FROM MAKIN TO BOUGAINVILLE: Marine Raiders in the Pacific War
by Major Jon T Hoffman, USMCR
Bougainville
In the immediate aftermath of the fall of New
Georgia, the Allies seized other islands in the vicinity, to include
Arundel, Vella Lavella, and Kolombangara. Thereafter the South Pacific
command turned its attention to the next major step in the encirclement
of Rabaul. There were several options, but the final choice was a
landing on Bougainville, the largest island in the Solomons group. A
month later MacArthur's command would assault Cape Gloucester on the
western end of New Britain. Rabaul would then be within range of Allied
land-based fighter aircraft coming from two directions. Air power thus
could neutralize the Japanese bastion and allow it to be by-passed. The
scheduled D-day for Bougainville was 1 November 1943.
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Cape
Torokina on Bougainville is seen after the Allies built an airstrip.
Threatening Puruata Island, assaulted by the 3d Raider Battalion on 1
November 1943, is in the foreground. Tiny Torokina Island lies in
between Puruata and the Cape. Department of Defense Photo (USMC)
68047
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Several factors dictated Halsey's scheme of maneuver
for the offensive. First, he had too few transports and Marines to make
a direct assault on the heavily defended enemy air fields located on the
northern and southern ends of the island. Another consideration was the
range of land-based fighters from bases in the Central Solomons
they could only effectively cover a landing in the southern half of
Bougainville. The planners settled on the Empress Augusta Bay-Cape
Torokina region on the western side of the island. Defenses were
negligible there, and Bougainville's difficult terrain would prevent any
rapid reaction from enemy ground forces located elsewhere on the island.
Once ashore, the invasion force would seize a defensible perimeter,
build an airfield, and eventually neutralize the remainder of the island
from this enclave. A patrol landed by submarine in late September
discovered that the areas back of the landing beaches were swampy.
Aerial reconnaissance in October also discovered the construction of new
defenses. Neither of these facts changed the plan, however.
For this operation, the 2d and 3d Raider Battalions
were organized as the 2d Raider Regiment, with Shapley in command.
Lieutenant Colonel Joseph P. McCaffery took over the 2d Raider
Battalion. Because of insufficient shipping, the initial landing
consisted of just two regiments of the 3d Marine Division, reinforced by
the raiders and the 3d Defense Battalion. The remainder of the Marines
and the Army's 37th Division would follow at a later time.
On 1 November, the 3d and 9th Marines, assisted by
the 2d Raider Battalion, seized a swath of the coast from Cape Torokina
to the northwest. At the same time, the 3d Raider Battalion (less
Company M) assaulted Puruata Island off Cape Torokina. Japanese defenses
in the landing area consisted of a single company supported by a 75mm
gun. One platoon occupied Puruata and a squad held Torokina Island,
while the rest of the Japanese infantry and the gun were dug in on the
cape itself.
(click on image for an enlargement in a new window)
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The small Japanese force gave a good account of
itself. The 75mm gun enfiladed the eastern landing beaches, while
machine guns on the two small islands and the cape placed the approaches
to this area in a cross fire. The result was havoc among the initial
right flank assault waves, which landed in considerable disorder. The
75mm gun destroyed four landing craft and damaged 10 others before
Sergeant Robert A. Owens of the 1st Battalion, 3d Marines silenced it.
(He received a posthumous Medal of Honor for his single-handed charge
against the key position.)
The 2d Raider Battalion, landing just to the left of
Owens' battalion, suffered from the gun, and from mortar and machine gun
fire raking the beach. McCaffery succeeded in reorganizing his force on
the beach and launching an attack that swept away the enemy defenses,
but he fell mortally wounded in the process. Other battalions farther to
the west met little or no resistance, except from high surf that caused
many landing craft to broach. Company M, 3d Raiders, temporarily
attached to the 2d Raider Battalion, moved out at noon and occupied a
blocking position 1,500 yards up the Piva Trail, the main avenue of
approach into the beachhead. The 3d Raiders silenced the machine guns on
Puruata on D-day, and destroyed the last defenders on that island by
late afternoon on 2 November. Total raider casualties to this point were
three killed and 15 wounded.
