Battle of Tinian
Part of the Mariana and Palau Islands campaign of the Pacific Theater (World War II)

An LVT churns through the surf bound for beaches of Tinian
Date24 July – 1 August 1944
Location
Result American victory
Belligerents
 United States  Japan
Commanders and leaders
Units involved

V Amphibious Corps

  • 50th Infantry Regiment
  • 56th Naval Guard Force
  • Strength
    40,000 9,000
    Casualties and losses
    Ashore:
    • 290 killed
    • 1,515 wounded
    • 24 missing
    Afloat:
    • 63 killed
    • 177 wounded
    • 5,745 dead
    • 404 captured
    Up to 4,000 civilians killed (including many suicides)

    The Battle of Tinian was part of the Pacific campaign of World War II, fought on the island of Tinian in the Mariana Islands from 24 July until 1 August 1944. The 9,000-man Japanese garrison was eliminated, and the island joined Saipan and Guam as a base for the Twentieth Air Force.

    At Cairo Conference in December 1943, the Combined Chiefs of Staff endorsed a two-pronged attack through the Central Pacific and Southwest Pacific Areas. On 12 March 1944, the Commander in Chief, Pacific Ocean Areas, Admiral Chester W. Nimitz, was directed to neutralize Truk and occupy the Mariana Islands. Following the conclusion of the Battle of Saipan on 9 July, Major General Harry Schmidt's V Amphibious Corps began preparations to invade nearby Tinian. The Japanese defending the island were commanded by Colonel Kiyochi Ogata, the commander of the 50th Infantry Regiment. This regiment was part of the 5,000 Army troops on the island. There were also about 4,000 Imperial Japanese Navy personnel on Tinian, the main force being the 56th Naval Guard Force, under the command of Captain Goichi Oie. Most of the island was surrounded by coral cliffs, so Ogata concentrated his forces on the south west of the island, where the best landing beaches were located.

    Major General Clifton B. Cates's 4th Marine Division landed on Tinian on 24 July 1944, supported by naval bombardment and the guns of the XXIV Corps Artillery, firing across the strait from Saipan. Instead of landing in the southwest, they landed on the northwest coast, where there were two small beaches that were lightly defended. These beaches were flanked by low coral cliffs that the marines were able to surmount with the aid of ramps mounted on LVTs known as "Doodlebugs". A successful feint in the southwest by Major General Thomas E. Watson's 2nd Marine Division diverted defenders from the actual landing site on the north of the island. The 2nd Marine Division then landed behind the 4th Marine Division. The weather worsened on 28 July, damaging the pontoon causeways and interrupting the unloading of supplies, but on 30 July the 4th Marine Division occupied Tinian town and the airfield. Japanese remnants made a final stand in the caves and ravines of a limestone ridge on the south portion of the island. Resistance continued through 2 August, with some civilians murdered by the Japanese, and mopping up patrols continued into 1945.

    Tinian became an important base for further US operations in the Pacific. North Field became operational in February 1945 and West Field in March. The Seabees turned the island built six 8,500-foot (2,600 m) runways for attacks by the Twentieth Air Force's Boeing B-29 Superfortress bombers on the Philippines, the Ryukyu Islands, and mainland Japan, including the bombing of Tokyo in March and the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945.

    Background edit

     
    Map of the battle

    Strategy edit

    After World War I, the United States had developed a series of contingency plans for the event of a war with Japan known as the Orange plans. These envisaged an advance through the Marshall and Caroline Islands to the Philippines, from whence Japan could be blockaded. The Mariana Islands figured only incidentally in the plans, as they lay north of the direct route between Hawaii and the Philippines.[1] At the Casablanca Conference in January 1943, the Combined Chiefs of Staff had endorsed an offensive in the Central Pacific along the lines envisaged in the Orange Plan. In his formulation of the strategy, the Commander in Chief, United States Fleet, Admiral Ernest J. King,[2][3] specifically mentioned the Mariana Islands as "the key to the situation because of their location on the Japanese line of communications."[4]

    Another rationale for the capture of the Mariana Islands emerged with the development of the long-range Boeing B-29 Superfortress bomber.[5] The air staff planners began incorporating the Mariana Islands into their plans in September 1943.[6] The Combined Chiefs endorsed this at the Cairo Conference in December, along with a two-pronged offensive, with the Central Pacific drive in conjunction with one along the north coast of New Guinea.[7] In response, the Commander in Chief, Pacific Ocean Areas (CINCPOA), Admiral Chester W. Nimitz, produced a campaign plan, Operation Granite, which tentatively scheduled the capture of Mariana Islands of Saipan, Tinian and Guam for November 1944 as the culmination of the Central Pacific campaign.[8]

