CONDITION RED: Marine Defense Battalions in World War II
by Major Charles D. Melson
Two African-American Defense Battalions
The wartime demand for manpower and the racial policy
of the Roosevelt administration caused the Marine Corps to agree in
February 1942 to accept African-American recruits for the first time
since the Revolutionary War, when a few blacks had served in the
Continental Marines. The Commandant, General Holcomb, insisted that
racial segregation not only lawful in most places at the time,
but enforced throughout much of American society would prevail
and that the African-Americans would perform useful military duty. To
gain a military advantage from these recruits, without integrating the
races, the Marine Corps decided to group them in a black unit that could
train largely in isolation and fight almost independently. Holcomb's
policy resulted in the creation of the 51st Defense Battalion
(Composite), commanded by whites but manned by African-Americans who had
trained at the Montford Point Camp, a racially segregated facility at
Camp Lejeune, North Carolina.
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Under a heavily clouded sky, Marines of the 16th Defense
Battalion man a 3-inch antiaircraft artillery position on Johnston
Island. Note the absence of protective parapets or camouflage. Johnston
was not seriously threatened in the course of the war. Department of Defense
photo (USMC) 55863
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In
the 4 June 1942 Japanese air raid on Midway a number of Marines in the
garrison, including some from the 6th Defense Battalion, were killed.
Here, the surviving Marines prepare to bury their buddies with full
military honors. Department of Defense photo (USN) 12703
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A decision to use the draft, beginning in January
1943, as the normal means of obtaining manpower for all the services
brought more blacks into the Marine Corps than a single battalion
plus its training base and administrative overhead could absorb.
The transition of the 51st from a composite unit to an ordinary defense
battalion released infantry men and howitzer crews to help form a cadre
for a second African-American defense battalion, the 52d. Because the
nature of the conflict was again changing as the advance toward Japan
accelerated, the Marine Corps organized no additional black defense
battalions, instead creating numerous independent companies to provide
logistics support for amphibious operations.
The steps taken in May 1942 toward standardized
equipment began bringing order to a sometimes bewildering array of new
and old, simple and complex. When a veteran master sergeant joined one
of the defense battalions as a replacement, he asked to see the "new
155mm guns," but, to his astonishment, was shown a weapon fabricated in
1918. "I thought we had new guns here!" he bellowed. The radio gear and
radar required unceasing maintenance and fine-tuning by specialists who
themselves were fresh from training. Radar, in particular, seemed a
mystery to the uninitiated and a challenge to the newly minted
technicians. In evaluating the radar specialists, Captain Wade W. Larkin
explained that the device was "technically complex enough for them to be
justifiably proud of what they were doing," even though they could not
talk openly about so "confidential" a piece of equipment. At the time,
radar was cutting-edge technology; Vern C. Smith, who helped operate one
of the new sets in the Wallis Islands, recalled that his SCR-268,
acquired from another battalion, was so new that its serial number "was
a single digit."
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African-American Marines of the 51st Defense Battalion
are shown here in training at Montford Point, Camp Lejeune, before their
deployment to the Pacific War. Department of Defense photo (USMC)
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Shoulder Insignia
Marines serving with the Army's 2d Division in World
War I wore the Indian-head shoulder patch, and during the occupation of
Iceland, in late 1941 and early 1942, members of the Marine brigade
adopted the polar-bear flash worn by the British garrison they were
relieving. The Marines who sewed on the polar-bear insignia included men
of the 5th Defense Battalion. Marine shoulder insignia proliferated
after the official recognition of the 1st Marine Division's patch in
1943.
The designs chosen by the wartime defense battalions
might either reflect the insignia of a Marine amphibious corps or of the
Fleet Marine Force Pacific, but they might also be created by the
individual battalion. Worn on the left shoulder of field jackets,
overcoats, service blouses and shirts, the patches identified individual
Marines as members of a specific unit. On 1 August 1945, Marine Corps
headquarters recognized 33 such designs, although others existed.
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