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Robert Edgar Bales, Jr.

NAME:
Robert Edgar Bales, Jr.
NICKNAME:
SERVICE NUMBER:
906200
HOME OF RECORD:
Chatawa, MS
NEXT OF KIN:
Parents, Robert & Mamie Bales
DATE OF BIRTH:
8/12/1925
SERVICE DATES:
11/8/1943 – 12/21/1945
DATE OF DEATH:
12/12/1954
CAMPAIGNUNITMOSRATERESULT
SaipanIn Hospital 
TinianIn Hospital 
Iwo JimaB/1/24745PFCWIA
INDIVIDUAL DECORATIONS:
Purple Heart
LAST KNOWN RANK:
Corporal
Robert Bales Selective Service registration card.

Robert Bales was born in 1925, the youngest son of Bob and Mamie Bales. He grew up in Columbia, Mississippi with his older brothers, Ollie and Howard. Eighteen-year-old Bales was one of the first men in his area to receive his draft notice; on 8 November 1943 he entered the Marine Corps and traveled to San Diego for boot camp. Although he was a Selective Service inductee, Bales proved to be as gung-ho as any volunteer–as one of the top in his training platoon, he was promoted to Private First Class immediately after graduation, and wore the silver cross badge of a rifle sharpshooter. He was sent to Hawaii to join the 4th Signal Battalion.

On 21 February 1944, PFC Bales was reassigned to Company B, 24th Marines, as a replacement rifleman. He trained for the invasion of the Marianas during the spring, but was either injured or seriously ill when the invasion force left Hawaii, and was ordered to remain behind in the care of a naval hospital.  He was waiting for Baker Company when they returned from securing Saipan and Tinian, and once again began preparing for an amphibious invasion.

Bales was fit and ready for duty the day his division set sail for Iwo Jima, and made his first combat landing on that island. However, he was not in the fight for long. On 21 February 1945 – one year to the day after he joined Baker Company – Bales was hit by shrapnel in the left arm and left knee, and evacuated from Iwo via the USS Samaritan. He eventually saw Saipan, but only from the confines of the 148th General Hospital, where his wounds were treated. Within a few weeks, Bales was deemed fit for active duty and returned to Camp Maui, where he was reunited with his surviving friends in Company B.

Bales spent the rest of the war training for the planned invasion of Japan, but was spared further combat when the Japanese surrendered. He was discharged from the service as a corporal the following December. He returned to Mississippi and settled in McComb, where he worked as a carpenter.

On the night of 12 December 1954, Bales was killed in a head-on car crash near Magnolia, Mississippi. Witnesses noted that his car was driving without headlights and weaving into the southbound lane of the highway. A few days after the crash, a pair of college students – twin brothers and former luminaries of the Magnolia High School football team – admitted to arguing with Bales at a cafe shortly before the crash. After “inviting” Bales outside to settle the argument, one of the brothers sucker-punched the carpenter, knocking him to the ground. Bales staggered to his car and drove away. The crash occurred a few moments later.

Bales is buried in McComb’s Hollywood Cemetery.

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