    By February 1944, there was consideration of advancing the timetable by bypassing Truk and heading directly for Palau or the Marianas after the capture of the Marshall Islands. Nimitz and his Deputy Chief of Staff, Rear Admiral Forrest P. Sherman a meeting of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in Washington, DC, on 7 March 1944, and were questioned by the Chief of Staff of the United States Army, General George C. Marshall, and the Chief of Staff to the Commander in Chief, Admiral William D. Leahy. Sherman argued that the neutralization of Truk required the occupation of the Mariana Islands in order to cut the air route to Truk from Japan. On 12 March, the Joint Chiefs of Staff directed Nimitz to neutralize Truk and occupy the Mariana Islands, with a target date of 15 June.[9]

    Tinian was considered a target from the outset.[10] Its proximity to Saipan meant that while it remained in Japanese hands, Japanese aircraft could stage though Tinian. The garrison might also raid Saipan.[11] The Japanese on Tinian could observe ship and aircraft movements on Saipan and communicate them to Tokyo.[12] Tinian also had value in its own right, as its flat terrain made it highly suitable for the development of air bases for the B-29. There were already airfields at Ushi Point and Gurguan Point that looked promising for development into B-29 airfields, and there was another under construction near Tinian Town.[11] Ushi Point had a hard-surfaced runway 4,750 feet (1,450 m) long.[12] With the conclusion of the Battle of Saipan on 9 July, preparations began for the attack on Tinian.[13]

    Geography edit

    Tinian was part of Japan's South Seas Mandate.[14] It covered about 50 square miles (130 km2), measuring 10+14 miles (16.5 km) from north to south, and 5 miles (8.0 km) across at its widest point. The terrain was generally low and flat, making it suitable for airfields. There were two hills in the north: the 390-foot (120 m) Mount Maga and the 564-foot (172 m) Mount Lasso. There was also a rugged 580-foot (180 m) limestone hill mass of cliffs and ravines in the south. About 90 percent of the island (about 15,000 acres (6,100 ha)) was covered in sugar cane fields. The square fields gave the island a checker board look from the air. Fields were surrounded by drainage ditches or windbreaks of trees or hedgerows.[15][16]

     
    The low cliffs between the two White beaches

    Most of the island was encircled by jagged limestone cliffs that ranged from 6 to 100 feet (1.8 to 30.5 m) high. There were only a few beaches, which the Americans designated by colors.[16] The best beaches were around Sunharon Bay in the southeast: Blue Beach, 1 mile (1.6 km) south of Tinian Town, was 600 yards (550 m) long; Green Beach One, located between the two piers at Tinian Town, was also 600 yards (550 m) long; Green Beach Two, at the southern end of Tinian Town, was 400 yards (370 m) long; Red Beach One and Two were north of the piers, with a combined width of 825 yards (754 m); and Orange Beach, 12 mile (0.80 km) north of Red Beach One, was 340 yards (310 m) long.[17]

    There were two beaches on the east coast at Asiga Bay: the 355-yard (325 m) Yellow Beach One and the 200-yard (180 m) Yellow Beach Two. These were flanked by cliffs and subject to heavy surf when there was an easterly wind. There were also two small beaches on the northwest coast: the 65-to-75-yard (59 to 69 m) White Beach One and the 200-yard (180 m) White Beach Two.[17]

    There was little seasonal variation in temperature, which ranged from an average of 76 °F (24 °C) in January to 80 °F (27 °C) in June, but the average humidity in those months was 78 and 84 percent, respectively. Fair weather prevailed during the dry season from November to March, but the wet season from November to March was characterized by frequent rains and occasional typhoons. Sunharon Bay was little more than an anchorage, and was unusable in rough weather.[15]

    According to a 1 January 1944 census, it had a population of 18,000 Japanese civilians, most of whom worked in the sugar cane industry, and 26 ethnic Chamorro people; most of the original population had been forcibly removed to other islands. The main settlements were Tinian Town in the south and two small villages around Ushi Point Airfield in the north. The former was the administrative center of the island, while the latter housed airfield workers. Roads were approximately 18 feet (5.5 m) wide and surfaced with crushed coral. They were generally straight, following the edges of the cane fields. Approximately 40 miles (64 km) of narrow gauge railways connected the sugar plantations with Tinian Town.[15]

