Cape Gloucester: The Green Inferno
by Bernard C. Nalty
Final Combat and Relief
The flotilla of Army LCMs and Navy LCTs that
supported the Volupai landings inflicted further damage on Japanese
coastal traffic, already hard hit by air strikes. On 9 March, a convoy
of landing craft carrying supplies around the tip of the peninsula for
delivery to the advancing Marines at Talasea spotted four enemy barges,
beached and sloppily camouflaged. An LCT took the barges under fire from
its 20mm cannon and machine guns, destroying one of the Japanese craft.
Later that day, two LCMs used the 37mm gun of the Marine light tank that
each was carrying, to fire upon another barge beached on the
peninsula.
The enemy tried to make the best possible use of the
dwindling number of barges, but the bulk of Matsuda's troops moved
overland, screened by Terunuma's men during the transit of the base of
the Willaumez Peninsula. About a hundred Japanese dug in at Garilli, but
by the time Company K of Deakin's 3d Battalion, 5th Marines, attacked on
11 March, the enemy had fallen back to a new trail block about three
miles distant. For four days, the Marines fought a succession of sharp
actions, as the Japanese retreated a few hundred yards at a time,
dragging with them a 75mm gun that anchored each of the blocking
positions. On 16 March, Deakin himself joined Company K, arriving in an
LCM that also carried a section of 81mm mortars. The Japanese turned
their cannon seaward to deal with this threat but failed to hit the
landing craft. Shortly after the Marine mortars landed and went into
action, Terunuma's men again withdrew, but this time they simply faded
away, since the bulk of Matsuda Force had escaped to the
east.
Having secured the Red Beach-Garua Bay-Talasea area,
the 5th Marines dispatched patrols southward to the base of the
Willaumez Peninsula, capturing only the occasional straggler and
confirming the departure of the main body of Matsuda's command. The 1st
Marine Division established a comfortable headquarters, training sites,
a hospital that utilized captured stocks of Japanese medicine, and a
rest area that featured swimming off the Garua beaches and bathing in
hot springs ashore. The Navy built a base on the Willaumez Peninsula for
torpedo boats that harried the surviving Japanese barges. Unfortunately,
on 27 March, the second day the base was operating, Allied aircraft
mistook two of the boats for Japanese craft and attacked, killing five
sailors and wounding 18.
One of the courses taught at the new Garua training
center sought to produce amphibious scouts for the division's future
operations. The school's headquarters decided that a reconnaissance of
Cape Hoskins would serve as a suitable graduation exercise, since aerial
observers had seen no sign of enemy activity there. On 13 April, Second
Lieutenant Richard R. Breen, accompanied by Lieutenant Marsland of the
Royal Australian Air Force, embarked with 16 trainees, two native
guides, and a rifle platoon from the 2d Battalion, 5th Marines, in a
pair of LCMs. While two instructors stood by in one of the landing
craft, the platoon established a trail block, and the future scouts
advanced toward the Cape Hoskins airfield, no longer used by the
Japanese. En route to the objective, however, the patrol encountered
fire from small arms and mortars, but the Marines had apparently learned
their lessons well, for they succeeded in breaking off the action and
escaped without suffering casualties.
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Before the building of a rest area at Garua Bay, with
its hot springs and bathing beaches, these Marines relax in one of the
crystal clear streams running into the sea from New Britain's
mountainous interior. Department of Defense (USMC) photo 78381
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Meanwhile, the Japanese retreat continued. Komori's
troops, blazing the trail for Sato's command from Augitni to the
northern coast, encountered a disheartening number of hungry stragglers
as they marched toward a supply depot at Kandoka, roughly 10 miles west
of the Willaumez Peninsula. Crossing the Kuhu River, Komori's soldiers
came under ineffectual fire from an American landing craft. The
rain-swollen Via River, broader than the Kuhu, proved a more serious
obstacle, requiring a detour lasting two days to reach a point where the
stream narrowed. Komori's provisions ran out on 17 March, forcing the
soldiers to subsist on taro, birds and fish, and vegetables from village
garden plots, supplemented by some welcome coconuts gathered from a
plantation at Linga Linga. After losing additional time and a dozen
lives crossing yet another river, the Kapaluk, Komori's troops straggled
into Kandoka on the 24th, only to discover that the food and other
supplies had been carried off toward Rabaul. Despite this crushing
disappointment, Komori pressed on, his men continuing to live off the
land as best they could. Five more men drowned in the fast-moving waters
of the Kulu River, and a native hired as a guide defected. Already
weakened physically, Komori came down with an attack of malaria, but he
forced himself to continue.
