A CLOSE ENCOUNTER: The Marine Landing on Tinian
by Richard Harwood
Final Days
The Japanese were now cornered in a small area of
southeastern Tinian. The Marines "had advanced so rapidly that only
four square miles of the island remained for safe firing by ships not
supporting battalions [i.e., not with shore spotters]," according to a
report on 30 July by Rear Admiral Harry W. Hill, commander of the
Northern Attack Force.
The Marine commander for the operation, Major General
Schmidt, saw the end in sight and late on the afternoon of 30 July
issued an operations order calling on the divisions to drive all the way
to the southeast coastline, seize all territory remaining in enemy hands
and "annihilate the opposing Japanese."
This was not a trifling assignment; it produced the
heaviest fighting since the counterattack on the night of Jig Day. A
Japanese warrant officer captured on 29 July estimated that 500 troops
of the 56th Naval Guard Force and from 1,700 to 1,800 troops of
the 50th Infantry Regiment remained in the southeastern area in a
battle ready condition. American intelligence estimates on 29 July,
based on daily reports from the divisions, reckoned that 3,000 Japanese
soldiers and sailors had been killed or taken prisoner up to that point.
If that was the case, two-thirds of the nearly 9,000 Japanese defenders
were still alive on the island.
|
As a
Navy corpsman administers a bottle of plasma to a wounded Marine, the
stretcher bearers wait patiently to carry him on board a landing craft
which will evacuate him to a hospital ship offshore, where he will be
given full treatment. Department of Defense Photo (USMC) 87434
|
The terrain occupied by the Japanese main force was
rugged, difficult to reach or traverse and well-suited for defense.
Outside of Tinian Town the gentle landscape ended, with the ground
rising to a high plateau 5,000 yards long and 2,000 yards wide, with
altitudes higher than 500 feet. The plateau was rocky and covered with
thick brush. There were many caves. Along the east coast, the cliff
walls rose steeply and appeared impossible to scale. The approaches to
the plateau were blocked by many cliffs of this sort as well as by
jungle growth. A road in the center of the plateau, leading to its top,
was reported by a prisoner to be mined. The plateau was the enemy's last
redoubt.
It became the object of the most intense bombardments
any Japanese force had yet experienced to date in World War II. Marine
artillery regiments on the island and the XXIV Corps Artillery on
southern Saipan fired throughout the night of 30-31 July on the wooded
clifflines the Marines would face during their assault. At 0600, the
battleships Tennessee and California, the heavy cruiser
Louisville, and the light cruisers Montpelier and
Birmingham began the first of two sustained bombardments that
morning. They fired for 75 minutes, then halted to allow a 40-minute
strike on the plateau by 126 P-47s, North American Mitchell B-25
bombers, and Grumman Avenger torpedo bombers from the escort carrier
Kitkun Bay. The planes dropped 69 tons of explosives before the
off shore gunfire resumed for another 35 minutes. All told, the
battleships and cruisers fired approximately 615 tons of shells at their
targets. Artillerymen of the 10th Marines fired about 5,000 rounds
during the night; 14th Marines gunners fired 2,000. The effect, one
prisoner said, was "almost unbearable."
As you faced south on that morning, the regimental
alignments from west coast to east coast were the 24th, 23d, 8th, 6th
and 2d Marines. The task of the 24th was to clear out the western
coastal area, with one battalion assigned to seizure of the plateau. The
2d Marines was to seal off the east coast at the base of the plateau.
The 6th, 8th, and 23d Marines would assault the cliff areas and make
their way to the top of the plateau.
|
Some
badly wounded casualties died of their severe injuries after having been
evacuated from Tinian. Those who succumbed to their wounds were buried
at sea. Marine Corps Historical Collection
|
The 24th, jumping off with the 23d at 0830, moved
into the coastal plain and immediately encountered brush and undergrowth
so dense that tank operations were severely hampered. As compensation,
armored amphibians lying offshore provided heavy fires against enemy
beach positions and covered the regiment's right flank as it made its
way down the coast. A platoon-size Japanese beach unit launched a
foolish counterattack on the 1st Battalion, 24th Marines at about 1000.
