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Phil Wood's Letters

Letter #60
Lay Bare A Few More Nerves

To Margretta & Gretchen
2 April 1944

2 April[1]
I’ve been a Marine exactly two years today

Dear girls,

I’ve been thinking [of sending] you the story of Namur for quite some time. I guess I didn’t because of censorship, and because a great deal of what I saw wasn’t nice and orderly and safe – that is, after all, the traditional view that one is supposed to impress on the loved ones at home.[2] Of course they know it isn’t that way, just as well as you do, but they don’t want to sound as though they’re worrying themselves to death. Maybe it’s the realistic age we’re living in that makes the change – not blatantly so, as were the 20s – but quietly, factually – simply accepting facts, though unpleasant, because of a desire to know rather than an attempt to seek a new thrill – a violent sensation – The Sun Also Rises – cut away another inhibition – lay bare a few more nerves.

I’m not writing because I want to shock or worry you, or because I’m proud of the dangers I’ve been through – it’s just that knowing and loving you, I think that you would prefer knowing what it was like and how I felt – and thus what it will be like next time. Known fears and worries are limited ones. Unknown, they can become tremendous.
Copies of the above map and questionnaire (front and back) were distributed to all hands of the 4th Marine Division en route to Operation Flintlock. (Editor's collection.)
We knew where we going as soon as we had been out to sea a day or two. We had known for a month that we were to go directly into action, and when – we didn’t know where – we were issued many maps and photos, and reams of intelligence data, and operations orders – spent long hours every day teaching everything we knew to the men – memorizing, going over it, pounding it in. Hours of physical exercise out in the hot sun, the huge convoy stretched out to the horizon all around us, swelteringly hot below decks, increasingly tense feeling all over the ship, sleeping on the cool decks with the breeze, the constant boil of the phosphorescent sea under the prow, the constant darkness and quiet, and the ever-constant star that twinkled red and blue. Singing every night, the old songs, the company accordionist playing up on deck. More work during the day, firing the weapons over the side, rifle inspection, final word on boat assignment tables, the last time you clean and oil your rifle, fuse your hand grenade and hang it on your belt. Land – little low islands looking brilliantly green after weeks of blue sky and bluer water… the rumbling of guns, Roi and Namur marked by a thin trail of smoke threading across the sky – the Artillery and one outfit of Infantry lands on the nearby, lightly defended islands, and we hear the report on the radio; the Colonel announces all events over the P.A. and is cheered by the men.[3] This is it – the last Officer’s meeting – the Colonel’s big red face, and bigger but unsteady grin under the only small light in the room, all the Officers tense and still, getting the final dope, the final meeting of The Agony Quartet, which is a Duet now, talking it over – this is it, you know, and deciding that we were excited but not afraid, and falling asleep with, strangely, no trouble at all.
Officers of the 24th Marines inspect a relief map of Roi-Namur. Regimental commander Colonel Franklin Hart is at left; Jimmie Dyess is at far right. Beside him is the battalion executive officer, Major Maynard Schultz.
Up before dawn, tight stomach but a ravenous appetite – forgot to wake up Ted, and he almost missed the boat. The last time I saw him, he was mad as Hell and cussed me out for a knucklehead. Went down into the men’s compartment, and they were all excited but very gay. Overnight the atmosphere had changed – the incessant pounding had been going on for 24 hours now, and we didn’t see how there could be anything left. They called us up topside by boat groups – mine was last by about an hour, the motor conked out. When we finally went over the net there were only a couple of landing boats to be seen, circling aimlessly around, belonging to other outfits. I took off like a bat out of Hell for where I thought the Company was–several miles away in the lagoon – they tagged along and we made quite a sizable group – it was raining and cold and the water was rough. I wandered from one rendezvous area to another, almost deciding to go in with the assault wave of another regiment, and finally stumbled on “A” Company, shells screaming overhead – the smell of powder, the brilliantly blue lagoon, and shivering with cold – for now it could only be cold – the word seemed clear in all the outfits I talked to that there was nothing left. I don’t know how they thought they knew, but we believed it; and felt bitterly disappointed. All the work, preparation, and worry seemed to be for nothing – there was nothing to do but walk ashore. Harry’s face when I finally found his boat was a study in dejection. “We won’t get our licks in now,” he yelled, but we formed up anyway.[4]
American landing craft leave little white wakes as they approach Roi (right) and Namur, 1 February 1944. US Navy photo.
Our Battalion was in reserve for the Regiment, and about 40 minutes after the first wave went in they called for us.[5] We didn’t know why – probably to share to coconuts with them, but we started in. “A” Company was to reinforce the Battalion assigned to the right half of Namur.[6] We looked long and hard at the low island – the shelling had stopped now but a steady column of smoke went drifting over our heads  –we could see the blasted palm trees, the tortured steel skeletons of the two hangers of Roi – we got down, just for form, because we had always done it, but inwardly terrifically let down – empty – the boat chugged in.
An ammunition dump explodes on Namur. Boats carrying 1/24 can be seen advancing into the smoke. US Navy photo.
Suddenly, when we were about 100 yards offshore a tremendous blast of air seemed to stop the boat, followed by a wave of sound that left everything throbbing – we involuntarily poked our heads up and looked – the whole right half of the island had heaved and coughed its flaming entrails up into the air – hundreds of feet above us – a Pillar of Fire in the daytime – the biggest munitions dump on the island had been mined and set off by the Japs a couple of hundred yards inland, concrete blocks rained into the water around us, every man muttered “Christ, this is it!” to himself, and a huge cloud of black ash drifted over the boat – so thick you couldn’t breathe or see the man next to you in the boat – the most terrifying moment I’ve ever spent – there seemed to be no more sound left in the world.[7]
When it cleared, we were ten yards from the beach – the ash stuck to the green and brown camouflage paint, and we fought the battle in blackface – the grating jolt, the ramp went down and I pounded ashore through the shallow water to find thousands of men crouched on the beach in the shelter of a slight rise. They were as thick as flies – I said “Another Tarawa” to myself, and found a Lieutenant that I knew calmly trying to bandage a man who had half his face torn off by two machine gun bullets. He simply said, “Don’t go up there, Phil – it’s all mined – we had just knocked out the machine guns that were trained on the beach and started in and they blew it. It got Jim and every man in his platoon. We’ve lost a lot.”[8] I turned to go and stepped on a body burned black – Jap – so much foul meat – but I cussed it and was mad at it when I should, I suppose, have been revolted.

