A DIFFERENT WAR: Marines in Europe and North Africa
by Lieutenant Colonel Harry W. Edwards, U.S. Marine Corps (Ret)
Assignment to London (continued)
Major General Ralph J. Mitchell, Director of Aviation
at Headquarters, U.S. Marine Corps, prior to World War II, was eager to
have his officers and NCOs learn what they could from the British
experience of fighting the Luftwaffe. He sent them as observers
to Cairo and London and frequently as students or trainees to various
training courses offered by the British.
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In
1941, MajGen Ralph J. Mitchell, Director of Aviation at Headquarters,
Marine Corps, dispatched senior Marine aviators to observe and learn
what they could from British air tactics against the Nazis in the desert
war. Then-Col Roy S. Geiger, here in a postwar official portrait, was
one of the first sent to Egypt. Department of Defense Photo (USMC)
303319
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These practices began before America entered the war,
and continued throughout the war. Most of those officers were given the
status of ANA for Air, and assigned to the American Embassy in London.
After June 1941, they were carried, for record purposes, on the muster
rolls of the Marine Detachment in London.
Among the first arrivals, in April 1941, were
Colonels Roy S. Geiger and Christian F. Schilt. They spent their time in
Africa, observing British operations. Geiger was on board the British
aircraft carrier Formidable while it was performing escort duty.
By the time the carrier had reached its destination, it had lost all of
its aircraft and pilots in combat operations protecting the convoy from
attack by aircraft and submarines.
Brigadier General Ross E. Rowell and Captain Edward
C. Dyer took the long trip around through China and India and arrived in
Cairo a month later. Rowell was interested in the operational side of
the RAF and he told Dyer to concentrate on the technical aspects, since
Dyer was a communications specialist with an advanced electronics degree
and had been assigned to the Navy Bureau of Aeronautics.
They met with top British military leaders: General
Sir Archibald Wavell, Air Vice Marshal Arthur Tedder, and Admiral Andrew
Cunningham, and found all of them extremely cooperative. In anticipation
of American entry into the war, nearly all of the British commanders
were very friendly and forthcoming with their military visitors. The
only exception was General Bernard L. Montgomery, who had a reputation
for not tolerating visitors at his headquarters.
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Col
Christian F Schilt was another Marine pilot sent to the Middle East. For
bravery in January 1928 while flying with Observation Squadron 7-M,
then-1stLt Schilt was awarded the Medal of Honor. He served in both
World War II and the Korean War, where he was commander of the 1st
MAW. Department of Defense Photo (USMC) A401984
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The Marines were favorably impressed by a number of
things which they observed, including: the organization of the war
rooms; the RAF radio intercept system used to track the movement of all
German aircraft; deceptive use of dummy airfields, complete with dummy
aircraft; the competence of British radio technicians and their
ingenuity in salvaging material for operational repairs; and the
effective air defense system employed by the RAF in the Western
Desert.
Other Marine aviators who arrived in Cairo at this
time included Lieutenant Colonels Claude A. Lar kin and Walter G.
Farrell, and Captain Perry O. Parmalee. All visited RAF squadrons in
Haifa and Beirut as well as Egypt.
While in Egypt, Dyer contracted yellow jaundice and
dengue fever and was to be hospitalized for a month. Once recovered, he
caught up with Rowell in London, where they visited the RAF Coastal
Command headquarters in Scotland and Bomber Command in England. They
observed how the RAF used pathfinder aircraft to guide their bomber
formations over German targets and how they employed saturation bombing
to minimize losses.
Dyer enrolled in a three-week course for fighter
controllers at Stanmore where, for the first time, he was given detailed
information about the use of radar. The Germans, as did the U.S., also
had some radar equipment, but it was not nearly as sophisticated, or
effective, as that developed by the British. Dyer next attended a
British radar school and stood watches, as an observer, at various
Fighter Command stations and ground control intercept stations, so as to
become well indoctrinated in the system.
For his return home, Dyer embarked on a British
aircraft carrier and that was, for him, the most disappointing part of
the entire trip. He alleged that the British use of alcohol in their
wardrooms adversely affected both their personnel and their flight
operations.
