CONDITION RED: Marine Defense Battalions in World War II
by Major Charles D. Melson
Into the Central and Northern Solomons
On 21 February 1943, the 43d Infantry Division, the
3d Raider Battalion, and a detachment from the 11th Defense Battalion
secured the Russell Islands as a base for further operations in the
Solomons and elsewhere. Seacoast and antiaircraft artillery landed at
Banika, and two weeks later, when the Japanese launched their first air
strikes, the antiaircraft weapons were ready. The 10th Defense
Battalion, under Colonel Robert Blake, arrived on 24 February to
reinforce the detachment. The Russells soon became a boomtown a
jerry-built staging area for Allied units arriving in the South Pacific,
reorganizing, or moving to other battlegrounds.
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An
LST brings the 9th Defense Battalion to Rendova Island, set up its
artillery and antiaircraft guns to support the assault where the unit
helped overcome Japanese resistance and then on heavily defended
neighboring island of New Georgia. Photo courtesy of the U.S. Naval
Institute
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The 12th Defense Battalion, commanded by Colonel
William H. Harrison, covered the occupation of Woodlark Island,
northeast of New Guinea, by Army ground units on 30 June 1943. In just
16 days, Army engineers built an airfield, which the battalion protected
until the end of the year. The main purpose of the Woodlark operation
was to screen the landings on New Georgia in the central Solomons.
Elements of the 9th, 10th, and 11th Defense
Battalions supported the Army's XIV Corps in the central Solomons
campaign. The strongly reinforced 9th Defense Battalion, now commanded
by Lieutenant Colonel William J. Scheyer, participated in various
aspects of the fighting. The 155mm and antiaircraft artillery groups
landed on 30 June at Rendova Island, just off the coast of New Georgia.
In the confusion of the Rendova landings, during which the assault waves
arrived off schedule and out of sequence, antiaircraft gunners doubled
as infantry in eliminating light opposition, and members of the 155mm
unit, looking for firing positions, clashed with Japanese patrols. The
heavy guns set up and registered in time to support the main landings at
New Georgia's Zanana beaches on 2 July. The 90mm antiaircraft guns also
were ready that same day, fortunately so, since the Japanese launched
the first of 159 air raids carried out during the campaign. The
battalion's antiaircraft weapons downed 46 aircraft, including 13 of 16
in one formation. Edmund D. Hadley, serving with the antiaircraft group,
helped fight off one of the heaviest raids. "I will always think of July
4, 1943, as the day the planes fell," he said, his memory sharpened by
the fact that he and his 90mm gun crew had to dive into a mud hole to
escape a Zero fighter strafing Rendova.
The curtain of antiaircraft fire that protected
Rendova and the Zanana beaches had an unintended effect on one of the
two secondary landings on New Georgia Rice Anchorage and Wickham
Anchorage. Fragments from antiaircraft shells fired from Rendova rained
down upon Rice Anchorage, to the north, where elements of the 11th
Defense Battalion guarded a beachhead seized by the Marine 1st Raider
Regiment. The commander of a raider battalion recalled setting Condition
Red whenever the 90mm guns cut loose on Rendova, for their "shrapnel was
screaming in the air above the trees," as it tumbled to earth.
The main landing on Zanana beach, New Georgia, took
place on 2 July under the cover of fire from antiaircraft guns and 155mm
artillery on Rendova. Machine guns and light antiaircraft weapons
promptly deployed from Rendova across the narrow strait to New Georgia
to help protect the beachhead there. Light tanks from the 9th, 10th, and
11th Defense Battalions helped Army troops punch through the Japanese
defenses barring the way to the principal objective, Munda Point
airfield. The M3A1 Stuart light tanks and their crews defied jungle,
mud, and suicidal counterattacks in spearheading a slow and deliberate
attack. The tank gunners fired 37mm canister rounds to strip away the
jungle concealing Japanese bunkers, followed up with high-explosive
shells to penetrate the fortifications, and used machine guns to cut
down the survivors as they fled. Captain Robert W. Blake, a tank
commander who earned the Navy Cross in the central Solomons, noted that
"death on the Munda Trail" was noisy, violent, and far from romantic. "I
trip the seat lever," he wrote, "and drop down behind the periscopic
sight. I level the sight dot at the black slot and press the firing
switch. Wham, the gun bucks, a wad of smoke billows through the trees.
The concealing branches are left raw and broken." According to one
analysis of the fighting, "A handful of Marine tanks, handicapped by
difficult jungle, had spearheaded most of the successful attacks on New
Georgia."