The Captain sensibly decided to go up through the blasted area–we could be sure no Japs were left there. We moved out, scurrying from one shell hole to another as we realized for the first time that a lot of rifle fire was coming our way.[9]

The area covered by the bombardment, a 400 yard swath cut along the length of the beach – stood for a simply incredible destruction. There had been many buildings, pillboxes, and men there – nothing was left but rubble – twisted iron, heaps of concrete, a few blasted palm stumps and shell-pocked earth – a super No Man’s Land that you had read about so often, and here I was. This was the battle that I had pointed toward for so long – two years, almost. It all seemed unreal – I felt detached, but very tense.

We met nothing but a few snipers until we came to the northern half of the island. There some shells had landed, but there was a lot of shrubbery and treed area left – many dugouts, pillboxes, and blockhouses – and almost all the Japs left living on Roi and Namur [after] the bombardment. The first one I saw was half naked – an Officer, brandishing a Samurai sword. I slowly sighted on him, but before I squeezed the trigger he was down – one of my machine gunners was standing over him, smashed out a gold front tooth and put it in his pocket – I yelled, “Why?” He said because his dad had asked for one, I said I was glad it was for a sentimental reason.

We moved around the perimeter of the island, just off the beach, from where we landed up to the northernmost point.[10] On our flanks we were the forward echelon of the Regiment – we picked up stragglers from the outfit that had been blasted, but the rest of them followed us.[11]
Corporal Arthur "B." Ervin, hero of Namur.
I noticed Corporal Ervin – then [a] machine gun squad leader, now my mortar section leader, up ahead, waving us on. As long as he was in the action, he stayed at least 50 yards ahead of anybody else in the Company.[12] I took a couple of the others and went up to help him. He had stumbled on a dugout containing 6 or 7 Japs, had fired at them standing on the edge – then thrown a grenade or two and come back for more – a couple of us went up with him – I went around behind the position, and while they finished off the ones that were there, I waited for any that might retreat – one did, and I shot him as he tried to sneak past me in the undergrowth. I was partly, very dimly conscious that I had killed, but more aware of the satisfying way my little carbine heaved in my hands and coughed up bullets.

