LIBERATION: Marines in the Recapture of Guam by Cyril J. O'Brien
The Attack North
III Corps's Geiger knew Obata's probable route of
retreat and drew up a succession of objectives across the island which
would incrementally seize all potential enemy strong points. Jump-off
for the drive north was 063031 July with the 3d Marine Division on the
left and the 77th Infantry Division on the right, dividing the island
down the middle. The Marine zone would include the island capital of
Agana, the Japanese airfield at Tiyan, Finegayan, and the shores of
Tumon Bay. The 77th would have Mount Barrigada, Yigo, and Mount Santa
Rosa in its zone. The 1st Marine Brigade relieved the 77th Division of
the defense of the southern portion of the FBHL and would continue to
patrol the southern half of Guam. As the Corps attack moved northward
and the is land widened, the brigade would eventually take part in the
drive to the extreme north coast of the island.
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Marine artillerymen, members of Battery C, 7th 155mm (Long Toms) Gun
Battalion, III Amphibious Corps Artillery, take advantage of a lull in
fire missions to swab the bore of their gun. Soon after, the gun was
back in battery firing missions. Department of Defense Photo (USMC)
91347
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Fleet Marine Force, Pacific commander LtGen Holland M. Smith, right,
stands with the leaders of the successful retaking of Orote Peninsula.
From left to right, LtCol Alan Shapley; BGen Lemuel C. Shepherd, Jr.;
and Col Merlin F Schneider. Department of Defense Photo (USMC)
93543
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The 3d Division reached Ordot in the center of its
zone where Obata had directed some of his survivors. The 3d Battalion,
21st Marines, ran into them and one of their pillboxes, which the
Marines thoroughly gutted. The Americans also accounted for 15
infantrymen and two light tanks which were the targets of M-1s and
bazookas.
The honor of liberating Agana fell to the 3d
Battalion, 3d Marines. The riflemen entered the townÕs ruins treading
carefully, sizing up the stark, dusty building walls for snipers. A few
enemy riflemen emerged from behind concrete outcroppings then dropped
back into eternity. The Japanese guards were stragglers, the wounded, or
a few foolish enough to stay. In one house, a Marine opened a closet to
reveal a Japanese officer, sword in hand. The Marine slammed the door,
riddled it with an automatic rifle, and didn't bother to look again. The
once-beautiful old Plaza de Espana was in American hands 15 minutes
after the town was entered. By noon it was secured.
The 1st and 2d Battalions, 3d Marines, moved along to
the critical Agana-Pago Road. At 1350 the 21st Marines was right up
there with them after the few engagements with pillboxes, snipers, and
tanks. By 1510, Colonel Craig's 9th Marines on the division's right was
partially across the road and seized the remaining portion of that
highway in its sector on the next day. Hardsurfaced, with two lanes
across the midriff of the island, the Agana-Pago Road would prove
critical in winning the battle of Guam.
Leaving Agana and its historic rescue of the capital,
the 3d Battalion, 3d Marines, under Major Royal R. Bastian, Jr., who had
taken command when Lieutenant Colonel Houser was wounded on 22 July,
moved on with relative ease. Before dusk the battalion had seized 1,400
yards of other critical roads and trails which led to strategic and
defended strongpoints of Finegayan and Barrigada.
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As the regimental field music sounds "To the Colors," Col Schneider and
his 22d Marines staff and command salute as the American flag is raised
over Guam for the first time since it was taken down by the Japanese
invaders in December 1941.
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General Turnage got well within striking distance of
the Tiyan airfield and the little town of San Antonio, on the 31st, but
the next day, 1 August, his advance was seriously slowed by mines. It
took the cool skill and slow and steady hands of the bomb disposal
specialists of the 25th Naval Construction Battalion and the 19th
Marines' engineers to reduce those obstacles.
Students of the battle and those who were there
consider the taking of the cross-island Agana-Pago Road as a major
factor in guaranteeing the success of the drive northward. Its capture
solved a host of logistic problems, for the 77th particularly. The Army
division, for example, had no roads heading north initially in its zone
of advance and needed such a road over which it could supply its troops
as they came down out of the hills and cut their way through the jungle.
Frontline troops in the Army zone were soon running low on supplies,
especially water. General Bruce promised his people a hot breakfast as
soon as they and the Marines could give him the road. Trucks were soon
thick on the road even while SeaBees and engineers were enlarging and
repairing it.
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Troops of the 3d Battalion, 3d Marines, enter the wreckage of Agana in
the trace of retreating Japanese forces, who had planted land mines
before they left. Department of Defense Photo (USMC) 93571
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The 77th had moved out on schedule just after
daylight on 31 July, with the 307th Infantry in the advance, followed by
the 305th. As was the situation facing the 3d Division, enemy resistance
to the Army advance was negligible. Within two hours, both Army
regiments had secured the cross-island road in their zones. The 307th
rescued 2,000 Guamanians in the detention camp at Asinan. Unopposed, the
77th by noon of 1 August was across the Pago River. Residents of the
area said the Japanese had left in a hurry for Barrigada, a destination
where III Corps intelligence already anticipated the enemy would hold
up. The jungle-covered mountain there, 674 feet high, dominated the
area.
General Bruce assigned the capture of Barrigada to
the 307th. It was to maintain contact with the 3d Marine Division on the
left and push through the town, then continue about a mile to seize
Mount Barrigada. The 305th to the right of the 307th would attack in the
same direction east of the town and Barrigada mountain and protect to
the coast. The town was in a clearing fully swept with defensive machine
gun fire. In the same clearing was a much-desired well. Its capture
meant the world to the parched troops.
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Soldiers of the 77th Division reach the end of the road bulldozed by the
302d Engineer Combat Battalion, and strike out cross country in the 31
July advance.