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Raiders pose during a lull in the battle next to one of
the Japanese dugouts they cleared on Cape Torokina on 1 November.
Department of
Defense Photo (USMC) 68117
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Over the next several days the Marines advanced
inland to extend their perimeter. There were occasional engagements with
small enemy patrols, but the greatest resistance during this period came
from the terrain, which consisted largely of swampland and dense jungle
once one moved beyond the beach. The thing most Marines would remember
about Bougainville would be the deep, sucking mud that seemed to cover
everything not already underwater. On 4 November another unit relieved
the 2d Raider Battalion on the line, and both battalions of the raider
regiment were attached to the 9th Marines. The raiders maintained
responsibility for the roadblock, and companies rotated out to the
position every couple of days.
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Demolition men of the 3d Raider Battalion landed on
Torokina Island on 3 November, but found that supporting arms had
already killed or driven off all Japanese. Department of Defense Photo (USMC)
63165
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Two small attacks hit Company E at the roadblock the
night of 5 November, and a larger one struck Company H there two days
later. Company G came forward in support and the enemy withdrew, but
the Japanese kept up a rain of mortar shells all that night. On the
morning of 8 November Companies H and M occupied the post and received
yet another assault, this one the heaviest yet. In midafternoon
Companies E and F conducted a passage of lines, counterattacked the
enemy, and withdrew after two hours.
The next morning Companies I and M held the roadblock
as L and F conducted another counterattack preceded by a half-hour
artillery preparation. Japanese resistance was stubborn and elements of
Companies I and M, and the 9th Marines eventually moved forward to
assist. Shortly after noon the enemy retired from the scene. Patrols
soon discovered the abandoned bivouac site of the Japanese 23d
Infantry Regiment just a few hundred yards up the trail. In the
midst of this action PFC Henry Gurke of Company M covered an enemy grenade with
his body to protect another Marine. He received a posthumous Medal of
Honor for his heroic act of self-sacrifice.
The raider regiment celebrated the Marine Corps'
birthday on 10 November by moving off the front lines and into division
reserve. Other than occasional patrols and short stints on the line, the
next two weeks were relatively quiet for the raiders. The Army's 37th
Division began arriving at this time to reinforce the perimeter. On 23
November the 1st Parachute Battalion came ashore and temporarily joined
the raiders, now acting as corps reserve. Two days later the 2d Raider
Battalion participated in an attack extending the perimeter several
hundred yards to the east, but it met little opposition.
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Raiders move up the muddy Piva Trail to safeguard the
flank of the beachhead. Department of Defense Photo (USMC) 70785A
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On 29 November Company M of the 3d Raider Battalion
reinforced the parachutists for a predawn amphibious landing at Koiari
several miles southeast of the perimeter. This operation could have
been a repeat of the successful Tasimboko Raid, since the
Marine force unexpectedly came ashore on the edge of
a large Japanese supply dump. However, the enemy reacted quickly and
pinned the Marines to the beach with heavy fire. Landing craft
attempting to extract the force were twice driven off. It was not until
evening that artillery, air, and naval gunfire support sufficiently
silenced opposition that the parachutists and raiders could get back out
to sea.
Army troops continued to pour into the enlarging
perimeter. On 15 December control of the landing force passed from the I
Marine Amphibious Corps to the Army's XIV Corps. The Americal Division
gradually replaced the 3d Marine Division, which had borne the brunt of
the fighting. For much of the month the 2d Raider Regiment served as
corps reserve, but these highly trained assault troops spent most of
their time on working parties at the airfield or carrying supplies to
the front lines. On 21 December the raiders, reinforced by the 1st
Parachute Battalion and a battalion of the 145th Infantry, assumed the
position formerly occupied by the 3d Marines. The regiment remained
there until 11 January, when an Army outfit relieved it. The raiders
boarded transports the next day and sailed to Guadalcanal.
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