The survivors struggled onward toward Cape Hoskins
and ultimately Rabaul. On 9 April, Easter Sunday, four half-starved
Japanese wandered onto the San Remo Plantation, where Gayle's battalion
had bivouacked after pursuing the enemy eastward from the Willaumez
Peninsula. The Marine unit was preparing to pass in review for the
regimental commander later that day, when a sentry saw the intruders and
opened fire. The ensuing skirmish killed three of the enemy. One of the
dead proved to be Major Komori; his pack contained a rusty revolver and
a diary describing the sufferings of his command.
Colonel Sato, with the rest of the rear guard for the
Matsuda Force, set out from Augitni on 7 March, one day after
Komori, who sent back word on the 19th that patrols from the 5th Marines
had fanned out from the Willaumez Peninsula, where the reinforced
regiment had landed almost two weeks earlier. When Sato reached Linga
Linga and came across a bivouac abandoned by a Marine patrol, his force
had dwindled to just 250 men, less than half the number that started
out. He received a shock the following day when American landing craft
appeared as his men prepared to cross the Kapaluk River. He immediately
set up a perimeter to beat back the expected attack, but the boats were
carrying elements of the 2d Battalion, 1st Marines, under Major Charles
H. Brush, Jr. A patrol from Brush's Company F landed on a beach beyond
Kandoka, the former site of a Japanese supply cache, and dispatched one
platoon, led by First Lieutenant William C. Schleip, westward along the
coastal track, even as Sato, aware only of the general location of the
landing, groped eastward toward the village. On 26 March, the two
collided, the Japanese surprising the Marines in the act of crossing a
small stream and pinning them down for some three hours until the
approach of reinforcements from Company F forced the enemy to break off
the action, take to the jungle, and bypass Kandoka.
As the head of Sato's column disappeared in the
jungle, one of the division's light airplanes, scouting landing sites
for Brush's battalion, sighted the tail near Linga Linga. The pilot,
Captain Petras, turned over the controls to Brigadier General Earl C.
Long, also a pilot, sketched the location of the Japanese, and dropped
the map to one of the troop-laden landing craft. Petras then led the way
to an undefended beach, where Brush's Marines waded ashore and set out
in pursuit of Sato. On 30 March, Second Lieutenant Richard B. Watkins,
at the head of an eight-man patrol, spotted a pair of Japanese, their
rifles slung, who turned out to be members of a 73-man patrol, far too
many for Watkins to handle.
Once the enemy column had moved off, Watkins and his
men hurried to Kandoka, where he reported to Major Brush and obtained
mortars and machine guns before again taking to the trail. Brush
followed, bringing a reinforced rifle platoon to increase the Marine
fire power. Meanwhile, the Japanese encountered yet another Marine
patrol, this one led by Sergeant Frank Chliek, which took up a position
on high ground that commanded the trail. When they heard Chliek's group
open fire, Watkins and Brush hurried to its aid; the resulting slaughter
killed 55 Japanese, including Colonel Sato, who died sword in hand, but
the Marines did not suffer even one casualty.
On 9 April, the 3d Battalion, 1st Marines, under
Lieutenant Colonel Hankins, replaced Brush's 1st Battalion and continued
the search for enemy stragglers. The bulk of the Matsuda Force,
and whatever supplies it could transport, had by this time retreated to
Cape Hoskins and beyond, and Army troops were taking over from the
Marines. Almost four months had elapsed since the landing at Cape
Gloucester; clearly the time had come for the amphibious troops to move
on to an operation that would make better use of their specialized
training and equipment. The final action fought by the Leathernecks took
place on 22 April, when an ambush sprung by the 2d Battalion, 5th
Marines, killed 20 Japanese and resulted in the last Marine fatality of
the campaign. In seizing western New Britain as part of the isolation of
Rabaul, the division suffered 310 killed in action and 1,083 wounded,
roughly one-fourth the estimated Japanese casualties.