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Splattered by mud from a near-miss, Marines operating an
optical gun director check the equipment for damage as they prepare for
the next Japanese air attack on Rendova. On Vella Lavella, Marines
downed 42 enemy aircraft in 121 raids. Department of Defense photo (USMC)
58419
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On 4 August, the Marine tanks that had survived
Japanese fire, formidable terrain, and mechanical breakdown, moved onto
Munda Point airfield, littered with wrecked airplanes and pockmarked
with shell craters. The infantry mopped up on the next day, and the 9th
Defense Battalion moved its antiaircraft weapons into position to
protect the captured airdrome, while its 155mm guns prepared to shell
the Japanese garrison on nearby Kolombangara.
The 4th Defense Battalion covered a landing by Army
forces on 15 August at Vella Lavella, the north-westernmost island in
the central Solomons. The battalion's antiaircraft weapons, concentrated
near Barakoma harbor, shot down 42 Japanese aircraft during 121 raids.
Attempts to land cargo elsewhere on the island, and thus speed the
distribution of supplies, triggered a savage reaction from Japanese air
power. Speed proved less important than security, and after the sinking
of an LST on 1 October, I Marine Amphibious Corps directed that all
ships would unload at Barakoma under an antiaircraft shield provided by
the 4th Defense Battalion.
The tank platoons of the 9th, 10th, and 11th Defense
Battalions veterans of the conquest of New Georgia boarded
landing craft and sailed due west to Arundel Island, where Army troops
landed on 27 August. As had happened during the earlier capture of Munda
Point, the Stuart tanks used their 37mm guns to breach a succession of
defensive positions, suffering steady attrition in the process. On 19
September, all the surviving armor formed two ranks, the rear covering
the front rank, which plunged ahead, firing 37mm canister to strip away
the jungle concealment as the tanks gouged paths for advancing soldiers.
This charge proved to be the last major fight during the conquest of
Arundel Island.
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The
90mm antiaircraft guns on Rendova, as this one, threw up a barrier of
fire to protect the troops attacking Munda airfield from enemy air raids
and, in doing so, showered shell fragments on the Marines across New
Georgia at Rice Anchorage. Department of Defense photo (USMC)
60625
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On 1 November 1943, the offensive reached the
northern Solomons, as the recently organized 3d Marine Division landed
at Bougainville. The 3d Defense Battalion, led by Lieutenant Colonel
Edward H. Forney, followed the first waves ashore and had heavy machine
guns and light antiaircraft guns ready for action by nightfall. The
battalion organized both antiaircraft and beach defenses, taking
advantage of the dual capabilities of the 90mm gun to destroy Japanese
landing barges on the Laruma River. The 155mm artillery group supported
Marine raiders and parachutists at Koiari and joined the 12th Marines,
the 3d Marine Division's artillery regiment, in shelling Japanese
positions at Torokina. The defense battalion would remain at
Bougainville into the following year, earning the dubious honor of being
"the last Fleet Marine Force ground unit" to be withdrawn from the
Solomons.
Colonel William H. Harrison's 12th Defense Battalion
supported the landing of the 1st Marine Division at Cape Gloucester, New
Britain, in December 1943. The lodgment on New Britain marked the end of
the Rabaul campaign and of participation by major Marine Corps
units in the South and Southwest Pacific for the United States
had decided to isolate and bypass the fortress instead of storming it.
Radar operator Victor C. Bond, a member of Harrison's battalion at Cape
Gloucester, remembered sitting on the exposed "plow seat" of an SCR-268,
with 90mm guns barking nearby. "During an air raid," he said, "it was
difficult to tell if all the noise and smoke was due to the 90mms or the
enemy."
Antiaircraft Machine Guns
A number of "light" antiaircraft artillery weapons
and "heavy" machine guns were placed in the weapons groups of the
defense battalions to provide close-in defense against low-flying
aircraft.
These weapons were flexibly employed and landed found
on the beach with the assault waves. They were designated dual-purpose
weapons as they were used against both air and surface targets. While
organized into batteries by weapons' types, light antiaircraft weapons
were often attached to task-organized teams.
The Bofors-designed 37mm and 40mm automatic guns were
the backbones of these teams. The M1 40mm antiaircraft gun became the
standard piece by July 1942. It was manufactured by Blaw-Know,
Chrysler, and York Safe &Amp; Lock in the United States. The M1 was
recoil operated and designed for use against aircraft and could serve as
an antitank weapon. It fired 1.96-pound shells at a rate of
120-per-minute with a maximum range of over four miles. Its M2 carriage
had electric brakes and bullet-resistant tires, was towed at up to 50
miles an hour, and could be put in firing position within 25 seconds.
