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The Battle for Tinian: Vital Stepping Stone in America's War Against Japan PDF

239 Pages·2012·3.39 MB·English
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Tinian-layoutEDITED_Layout 1 3/5/12 3:58 PM Page 1 THE BATTLE FOR TINIAN Tinian-layoutEDITED_Layout 1 3/5/12 3:58 PM Page 2 Tinian-layoutEDITED_Layout 1 3/5/12 3:58 PM Page 3 THE BATTLE FOR TINIAN Vital Stepping Stone in America’s War Against Japan N N. P ATHAN REFER Philadelphia & Oxford Tinian-layoutEDITED_Layout 1 3/5/12 3:58 PM Page 4 Published in the United States of America and Great Britain in 2012 by CASemAte PUBLISHeRS 908 Darby Road, Havertown, PA 19083 and 10 Hythe Bridge Street, Oxford, OX1 2eW Copyright 2012 © Nathan N. Prefer ISBN 978-1-61200-094-7 Digital edition: ISBN 978-1-61200-107-4 Cataloging-in-publication data is available from the Library of Congress and the British Library. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission from the Publisher in writing. 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Printed and bound in the United States of America. For a complete list of Casemate titles please contact: CASemAte PUBLISHeRS (US) telephone (610) 853-9131, Fax (610) 853-9146 e-mail: [email protected] CASemAte PUBLISHeRS (UK) telephone (01865) 241249, Fax (01865) 794449 e-mail: [email protected] Photo, title page:Amphibious tractors carrying Marines of the 4th Division approach the crowded White Beaches of Tinian. Many men had to climb out of the landing craft onto cliffs in order to get ashore. National Archives and Records Administration Tinian-layoutEDITED_Layout 1 3/5/12 3:58 PM Page 5 CONTENTS Acknowledgments 9 1. tINIAN: tHe ISLAND 11 2. tHe DeFeNDeRS: tHe JAPANeSe GARRISON ON tINIAN 17 3. WHY tINIAN? 29 4. tHe PLAN: “PLAYING BY eAR” 41 5. JIG DAY: JULY 24tH 59 6. JAPANeSe COUNteRAttACK 87 7. 25 JULY 1944: eXPANDING tHe BeACHHeAD 101 8. 26 JULY 1944: WHeRe ARe tHe JAPANeSe? 109 9. tHe mARINeS ADVANCe SOUtH 119 10. tINIAN tOWN AND BeYOND 129 11. tHe BItteR eND 139 12. tINIAN tO NAGASAKI 159 13. CONCLUSION: tHe ImPORtANCe OF tINIAN 169 Appendix A: Leading Personalities 175 Appendix B: Order of Battle—U.S. Forces 189 Appendix C: Order of Battle—Japanese Forces 197 Appendix D: Distribution of Casualties 201 Appendix e: U.S. marine Division, 1944 202 Appendix F: medal of Honor Citations 207 Appendix G: Ship Histories 211 Notes 215 Bibliographic essay 225 Index 229 Tinian-layoutEDITED_Layout 1 3/5/12 3:58 PM Page 6 MAPS 1. mariana Islands, 1944 10 2. Japanese Defensive Sectors, tinian, July 1944 25 3. Landing Plan, July 1944 55 4. Jig Day, 24–25 July 1944 81 5. tinian, July–August 1944 116 6. Scene of Night Action, 31 July–1 August 1944 140 All maps courtesy of Mary Craddock Hoffman Tinian-layoutEDITED_Layout 1 3/5/12 3:58 PM Page 7 In landing operations, retreat is impossible. to surrender is as ignoble as it is foolish. Above all else remember that we as the attackers have the initiative. We know exactly what we are going to do, while the enemy is ignorant of our intentions and can only parry our blows. We must retain this tremendous advantage by always attacking, rapidly, ruthlessly, viciously and without rest. GeN. GeORGe S. PAttON, JR. General Order to Seventh US Army before the Sicily landings, 27 June 1943 Tinian-layoutEDITED_Layout 1 3/5/12 3:58 PM Page 8 Tinian-layoutEDITED_Layout 1 3/5/12 3:58 PM Page 9 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS As with any study such as this there are many who contribute to the final outcome. I would like to gratefully acknowledge the following persons and organizations which made this book possible. Special appreciation to Brig. Gen. edwin m. Simmons USmC (Ret.) and Bemis m. Frank, also retired, for their assistance and cooperation dur- ing my visits to the marine Corps History and museums Division, marine Corps Historical Center at the Washington, D.C. Navy Yard. Special ap - pre ciation is also due to those veterans who willingly provided their own experiences. Here are included earl F. Dunlop (3/25), Andrew J. Link (4th engineers), Henry m. mcCown (593d Naval Construction Battalion), and Paul A. Viel (1/23). Special appreciation is also due to mr. David Farnsworth, Publisher of Casemate who, a decade later, remembered this author and his previous work. to editor Steven Smith, Libby Braden and tara Lichterman, another debt of gratitude for their assistance, encouragement and help in getting this work to print. Finally, there are those who suffered through it all. First and foremost my wife Barbara Anne, who fulfilled the roles of secretary, research assis- tant and cheerleader. then our daughters Hollie and Amy, and daughter- in-law Rose, who learned far more than they ever desired about the Second World War. And the sons, Douglas, Kevin, michael and Christopher and sons-in-law Garret and Joseph who fortunately have never had to experi- ence the tragedy of war. Finally, may the grandchildren, Alexis, Amanda, Andrew, Brittany, Grace, Hannah, Lucas, Nicholas and Samantha never know war. Without them this book would never have been completed. 9

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In July 1944, the 9,000-man Japanese garrison on the island of Tinian listened warily as the thunder of the United States Navy and Marine Corps, Army and Air Corps, descended on their neighboring island, Saipan, just three miles away. There were 20,000 Japanese troops on Saipan, but the US obliterat
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