
John B. Hill as executive officer, became the official reporting echelon
for nearly all Marine personnel serving in Europe and Africa, including
those on temporary duty and those attached to the OSS. The detachment
was billeted at 20 Grosvenor Square, which was known at that time as the
American Embassy Annex.
Major Jordan and Captain Hill both held the title of
ANA and their duties took them to various parts of the United Kingdom as
Special Naval Observers (SNOs). Jordan was the only detachment commander
to carry this added title. None of the three officers who succeeded him
in the post Captain Thomas J. Myers, First Lieutenant Alan
Doubleday, and Captain Harry W. Edwards were so designated.
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Maj
John C. McQueen was ordered to England in 1940 to observe the training
of Royal Marines and to study the types of British landing craft. While
in London, he was appointed Embassy security officer by Ambassador
Winant. Department of Defense (USMC) A49691
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Initially, the detachment roster showed a strength of
four officers and 55 enlisted men. Since this was the first embassy
detachment in London for the Marine Corps, the enlisted personnel were
selected with emphasis on intelligence and military bearing; many of
them had previously served in the 1939 World's Fair Detachment in New
York. When the second echelon of the 12th Provisional Marine Company
arrived in December 1941 with 2 more officers and 62 enlisted Marines,
the strength swelled to 123. The two additional officers were Captain
Walter Layer and First Lieutenant Thomas J. Myers.
Before departure from America, all members of the
detachment were outfitted with a complete civilian wardrobe, purchased
from the Hecht Company in Washington, D.C., with a government clothing
allowance. It was U.S. policy, prior to the declaration of war, to have
military personnel travel in civilian clothes when en route to countries
which were at war.
The mission of the London detachment was to provide
security for the American Embassy and to furnish escorts for State
Department couriers. Sergeant John H. Allen, Jr., was assigned duty as
orderly to the American Ambassador. The unit's billet on Grosvenor
Square was close to the American Embassy, a very prestigious address in
peacetime, but a tempting target in wartime. The Marines established
their own mess, appointed an air raid precaution officer and, with the
arrival of Harley-Davidson motorcycles equipped with sidecars, operated
a courier service between the Embassy and various governmental staff
offices in London. Warrant Officer George V. Clark organized the
service, modeled after one that he operated in Shanghai, China, for the
4th Marines during 1937-1939.
As with all services, the immediate prewar era was a
period of rapid expansion for the Marine Corps. Marine aviation, which
would grow from 240 pilots in 1940 to 10,000 in 1944, focused much of
its attention on the Royal Air Force (RAF), whose effective air defense
in the Battle of Britain (1940) was one of the greatest military
victories of all time. It had severely reduced the strength and combat
efficiency of the Luftwaffe, the German air force, saved the
beleaguered survivors of Dunkirk, and protected England from invasion.
Many Marine aviators visited England and Egypt during this time, and
what they learned from the RAF would have a profound effect upon the
development of tactics and techniques employed by the Marine air arm
during World War II.
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LtCol Jordan fostered good relations with the Allied
services in England, and especially with the Royal Marines. A rifle
match was held jointly with them at Portsmouth in 1942. According to the
scoreboard, the Royal Marines won. Photo courtesy of Col Roy J. Batterton, USMC
(Ret)
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