Tuesday, March 8, 2022


 POST #22-27 

 Day Seventeen...Iwo Jima Battle Narrative, 8 March, 1945.. 

Mikey's Dads 100th Birthday Was on 2-22-2022...

 We continue the day-by-day story of the First Battalion, 24th Marines, Baker company in the bloody battle of IWO JIMA...

******
Day Seventeen...Breakdown

If you're have trouble seeing the entire post, CLICK HERE
Subscribe to get E-Mail notifications of new posts!

Fill the CONTACT US TO SUBSCRIBE fields!

********

Tap any photo or video to enlarge/play.

Tap the underlined links to visit an explanatory webpage. 

********

On 2-22-2022) Mikey's Dad, Willard W. Wemple would have been 100 years old.  We are following Dad's time in the First Battalion, 24th Marines, Baker company, from February 19th to March 17th, 1945, in....Operation Detachment.

What we post here on the Blog Post about the B-1-24 will be minimal. But we will add links leading to a very good, detailed website...1st Battallion-24th Marines that will give way more information than we can deliver ourselves. We must warn you that some of the information will be graphic and upsetting, but will give you some idea about what Dad and the other Marines experienced.  If you see a mention of Baker Company, that is the unit dad was assigned to.

******

On morning of this day, 8 March 1945, Dad and Baker Company had appreciated the opportunity to catch up on some sleep in relative safety several hundred yards behind the front lines.

But today these Marines and dozens of their comrades in seriously depleted ranks were again tasked with breaking through the same defensive line that defied their efforts for the past several days.

Captain William Eddy brought Baker Company up to the lines to relieve Easy Company, 2/24, at about 0430. Easy Company’s relief by Baker was the last action it would take in the battle. That morning, Easy was disbanded and the survivors assigned to other units in the battalion, an extreme measure that spoke to the tremendous casualties suffered in the past week.

Baker and Charlie were about fifty yards short of a ridgeline covered with bunkers and pillboxes. The men hoped to be atop the ridge by nightfall.

Demolition work filled the morning’s advance, with many pillboxes and caves gradually being overrun.  Baker and Charlie Companies used countless rounds of small-arms ammunition, gallons of flamethrower fuel, and pounds of TNT every couple of yards, eliminating one fortification after another.

It took nearly six hours to traverse those fifty yards, but at last portions of Baker and Charlie gained the top of the ridge.

At noon, Able Company was moved back into regimental reserve. Charlie Company occupied the high ground except for the right flank, where a stubborn Japanese blockhouse resisted capture.

Baker Company had one platoon on the ridge with another working its way forward. An advance of fifty yards may sound modest, but considering the number of casualties sustained in trying to cross this same ground over several days, scaling the ridge was a significant achievement.

The terrain beyond was another endless sprawl of boulders, crags, and gullies, but for a brief moment, it seemed that First Battalion had finally achieved a breakthrough.

Of course, the Japanese were waiting. The Jap spotters who withdrew from the ridge had new positions, and they knew the exact coordinates of the ridge. Every time a Marine showed his head, he drew fire, not just rifles and machine guns, but batteries of Japanese mortars.

These occasional heavy barrages continued at the slightest provocation for the next several hours. Then, at 1515, the Japanese unleashed everything they had.

The afternoon of 8 March 1945 was the point that all but ended the First Battalion’s effectiveness as a combat unit and came closest to breaking their collective spirit.

The worst happened about 1515 when an extremely heavy barrage killed 15 men in the two companies, including the last two remaining platoon leaders in “C” Company. The only officer left in “B” Company was Captain Eddy.  

It will never be known how long this shelling lasted. The top of the ridge exploded in a series of blasts that shook the earth and filled the air with flying pieces of metal. Countless 81mm and 90mm bombs ripped the ground, and there may have been some of the man-sized 320mm shells. The shrieks of the missiles mingled with the screams of the men who fell from with shrapnel.  The men were in a state of physical and emotional collapse.

After the shelling came they realized that they could not stay where they were. It was late too for air support, and they did not know where to send it...the Japanese batteries were too well hidden. And, looking up and down the line, it was clear that not enough Marines remained to mount an effective nighttime defense.

Down the slope they went, bearing the wounded and the dead, searching for a point to consolidate and dig in for the night. As they went, the Japanese dropped a second “extremely heavy” barrage on the top of the ridge.

Able Company provided reinforcements. One platoon went into line with Baker Company; another reported to the remnants of Charlie Company.

This emergency move proved to be a good idea. Japanese fire usually tapered off at nightfall, but tonight the mortarmen fired as though they had all the ammunition in the world, hitting the top of the ridge and dropping shells blindly all along the line of the 24th Marines.

The Marines would be busy that night. The Japanese were out in force, striking up and down the Marine line. It was the heaviest infiltration attempts that First Battalion experienced during the campaign.

Dad remembered hearing the Japanese soldiers chattering in the dark and trying to figure out where they were...It was a long night, and tomorrow the grueling advance would begin one more time...

Dads Baker Company had 9 Marines killed this day and 33 wounded.

Read the full narrative for today...it's very detailed, and again graphic...        

******

TODAYS FULL NARRATIVE

Todays narrative is Day SEVENTEEN on Iwo Jima, 8 March, 1945...It will be called Breakdown...

Click or tap HERE to go to the full narrative...It's very interesting 

https://1-24thmarines.com/the-battles/iwo-jima/d17/


Over the next posts and next days we will continue posting daily updates that will follow 1-24-B in the battle through logs and stories of the battle as told by a Military Historian and battle participants on the 1st Battallion-24th Marines Website...


 Visit our YouTube Channel --- MtMikey for all of our videos! - Please Like and Subscribe! -

Until Next Time!!

  

No comments:

Post a Comment