The Japanese were annihilated. Later, flame-throwing tanks burned off
brush and undergrowth concealing Japanese riflemen.
|
Two
Marines escort two apparently healthy, hearty, and willing Japanese
prisoners to be turned in at the POW stockade in the rear of the
fighting. Most of the prisoners taken on Tinian, however, were civilian
workers rather than military men. Department of Defense Photo (USMC)
91365
|
|
Tank-infantry tactics perfected in prior operations
proved successful on Tinian as well. The riflemen served as the eyes of
the armored vehicle and would direct the tank crewmen over a telephone
mounted in a box on the rear of the tank. Department of Defense Photo (USMC)
152074
|
On the regiment's left flank, the 3d Battalion was in
assault at the base of the plateau. It encountered minimal opposition
until about 1600 when it began to receive rifle and machine gun fire
from cliff positions. Tanks were called on but soon found themselves
mired in a minefield and were held up for several hours while engineers
cleared 45 mines from the area.
The 1st Battalion, 23d Marines, encountered similar
troubles. As the regiment approached the plateau, it ran into dense
small arms fire from two positionsa small village at the base of
the cliff and from the cliff face itself. It also began receiving fire
from a "large-caliber weapon." Lacking tank support the Marines pressed
forward, running a few yards, diving on their bellies, getting up, and
advancing again. Medium tanks finally came up in search of this elusive
and well-concealed weapon. One of them took six quick hits from the
concealed position of this Japanese gun. A second tank was hit but in
the process the enemy position was discovered: a camouflaged, concrete
bunker housing a 47mm antitank gun and 20 troops, all of whom were
killed.
The 2d Battalion of the 23d had similar difficulties.
After coming under fire from riflemen and machine gunners, one of its
supporting tanks was disabled by a mine. After its crew was taken to
safety by another tank, the disabled vehicle was seized by the Japanese
and used as an armored machine gun nest. Other tanks soon took it out.
The 23d also lost that day two 37mm guns and a one-ton truck belonging
to the regiment's half-track platoon. The guns and the vehicle got too
far out front, came under heavy fire and were abandoned. A detail from
the platoon later retrieved one of the guns, removed the breech block
from the other one and brought back the .50-caliber machine gun from its
mounting on the truck.
|
MajGen Clifton B. Cates, center, visits the command post
of 24th Marines commander Col Franklin A. Hart. On the left is LtCol
Charles D. Roberts, S-3 of the 24th Marines. Gen Cates would become the
19th Commandant of the Marine Corps. Department of Defense Photo (USMC)
143760
|
|
Tinian Town was made a shambles because U.S. commanders
knew that the enemy was well emplaced, dug in, and expected landings on
the beaches fronting the town. As a result, they directed a large share
of the pre-Jig Day bombardment into the waterfront and surrounding area,
thereby reinforcing Japanese beliefs that this is where the Marines
would land. Marine Corps Historical Collection
|
Late in the afternoon, the 1st Battalion, 23d
Marines, and a company from the 2d Battalion gained a foothold on top of
the plateau; the 3d Battalion soon followed. To their left, the 3d
Battalion, 8th Marines, shrugged off small arms fire early in the day
and reached the base of the cliff where it stalled for the night. The
1st Battalion had better luck. Company A made it to the top of the
plateau at 1650, followed by a platoon from Company C. Soon after, the
whole battalion was atop the hill. It was followed by Companies E and G
of the 2d Battalion.
The Company G commander was Captain Carl W. Hoffman,
who later wrote the definitive histories of the Saipan and Tinian
campaigns. In an oral history interview, he described his own
experiences on top of the plateau the night of 31 July:
By the time we got up there . . . there wasn't enough
daylight left to get ourselves properly barbed-wired in, to get our
fields of fire established, to site our interlocking bands of machine
gun fireall the things that should be done in preparing a good
defense.
By dusk, the enemy commenced a series of probing
attacks. Some Japanese intruded into our positions. It was a completely
black night. So, with Japanese moving around in our positions, our
troops became very edgy and were challenging everybody in sight. We
didn't have any unfortunate incidents of Marines firing on Marines . . .
[because they] were well-seasoned by this point . . . .