Drawing upon his training and observations in
England, Dyer was able to suggest changes in Marine aviation doctrine
for employing intercepting aircraft more effectively. He also was able
to adopt much of the RAF system of night interception in the subsequent
development of training for night fighter squadrons in the Marine
Corps.
Back in Washington, he shared his knowledge with
others, especially his Naval Academy classmate, Major Frank H. Schwable,
who later played a large role in developing a night-fighter program for
the Marine Corps.
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Two
Marine aviators, BGen Ross E. Rowell, left, and Capt Edward C. Dyer took
the long trip to the Middle East by way of China and India, and arrived
in Cairo in May 1941. They both went on to England, where they observed
British bombing tactics. Dyer attended fighter control and radar
schools, learning ground control systems. Department of Defense Photos (USMC)
12631 and 11868
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Dyer's visit to England was quickly followed by those
of other Marine flyers in 1941 and 1942. They included Schwable and
Major Lewis G. "Griff" Merritt. Schwable was directed by the Commandant
of the Marine Corps to "get all the information you can on the
organization and operation of night fighting squadrons, paying
particular attention to the operational routine, squadron training,
gunnery and tactical doctrine..." He also was told not to be concerned
about the technical end of it, since that had been covered by Dyer.
Schwable and Merritt also visited Cairo to observe British air
operations in desert warfare.
When Schwable returned home in April 1942, he wrote a
detailed report on his findings. He was convinced that the most
essential qualification for a night fighter pilot was his desire to be
one. He recommended that those selected should be fairly young but
stable and conscientious, cool headed but aggressive, and not
quick-on-the-trigger or devil-may-care, as many a day fighter had
been.
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Maj
Frank H. Schwable was directed by MajGenComdt Thomas Holcomb to go to
England to "get all the information you can on the organization and
operation of night fighting squadrons . . . . When he returned to the
United States, he pioneered Marine Corps night fighter tactics and
commanded the first such night fighter squadron in the Pacific.
Department of
Defense Photo (USMC) 68297
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He and Dyer fought hard to obtain funding for the
aircraft and personnel that would ultimately produce an effective night
fighter capability for the Marine Corps. When the first Marine Night
Fighter Squadron, VMF(N)-531, was commissioned on 16 November 1942,
Schwable became its leader and it would achieve a fine combat record in
the Pacific war.
The list of Marine aviators who visited Europe and
North Africa operations continued. Lieutenant Colonel Francis P. Mulcahy
and Major William J. Manley both spent nearly all of their time in
Egypt. Lieutenant Colonel Field Harris and Major William D. McKittrick
spent nearly four months, from August to November 1941, inspecting
British aircraft facilities and equipment (much of which was
American-made), debriefing bomber crews, and talking with staff
officers. They also visited Palestine, Syria, and Cyprus.
Captain Etheridge C. Best went to England to study
the communications control system in the RAF. He attended the RAF Day
Fighter Controller Course and several courses regarding radar. He also
visited most of the RAF units in England. Returning home in early 1942,
he helped to pioneer the use of a ground control intercept system by the
Marine Corps and became a deputy director of the Electronics Division of
the Bureau of Aeronautics.
Prodded by an urgent request from Admiral William F.
Halsey for a night fighter capability in the Pacific, the Marine Corps
continued to send aviation personnel to England to observe and train
with the RAF in order to learn its system of night fighting and radar
control. Among the officers so assigned were Majors Frank H.
Lamson-Scribner, William Via, Michael Sampas, Gooderham L. McCormick,
Frank G. Dailey, and John Wehle.
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Another pilot sent to the Middle East was Maj Lewis G.
"Griff" Merritt, who had the unique experience, as a Marine, of being
shot down by a Luftwaffe plane while a passenger in a RAF
aircraft. Department of Defense Photo (USMC) 14569-A
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Major Wehle, who was a Marine test pilot, took
particular interest in testing various British aircraft. He was also
charged to investigate the British glider program. He returned to the
U.S. with a negative recommendation, which probably helped to doom a
Marine Corps glider program that was already underway.
