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    Legacy Member DICKX's Avatar
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    A thank you to all who have served- a story about one marine

    This is a good read, a little long and this forum may not be the place for it, but I know that many of you guy's were in the service, and I THANK YOU FOR YOUR SERVICE.
    Celebrating the 237th Birthday of our Nation's USMC Nodvember 10th.

    DOWN TO ONE MARINE

    On Nov. 15, 2003, an 85-year-old retired Marine Corps colonel died of
    congestive heart failure at his home in La Quinta, Calif., southeast
    of Palm Springs.

    He was a combat veteran of World War II. Reason enough to honor him.
    But this Marine was a little different. This Marine was Mitchell
    Paige.

    It's hard today to envision -- or, for the dwindling few, to remember
    -- what the world looked like on 26 Oct 1942.

    The U.S. Navy was not the most powerful fighting force in the Pacific.
    Not by a long shot. So the Navy basically dumped a few thousand lonely
    American Marines on the beach at Guadalcanal and high-tailed it out of
    there.

    Nimitz, Fletcher and Halsey had to ration what few ships they had.
    I've written separately about the way Bull Halsey rolled the dice on
    the night of Nov. 13, 1942, violating the stern War College edict
    against committing capital ships in restricted waters and instead
    dispatching into the Slot his last two remaining fast battleships, the
    South Dakota and the Washington, escorted by the only four destroyers
    with enough fuel in their bunkers to get them there and back.

    Those American destroyer captains need not have worried about carrying
    enough fuel to get home. By 11 p.m., outnumbered better than three-
    to-one by a massive Japaneseicon task force driving down from the
    northwest, every one of those four American destroyers had been shot
    up, sunk, or set aflame. And while the South Dakota -- known
    throughout the fleet as a jinx ship -- had damaged some lesser
    Japanese vessels, she continued to be plagued with electrical and fire
    control problems.

    "Washington was now the only intact ship left in the force," writes
    naval historian David Lippman. "In fact, at that moment Washington was
    the entire U.S. Pacific Fleet. She was the only barrier between
    Admiral Kondo's ships and Guadalcanal. If this one ship did not stop
    14 Japanese ships right then and there, America might lose the Pacific
    war. .."

    On Washington's bridge, Lieutenant Ray Hunter had the conn. He had
    just seen the destroyers Walker and Preston blown sky high. Dead ahead
    lay their burning wreckage. Hundreds of men were swimming in the water
    and the Japanese ships racing in.

    Hunter had to do something. The course he took now could decide the
    war, Lippman writes. ''Come left, he said. ...
    Washington's rudder change put the
    burning destroyers between Washington and the enemy, thus preventing
    her from being silhouetted by their fires.

    The move made the Japanese momentarily cease fire. Lacking radar, they
    could not spot Washington behind the fires. ... Washington raced
    through burning seas. Dozens of destroyer men were in the water
    clinging to floating wreckage. Get after them, Washington! one shouted

    Sacrificing their ships by maneuvering into the path of torpedoes
    intended for the Washington, the captains of the American destroyers
    had given [ADM] China" Lee one final chance.

    Blinded by the smoke and flames, the Japanese battleship Kirishima
    turned on her searchlights, illuminating the helpless South Dakota,
    and opened fire.
    Finally, as her own muzzle blasts illuminated her in the darkness,
    Admiral Lee and Captain Glenn Davis could positively identify an enemy
    target.

    The Washington's main batteries opened fire at 12 midnight precisely.
    Her radar fire control system functioned perfectly. During the first
    seven minutes of 14 Nov 1942, the "last ship in the U.S.
    Pacific Fleet" fired 75
    of her 16-inch shells at the battleship Kirishima. Aboard Kirishima,
    it rained steel. At 3:25 a.m., her burning hulk officially became the
    first enemy sunk by an American battleship since the Spanish-American
    War. Stunned the Japanese withdrew. Within days, Japanese commander
    Istook Yamamoto recommended the unthinkable to the Emperor --
    withdrawal from Guadalcanal.

    But that was still weeks in the future. We are still with Mitchell
    Paige back on the malaria jungle island of Guadalcanal, placed like a
    speed bump at the end of the long blue-water slot between New Guinea
    and the Bismarck Archipelago ... the very route the Japanese Navy
    would have to take to reach Australiaicon.

