Thursday, March 17, 2022

 

POST #22-36 

 Day Twenty-Six...Iwo Jima Battle Narrative, 17 March, 1945.. 

Almost Done!

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

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

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Day 26...The End...

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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 have posted here on the Blog Post about the B-1-24 was be minimal. But we added links leading to a very good, detailed website...1st Battallion-24th Marines that have given way more information than we can deliver ourselves. 

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On this day, 17 March 1945...At daylight, the sweeps began once more. One last time, Battalion 1-24 climbed out of foxholes. One last time they moved out, carefully searching through the caves, searching for the enemy. But instead of facing northeast as they had done for nearly thirty days, their line of advance moved southwest. Back to the landing beaches!  Soon to be the departing beaches!

They moved slowly through the terrain. Discarded weapons were collected. Dropped gear was salvaged. Caves were blasted shut. Dead men were hauled out and sent for burial...in a cemetery if American, on the spot if Japanese. It took hours to cover the few hundred yards back to Hill 382. They crossed their own old battlefields and those of hundreds of other men. Every step held memories, and every step got them closer to the end.

When Dad and the other Marines caught sight of the beach they must have been amazed at the change since they came ashore nearly a month earlier. There were thousands of men and lots of equipment. There were pilots and mechanics, cooks, bakers, hospitals, and bulldozers making runways.

But no one was interested in sightseeing...they wanted to get aboard one of the ships and sail as far away from Iwo as possible. For a time, the rumor had it that they would board the ship that evening, but this didn’t happen. Instead, they dug in one more time on the slopes of Hill 382...overlooking the Meat Grinder, the Turkey Knob and the Amphitheater... the spots that they had battled for, and where their buddies had died. They waited for an attack and waited for the morning and the orders that would finally get them out of the living hell they had experienced...Tomorrow...

The 1-24 consisting of Dads Baker Composite Company and Able Composite Company had one last Marine killed this day and no wounded, with a Battalion strength of 480.

For the entire campaign of the 1034 men of the 1-24 that landed on Iwo, 146 were killed, 482 were wounded and 11 became sick.

According to official records, the 36-day assault of Iwo Jima resulted in more than 26,000 total American casualties, including 6,800 dead. Japanese combat deaths numbered over three times as many. The Medal of Honor was awarded to 27 U.S. Marines and U.S. sailors (14 posthumously).

Read the full narrative below...     
  
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TODAYS FULL NARRATIVE

Todays narrative is DAY TWENTY-SIX on Iwo Jima, 14 March, 1945...It will be called The End...

Click or tap HERE to go to the full narrative...

https://1-24thmarines.com/the-battles/iwo-jima/d26/

Soon we will be ending the daily updates that followed the 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...  Thank you for following along!


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Until Next Time!!

     

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