Early in February 1944, after the capture of the Cape
Gloucester airfields but before the landing at Volupai. General
Rupertus, warned that his 1st Marine Division might remain on New
Britain indefinitely. Having the unit tied down for an extended period
alarmed the recently appointed Commandant of the Marine Corps, General
Vandegrift. "Six months there," he remarked, referring to an extended
commitment in New Britain, "and it will no longer be a well-trained
amphibious division." Vandegrift urged Admiral Ernest J. King, the Chief
of Naval Operations, to help pry the division from MacArthur's grasp so
it could again undertake amphibious operations. Admiral Chester W.
Nimitz, Commander in Chief, Pacific Ocean Areas, wanted the division for
the impending invasion of the Palau Islands, the capture of which would
protect the flank of MacArthur's advance to the Philippines. In order to
obtain the Marines, Nimitz made the Army's 40th Infantry Division
available to MacArthur, in effect swapping a division capable of taking
over the New Britain campaign for one that could spearhead the
amphibious offensive against Japan. MacArthur, however, briefly retained
control of one component of the Marine divisionCompany A, 1st Tank
Battalion. That unit's medium tanks landed on 22 April at Hollandia on
the northern coast of New Guinea, but a swamp just beyond the beachhead
prevented the Shermans from supporting the advance inland.
New Weapons in the Division's Arsenal
During the period of rehabilitation following the
Guadalcanal campaign, the 1st Marine Division received two new
weaponsthe M4 medium tank, nicknamed the Sherman in honor of
William Tecumseh Sherman whose Union troops marched from Atlanta to the
sea, and the M-1 rifle. The new rifle, designed by John C. Garand, a
civilian employee of the Springfield Armory in Massachusetts, was a
semi-automatic, gas-operated weapon, weighing 9.5 pounds and using an
eight-round clip. Although less accurate at longer range than the
former standard rifle, the M-1903, which snipers continued to use, the
M-1 could lay down a deadly volume of fire at the comparatively short
ranges typical of jungle warfare.
In addition, the division received the M4A1, an early
version of the Sherman tank, which MacArthur valued so highly that he
borrowed a company of them from the 1st Marine Division for the
Hollandia operation. The model used by the Marines weighed 34 tons,
mounted a 75mm gun, and had frontal armor some three inches thick.
Although a more formidable weapon than the 16-ton high tank, with a 37mm
gun, the medium tank had certain shortcomings. A high silhouette made
it a comparatively easy target for Japanese gunners, who fortunately did
not have a truly deadly anti-tank weapon, and narrow treads provided
poor traction in the mud of New Britain.
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Marine infantrymen, some of them using the M1 rifle for
the first time in combat, and a Sherman tank form a deadly team in the
comparatively open country near the Cape Gloucester airfields.
Department of
Defense (USMC) photo 69146
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The commanding general of the Army's 40th Infantry
Division, Major General Rapp Brush, arrived at New Britain on 10 April
to arrange for the relief. His advance echelon arrived on the 23d and
the remainder of the division five days later. The 1st Marine Division
departed in two echelons on 6 April and 4 May. Left behind was the 12th
Defense Battalion, which continued to provide antiaircraft defense for
the Cape Gloucester airfields until relieved by an Army unit late in
May.
In a campaign lasting four months, the 1st Marine
Division had plunged into the unforgiving jungle and overwhelmed a
determined and resolute enemy, capturing the Cape Gloucester airfields
and driving the Japanese from western New Britain. A number of factors
helped the Marines defeat nature and the Japanese. Allied control of the
air and the sea provided mobility and disrupted the coastal barge
traffic upon which the enemy had to depend for the movement of large
quantities of supplies, especially badly needed medicines, during the
retreat to Rabaul. Warships and landing craft armed with
rocketssupplemented by such improvisations as tanks or
rocket-equipped amphibian trucks firing from landing
craftsupported the landings, but the size of the island and the
lack of fixed coastal defenses limited the effectiveness of the various
forms of naval gunfire. Using superior engineering skills, the Marines
defied swamp and undergrowth to bring forward tanks that crushed enemy
emplacements and added to the already formidable American firepower.
Although photo analysis, an art that improved rapidly, misinterpreted
the nature of the damp flat, Marine intelligence made excellent use of
captured Japanese documents throughout the campaign. In the last
analysis, the courage and endurance of the average Marine made victory
possible, as he braved discomfort, disease, and violent death during his
time in the green inferno.
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