As the night wore on, the intensity of enemy attacks
started to build and build and build. They finally launched a full scale
banzai attack against [our] battalion . . . . The strange thing
the Japanese did here was that they executed one wave of attack after
another against a 37mm position firing cannister ammunition . . . .
That gun just stacked up dead Japanese . . . As soon
as one Marine gunner would drop another would take his place. [Eight of
10 men who manned the gun were killed or wounded]. Soon we were nearly
shoulder-high with dead Japanese in front of that weapon . . . . By
morning we had defeated the enemy. Around us were lots of dead ones,
hundreds of them as a matter of fact. From then on . . . we were able to
finish the rest of the campaign without difficulty . . . . People have
often said that the Tinian campaign was the easiest campaign . . . in
the Pacific . . . .
For those Marines who were in that 37mm position up
on the escarpment, Tinian had to be the busiest campaign within the
Pacific war.
|
A
lone member of the 24th Marines, 4th Marine Division patrolling through
the outskirts of Tinian Town, pauses at a torii of a Shinto
shrine. The ruins about him give proof of the heavy shelling visited
upon the town before the landing. Marine Corps Historical Collection
|
Hoffman had another lively experience before leaving
the island. He was a trumpet addict and carried his horn with him all
through the Pacific war:
For Tinian, I didn't take any chances such as sending
my horn ashore in a machine gun cart or a battalion ambulance. I had it
flown over to me. One evening, my troops were in a little perimeter with
barbed wire all around us on top of the cliff. My Marines were shouting
in requests: "Oh, You Beautiful Doll" and "Pretty Baby" and others.
While I was playing these tunes, all of a sudden we heard this scream of
"banzai.' An individual Japanese soldier was charging right
toward me and right toward the barbed wire. The Marines had their
weapons ready and he must have been hit from 14 different directions at
once. He didn't get to throw [his] grenade. ... I've always cited him
as the individual who didn't like my music. He was no supporter of my
trumpet playing. But . . . I even continued my little concert after we
had accounted for him.
A final banzai attack on the night the 37mm
guns had their big harvest, occurred in the early morning hours of 1
August. A 150-man Japanese force attacked the 1st Battalion, 28th
Marines, on Hoffman's left flank. After 30 minutes, the main thrust of
the attack was spent and at dawn the Japanese withdrew; 100 bodies lay
in an area 70 yards square in front of the position of Company E, 2d
Battalion, 28th Marines. The 8th Marines took 74 casualties that night.
The following morning the two divisions went back to work. The 2d moved
across the plateau toward its eastern cliffs, the 4th toward cliffs on
the south and west. When they reached the escarpment's edge, overlooking
the ocean, their job was essentially done. At 1855, General Schmidt
declared the island "secure," meaning that organized resistance had
ended. But not the killing. Hundreds of Japanese troops remained holed
up in the caves pockmocking the southern cliffs rising up from the
ocean.
On the morning of 2 August, a Japanese force of 200
men sallied forth in an attack on the 3d Battalion, 6th Marines. After
two hours of combat, 119 Japanese were dead. Marine losses included the
battalion commander, Lieutenant Colonel John W. Easley. Shortly
afterwords, the regiment's 2d Battalion, led by Lieutenant Colonel
Edmund B. Games, was hit by 100 Japanese, 30 of whom were killed before
the unit withdrew.
Contacts of this kind continued for months. By the
end of the year, Colonel Clarence R. Wallace's 8th Marines, left on
Tinian for mopping up operations, had lost 38 killed and 125 wounded;
Japanese losses were 500 dead.
Beginning on 1 August, there were large-scale
surrenders by civilians leaving the caves in which they had taken
refuge. Marine intelligence officers estimated that 5,000 to 10,000
civilians had been hiding out in the southeast sector.
