Tarawa (CV 40) - Naval Cruise Book

 - Class of 1946

Page 60 of 68

 

Tarawa (CV 40) - Naval Cruise Book online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 60 of 68
Page 60 of 68



Tarawa (CV 40) - Naval Cruise Book online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 59
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Page 60 text:

steel helmets. CWVe are in the presence of the last great enemy, Death? Almost as an echo, strident through the loudspeaker on the bridge, came the report: The issue is in doubt. 1:45 p.m.: Colonel Shoup received this message: Reserve teams unable to land. Heavy enemy fire. ls there another beach where we can land ? 1:50 p.m.: Beach Red 1 radioed: 'cAnti-boat guns holding up reserves. Troops 400 yards away from Jap guns on right. 1:51 p.m.: To Colonel Shoup: All medium tanks, except one, now on beach. QBy the end of the day, the Japanese tanks had all been knocked out.j 3:00 p.m.: The Commanding Officer Third Battalion, Second Regiment, reported: 'fStill in landing boat off shore and out of contact with my assault units? General Smith ordered, Land at any cost, regain control of your battalion, and continue the attack. 4:11 p.m. All planes in the air were ordered to expend every round ammunition before leaving the area. 4:45 p.m.: The Sixth Marine Regiment was released to the control of the Second Marine Division. This was all that was left of available manpower. The bolt was shot. x The boys of the Sixth had been the first to land in Iceland, and had fought at Guadalcanal with distinction. 5:20 p.m.: General Smith received first fragmentary casualty reports. They were bad. 7:00 p.m.: Dusk. General Smith messaged to Colonel Shoup: C'Hold what you have. Develop contact between battalions. Clear isolated machine guns holding out on beach. Make provisions for organized counter-attacks. QThis did not develop that night. The morale of the Japs was beginning to show its signs of a break.j 10:00 p.m.: Colonel Shoup summed up D-Day in this report to General Smith: Have dug in to hold limited beach-head. Second Battalion, Eighth Regiment holds left flank. Second Battalion, Second Regiment and First Battalion, Second Marine Regiment, hold Beach Red 2. No word from Third Battalion, Second Regiment. My Command Post, center of Beach Red 23, The 'climited beach-headn was about 300 yards wide and 30 to 50 yards in average depth around the head of the pier, while on Beach Red 2 it extended on a shallow front about 450 yards. All through the night and into the early morning hours of November 21, boats held back from the Line of Departure tried to run the gauntlet to the beach. There were casualties. The transportsby now were being converted into hospital ships. Marines on top of the pier weathered heavy enemy shelling as they struggled to bring ammunition ashore. The inferno lighting up the shore prevented any chance of secrecy. 2:00 a.m.: Firing from behind was discovered as coming from the wrecked hull of a Japanese tramp steamer on the reefs off Beach Red 2. The Task Force promised: Will bomb at daylight. The pier was of white coral grit. The quarter moon was bright. These, the white sand, and the blazing background made perfect targets of every man who had to cross the stretch. The nightls unsung heroes were the Marine working parties . . . unloading, sweating, carrying, dying. Where the japs were left on the pier, the line would tighten up. Betio burned like a bonfire. At dawn, November 21, 1943, D plus I Day, dive bombers blasted and pounded the hull on the reefs off Beach Red 2, and still, when the first Marines come onto the reef that morning, there was additional fire from the wreck.

Page 59 text:

Fire from the Japanese coastal guns was intermittent at first. The deluge of steel from the bombard ment had shocked and dazed the defenders. 'l he amphibious tractors in the first three assault waves therefore managed to lumber over the reef and reach the beach with relatively few casualties But now the l30IT1lJZlI'Cll1lCI1l had ceased. The fire from the beach became more intense. The fourth wave, in landing boats, found insufficient water to clear the reef. The men had to get out and wade in With patient and indomitable courage some lived to reach the beach K Its average depth from water's edge to sea wall was twenty feet. The sea wall, built of coconut logs driven into the ground, was four feet high. On this shallow strip, 100 yards from the pier toward the east, the Second Battalion of the Eighth Marine Regiment later established a beach-head 8:30 a.m.: From the Line of Departure the assault waves headed for the beach 8:37 a.m.: From the Flagship, General Smith issued the message: UH-Hour is 0900 9:10 a.m.: Second Battalion, Eighth Marine Regiment, landed on Beach Red 3. Half hour later 9:12 a.m.: Second Battalion, Second Marine Regiment, landed on Beach Red 2. Shortly, the commanding officer messaged: Meeting heavy resistance 9:17 a.m.: Third Battalion, Second Marine Regiment, landed on Beach Red 1. The commanding officer messaged: ffBoats held up on reef, right flank Red 1. Troops receiving heavy fire in water Shortly after the action opened, the wounded began to move back to the transports. Men risked their lives to swim to their wounded buddies and drag them back to the boats. Many of these became casualties themselves. The first of the landing craft took off for their return to the transports loaded down with the wounded. They carried, on this tragic journey, boys who thirty minutes earlier had been among the finest physical specimens of the country . .33 the commanding officer messaged: ffHeavy opposition? D., . ' F, 10:00 a.m.: The battle for Betio was in a Crescendo of Fury. 'fTough resistance on Beach Red 3 toward the airport. Colonel Shoup ordered the Second Regiment's First Battalion to land on Beach Red 2. QHis Com- bat Team 2 established a limited beach-head against heavy fire at about 2 p.m.j 10:08 a.m.: The Second Battalion of the Eighth Marine Regiment reported that it had advanced inland to the airport. 10:18 a.m.: The Third Battalion of the Eighth Regiment already boated. 10:45 a.m.: The commanding officer of the Second Regiment's Second Battalion reported: HStiff resistance. Need half-tracks. Tanks no good. 11:05 a.m.: The Third Battalion of the Eighth Marines received orders to land on Beach Red 3 ' ' al later noted: cfHeavy and protect the left flank of the Second Battalion. The operations Journ casualtiesf' 11:58 a.m.: The Second Regiment's Second Battalion reported its situation ffbadf, 12:03 p.m.: The Second Regiment's Third Battalion radioed: f'Large calibre guns on west coast. Request air attack. The carrier-based planes roared in. 12:05 p.m.: A and B Companies, First Battalion, landed on Beach Red 2 to support the first waves. R d 3 t re uest of Second Battalion, Eighth Regiment. 12:29 p.m.: Planes shifted to strafe Beach e , a q 12:34 p.m.: The same battalion now had Enemy tanks to our frontff 1200 p.m.: In a gashed tractor were bodies of two Marines and a Navy doctor. The shell that killed them also Wounded ten other men. In the blazing sun, Marines and bluejackets removed their



Page 61 text:

'cWe are engaging Target 228 Cat the southern Kip of Beach Green, where Japanese 8-inch coastal emplacements had been concentratedj at 7 until 7:20 a.m., with Fire Support Group 12. We are engaging the east end of Betio at 8 a.m. and 9 a.m. for 20 minutes with Fire Support Groups 31 and 22. Fire Support Groups consisted of destroyers and cruisers. Their accuracy was unbelievable. The tiny islet was divided into squares on the target map. Planes and destroyers were allotted to each battalion and worked under the battal- ion commander's orders. Marines storming Tarawa airport 5:22 a.m.: General Smith sent a message to Golonel Elmer Hall commanding the Eighth Marine Regiment, to land his first battalion on Beach Red 2 at once. They started in at a quarter past seven wading in shoreward over the reef. For the men ashore there was little to do but watch, hope, and pray. Many turned away. The battle ahead was better than this. As the First Battalion of the Eighth Regiment was wading in, Golonel Hall sent a message to Golonel Shoup that he and the remaining waves were laying off. Impossible to land vehicles and equipment because of heavy enemy firef' During the initial stage of the second day of battle, Jap mortars got the range of some revetments that had been captured and in which many of the Sherman tanks had been placed for the night. While shells were exploding around them their crews manned them and began a desperate zig-zagging to escape the blasts. They escaped the concentration and were shortly back in the fight. 8:23 a.m.: Golonel Shoup to General Smith: Urgently request rations and small arms ammuni- tions landed on the beach. The great majority of the men ashore had been fighting for over 24 hours without rest and with only the canteens of hot medicated water and the one ration they had brought ashore with them. Working parties were sent out to search the bodies of dead Marines for ammnuition, first-aid packs and water. Rations lay out there on the water. Thursday would be Thanksgiving at home. 9:22 a.m.: Golonel Shoup notified General Smith that he was making every effort to occupy the north and west ends of the island. During the next hour the tempo increased. Gradually the laps were forced back from most of the airstrip. There were a good many casualties, but the men did get across the strip and to the far side of the islet. 10:30 a.m.: General Smith to Golonel Shoup: Do you have suiiicient troops to occupy Betio? Request additional information before committing division reserves elsewhere. 10:50 a.m.: The Third Battalion of the Second Regiment reported it was pinned down. They wanted dive-bombers, they wanted tanks. Both requests were filled. 11:30 a.m.: Colonel Shoup reported the situation still critical. 'cRequest rubber boat battalion of the Sixth Marine Regiment landed Beach Red 2 and attack through area now held by the Second Battlion Eighth Marine Regiment.

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