Guam: Operations Of The 77th Division - 21 July-10 August 1944 [Illustrated Edition]
By Anon Anon
()
About this ebook
THE INVASION OF THE SOUTHERN MARIANAS in June and July of 1944 was part of a coordinated effort by U. S. forces to gain bases within striking distance by air of the Philippines and the Japanese home islands. The enemy position in the Pacific was weakening under strong Allied offensives, which moved along two lines converging on the Japanese inner zone. From Australia the Allied offensive had developed on an axis northwest along New Guinea and beyond the Bismarck Sea, and from Hawaii it had moved to the west through the Marshall Islands. The advance along both lines had depended upon the conquest of enemy islands selected to form a system of supporting garrisons from which air and sea power could neutralize the remaining enemy bases in the area.
The seizure of Guam in July-August 1944 added another base to our growing chain of possessions encircling the Japanese homeland. Marine troops made the initial landings on Guam and were aided in capturing the island by army units, comprised chiefly of the 77th Infantry Division. Guam tells the Army’s part of the campaign.
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Guam - Anon Anon
This edition is published by PICKLE PARTNERS PUBLISHING—www.picklepartnerspublishing.com
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Text originally published in 1946 under the same title.
© Pickle Partners Publishing 2013, all rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted by any means, electrical, mechanical or otherwise without the written permission of the copyright holder.
Publisher’s Note
Although in most cases we have retained the Author’s original spelling and grammar to authentically reproduce the work of the Author and the original intent of such material, some additional notes and clarifications have been added for the modern reader’s benefit.
We have also made every effort to include all maps and illustrations of the original edition the limitations of formatting do not allow of including larger maps, we will upload as many of these maps as possible.
American Forces in Action Series
GUAM — Operations of the 77th Division — 21 July-10 August 1944
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
TABLE OF CONTENTS 4
Maps 5
Illustrations 5
Foreword 7
CHAPTER I — Objective: Guam 8
Offensive in the Central Pacific 9
Marianas Islands 12
The Island of Guam 17
Enemy Forces on Guam 23
Plan of Attack 25
CHAPTER II — Assault Phase 29
The Landings 30
Expanding the Beachheads 35
Attack on Orote Peninsula 37
Establishment of Final Beachline 41
Battle of Supply 47
CHAPTER III — Pursuit Phase 51
Reconnaissance of Southern Guam 51
Pursuit to the North 56
77th Division's Supply Route 62
CHAPTER IV — Barrigada — The Pursuit Continues 64
Feeling Out Enemy Positions 68
The Gap on the Left 71
Tanks Support the 305th 74
Attempt to Close the Gap 76
North to O-3 Line 82
CHAPTER V — Final Pursuit Phase 86
The 306th Takes Over the Left (5-6 August) 86
Two Japanese Tanks 89
Plans for the Attack on Mt. Santa Rosa 93
Attack on Yigo 94
Tank Attack Against the 306th (7/8 August) 99
Push Beyond Mt. Santa Rosa (8 August) 99
Mopping Up 101
REQUEST FROM THE PUBLISHER 105
Maps
1—Allied Advance in the Pacific
2—Central Pacific Islands
3—The Southern Marianas: Plan of Attack, III and V Amphibious Corps
4—Guam (physiographic map)
5—Enemy Dispositions on Guam, July 1944
6—Preferred Plan of Attack on Guam, III Amphibious Corps—
7—W-Day Landing, III Amphibious Corps, 21 July 1944
8—Beachheads on W + 1, 111 Amphibious Corps, 22 July 1944
9—77th Division Sector, 24-27 July 1944
10—Orote Peninsula, 1st Provisional Marine Brigade, 25-29 July 1944
11—The Gap, 77th Division and 3d Marine Division, 25-27 July 1944
12—Reconnaissance of Southern Guam, 28 July-2 August 1944
13—Pursuit Phase, III Amphibious Corps, 31 July-1 August 1944
14—Construction of New Road, 302d Engineer Combat Battalion, to 31 July 1944
15—Approach to Barrigada, 77th Division, 2-4 August 1944
16—Reconnaissance of Barrigada, Company D, 706th Tank Battalion, Company I, 305th RCT
17—The Gap on the Left, About Noon, 2 August 1944
18—Situation on the Right, Close of Day, 2 August 1944
19—Company G's Attack, 1500-Dark, 2 August 1944
20—Barrigada Positions, Close of Day, 2 August 1944—
21—Advance to the 0-3 Line, 305th and 307th RCT, 3-4 August 1944
22—Plan for Advance, 77th Division, 5 August 1944
23—Advance to 0-4 Line, 77th Division, 5-6 August 1944
24—Plans for Final Phase, III Amphibious Corps
25—Action at Yigo, 7 August 1944
26—Night Positions, 7/8 August 1944
27—Guam (in color)
Illustrations
Maj. Gen. Andrew D. Bruce
Troops of 77th Division
Bluffs Rising 600 Feet
The Enemy Task Force
General Takashina and Colonel Suenaga
Japanese 200-mm Coastal Defense Gun
Landing Beaches
Hills in Western Coastal Range
The First Wave of Landing Craft
Small Boats Leave Asan Beaches
Waiting for Orders
306th RCT Comes Ashore
Close-in Fighting
Orote Air Strip
An Antitank Crew
The 2d Battalion, 305th RCT
Men of Company B
Cranes at Reef's Edge
Bulldozers Cleared Roads
Supplying the 77th Division
Area Patrolled
Pursuit Phase Begins
Machine-Gun Nests
Company G, 305th RCT
Native Camp
An Artillery Column
Locale of Barrigada Action
The Green House
The Wooded Plateau
Disabled Japanese Light Tank
Mt. Santa Rosa's Bare Slopes
The March to Yigo
Foreword
In a nation at war, teamwork by the whole people is necessary for victory. But the issue is decided on the battlefield, toward which all national effort leads. The country's fate lies in the hands of its soldier citizens; in the clash of battle is found the final test of plans, training, equipment, and-above all-the fighting spirit of units and individuals.