I realized that the sound of my firing might attract snipers, so I moved off and sat quietly in the bush, waiting for the others to come up. When they did we moved forward, Roy and I side by side.[13] I do like fighting next to him–we know each other well enough.

A burst of machine gun fire came from a blockhouse we were approaching, we all dove for nearby trenches, and Steve Hopkins and I landed in a small one. On a small projection lay a Jap. I thought him dead, and passed by him up the trench. Hoppy kept an eye on him, though, and when the wounded Jap rolled over to throw the grenade he had in his hand, Hoppy shot him. The kid was white-faced and chattery – “Did you see, Mr. Wood? Did you see the grenade? Did you see what he was going to do?”[14]
Over our heads all Hell broke loose. My machine guns behind me started a duel with those in the blockhouse – pound after pound of lead went over, then a Jap knee mortar started pounding away, probing for our trench, but luckily never got it. During a lull in the fire fighting my runner crawled up to me, and Cpl. Ervin slipped out of the trench and went forward again.[15] He came on a Jap machine gun nest beside the blockhouse, killed two of the men manning it, but was driven off when an officer knocked off his helmet with a round from his pistol. Ervin’s face was sprayed with bits of lead – he backed off, came back, and told us the situation – what was up there, where they were – I hopped out and went back to assign the target to my mortars. When I got there I found that a couple of the men had been wounded by the Jap knee mortars, but by the time we had set up, the forward elements of the company had moved up too close to the position to let us fire safely.

That was my job – to find targets for the mortars, check and see that no friendly troops were too close, and then adjust their fire onto the target. The mortar fires from behind the lines, and they need someone to control their fire from the front. My machine gun squads were attached to the rifle platoon, but if they happened to be around and I spotted targets for them, I controlled their fire, too.[16] That was the biggest trouble I had, though – our boys, the riflemen, were too eager to attack. Several times I could have saved lives if they had only waited for a preparatory mortar barrage, but they couldn’t wait to close with the Japs. It made for a headlong, rushing attack that never gave the enemy a chance to reorganize. Every one of them is vividly conscious of the fact that he is a Marine.
"Fourth Division marines fighting on Namur Island, Kwajalein Atoll, 1 February 1944. These men are preparing to rush a Japanese blockhouse, after throwing hand grenades." US Navy photo 80-G-213445.
We used bazookas on the blockhouse, and finally it was silenced; Harry, then Cpl. Ervin ran across the open and threw hand grenades into the firing ports. I picked up Ervin’s helmet to toss it to him, but it was knocked out of my hand by a sniper’s bullet.[17]Ervin hopped up on top of the blockhouse, and stood there silhouetted against the sky – legs spread apart, hatless, with blood on his face and his coat flung open, firing his rifle from the hip into the dugout that lay in front of Sgt. Tucker and myself – he killed some, but fire kept coming at him from the dugout, so he jumped down, ran to it, and was hit just as he got in front of me. Harry and I yelled to him – he said he didn’t want any help, and pulled himself out with his right arm–he was hit in the side–and Harry had to order him back to the hospital. Ervin claimed that he could still throw grenades with his one arm.[18]

Sgt. Tucker was in a hole on my left – he and Harry and Roy and two or three from Roy’s platoon and I gave the dugout a barrage of grenades at a range of ten yards – they were deafening – Tuck and Cpl. Robbins charged first, but were driven back by fire.[19] Then five or six of us went over the edge of the embankment and shot everything that moved – a rifle came around a corner – I shot it out of the Jap’s hands and someone else drilled him – he had a big silk flag tied to his rifle which I cut off and stuffed into my pocket – it’s one of the few found on Namur.[20]

I found [a] runner, gave him directions as to the disposition of the mortar sections, and he went back to tell them where to go.When I turned, the rest of them had gone on – running, stopping to fire when they saw a fleeing Jap – following the beachline along the island. Imm, my other runner – 17 and, literally, has never been kissed – and I started after them, heard heavy firing, and stopped to reconnoiter. We were almost up to a wide, cleared area, just off a road running parallel to the beach. The “daring dozen” were across the clearing, and apparently having a hell of a fight in the scrubbed area 100 yards ahead of us. We crawled into a shell hole with a Lieutenant from D Company – he told us to stay down for Christ’s sake, the road and the clearing were machine gun lanes, and the Japs had been killing anyone who tried to go up.[21]

Only four of us got out of that trap whole – that any did was Sgt. Tucker’s doing – seeing that they were being methodically slaughtered, he stood up and opened fire with his rifle. As each Jap arose out of the opposing trench to fire, Tucker carefully sighted in and shot him – often, as we found out later, right between the eyes. They think that he killed about 30 Japs that way – he put two enemy machine guns out of action, and gave the others a chance to pull the wounded into nearby shell holes – bullets creased his helmet, punctured his canteen, and cut off his rifle belt, but he didn’t get down until the rest of them were safely in position.[22]Harry was hit in the leg, but Roy was alright.

