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16-250 Garand Picture of the Day - 96 Inf Div

LVT Amtrac amphibious lands 96th infantry division troops Okinawa 1945

Medal of Honor for the 96 Div
Pvt. Clarence B Craft
With five comrades, Pfc. Craft was dispatched in advance of Company G to feel out the enemy resistance. The group had proceeded only a short distance up the slope when rifle and machine gun fire, coupled with a terrific barrage of grenades, wounded three and pinned down the others. Against odds that appeared suicidal, Pfc. Craft launched a remarkable 1-man attack.
He stood up in full view of the enemy and began shooting with deadly marksmanship wherever he saw a hostile movement. He steadily advanced up the hill, killing Japanese
soldiers with rapid fire, driving others to cover in their strongly disposed trenches, unhesitatingly facing alone the strength that had previously beaten back attacks in battalion strength. He reached the crest of the hill, where he stood silhouetted against the sky while quickly throwing grenades at extremely short range into the enemy positions.
His extraordinary assault lifted the pressure from his company for the moment, allowing members of his platoon to comply with his motions to advance and pass him more grenades. With a chain of his comrades supplying him while he stood atop the hill, he furiously hurled a total of two cases of grenades into a main trench and other positions on the reverse slope of Hen Hill, meanwhile directing the aim of his fellow soldiers who threw grenades from the slope below him.
Captain Seymour W. Terry
Seymour W. Terry was leading an attack against heavily defended Zebra Hill on Okinawa, when devastating fire from 5 pillboxes halted the advance. He braved the hail of bullets to secure satchel charges and white phosphorus grenades, and then ran 30 yards directly at the enemy with an ignited charge to the first stronghold, demolished it, and moved on to the other pillboxes, bombarding them with his grenades and calmly cutting down their defenders with rifle fire as they attempted to escape.
Private Ova A. Kelly
At this critical moment Pvt. Kelley, on his own initiative, left his shallow foxhole with an armload of hand grenades and began a 1-man assault on the foe. Throwing his missiles with great accuracy, he moved forward, killed or wounded 5 men, and forced the remainder to flee in a disorganized route. He picked up a M-1 rifle and emptied its clip at the running Japanese, killing 3. Discarding this weapon, he took a carbine and killed 3 more of the enemy. Inspired by his example, his comrades followed him in a charge which destroyed
the entire enemy force of 34 enlisted men and 2 officers and captured 2 heavy and 1 light machineguns.
Private First Class Edward J. Moskala
Edward J Moskala was the leading element when grenade explosions and concentrated machine gun and mortar fire halted the unit's attack on Kakazu Ridge, Okinawa, Ryukyu Islands. With utter disregard for his personal safety, he charged forty yards through withering, grazing fire and wiped out two machine gun nests with well-aimed grenades and deadly accurate fire from his automatic rifle. When strong counterattacks and fierce enemy resistance from other positions forced his company to withdraw, he voluntarily remained behind with 8 others to cover the maneuver. Fighting from a critically dangerous position for three hours, he killed more than twenty-five Japanese before following his surviving companions through screening smoke down the face of the ridge to a gorge where it was discovered that one of the group had been left behind, wounded. Unhesitatingly, Pvt. Moskala climbed the bullet-swept slope to assist in the rescue, and, returning to lower ground, volunteered to protect other wounded while the bulk of the troops quickly took up more favorable positions.
Technical Sergeant Beaufort T. Anderson
When a powerfully conducted predawn Japanese counterattack struck his unit's flank, he ordered his men to take cover in an old tomb, and then, armed only with a carbine, faced the onslaught alone. After emptying 1 magazine at pointblank range into the screaming attackers, he seized an enemy mortar dud and threw it back among the charging Japs, killing several as it burst. Securing a box of mortar shells, he extracted the safety pins, banged the bases upon a rock to arm them and proceeded alternately to hurl shells and fire his piece among the fanatical foe, finally forcing them to withdraw.
full stories here Deadeye Medal of Honor Recipients
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08-27-2016 02:31 PM
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Bambo on the top of the gun shields??
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Empty ammo can on the left .50 BMG ammunition feed cover is up getting ready to change cans.....!
Just a question why would the other MG have its cover up as well with obvious rounds present.? TIA
Last edited by CINDERS; 08-27-2016 at 11:42 PM.
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the bamboo makes sense to me, smashing your face on the edge of the shield during the landing would make it difficult to concentrate on where you were supposed to be firing at.
Last edited by henry r; 08-28-2016 at 08:17 AM.
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Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
WarPig1976
Bambo on the top of the gun shields??
When bullets hit the steel shield, they can explode into little shrapnel blasts. These can give multiple wounds that bleed like hell...the bamboo absorbs the scrap from those bursting bullets.

Originally Posted by
CINDERS
.50 BMG ammunition feed cover is up
I suspect it's a safety measure as the troops are at the muzzle of hot guns. It would avoid a cookoff, clear chamber and open cover.
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Just another clever GI field expedient... a smart bunch, them grunts
Real men measure once and cut.
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I suspect it's a safety measure as the troops are at the muzzle of hot guns. It would avoid a cookoff, clear chamber and open cover.
That makes sense if one round cooked-off the gun may run out the belt that would be rough on the troops just landed
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
if one round cooked-off the gun may run
That was what the drill was meant to avoid...
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I can't help but wonder if one of the guys in that picture was my great uncle Sgt Bill J. Allman from Gadsden, Alabama. I don't remember which battalion or company he was in. He was wounded on Okinawa; supposedly shot by a sniper. After the war he became a local junior college instructor, eventually retired from that, and died in 2000.
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Exactly how does a round cook off in the open bolt 50BMG ?
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