Many distinguished ground officers also conducted
productive visits to England as observers prior to America's entrance
into the war.
Colonel Julian C. Smith and Major Jack P. Juhan
arrived in London at the height of the German air blitz and spent some
anxious moments in air-raid shelters. They collected a large amount of
material on landing boats and tactics, enjoyed a number of high-level
briefings, and toured the British amphibious warfare base at Rosneath,
Scotland, where they had a visit with Prime Minister Winston S.
Churchill. Their trips were followed by those of Colonel John T. Walker,
Majors George F. Good, Jr. and Lyman G. Miller, Captains Bruce T.
Hemphill, Eustace C. Smoak, Joe Smoak, and Charles Cox, and Warrant
Officer Ira Brook.
During May and June of 1941, Major Good and Captain
Hemphill traveled to England on a secret mission, along with some Navy
civil engineers, to tour four base sites, two in Scotland and two in
Ireland, and to advise the Marine Corps and the Navy as to their
security requirements. They arrived in London on a Pan American Airways
Clipper flight via Lisbon.
Their itinerary included a five-day stay in
Londonderry, Northern Ireland, followed by a stop in Greenoch, Scotland.
At the end of their reconnaissance, Major Good returned to Iceland to
rejoin the 5th Defense Battalion, and Captain Hemphill escorted the
newly arrived Marine embassy guard detachment to London before returning
to Washington.
Majors Wallace M. Greene, Jr., and Samuel B. Griffith
II, arrived together in England in 1941 with an interest in special
forces, in anticipation of the establishment of similar organizations in
the Marine Corps. Greene attended the British Amphibious Warfare School
and the Royal Engineers' Demolition School, while Griffith observed
commando training. After their return and based to a degree upon
an impetus from the White House Major General Thomas Holcomb,
Commandant of the Marine Corps, authorized the formation of two raider
battalions. Griffith became the executive officer of the 1st Raider
Battalion and subsequently its commander.
The concept of having specialized units in the Marine
Corps was a controversial issue and would continue to be so during the
war. Commando training, however, was a focus of interest as the Marines
noted the success the British commandos had, and they welcomed the
opportunity to send Marines to England for that training.
On 7 June 1942, the London detachment designated two
of its officers, Captain Roy T. Batterton, Jr., and Marine Gunner George
V. Clark, and 10 enlisted men, to take the training. Captain Batterton
later provided some interesting highlights of his experience during
seven grueling weeks that summer (He considered the course to have been
extremely valuable to him during his subsequent duty with the 4th Marine
Raider Battalion in the Pacific.).
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Then-Col Julian C. Smith, left, and Maj Jack P Juhan
arrived in England at the height of the German air raids to collect
information on British landing craft and tactics, and to tour the
amphibious warfare base at Rosneath, Scotland.
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Batterton's Marine detail was assigned successively
to four different commando units for its training at various bases in
Scotland and England. Three were British Army Commandos (4th, 6th, and
9th) and one Royal Marines. A British Army commando averaged 500 men in
size with a lieutenant colonel in command. There were six troops per
commando, each commanded by a captain, and three sections per troop,
each commanded by a lieutenant.
Their training began at Achnacarry, Scotland, where
the Marines were quartered in Nissen huts. Their beds consisted of
wooden slabs, laid across six-inch blocks with straw mats as mattresses.
Their working day was from 0830 to 1740, with time off only on Saturday
afternoons. Training was in 40-minute periods allocated as follows: Bren
gun, 16 periods; Thompson sub-machine gun, 4; grenades, 9; pistol, 4;
foreign arms, 6; Garand rifle, 10; firing all weapons, 20; physical
training, 21; bayonet, 6; climbing, 4. In addition, there were various
course exercises, toggle bridging, field craft (scouting and
patrolling), marching, map-reading, and two field exercises of 16 and 36
hours each.
A rapid, seven-mile march demanded the utmost
endurance. On such a forced march, the British required that all men
keep in step, all the time, at either quick- or double-time, to create
the teamwork which is essential to achieving their objective.