I didn’t know any of this until later. I only saw one man run across the clearing, and he was cut down – that was enough. We stayed there – I lay on my back, looking up at a shell scarred fragment of a tree that stood over our hole, watching the beautiful serene white terns soar over the battlefield – and for the first time, I was really afraid. Afraid of my own motives for staying there. I knew damned well that it was foolish to think of going up, but that didn’t matter. I was still afraid, wasn’t I? Yes, I was afraid, but it was a justifiable fear of a certain death – still afraid, though – I thought of the mortars, but the other Lieutenant said that the Third Battalion had reached the beach a few hundred yards up the line, and this was the last pocket of resistance. I thought he was wrong, and he was, but I couldn’t take a chance, and in the growing dusk I sat and worried – still firing forward, what could I do – nothing, but they needed help. Imm is asleep, confident that anything I decide is correct – but I haven’t decided, there is no decision to make – were are too disorganized to effect a mass rush, the Company spread out from here back to the blockhouse. They need help. Yes, I am afraid, I’ll admit it, but what about it? A half-track passed over our hole on the way up the road, but it doesn’t get 25 yards in front of us before it is stopped by the sheer force of thousands of rounds from Jap heavy machine guns – it backs off, without even getting a chance to fire a round. I now admit that I’m afraid – even to myself, but am no longer ashamed of it. And the half-track gives me an idea.

PFC William J. Imm, mortar section runner.
When it became quite dark I woke Imm up, and explained what we were going to do. He almost knifed me when I shook him awake, but luckily I called him by name as I did it. The firing had quieted down, and we hopped out of the shell hole, and scurried off in the dark to where I thought the command post was, to try to arrange to have tanks brought up at dawn.[23]Moving around in the rear, we were challenged many times – often incorrectly, thus causing my answer to be incorrect – the first time, without thinking, I bawled out “You lugheaded sonofabitch, that’s no way to give the password!” then realized that the more I did that, the safer I was – everybody was jittery and trigger happy that night, and the more I sounded like a tough ole gunnery sergeant, the more at home they would feel.[24] We wandered around for a little while, but the command post was well hidden, for we never did find it–when we got to the lagoon beach where we landed, half a mile back, I found a phone and called up Battalion to tell them what was happening, and ask for tanks. Col. Dyess surprised me by saying that the Captain had just radioed in the same dope and the same request.[25] So I woke Imm up – with a long stick – and we headed back. We went by way of the beach around the island, to avoid all the trigger-happy boys, and were even more worried by the fact that we didn’t hear any challenge at all. Walking up that silent beach – only sporadic firing inland now – with 60mm mortar parachute flares going off at regular intervals – during which we would freeze in whatever positions we happened to be in. Dead bodies everywhere – some lying in the shallow wash inside the coral reef – the island was beginning to smell already.
Back at the company – when we got there, we found that they had just moved reinforcements up, the Captain and “Fireball” Stott had placed half a dozen machine guns along our front line, which was about 50 yards from the Jap trenches and pillbox system. There wasn’t much action that night – some Japs tried to crawl through our lines, but didn’t get very far – Hoppy got it that night as he was helping to dig in his machine gun.[26]

