SILK CHUTES AND HARD FIGHTING: US. Marine Corps
Parachute Units in World War II
by Lieutenant Colonel Jon T. Hoffman (USMCR)
The Jump into Parachuting
The widely publicized airborne coup in the Low
Countries created an immediate, high-level reaction within the Marine
Corps. On 14 May the acting director of the Division of Plans and
Policies at Headquarters Marine Corps issued a memorandum to his staff
officers. The one-page document came right to the point in its first
sentence: "The Major General Commandant [Thomas Holcomb] has ordered
that we prepare plans for the employment of parachute troops." The
matter was obviously of the highest priority, since Colonel Pedro A. del
Valle asked for immediate responses, which could be submitted "in pencil
on scrap paper." Perhaps as telling, the memorandum did not direct a
mere study, but the creation of a course of action.
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Marines hit the dirt in a drop zone at New River, North
Carolina, in November 1942. Parachutists used a tumbling technique to
absorb some of the impact of the landing. Department of Defense Photo (USMC)
127-GC-495-5049
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Considering the Corps' complete lack of expertise in
this emerging field of warfare, Headquarters quickly translated staff
plans into reality. The first small group of volunteers reported for
training in October 1940 and graduated the following February.
Succeeding classes went through an accelerated program for basic
parachute qualification, but the numbers mounted very slowly. Throughout
1941 the Marine Corps produced just a trickle of jumpers and remained a
long way from possessing a useful tactical entity. Most members of the
first three training classes reported to the 2d Marine Division in San
Diego, California, to form the nucleus of the Corps' first parachute
unit. The 2d Parachute Company (soon redesignated Company A, 2d
Parachute Battalion) formally came into existence on 22 March 1941. The
first commanding officer was Captain Robert H. Williams. The majority of
the fourth class went to Quantico, Virginia, and became the nucleus of
Company A, 1st Parachute Battalion, on 28 May. Its first commanding
officer was Captain Marcellus J. Howard. From that point forward,
graduating classes were generally detailed on an alternating basis to
each coast. In the summer of 1941, the West Coast company transferred to
Quantico and merged into the 1st Battalion. Williams assumed command of
the two-company organization.
The concentration of the Corps' small paratrooper
contingents at Quantico at least allowed them to begin a semblance of
tactical training. The battalion conducted a number of formation jumps
during the last half of July, some from Marine planes and others from
Navy patrol bombers. In no case could it muster enough planes to jump an
entire company at once. Captain Williams used his battalion's time on
the ground to emphasize his belief that "paratroopers are simply a new
form of infantry." His men learned hand-to-hand fighting skills, went on
conditioning hikes, and did a lot of calisthenic exercises. A
Time magazine reporter noted that the parachutists were "a
notably tough-looking outfit among Marines, who all look tough." One of
the battalion's July jumps demonstrated the consternation that
paratroopers could instill by their surprise appearance on a
battlefield. A landing at an airfield near Fredericksburg, Virginia,
unexpectedly disrupted maneuvers of the Army's 44th Infantry Division,
because its leaders thought the Marines were an aggressor force added to
the problem without their knowledge. The same jump also indicated some
of the limitations of airborne operations. An approaching thunderstorm
brought high winds which blew many of the jumpers away from their
designated landing site and into a grove of trees. Luckily, none of the
40 men involved sustained any serious injuries.
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Marines of the fledgling 1st Parachute Battalion land
near Fredericksburg, Virginia, following a tactical jump in July 1941.
Their unexpected arrival in the midst of an Army maneuver demonstrated
the disruption that parachutists could cause to unwary opposing
units. Department of Defense Photo (USMC)
127-GC-495-504479
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Overseas Models
The Soviet Union was the first nation to take a
serious interest in parachuting as a means to introduce ground forces
into battle. The Red Army created a test unit in 1931 and by 1935 was
able to employ two battalions of parachute infantry in field exercises.
Beginning in the mid-1930s, several other European nations followed
suit. Germany launched a particularly aggressive program, placing it in
the air force under the command of a former World War I pilot, Major
General Kurt Student. The German parachutists were complimented by
glider units, an outgrowth of the sport gliding program that developed
flying skills while Germany was under Versailles Treaty restrictions on
rearmament. By 1940 Hitler had 4,500 parachutists at his disposal,
organized into six battalions. Another 12,000 men formed an air infantry
division designed as an air-landed follow-up to a parachute assault. A
force of 700 Ju-52 transport planes was available to carry these troops
into combat and each Ju-52 could hold up to 15 men.
The Soviet Union made the first combat use of
parachute forces. On 2 December 1939, as part of its initial abortive
invasion of Finland, the Red Army dropped several dozen paratroopers
near Petsamo behind the opposing lines. They apparently came down on top
of a Finnish unit, which shot many of them before they reached the
ground. Subsequent Soviet attempts during the Finnish campaign to employ
airborne forces, all small in scale, met equally disastrous fates.
Germany's first use of airborne forces achieved
favorable results. As part of the April 1940 invasions of Norway and
Denmark, the Luftwaffe assigned a battalion of paratroopers to
seize several key installations. In Denmark, two platoons captured a
vital bridge leading to Copenhagen, while another platoon took control
of an airfield. In Norway, a company parachuted onto the airfield at
Stavanger and quickly overwhelmed its 70 defenders, thus paving the way
for the landing of 2,000 air infantrymen. Although these operations were
critical to German success in the campaign, they received little
attention at the time, perhaps due to the much larger and bloodier naval
battles that occurred along the Norwegian coast.