AMERICAN FORCES IN ACTION SERIES presents detailed accounts of particular combat operations of United States forces. To the American public, this record of high achievement by men who served their nation well is presented as a preface to the full military history of World War II. To the soldiers who took part in the operations concerned, these narratives will give the opportunity to see more clearly the results of orders which they obeyed and of sacrifices which they and their comrades made, in performance of missions that find their meaning in the outcome of a larger plan of battle.
s/Dwight D. Eisenhower
DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER
Chief of Staff
WAR DEPARTMENT
Historical Division
Washington 25, D. C.
1 February 1946
The seizure of Guam in July-August 1944 added another base to our growing chain of possessions encircling the Japanese homeland. Marine troops made the initial landings on Guam and were aided in capturing the island by army units, comprised chiefly of the 77th Infantry Division. Guam tells the Army's part of the campaign.
This study is based upon a first narrative prepared in the field from military records and from notes and interviews recorded during the operation by S/Sgt. James M. Burns. The manuscript of this historical officer has been edited and partially rewritten with the help of additional documentation by Mrs. Marjorie Cline of the editorial staff of the Historical Division. Although in published form the book contains no documentation, the original manuscript, fully documented, is on file in the War Department. Two photographs (pp. 43 and 120) are International News Photos; four (pp. 59, 105, 115) are from the Bishop Museum on Oahu; seven (pp. 15, 21, 32, 33, 54, 69, 78) were taken by the U. S. Navy; one (p. 34) is from the U. S. Coast Guard; one (p. 44) was taken by the U. S. Marine Corps; two (pp. 152 26) were supplied by the Air Transport Command, Overseas Technical Unit. The rest, unless otherwise stated in the captions, were taken by the U. S. Army Signal Corps. Photographs from International News Photos may not be reproduced without the approval of the War Department. Readers are urged to send directly to the Historical Division, War Department, Washington 25, D. C., comments, criticism, and additional information which may be of value in the preparation of a complete and definitive history of the Guam operation.
CHAPTER I — Objective: Guam
THE INVASION OF THE SOUTHERN MARIANAS in June and July of 1944 was part of a coordinated effort by U. S. forces to gain bases within striking distance by air of the Philippines and the Japanese home islands. The enemy position in the Pacific was weakening under strong Allied offensives, which moved along two lines converging on the Japanese inner zone. From Australia the Allied offensive had developed on an axis northwest along New Guinea and beyond the Bismarck Sea, and from Hawaii it had moved to the west through the Marshall Islands (Maps Nos. 1 and 2, pp. x and 2). The advance along both lines had depended upon the conquest of enemy islands selected to form a system of supporting garrisons from which air and sea power could neutralize the remaining enemy bases in the area.
By late spring Allied forces in the Southwest Pacific, pushing their advance along the northern coast of New Guinea, had reached Biak Island. Their network of forward bases in the Admiralty Islands and on New Guinea threatened Japanese holdings in the Netherlands Indies, the Caroline Islands, and even the Philippines. Eastward of Hollandia more than 100,000 enemy troops, cut from their sources of supply, were ineffective for future operations. To the north and east of the New Guinea thrust, Central Pacific forces had established a line of approach toward the Philippines, severing the enemy's communications east of Eniwetok atoll. The advance through the Central Pacific, begun a year later than that in the South and Southwest Pacific, protected the Allied positions in the Admiralties and on the New Guinea coast by weakening Truk, principal Japanese fleet base and aircraft staging center in the vicinity.
The next move, to the Marianas, was daring; it extended the Central Pacific spearhead more than a thousand miles to the west of the Marshalls, between the enemy-held Carolines on the south and Wake and Marcus on the north. The potential value of the southern Marianas was worth the risk. In addition to threatening the Philippines and the enemy supply line to the south, the conquest of these islands would furnish Central Pacific forces with their first bases for large-scale air attacks on Japan.
Offensive in the Central Pacific
Advance through the Central Pacific to the Marianas by U. S. forces meant penetrating deep into the Mandates, made up of the Marianas, Palau, Caroline, and Marshall Island groups, which the Japanese had controlled since World War I. Except for Guam, a possession of the United States since the Spanish-American War, these islands had been secretly fortified by the enemy prior to 7 December 1941. By overwhelming Guam four days after their attack on Pearl Harbor, and occupying the Gilbert Islands during September and October 1942, the Japanese controlled all the great island chains in the Central Pacific. For more than two years they had been perfecting interdependent land, air, and sea bases on these chains to form a defensive system in depth, guarding their inner empire from attack on the east and south.
The offensive on the east, penetrating the chain barrier, had begun on 21 November 1943 under the command of Admiral Chester W. Nimitz, Commander-in-Chief, U. S. Pacific Fleet and Pacific Ocean Areas. The first blow struck by Admiral Nimitz involved the seizure of selected atolls in the Gilberts. His offensive required a powerful naval force, with carrier-based planes superior in fire power and maneuverability to the Japanese land-based aircraft, to make the initial attacks on the enemy defenses. Before the amphibious assault, carrier bombers, assisted by medium bombers flying from South Pacific fields, softened
the enemy's position in the Gilberts. A naval convoy transported marine and army ground troops to the beaches, some 2,000 miles southwest of Pearl Harbor, and covered the invasion offshore. The