We crawled up to where the Captain was, in the front line, and it was a mistake – he thought we were infiltrating Japs, challenged us, but I was pretty deafened by the day’s firing and didn’t hear him – his runner almost plugged us before we were recognized. We exchanged “the word.” He had been on the left flank all day, the wounded had been evacuated, and we were expecting a counter-attack that night. It materialized. We had been told before we went in to expect it – that no matter how hopeless the situation, the Japs would always counter-attack, to save face and all that. They did it, but it hit our left, in B Company’s sector, before dawn with wild yelling and all the accouterments – firecrackers, samurai [sword] waving officers who shouted commands in English – B Company was pushed back by the sheer violence of the attack, and they suffered pretty heavy casualties; but their 60mm mortars saved the day – they fired at a perilously close range, but succeeded in breaking up the charge. A damned good weapon – my favorite – if I had enough of them and enough men, I think I could pretty near win this war with them alone.[27]
PFC Stephen P. Hopkins, the company's first KIA.
I crawled into the nearest hole when I had talked with the Captain, and after I had rolled the sleeping Imm into a trench, I curled up with the company’s First Sergeant. It started to rain – cold, steady, miserable rain – but in spite of the shivering and the flares and the fears of a counter-attack, I slept for a couple of hours – then the Top woke me up to stand watch for a couple of hours while he slept. He never realized that it was me until the next morning – thought I was some private, though he said that he should have recognized the bony knees and elbows – flares whistling weirdly and painting all things with a ghastly whitewash – occasional bursts of Jap machine gun fire over our heads – red tracer streaks against the sky–the sigh and wash of the sea at our side, and the distinctive, sickeningly sweet odor of Japs – something they eat makes them all smell the same.[28]

At dawn the Captain called to me, and told me that he had checked all night, by radio, and found out that there were no Marines on the beach beyond us, only Japs, so it was safe to fire the mortars. We set a time, and I crawled back to the guns, and sat there with them, cleaned my carbine in the growing light, ate a couple of squares of chocolate – the first food I’d had in 24 hours, but I wasn’t hungry – drank a little water, the first I’d had in almost a day, and smoked my first cigarette with relish, as soon as it was light enough not to show.
A newspaper artist's impression of Big Red's final moments appeared in the Sikeston (MO) Standard, 22 December 1944.
We fired about a hundred rounds, poured them into the dugouts and pillboxes that had given us so much trouble the day before. We heard screams and groans from where they fell, and it was all we could do to keep from cheering – our shelling brought return rifle fire from what was left of the Japs, and a couple of snipers started peppering our positions – but they were damned poor shots, and we finally cut them out of the trees. The tanks finally came up, Col. Dyess leading the way on foot – and he organized the attack – he was fearless to the point of being foolhardy, refused to take cover – even buck privates were yelling at him to get down, but he’d only wave his Tommy gun at them and say he was a lucky Irishman.

That attack broke the back of the resistance – from then on the Japs were disorganized and fleeing. When the mortars went out of action, I went up and helped a couple of my machine gun squads root them out of their dugouts. The mortars had made a slaughterhouse of the area, and then we chased the few remaining, there couldn’t have been more than 25 or 30, up the tank trap, an 8-foot trench that ran around the island just inside the beach.

We raced after them. It was like hunting rats then – they scurried and scrambled, hid among the bodies of their own dead – there were hundreds of dead, killed by the Naval bombing the day before, lying in the trench, horribly twisted and mangled – headless, bodies laid open to the backbone, small pieces of flesh splattered on the ground, and carcasses so thick that at times we had to walk on them to get by. I remember stepping over a Samurai sword, but was too tired to even pick it up. Didn’t care. Col. Dyess was killed halfway up by a machine gun that they had set up in ambush. Fired at me, I think, but I heard the click of the bolt and hit the deck, and the shots went over me.[29]

Finally it was over – we met the other units coming around the island from the other side – the island was secured – well in hand, I suppose you’d call it, by one or two in the afternoon. We walked back down the beach – that picture that I sent you – and assembled in the center of the island – began to find out who was killed, and I realized that my face was taut and tired, and it was from pulling my lips tight into a set expression so that the sight of those piled bodies wouldn’t show on my face.

We started to clean up – mop up the wooded area for isolated snipers, and my platoon found a couple of cases of Jap beer – we all had a bottle or two – they forced five on me, and I promptly got tight – no food and almost no water.

In a photo appropriately titled "Namur Nightmare," exhausted Marines trickle back from the firing line to a clearing dotted with Japanese bodies. This site will likely become their bivouac.
And when the mopping up was over, and the terns were again beginning to show luminous white against the darkening sky, we returned to the spot on the beach where we had spent the night before, and fell exhausted on the ground. Never have I been so weary – so drained of feeling. I heard that Ted had been killed – I had been very close to him, and two boys in my platoon – they were merely facts to be noted, not to feel.[30]

We slept, although it wasn’t sleep that we needed – just a chance to stretch out in the sun, alone, and do and think of nothing at all.