German airborne forces achieved spectacular success
just one month later. One battalion breached Belgium's heavily fortified
defensive line during the offensive of May 1940. Four battalions
reinforced by two air infantry regiments captured three Dutch air
fields, plus several bridges over rivers that bisected the German route
of approach to the Hague, Holland's capital, and Rotterdam, its
principal port. In each case the airborne units held their ground until
the main assault forces arrived overland. The final parachute battalion,
supported by two regiments of air infantry, landed near the Hague with
the mission of decapitating the Dutch government and military high
command. This force failed to achieve its goals, but did cause
considerable disruption.
The last major German use of parachute assault came
in May 1941. In the face of Allied control of the sea, Hitler launched
an airborne invasion of the Mediterranean island of Crete. The objective
was to capture three airfields for the ensuing arrival of air landed
reinforcements. Casualties were heavy among the first waves of 3,000 men
landed by parachute and glider, but others continued to pour in. Despite
an overwhelming superiority in numbers, the 42,000 Allied defenders did
not press their initial advantage. Late in the second day the Germans
began landing transports on the one airstrip they held, even though it
was under Allied artillery fire. After a few more days of bitter
fighting, the Allied commander concluded that he was defeated and began
to withdraw by sea.
In the course of the battle, the Germans suffered
6,700 casualties, half of them dead, out of a total force of 25,000.
Allied losses on the island were less than 3,500, although an additional
11,800 troops surrendered and another 800 soldiers died or were wounded
at sea during the withdrawal. The Allies decided that airborne
operations were a powerful tactic, inasmuch as the Germans had
leapfrogged 100 miles of British-controlled waters to seize Crete from a
numerically superior ground force. As a consequence, the U.S. and
British armies would invest heavily in creating parachute and glider
units. Hitler reached the opposite conclusion. Having lost 350 aircraft
and nearly half of the 13,000 paratroopers engaged, he determined that
airborne assaults were a costly tactic whose time had passed. The
Germans never again launched a large operation from the air.
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The first tactical employment of Marine parachutists
came with the large-scale landing exercise of the Amphibious Force,
Atlantic Fleet, in August 1941. This corps, under the command of Major
General Holland M. Smith, consisted of the 1st Marine Division and the
Army's 1st Infantry Division. The final plan for the exercise at New
River, North Carolina, called for Captain Williams' company to parachute
at H plus 1 hour onto a vital crossroads behind enemy lines, secure it,
and then attack the rear of enemy forces opposing the landing of the 1st
Infantry Division. Captain Howard's company would jump on the morning of
D plus 2 in support of an amphibious landing by Lieutenant Colonel
Merritt A. Edson's Mobile Landing Group and a Marine tank company.
Edson's force (the genesis of the 1st Raider Battalion) would go ashore
behind enemy lines, advance inland, destroy the opposing reserve force,
and seize control of important lines of communication. Howard's men
would land near Edson's objective and "secure the road net and bridges
in that vicinity."
For the exercise the parachutists were attached to
the 1st Marine Aircraft Wing, which operated from a small airfield at
New Bern, North Carolina, just north of the Marine base. The landing
force executed the operation as planned, hut Holland Smith was not
pleased with the results because there were far too many
artificialities, including the lack of an aggressor force. A shortage of
transport planes (only two on hand) handicapped the parachutists; it
took several flights, with long delays between, to get just one of the
under-strength companies on the ground. Once the exercise was underway,
Smith made one attempt to simulate an enemy force. He arranged for
Captain Williams to re-embark one squad and jump behind the lines of the
two divisions, with orders to create as much havoc as possible.
Williams' tiny force cut tactical telephone lines, hijacked trucks,
blocked a road, and successfully evaded capture for several hours. One
after-action report noted that "the introduction of paratroops lent
realism to the necessity for command post security."
Smith put great faith in the potential value of
airborne operations. In his preliminary report on the exercise, he
referred to Edson's infantry/tank/parachute assault on D+2 as a
"spearhead thrust around the hostile flank" and emphasized the need in
modern warfare for the "speed and shock effect" of airborne and armor
units. With that in mind, he recommended that his two-division force
include at least one "air attack brigade" of at least one parachute
regiment and one air infantry regiment. (The term "air infantry"
referred to ground troops landed by transport aircraft.) He also urged
the Marine Corps to acquire the necessary transport planes. Despite this
high-level plea, the Marine Corps continued to go slowly with the
parachute program. At the end of March 1942, the 1st Battalion finally
stood up its third line company, but the entire organization only had a
total of 332 officers and men, less than 60 percent of its table of
organization strength (one of the lowest figures in the division). The
2d Battalion, still recovering from the loss of its first Company A, had
barely 200 men.
Manpower and aircraft shortages and the
straightjacket of the parachute training pipeline accounted for some of
the bottleneck, but a lack of enthusiasm for the idea at Headquarters
also appears to have taken hold. By contrast, the Corps had not
conceived the original idea for the raiders until mid-1941, but it had
two full 800-man battalions in existence by March 1942. The Marine Corps
was not enthusiastic about the latter force, either, but it expanded
rapidly in large measure due to pressure from President Franklin
Roosevelt and senior Navy leaders. Without similar heat from above,
Headquarters was not about to commit its precious resources to a crash
program to expand the parachutists and provide them with air transports.
Marine planners probably made a realistic choice in the matter, given
the competing requirements to fill up divisions and air wings and make
them ready for amphibious warfare, another infant art suffering through
even greater growing pains.
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