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The Catholic cemetery of Anigua became the home of approximately 7,000
Guamanians liberated from Japanese rule. Here a family lives in a
temporary shelter.
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(click on image for an enlargement in a new window)
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At 0630, 2 August General Bruce dispatched a dozen
tanks of the 706th Tank Battalion on a reconnaissance. As the "recon"
armor turned into Barrigada town, the enemy opened up with a torrent of
fire. The determined Japanese fiercely resisted the 307th when it
reached the town and were equally determined to stop the 305th on the
right as that regiment's assault companies tried to outflank the town.
Repeated tank attacks and heavy artillery support netted only a few
yards at a time, but the soldiers kept advancing and by 4 August, the
77th Division held the town, or what was left of it, its precious well,
and the crest of the mountain.
Captured documents and interviews with prisoners
again left little doubt that the 77th Division's major obstacle would be
rugged, heavily crevassed, and jungled Mount Santa Rosa. It is six and a
half miles north east of Barrigada and a short distance from the ocean
on the east coast.
First to be addressed on the way were well-armed
outposts like Finegayan and Yigo. Each promised casualties, blood, and
delay. General Geiger employed the 77th to reduce Yigo and take Santa
Rosa, and left the capture of Finegayan and the rest of northern Guam
principally to the 3d Marine Division. He brought up General Shepherd's
brigade to assist in the final drive. To protect the Force Beachhead
Line, care for the Guamanians, and hunt down enemy stragglers in the
south, General Geiger tasked the 1st Battalion, 22d Marines; the 7th
Antiaircraft Artillery Battalion; and the 9th Defense Battalion, all
under Lieutenant Colonel Archie E. O'Neil, who commanded the 9th.
Before moving on, the brigade had aggressively sought
out Japanese holdouts, brought the fearful Guamanians into friendly
compounds, and provided security for those who chose to remain in their
own homes and again work their own ranches. As late as 2 August, 4th
Marines' patrols approaching Talofofo Bay on the southeast coast, came
across some 2,000 natives, still apprehensive of the Japanese, who were
directed to a compound which promised safety and at least minimum
comforts. The Guamanian people in their own residential and farm areas
could, however, still readily call upon the civil affairs sections for
food, protection, medicine, and shelter. Such civil care was integral to
the American occupation and was controlled by Marine General Larsen, who
would head the garrison force as soon as the island was again under the
American flag.
During the night of 2-3 August, the 12th Marines
delivered 777 rounds of harassing and interdictory fire on the roads and
trails the division would encounter around Finegayan. At 0700 on 3
August, the 3d and 9th Marines moved in assault well past the Tinyan
airfield. Then, about 0910 the 9th encountered a block at the cross
roads approaching Finegayan village. The situation and terrain favored
the Japanese with excellent fields of fire. After the Japanese position
was finally overrun with tanks, Lieutenant Colonel Carey Randall,
commanding 1st Battalion, 9th Marines, said that these defenses were the
toughest he had faced on Guam.
(click on image for an enlargement in a new window)
That contest for Finegayan was the last major battle
for the 3d Division on Guam. The Japanese made it something to remember.
A 3d Division armored reconnaissance patrol headed for Ritidian Point on
the northernmost point of the island ran into Japanese defenses located
on the Finegayan trails bristling with anti-tank weapons and artillery
pointed in the direction of the patrol. The Americans were surprised and
bruised, did the Japanese some harm, but sensibly cancelled the
mission.
The Japanese were plenty feisty at Finegayan, and in
a telling thrust dispatched two medium tanks which skirted the
crossroads of the 9th Marines at Junction 177 and went up the
Finegayan-Mount Santa Rosa Road. Impervious to Marine fire, the tanks
shot up the area and got away. Another tank force of undetermined size
then rumbled down under cover of a mortar barrage and it looked like the
beginning of a counterattack. Artillery stilled that Japanese effort.
The enemy tanks were driven off but survived to reappear again another
day.
It was in one of those typical sudden enemy attacks
around Finegayan that Private First Class Frank P. Witek, with automatic
rifle and grenades, raced ahead of his own tanks to destroy an eight-man
Japanese position which was holding back elements of his 1st Battalion,
9th Marines. He succeeded, but was killed. He was posthumously awarded
the Medal of Honor.
PFC Witek's Medal of Honor Hailed Inspiring Acts'
Private First Class Frank Peter Witek's Medal of
Honor citation reads as follows: "For conspicuous gallantry and
intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty
while serving with the 1st Battalion, 9th Marines, 3d Marine Division,
during the Battle of Finegayan at Guam, Marianas Islands, on 3 August
1944. When his rifle platoon was halted by heavy surprise fire from well
camouflaged enemy positions, Private First Class Witek daringly remained
standing to fire a full magazine from his [Browning] automatic [rifle]
at point-blank range into a depression housing Japanese troops, killing
eight of the enemy and enabling the greater part of his platoon to take
cover. During his platoon's withdrawal for consolidation of lines, he
remained to safeguard a severely wounded comrade, courageously returning
the enemy's fire until the arrival of stretcher bearers, and then
covering the evacuation by sustained fire as he moved backward toward
his own lines. With his platoon again pinned down by a hostile machine
gun, Private First Class Witek, on his initiative, moved forward boldly
to the reinforcing tanks, and infantry, alternately throwing hand
grenades and firing as he advanced to within 5 to 10 yards of the enemy
position, and destroying the hostile machine-gun emplacement and an
additional eight Japanese before he himself was struck down by an enemy
rifleman. His valiant and inspiring action effectively reduced the
enemy's firepower, there by enabling his platoon to attain its
objective, and reflects the highest credit upon Private First Class
Witek and the United States naval service. He gallantly gave his life
for his country."
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