Easily operated and maintained, the 40mm gun was credited with 50
percent of the enemy aircraft destroyed by antiaircraft weapons
according to statistics gathered between 1944 and 1945. Another light
weapon in the defense battalion arsenal was the Oerlikon 20mm
antiaircraft gun. It was made in the United States by Oerlikon-Gazda,
Pontiac Motors, and Hudson Motor Car. These were Navy Mark 2 and Mark 4
weapons, first used on static pedestal mounts, but later mounted in
pairs on wheeled carriages as a high-speed 'twin twenty.'
It was a simple blowback-operated gun capable of
being put into action quicker than larger caliber weapons. It fired
explosive, armor-piercing, and incendiary projectiles at a rate of 450
rounds a minute out to a maximum range of 4,800 yards. Mobility,
reliability, and high volume of fire enabled it to account for 32
percent of identified antiaircraft shot down during 1942 to 1944
period.
Finally, the battalions were liberally equipped with
heavy .30- and .50-caliber machine guns. The Browning M2 water-cooled
machine gun was used on an M2 mount as an antiaircraft weapon by special
weapons groups to help defend artillery and antiaircraft positions. The
Browning M1917 water-cooled machine gun was used for ground and beach
defense with crews made up from defense battalion personnel in
contingencies.
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On New Britain, the 12th Defense Battalion suffered
most of its casualties from typhus and other diseases, falling trees,
and lightning. "There is no jungle in the world worse than in
southwestern New Britain," a member of the 1st Marine Division declared.
The effort to limit the effects of malaria, prevalent in the swamps and
rain forest, involved the use of atabrine, a substitute for scarce
quinine. The remedy required hard selling by medical personnel and
commanders to convince dubious Marines to take a bitter-tasting medicine
that was rumored to turn skin yellow and make users sterile. In a moment
of whimsy, Second Lieutenant Gerald A. Waindel suggested adapting a
slogan used to sell coffee back in the United States: "Atabrine
Good to the last drop."
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The
9th Defense Battalion deployed light antiaircraft guns, as this Bofors
40mm weapon, in the Solomons on Rendova and New Georgia, both to protect
the Zanana beachhead and to support the accelerating advance against the
Munda airfield. Department of (USMC) 60095 by TSgt Jeremiah
Sarno
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Each
Japanese flag painted on this 3d Defense Battalion 40mm gun on
Bougainville represents a Japanese plane shot down. Department of Defense
photo (USMC) 74010
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In March 1944, a detachment from the 14th Defense
Battalion landed at Emirau, St. Mathias Islands, in support of its
occupation by Army troops. Technical Sergeant George H. Mattie reported
that "the Marines sent some troops ashore, met no opposition, and in a
matter of days the Seabees ripped up the jungle" for an airfield. The
deadliest things about duty at Emirau, Mattie remembered, were "boredom
and loneliness." Other detachments from the 14th Defense Battalion
supported the 1st Marine Aircraft Wing's occupation of Green Island, the
coup de grace for bypassed Japanese forces at Rabaul and throughout the
Bismarck Archipelago. The use of Green Island as an air base for
hammering the bypassed stronghold of Rabaul signaled the attainment of
the final rung in the so-called Solomons Ladder, which began at
Guadalcanal and required the services of three Marine divisions, two
Marine aircraft wings, and a variety of special units, including the
defense battalions. In a year and a half of fighting, the Marines
along with soldiers and sailors had not taken
any "real, honest-to-God towns," just "grass shacks and lizards and
swamp 'gardens' of slimy banyan trees.
As the campaign against Japan gathered momentum,
defense battalions on outlying islands like the Ellice group, Samoa,
Johnston, Palmyra, and Midway found themselves increasingly in the
backwash of war, struggling with boredom rather than fighting an armed
enemy. Major General Alexander A. Vandegrift, former commanding general
of the 1st Marine Division and since July 1943 the commander of I
Marine Amphibious Corps, noticed the fragile morale of some of the
defense battalions, as did his chief of staff, Colonel Gerald C. Thomas,
during their inspection tour of the Solomon Islands. "The war had gone
beyond them," recalled Thomas, and a number of the junior field-grade
officers were "pleading just to get into the war" and out of the defense
battalions. As a result, some 35 officers received transfers
to the Command and Staff College at Quantico, Virginia, for future
assignments to corps or division headquarters. The problem of the future
of the defense battalions in a changing situation remained unresolved
when the year 1944 began.
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The
light antiaircraft artillery of the 12th Defense Battalion on the deck
of an LST approaching Cape Gloucester, New Britain, is poised to fire on
Japanese aircraft. Department of Defense photo (USMC) 71623
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