    Opposing forces and plans edit

    Japanese edit

    The senior Japanese officer on Tinian was Vice Admiral Kakuji Kakuta, the commander of First Air Fleet. His headquarters was in Manila but he was on Tinian on an inspection tour when US operations in the Marianas Islands began on 11 June. He exercised no command authority over the army troops on the island, and the naval troops were not subject to his direct command.[18]

     
    Japanese defense sectors and dispositions of major units

    The Imperial Japanese Army force defending the island was the 50th Infantry Regiment, commanded by Colonel Kiyochi Ogata. This was part of 29th Division, all the rest of which was located on Guam. The regiment had three infantry battalions, a mountain artillery battalion with twelve 75mm guns, an anti-tank company with six 37mm guns, and a company of the 18th Infantry Regiment with twelve light tanks. The 1st Battalion, 135th Infantry Regiment, normally based on Saipan, was conducting amphibious landing exercises on Tinian on 11 June, and provided a fourth infantry battalion that Ogata incorporated into the island's defense.[19] The Army forces on Tinian totaled about 5,000 men.[20]

    The main Imperial Japanese Navy force on Tinian was the 56th Naval Guard Force (Keibitai), under the command of Captain Goichi Oie. He accepted Ogata as the commander on Tinian, but to avoid embarrassment, he did not inform his subordinates that their orders came from an Army officer.[21] His force of 1,400 troops and 600 laborers was equipped with three 6-inch and ten 140 mm coast defence guns, and ten 120mm and four 76.2 mm general purpose guns, twenty-four 25 mm and six 7 cm antiaircraft guns, and three 12 cm duel-purpose guns. Along with airfield construction crews, flight technicians and staff, there were about 4,000 sailors of various units on Tinian.[19][22] In addition, there were three civilian defence organizations of little military value, the Civilian Militia, the Home Guard Organization, and Youth Organization, and about sixty comfort women, none of whom survived the battle.[21]

    Ogata adhered to the Japanese doctrine of defense against amphibious attacks at the water's edge. In this he was aided by the geography of Tinian, which limited the possible landing sites. He positioned the 3rd Battalion, 50th Infantry Regiment, most of the heavy weapons of the 56th Naval Guard Force, around Sunharon Bay beaches. The Northern Sector around Asiga Bay was covered by the 2nd Battalion, 50th Infantry Regiment. He did not expect anything more than a raid on the beaches in the west, so this was assigned to the 3rd Company, 1st Battalion, 50th Infantry Regiment. The rest of the 1st Battalion was dug in around Mount Lasso. The 1st Battalion, 135th Infantry Regiment formed a mobile counterattack force, along with the tanks and a mobile artillery force of twelve 75mm mountain guns. The reserve was positioned to so to quickly reach either the Sunharon Bay or Asiga bay, depending on where the Americans made their main effort.[23][24]

    United States edit

     
    Senior US commanders on Tinian. Left to right: Vice Admiral Harry W. Hill, Major General Harry Schmidt, Admiral Raymond A. Spruance, Lieutenant General Holland M. Smith, Vice Admiral Richmond K. Turner, Major General Thomas E. Watson and Major General Clifton B. Cates

    The American forces were part of Admiral Raymond A. Spruance's Fifth Fleet. The Joint Amphibious Forces (Task Force 51) were led by Vice Admiral Richmond K. Turner and the expeditionary troops (Task Force 56) by Lieutenant General Holland M. Smith.[25] For the battle of Saipan, Turner also commanded the landing force (Task Force 52) and Smith had commanded the V Amphibious Corps. With concurrent operations on Guam in prospect, it was desirable for these roles to be separated. On 12 July, Smith became the commander of the newly established Fleet Marine Force, Pacific, and handed over command of the V Amphibious Corps and the Northern Troops Landing Force (NTLF) (Task Group 56.1) to Major General Harry Schmidt. Command of the amphibious forces in the Tinian operation (Task Force 52) was entrusted to Turner's former deputy, Rear Admiral Harry W. Hill, on 15 July. Although Turner and Smith remained in command of Task Forces 51 and 56 respectively, they sailed for Guam on 20 July, leaving the operation entirely in the hands of Hill and Schmidt.[26][27]