We had to bury those dead – those foul rotting bodies – dig in defenses, and remove all the duds from the area – and were lucky enough to have left the island before it was bombed by Jap planes – we watched that from the lagoon – it reminded me of the Fourth of July – that time we were on the Boston boat and watched the fireworks along the sound.

And we came back here, to this paradise, to rest, that we might fight as well again.

It’s taken several sittings to write all this, girls – I almost tore it up once, because it’s unconventional, because of the gory things, and because I say I was in the front lines and in danger. But you must know all that already. And it feels good to get it down on paper – somehow, that settles it – makes you feel it’s really over and done with. Not that it’s bothered me much, but you can’t help thinking of it at times.

All my love,
Phil

Footnotes

[1] The handwritten copy of this letter has not survived. Gretchen and Margretta made numerous attempts to have this letter published, and it is believed that the original was lost in one of these efforts. Fortunately, Gretchen transcribed the letter ahead of time.
[2] Phil is taking full advantage of his job as battalion censor in sending this remarkable (and detail-rich) letter out.
[3] On 31 January 1944, the 25th Marines attacked and secured the smaller islets surrounding Roi and Namur, overcoming light resistance and allowing the 14th Marines (artillery) to land and set up their batteries. The 14th would fire in support of the 23rd and 24th Marines during their landing.
[4] The 24th Marines had a great deal of trouble getting organized for the ship-to-shore movement. The amphibious tractors (LVTs) they were to use had been in service the previous day, and most were unable to find their parent ships to refuel or rearm. Boats (LCVPs) had to be substituted at the last minute, with priority given to the assault waves. Phil’s company was particularly fouled up as they received conflicting orders; first to head for the beach as stand-in reserve for 2/24, then to hold fast as 2/24’s scheduled reserve (Company G) arrived, just as the flags dropped to commence the assault.
[5] This is to say at approximately 1230. The trip to the beach took 33 minutes.
[6] The Second Battalion, 24th Marines.
[7] Later, it was revealed that a Marine demolition team from F/2/24 breached a large concrete blockhouse. What they thought was a defensive fortification turned out to be a stockpile of bombs and torpedoes for aircraft flying out of Roi; their satchel charges set off the entire dump, obliterating the heavy structure and leaving a hole “as large as a fair-sized swimming pool” which quickly filled with water. From the boats, it looked as if the entire island had been destroyed. Twenty Marines from 2/24 were killed and a further 100 wounded by the blast, which also caused Company A’s first combat casualties. Corporal William J. Quinn and PFC Edward J. Horan were struck by falling concrete; both survived and eventually returned to duty with the company.
[8] “Jim” is most likely Lt. James B. Heater of Fox Company. Heater was wounded on Namur, but soon returned to his unit and served through the rest of the war and in Korea, retiring as a lieutenant colonel.
[9] The front lines were approximately 200 yards inland by this time.
[10] After linking up with 2/24, Company A was ordered to pass through the reeling Company F and take over the far right flank of the regimental line. They appear to have cut sideways along the front until reaching the beach; this movement began around 1530 hours.
[11] Due to poor terrain and a lack of wire communication and contact between outfits, it took nearly two hours to complete the relief of Fox Company’s “stragglers” and begin the next phase of the attack.
[12] Ervin stepped over a “spider hole” and had a narrow escape when a Japanese soldier fired a bullet that left a long burn mark but did not break the skin. Ervin was more discomfited by swallowing a plug of chewing tobacco and trying not to throw up in front of his squad. It was later said that telling this story was the only thing that got Ervin to laugh in public.
[13] Phil was often attached (or attached himself) to Roy Wood’s Third Platoon.
[14] PFC George A. Smith, gunner for Hopkins’ squad, witnessed this event. Smith relates that Hopkins kept the muzzle of his rifle squarely on the “dead” man’s head while the Marines moved up the trench. When the man pulled his grenade, Hopkins shot him through the brain; unbelievably, the Japanese merely shook his head and continued raising his grenade, and “Hoppy put the rest of the clip into him before he stayed still.” Small wonder Hopkins was “white faced and chattering.”
[15] Phil’s runner was eighteen-year-old PFC William J. Imm of Maspeth, NY.