    On Guadalcanal the Marines struggled to complete an airfield. Yamamoto
    knew what that meant. No effort would be spared to dislodge these
    upstart Yanks from a position that could endanger his ships. Before
    long, relentless Japanese counterattacks had driven supporting U.S.iconbr /> Navy from inshore waters.
    The Marines were on their own.

    As Platoon Sgt. Mitchell Paige and his 33 riflemen set about carefully
    emplacing their four water-cooled .30-caliber Brownings, manning their
    section of the thin khaki line which was expected to defend Henderson
    Field against the assault of the night of 25 Oct 1942, it's unlikely
    anyone thought they were about to provide the definitive answer to
    that most desperate of questions: How many able-bodied U.S. Marines
    does it take to hold a hill against 2,000 desperate and motivated
    Japanese attackers?

    Nor did the commanders of the mighty Japanese Army, who had swept all
    before them for decades, expect their advance to be halted on some
    jungle ridge manned by one thin line of Yanks in khaki in October of
    1942

    But by the time the night was over, The Japanese 29th Infantry
    Regiment had lost 553 killed or missing and 479 wounded among its
    2,554 men, historian Lippman reports. The Japanese 16th Regiment's
    losses are uncounted, but the [US] 164th's burial parties handled 975
    Japanese bodies. ... The American estimate of 2,200 Japanese dead is
    probably too low.

    You've already figured out where the Japanese focused their attack,
    haven't you? Among the 90 American dead and seriously wounded that
    night were all the men in Mitchell Paige's platoon; every one. As the
    night of endless attacks wore on, Paige moved up and down his line,
    pulling his dead and wounded comrades back into their foxholes and
    firing a few bursts from each of the four Brownings in turn,
    convincing the Japanese forces down the hill that the positions were
    still manned.

    The citation for Paige's Congressional Medal of Honor picks up the
    tale:
    When the enemy broke through the line directly in front of his
    position, P/Sgt. Paige, commanding a machinegun section with fearless
    determination, continued to direct the fire of his gunners until all
    his men were either killed or wounded. Alone, against the deadly hail
    of Japanese shells, he fought with his gun and when it was destroyed,
    took over another, moving from gun to gun, never ceasing his withering
    fire."

    In the end, Sgt. Paige picked up the last of the 40-pound, belt-fed
    Brownings -- the same design which John Moses Browning famously fired
    for a continuous 25 minutes until it ran out of ammunition, glowing
    cherry red, at its first U.S. Army trial -- and did something for
    which the weapon was never designed. Sgt. Paige walked down the hill
    toward the place where he could hear the last Japanese survivors
    rallying to move around his flank, the belt-fed gun cradled under his
    arm, firing as he went.

    And the weapon did not fail.

    Coming up at dawn, battalion executive officer Major Odell M. Conoley
    was first to discover the answer to our question: How many able-bodied
    Marines does it take to hold a hill against two regiments of
    motivated, combat-hardened infantrymen who have never known defeat?

    On a hill where the bodies were piled like cordwood, Mitchell Paige
    alone sat upright behind his 30-caliber Browning, waiting to see what
    the dawn would bring.

    One hill: one Marine.

    But "In the early morning light, the enemy could be seen a few yards
    off, and vapor from the barrels of their machine guns was clearly
    visible,"
    reports historian Lippman. "It was decided to try to rush the
    position."

    For the task, Major Conoley gathered together "three enlisted
    communication personnel, several riflemen, a few company runners who
    were at the point, together with a cook and a few mess men who had
    brought food to the position the evening before."

    Joined by Paige, this ad hoc force of 17 Marines counterattacked at
    5:40 a.m , discovering that this extremely short range allowed the
    optimum use of grenades. They cleared the ridge.

    And that's where the unstoppable wave of Japanese conquest finally
    crested, broke, and began to recede. On an unnamed jungle ridge on an
    insignificant island no one had ever heard of, called Guadalcanal.

    But who remembers, today, how close-run a thing it was -- the ridge
    held by a single Marine, in the autumn of 1942?

    When the Hasbro Toy Co. telephoned some years back, asking permission
    to put the retired Colonel's face on some kid's doll, Mitchell Paige
    thought they must be joking.

    But they weren't. That's his face on the little Marine they call "G.I.
    Joe."

    And you probably thought that was an ARMY Doll....!!!

    It was a good read for me.

    Dick
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