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16-024 Garand Picture of the Day

To clear Iwo Jima’s caves and tunnels, the 147th’s infantry platoons went into action with an exceptional level of firepower, including extra BAR’s, bazookas and flame throwers.
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01-23-2016 09:30 PM
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I can't tell is the Marine forward of the bazooka firing an M1
or a B.A.R. Looks to big for an M1
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B.A.R. But that is not a Marine 147th regt Ohio National Guard
He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain that which he cannot lose
There are no great men, only great challenges that ordinary men are forced by circumstances to meet.
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Originally Posted by
Mark in Rochester
B.A.R. But that is not a Marine 147th regt Ohio National Guard
oops appologies.I saw Iwo and assumed Marine..
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Originally Posted by
SA M1Dom
oops appologies.I saw Iwo and assumed Marine..
I did not realize that there was Army at IWO until I found this photo
The army's 147th Infantry Regiment had a checkered career. It had come from the 37th Infantry Division, a mid-western National Guard outfit, when the old type divisions of four regiments were triangulated. Some called it a separate regiment, others a bastard regiment. Being commanded by a colonel in a war run by generals and having only a limited punch, it was sent here and there on guard duty. Relieving the battered marines and mopping up the island seemed a proper task, so it was loaded on ships at New Caledonia and sent north. Partway to Iwo Jima, the powers decided to declare the island secure a bit in advance, so the ships were ordered to proceed at flank speed - which is all out - and on March 21, 1945 the 2,700 men of the 147th Infantry, now attached to the 3d Marine Division, were landed.
By the end of April, when the island was declared fully secure, the 147th had killed an additional 1,600 enemy soldiers and captured 800, about one for each member of the regiment.
He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain that which he cannot lose
There are no great men, only great challenges that ordinary men are forced by circumstances to meet.
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