    For the Tinian operation, the V Amphibious Corps had the 2nd Marine Division, commanded by Major General Thomas E. Watson and the 4th Marine Division, which was commanded by Major General Clifton B. Cates, who had succeeded Schmidt. Both had participated in the fighting on Saipan, where they had incurred 6,170 and 6,612 battle casualties respectively,[28] and absorbed a single replacement draft of 1,268 men before the fighting began again on Tinian.[26] They were therefore understength, and much of their equipment had been worn out through combat and hard use.[28] The V Amphibious Corps had the support of Brigadier General Arthur M. Harper's XXIV Corps Artillery with its two battalions of 155 mm guns and two battalions of 155 mm howitzers.[29] For the Tinian operation, Harper also had command of the four battalions of the 27th Infantry Division Artillery and five Marine Corps 105 mm howitzer battalions, two each from the two marine divisions and one from the V Amphibious Corps, for a total of thirteen battalions. The rest of the 27th Infantry Division, except for the 105th Infantry, was in reserve, but on four hours' notice to embark for Tinian.[30]

     
    Japanese fixed gun positions on Tinian

    American intelligence about Tinian and the Japanese defenses there was excellent.[31] The Joint Intelligence Center Pacific Ocean Area (JICPOA), under the command of Brigadier General Joseph J. Twitty, assembled intelligence obtained from imagery intelligence, human intelligence and reference information, backed up by Ultra intelligence derived from code breaking and signals intelligence.[32] JICPOA produced a report on Tinian's hydrography and geography on 10 May 1944, that also detailed the locations of many of the defenses, and issued a series of topographic maps. A series of oblique aerial photographs were taken of Tinian's beaches. The headquarters of the Japanese 31st Army on Saipan was overrun in mid-June, and captured documents provided a full order of battle of the Japanese forces on Tinian.[33] The Americans estimated the strength of the Japanese garrison as 8,039, which was quite accurate.[34]

    What the intelligence reports revealed was that the best landing beaches were around Sanharon Bay but they were also the most heavily defended. The staff of the 4th Marine Division, particularly the plans officer, Lieutenant Colonel Evans F. Carlson, preferred to land in the north, where the beaches were poorer but the defenses were weaker and tactical surprise could be attained. Independently, Hill's staff independently arrived at the same conclusion.[35][36] Turner was not convinced. "If we go ashore at Tinian Town," Smith told him, "we'll have another Tarawa. Sure as hell! The Japs will murder us. What's more, we probably will be repulsed, and that will upset our entire timetable. What do you say to that?"[37]

     
    Oblique photograph of White Beach 1 taken before naval gunfire, artillery, air and bulldozers altered its appearance. This 60-yard (55 m) beach became the port of entry for most of the V Amphibious Corps' heavy equipment.

    Turner had plenty to say. He noted that the Sanharon Bay beaches had good gradients and inland approaches, that there was a protected harbor for small craft, and facilities for unloading supplies. Whereas the northern beaches were too small to land and support a force of the size contemplated, and were exposed to the weather, so if it turned bad the movement of supplies from Saipan could be obstructed or halted. An advance from north to south would likely take longer than one from east to west, and while artillery support from Saipan would be available in the early stages, unfavorable weather could prevent it being moved to Tinian to cover the advance once it moved further south.[35][36]

    In view of these objections, Schmidt ordered a reconnaissance of Yellow Beach 1 and White Beaches 1 and 2. On the night of 10/11 July, Companies A and B of Captain James L. Jones's V Amphibious Corps Amphibious Reconnaissance Battalion and Underwater Demolition Teams 5 and 7 set out in the high-speed transports USS Gilmer and Stringham. They were launched in rubber boats and paddled to within 500 yards (460 m) of the shore, then swam the rest of the way. The underwater demolition teams investigated the offshore reefs while the marines swam ashore and studied the beaches. Yellow Beach 1 was found to be strung with a double apron wire obstacle, with cliffs to the south that were 20 to 25 feet (6.1 to 7.6 m) high and unscalable without ladders or cargo nets.[38][39][40]

     
    White Beach 2 accommodated two battalions, each landing with a single company in the assault. The 25th Marines crossed this 160-yard (150 m) beach on Jig-Day, followed by two light artillery battalions and the 23rd Marines.