Marine Major General James L. Underhill, who took
command of the island as military governor on 10 August, became
responsible for the care and feeding of these civilians. The flow of
civilian refugees began on August 1, he recalled:
About 500 came through immediately, the next day
about 800, then a thousand and then two thousand and so on in increasing
numbers until about 8,000 were in. The remaining 3,000 hid out in caves
and dribbled in over a period of months. About 30 percent adult males,
20 percent adult females, and about 50 percent children. Many of them
were in bad shapehungry, wounded, ill and with few possessions
beyond the clothes they were wearing.
|
This
cliff was a formidable obstacle to movement on 31 July. Cutting
practically across the entire island, it provided problems for both
divisions. Here, 2d Division Marines climb the rockly slopes toward the
flat plateau on top. The 1st and 2d Battalions, 8th Marines, spent a
busy night (31 July-1 August) of the operating holding a road that
curled up this slope. Department of Defense Photo (USMC) 87898
|
|
The
end of the battle is in sight as troops of the 24th Marines and tanks of
the 4th Tank Battalion comb across the coastal plateau at Tinian's
extreme southern end. The 23d Marines, whose zone ended at the top of
the steep cliff seen in this picture, had to retrace its steps in order
to reach the lowlands. Aguijan Island may be seen dimly in the misty
background. Department of Defense Photo (USMC) 94350
|
|
This
75mm pack howitzer, nicknamed "Miss Connie," is firing into a
Japanese-held cave from the brink of a sheer cliff in southern Tinian.
The gun was locked securely in this unusual position after parts were
hand-carried to the cliff's edge. Department of Defense Photo (USMC)
94660
|
It was estimated that about 4,000 civilians were
killed in the bombardments of Tinian and in fighting on the island. On
Saipan, Marines had been helpless to prevent mass suicides among the
civilian population. They were more successful at Tinian. Unfortunate
incidents occurred civilians, for example, dying under Marine fire
after wandering into the lines at night.
There were also suicides and ritual murders, as
indicated in a report from the 23d Marines on 3 August:
Several freak incidents occurred during the day: (1)
Jap children thrown [by their parents] over cliff into ocean; (2)
[Japanese] military grouped civilians in numbers of 15 to 20 and
attached explosive charges to them, blowing them to bits; (3) Both
military and civilians lined up on the cliff and hurled themselves into
the ocean; (4) Many civilians pushed over cliff by [Japanese]
soldiers.
Efforts to prevent incidents of this kind were
generally successful. Marines used amplifiers on land and off shore to
promise good treatment to civilians and soldiers who would surrender
peacefully. "Thousands of civilians," Hoffman wrote, "many clad in
colorful Japanese silk, responded to the promisesthough it was
plain from the expressions on their faces that they expected the
worst."
Medal of Honor Recipients
Private First Class Robert Lee Wilson'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 Second Battalion, Sixth Marines, Second Marine
Division, during action against enemy Japanese forces at Tinian Island,
Marianas Group, on 4 August 1944. As one of a group of Marines
advancing through heavy underbrush to neutralize isolated points of
resistance, Private First Class Willson daringly preceded his companions
toward a pile of rocks where Japanese troops were supposed to be hiding.
Fully aware of the danger involved, he was moving forward while the
remainder of the squad, armed with automatic rifles, closed together in
the rear when an enemy granade landed in the midst of the group. Quick
to act, Private First Class Wilson cried a warning to the men and
unhesitatingly threw himself on the grenade, heroically sacrificing his
own life that the others might live and fulfill their mission. His
exceptional valor, his courageous loyalty and unwavering devotion to
duty in the face of grave peril reflect the highest credit upon Private
First Class Wilson and the United States Naval Service. He gallantly
gave his life for his country.
|
|
Private Joseph W. Ozbourn's Medal of Honor citation
reads as follows: "For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk
of life above and beyond the call of duty as a Browning Automatic
Rifleman serving with the First Battalion, Twenty-third Marines, Fourth
Marine Division, during the battle for enemy Japanese-held Tinian
Island, Marianas Islands, 30 July 1944. As a member of a platoon
assigned the mission of clearing the remaining Japanese troops from
dugouts and pillboxes along a tree line, Private Ozbourn, flanked by two
men on either side, was moving forward to throw an armed hand grenade
into a dugout when a terrific blast from the entrance severely wounded
the four men and himself. Unable to throw the grenade into the dugout
and with no place to hurl it without endangering the other men, Private
Ozbourn unhesitatingly grasped it close to his body and fell upon it,
sacrificing his own life to absorb the full impact of the explosion, but
saving his comrades. His great personal valor and unwavering loyalty
reflect the highest credit upon Private Ozbourn and the United States
Naval Service. He gallantly gave his life for his country.
|
|
|
|