[16] A weapons platoon leader in combat was most concerned with the mortars; as Phil mentions, his three machine gun squads were under the temporary command of his colleagues in the rifle platoons. Ordinarily, the platoon leader would call coordinates back to the mortar section sergeant, who would relay the orders to the tubes. Phil’s decision to go personally is somewhat unusual, but not out of character; Roy Wood will later mention that Phil preferred to take risks himself rather than send his men.
[17] This left “a slight scratch on the heel of my hand, so slight that it won’t even leave a scar that I can point to and tell my children that that is as close as Jap bullets ever got to me.” Phil did not bother to put in for a Purple Heart for this minor wound.
[18] Shortly after storming rearward in protest, Ervin became dizzy and – to his great annoyance – was carried back on a stretcher. He sustained “a through and through bullet wound in the tissues of the right chest wall” and “a grazing wound of the skin below the right clavicle.”
[19] Corporal Franklin C. Robbins, a quartermaster from Company D, attached himself to the assault troops. He was frequently mentioned alongside Sergeant Tucker in dispatches, and received a Silver Star Medal for gallantry.
[20] Unfortunately, this souvenir has been lost.
[21] The story of “the Daring Dozen” was a news item for a brief period after the battle; a number of them received decorations.
[22] Tucker would maintain this position overnight; his tally was eventually determined to be 38 of an estimated 75 Japanese in the trench. This feat earned him the Navy Cross.
[23] This plan, while quite courageous, was potentially fatal. Given the Japanese predilection for night infiltration, anything moving after dark was an open target for Marines–and the Japanese staged two attacks on 1/24 that night. The only reason to leave a hole at night was in a situation of most dire peril, and this rather foolish action on Phil’s part was a mark of inexperience and naiveté.
[24] Either the Marines that Phil encountered were just as inexperienced as he, or they had truly admirable fire discipline.
[25] Dyess was probably surprised in turn that a platoon leader had the temerity to call his command post and make tactical decisions.
[26] Smith recalls that his squad was ordered to advance their machine gun forward of the main line – a poor decision that left their crew exposed. They spotted movement, and Hopkins was shot in the head as he reached for his rifle. He died aboard a hospital ship a few hours later, without regaining consciousness, and was buried at sea.
[27] Approximately one company of Japanese soldiers struck at a gap between B/1/24 and I/3/24 in a fierce 45-minute fight. Although initially pushed back, the Marines rallied and actually wound up with a gain of 50 yards. Company B took severe casualties in this encounter; their Third Platoon was “practically wiped out [but] had hundreds of dead Japanese piled in front of its positions” as their captain later wrote.
[28] Being able to “smell” Japanese was a widely reported phenomenon throughout the Pacific Theater.
[29] Aquilla James Dyess received a posthumous Congressional Medal of Honor for organizing this final attack. The airfield on Roi was promptly renamed “Dyess Field.”
[30] Phil’s friend, 1Lt. Theodore Knapp “Ted” Johnson, the executive officer of Company C, was shot in the leg on 1 February 1944. The bullet must have hit an artery, for Johnson bled out and died while being evacuated for treatment. He was buried at sea. In addition to Hopkins, Phil’s platoon lost PFC Paul G. Southerland. According to veterans, Southerland was killed by a lone Japanese soldier while out souvenir hunting.

Editor's Comments

The full story of First Battalion, 24th Marines in Operation Flintlock incorporates much of this letter.

Part I: Not Afraid Of What Is Coming
Part II: Christ, This Is It
Part III: Better Not Shoot Me, You Sonuvabitch
Part IV: Like Hunting Rats
Part V: We Had To Bury Those Dead
Part VI: A Sad Voyage Back

 

Phil has obviously been wanting to get this off his chest for some time. As he mentions, the fear of censorship held him back – but now, two months after the battle with casualty reports released and numerous articles written, the rules are a little more relaxed. (Add, too, the fact that Wood often acted as the battalion censoring officer.) All helped spur him to write and send this remarkable letter, which evidently arrived with names and details intact.

 

As will be seen in subsequent missives, this letter caused quite a stir when it reached New York and was sent around to various family members and friends. Margretta even thought it might be published and sent copies to potential printers. Although initially surprised by the interest, Phil was evidently quite pleased with his work, and promised to “do a better job telling the story of the next one.” He would not get the chance.

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