THE RIGHT TO FIGHT: African-American Marines in World War II
by Bernard C. Nalty
Okinawa, Japan, and China
The fight for Okinawa, which proved to be the last
battle of World War II, involved some 2,000 black Marines, a larger
concentration than for any previous operation. On 1 April 1945, the 6th
and 1st Marine Divisions stormed ashore alongside two Army divisions,
while the 2d Marine Division engaged in a feint to pin down the island's
Japanese defenders. The three ammunition and four depot companies
assigned to the 7th Field Depot, supporting the III Marine Amphibious
Corps on that day, were divided between the demonstration and assault
forces. The 1st and 3d Ammunition Companies and the 5th, 38th, and part
of the 37th Marine Depot Companies accompanied the 2d Marine Division,
while the 12th Ammunition and 18th Depot Companies, along with the rest
of the 37th, participated in the landings by the 1st and 6th Marine
Divisions. Within three days, almost all of the amphibious force's black
Marines were in action ashore, and reinforcements soon arrived. By the
end of April, the 20th Marine Depot Company reached Okinawa from Saipan,
and in May the 9th and 10th Depot Companies from Guadalcanal, together
with the 19th from Saipan, joined the 7th Field Depot.
Drenching rain and seemingly bottomless mud hampered
the work of the ammunition and depot companies as the troops advanced
and supply lines grew longer. The same parties that moved ammunition and
other cargo forward to sustain the fighting also brought back the
wounded. Stewards, too, made an essential contribution to eventual
victory by serving as stretcher bearers. Indeed, casualties were almost
equally divided between combat service units, 11 wounded, and the
Stewards' Branch, seven wounded, one of them twice, and one killed.
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On
the beach at Iwo Jima, two black Marines crawl past the smouldering hulk
of a DUKW all the while being subjected to heavy Japanese machine gun,
mortar, and artillery fire. They struggled in the volcanic sand to set
up supply dumps. Department of Defense Photo (USMC) 111123
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The exhausting work of handling supplies continued
after Okinawa was declared secure on 22 June 1945, for the island became
a base from which to invade Japan. When hostilities ended on 15 August,
after the dropping of atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the III
Marine Amphibious Corps received orders to proceed to North China.
Meanwhile, the V Amphibious Corps, which had conquered Iwo Jima, would
participate in the occupation of Japan.
Assigned to the 8th Service Regiment (formerly the
8th Field Depot) in support of the Marine V Amphibious Corps, the 6th,
8th, and 10th Ammunition Companies arrived in conquered Japan between 22
and 26 September, along with the 24th, 33d, 34th, 42d, and 43d Depot
Companies. The 36th Marine Depot Company joined the earlier arrivals by
the end of October. Even though the mingling of Marine units on the
battlefields of the Pacific War had broken down, at least temporarily,
the wall separating blacks from whites, the occupation forces in Japan
and in North China, as well reestablished racial
segregation.
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PFCs
Willie J. Kanady, Eugene F. Hill, and Joe Alexander of the 34th Depot
Company relax during a lull in the action on Iwo Jima, where danger
persisted even after the island was declared secure. Before they left
Iwo, the company would become engaged when the Japanese mounted a banzai
charge against Marines and soldiers. Department of Defense Photo (USMC)
113835
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The African-American Marines who landed in North
China at the end of September 1945 men of the 1st and 12th
Ammunition Companies and the 5th, 20th, 37th, and 38th Depot Companies
encountered a cool initial reception from the Chinese. Edgar Huff
recalled that a Chinese might run up to a black Marine and touch his
face, as if to determine if the color would rub off on the fingers.
Until the sight of African-Americans became familiar, the local
civilians remained wary of them, but, Huff continued, "as soon as they
found that this paint wouldn't come off, or what they thought was
paint," the Chinese "got to be very charming and very lovely." Because
local labor proved readily available, the men of the depot and
ammunition companies frequently performed guard duty at American
installations and on the trains that Communist guerrilla forces preyed
upon in their war against the Nationalist government, which was trying
to assert its authority in the region.
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