On a toggle ride (called "Death Ride"), they crossed
a stream by climbing a tree with the help of a 50-foot rope ladder, then
sliding down a taut rope stretched downward at a 30-degree angle from
the tree to another on the opposite bank, by looping the toggle rope
over the taut rope. A toggle rope is normally six feet long and half an
inch in diameter, with a wooden handle spliced on one end and an eye
spliced on the other end.
For descending from cliffs, they were taught a method
called "absailing," which involves the use of a 100-foot length of
1/2-inch rope, looped first around a tree or a rock. The descent is made
in bounds, and the rope section is brought along with each increment of
descent.
In an assault exercise, performed in 10 minutes, they
crawled under a barbed wire, ascended a log ramp in order to jump from
an eight-foot height over a six-foot barbed wire obstacle, descended a
cliff by rope, and finished with a bayonet charge!
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Capt
Roy J. Batterton and Marine Gunner George V Clark of the London
detachment took 10 members of the detachment north to Scotland to begin
a seven-week commando training course. They are shown here at
Achnacarry, where they began their training. In the front row are, from
left: PFC Edgar Reynolds, Capt Batterton, Cpl John Sudro, and Sgt George
Allen. Middle row: Cpl Walter Kelly, PFC Michael Dunbar, PFC Donald
Stoner, and Cpl Paul Cramer. Rear row: Sgt George Hudock, Marine Gunner
Clark, PFC Taylor Collom, PlSgt Way Holland, Sgt Curtis Tatum, and Cpl
Henry Dozier. Another member, Sgt Robert Ryan, was not present.
Photo courtesy of
Col Roy J. Batterton, USMC (Ret)
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In another such exercise, two-man teams were
employed, one covering the other, to approach a dummy house while firing
from the hip with automatic weapons, throwing grenades through the
windows, searching the structure, then departing over a fence, down a
ravine by rope ladder, and up the other side by rope, using grenades
against surprise targets, and ending with a bayonet charge. They also
practiced rowing a 30-foot whaleboat, followed by a cross-country run of
two miles from and back to the boat.
Several of these assault exercises were conducted
with live ammunition. The training schedule proceeded regardless of
weather, which is frequently poor in Scotland. During training hours in
the camp area, with few exceptions, everyone moved on the double.
For their 36-hour exercise, they embarked for a night
landing on a simulated Norwegian coastal area. Upon landing they moved
15 miles to a viaduct, made preparations to "blow it up;" and returned
by a different route which was 35 miles cross-country. They organized a
defensive perimeter and signaled for a retrieval by boat.
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During their periods of training in Scotland, the London
Marines were taught how to climb cliffs using mountaineering techniques.
Similar skills are elements of training undertaken by present-day Marine
Corps reconnaissance units. Photo courtesy of Col Roy J. Batterton, USMC
(Ret)
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During the course of the seven weeks of training, the
Marines went from Achnacarry, Scotland; to Cowes on the Isle of Wight;
to Portsmouth, England (where they embarked in preparation for a landing
at Dieppe on the French coast); then back to Scotland to Lachailort and
Helensburgh. Thereafter, it was a tired but physically fit, well-trained
detail of Marines which returned to its detachment in London on 31 July.
These Marines were soon transferred to the United States and assigned to
combat units for duty in the Pacific, mostly to Marine raider battalions
in which they could practice and share their lessons learned.
The senior British instructor was so pleased with the
performance of this group that he sent a letter via Admiral Lord Louis
Mountbatten, then head of British combined operations, to Admiral Stark
at the headquarters of Commander, Naval Forces Europe, stating that "the
Marines have undergone an arduous commando training with an
exceptionally unconquerable spirit which never wavered during the
course!" He singled out for special praise the work of Captain Batterton
and Marine Gunner Clark and three NCOs: Platoon Sergeant Way Holland,
and Sergeants George J. Huddock and Curtis A. Tatum. This report pleased
Major Jordan, as he had been instrumental in organizing an exchange of
training between the Royal Marines and the Corps which would continue
over the years. Captain Batterton and his detail were not the first
group of Marines to receive this commando training, nor were they the
last. It proved to be a beneficial training resource for the Marine
Corps in the early stages of World War II.
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