    A strong current was encountered by the groups sent to reconnoitre the White Beaches, and the rubber boats wound up too far north. Consequently, the reconnaissance of White Beach 1 was carried out by the group intended to land on White Beach 2, and that of White Beach 2 had to be carried out the following night. They found that although White Beach 1 was only 60 yards (55 m) long, the cliffs for 150 yards (140 m) on either side were only 6 to 10 feet (1.8 to 3.0 m) high with small breaks, and could be negotiated by infantry without ladders or nets. Only the central 70 yards (64 m) of White Beach 2 could be reached by amphibian vehicles. Both White Beaches had gentle grades and it was possible for LCVPs to land on the reef 50 yards (46 m) from the beach and for infantry to wade ashore from there.[38][39][41]

    With this information in hand, a conference was held on board Turner's flagship, the USS Rocky Mount, on 12 July. Schmidt made the case for a landing on the White Beaches, citing six factors: (1) that a landing at Sanharon Bay would be too costly; (2) that the XXIV Corps Artillery could cover the beaches from Saipan; (3) the airfield at Ushi Point could be quickly captured and utilized; (4) tactical surprise could be attained; (5) the whole operation could be conducted from Saipan as a shore-to-shore movement; and (6) supplies could be preloaded on vehicles and driven straight to dumps, thereby avoiding congestion on the beaches.[38][42] Spruance called for a vote, in order of seniority, and Watson, Schmidt, Hill and Smith voted for the White Beach plan. To Spruance's relief, Turner agreed to make the decision unanimous.[43] On 20 July, Spruance confirmed the day of the assault, J-Day (or Jig-Day, using the phonetic alphabet of the time), as 24 July. Hill then chose 0730 as H-Hour.[44]

    Battle edit

    Bombardment edit

     
    USS Iowa fires a salvo from number 2 16" turret during the bombardment of Tinian on 14–15 June

    Artillery bombardment of Tinian commenced on 20 June when Battery B of the 531st Field Artillery Battalion began shelling targets on Tinian with its 155 mm "Long Tom" guns. In the days leading up to the landing, the XXIV Corps Artillery used 24,536 rounds on 1,509 counter-battery fire, harassing fire and area bombardment missions.[45] The XXIV Corps Artillery had its own observation aircraft, six Piper L-4 Grasshoppers based at Aslito Field on Saipan. [46] One was forced to ditch off Tinian Town on 28 July due to engine failure. The crew was rescued by the cruiser USS Louisville but the aircraft was lost. Another was forced down by Japanese fire the following day but landed safely behind American lines.[47] The Marine artillery had the support of observation aircraft from Stinson OY Sentinel aircraft from VMO-2 and VMO-4.[48]

    The US naval bombardment commenced on 13 June, with the fire support ships of Task Force 52 engaging targets on Tinian that could interfere with operations on Saipan. On 25 June, the destroyer escort USS Elden and destroyer USS Bancroft detected barges Japanese barges attempting to leave Sunharon Harbor and destroyed them. The bombardment was stepped up on 26 June, when the cruisers USS Indianapolis, Birmingham and Montpelier began a week of systematic attacks. On 23 July, the day before the landing, three battleships, five cruisers and sixteen destroyers participated in the bombardment.[49] On 23 July the battleship USS Colorado engaged the three 140 mm coast defense guns at Faibus San Hilo Point, which could be enfilade the White Beaches from defilade of the artillery on Saipan. Sixty 16-inch shells completely destroyed the battery.[50] That day, the battleships USS Tennessee and California fired 480 14-inch and 800 5-inch rounds into Tinian Town, reducing it to rubble.[50]

     
    TBM Avenger bombers prepare to take off from the USS Monterey to attack targets on Tinian

    The bombardment lifted for three periods of 40 to 60 minutes to allow for aerial bombardment. At least 200 sorties were flown from the aircraft carriers USS Essex and Langley, and another 50 or more from the escort carriers USS Gambier Bay and Kitkun Bay. Aslito Field-based Army Air Force Republic P-47 Thunderbolts of the 318th Fighter Group flew more than 100 sorties, 18 of which used napalm for the first time.[50] Attempts by destroyers to burn wooded areas with white phosphorus and thermite on 18 and 19 July failed due to the wet foliage, so napalm was tried. The results were inconclusive, as the best mixture had not yet been devised, but it had some success setting the canefields alight.[45]

    On 24 July, the Colorado and the destroyer Norman Scott were hit by the three 6-inch guns, which were concealed in caves 3,500 yards (3,200 m) southwest of the Tinian Town pier. Colorado was hit twenty-two times, killing 43 men and wounding 198. Norman Scott was hit six times, killing the captain, Commander Seymore Owens, along with 18 of his men, and wounding 47. The Colorado, cruiser Cleveland and destroyer Remey silenced the battery, but did not destroy it; this was accomplished on 28 July by the Tennessee, with 70 14-inch and 150 5-inch rounds.[51]

    Landing edit

     
    Men wade ashore from landing craft while LVTs move to and from the beachhead. In the background are ships that took part in the landing.

    The majority of the ships for the assault of Tinian were loaded at Tanapag Harbor on Saipan by troops of the Saipan Island Command. Ten preloaded tank landing ships (LSTs) with three and a half days' supply of water, rations, medical supplies and ammunition on their top decks were allocated to each division and eight to the NTLF. [52] Fourteen pontoon barges were loaded with drums of fuel and towed to positions off the reef to supply fuel to amphibious vehicles and landing craft.[53] After the initial landing, loaded trucks and trailers were embarked on landing craft, which shuttled them to Tinian where they unloaded at dumps and then returned on landing craft. Twenty landing craft mechanized (LCMs), ten landing craft tank (LCTs) and eight LSTs were assigned to this role, along with 88 2½-ton 6×6 trucks and 25 trailers.[53]

    Marine divisions had two battalions of 75 mm pack howitzers and two of 105 mm howitzers. The latter were remained behind on Saipan, but the 4th Marine Division was given the 1st and 2nd Battalions of the 10th Marines, so it had four battalions of 75 mm pack howitzers. Two amphibious truck (DUKW) companies were assigned to move them ashore quickly.[52][54] Each battalion was carried in an LST.[52] Tanks were loaded onto LCMs. Eighteen of the LCMs, each carrying one tank, were each embarked on the dock landing ships (LSDs) USS Ashland and Belle Grove.[53] Another ten tank-carrying LCMs sailed to Tinian under their own power.[55]

     
    Landing on Tinian

    The marines left their packs behind on Tinian and landed with coveralls, M1 helmets with camouflage covers, weapons, emergency rations, a spoon, a spare pair of socks, a poncho and insect repellent.[52][56] The assault troops were carried ashore in the 415 amphibious tractors (LVTs) of the Marine Corps's 2nd, 5th and 10th Amphibian Tractor Battalions and the Army's 534th, 715th and 773rd Amphibian Tractor Battalions. Fire support was provided by the Company D of the 2nd Armored Amphibian Battalion; only one company could be employed due to the narrowness of the beaches.[57] The shore party for White Beach 1 was provided by the Army's 1341st Engineer Combat Battalion and that of White Beach 2 by the 2nd Battalion, 20th Marines.[55]

    Captain Paul J. Halloran, the NTLF Construction Officer, designed a landing ramp that could be carried by an LVT. This creation was named a "Doodlebug". The Doodlebugs allowed the Marines to scale the low cliffs around the White Beaches. They drove up to the cliff face, firmly attached hooks to the cliff tops and then backed away from under the ramps, leaving them in place, with the other end falling into the water. The ramp crews checked that the ramps were firmly anchored and then the Doodlebugs drove over them to the top of the cliffs. The ramps were strong enough to hold the weight of a 35-short-ton (32 t) medium tank. Ten were built, of which six were used in the assault, carried to Tinian by Ashland.[58][52]

     
    Demonstration of the Doodlebug on Saipan

    On J-Day, 24 July, a feint was made to distract the defenders from the actual landing site.[59] This was carried out by the 2nd and 8th Marines of the 2nd Marine Division. The attack transports USS Calvert, Fuller, Heywood, J. Franklin Bell and Knox and troopships John Land and Winged Arrow took them to a point about 4 miles (6.4 km) offshore from Tinian Town, where they boarded landing craft using cargo nets, and then climbed back again. The empty landing craft then made a run for the shore until Japanese shore batteries started firing at them. The landing craft regrouped and made a second run, but turned back again 400 yards (370 m) from the beach. Around 10:00 the transports recovered the landing craft, and they transports headed for the transport area off the White Beaches.[60]

    Cates assigned the 24th Marines to land on White Beach 1, one battalion at a time, while the 25th Marines landed two battalions on White Beach 2. The 23rd Marines was in reserve.[57] The first wave of LVTs, consisting of eight LVTs for White Beach 1 and sixteen for White Beach 2, left the line of departure at 07:17 followed at close intervals by fourteen more waves. Eight LVTs carried a rifle company of about 200 men. No more than four LVTs could beach at the one time on White Beach 1, so the other four nosed up against the 3-to-10-foot (1 to 3 m) coral cliffs and the marines clambered over them.[61][62]

     
    M4 Sherman tanks and other vehicles deploy inland

    Two pillboxes guarded White Beach 2, which were bypassed by the first waves, but reduced by alter ones; 50 dead Japanese were inside. Both beaches had mines; none exploded on White Beach 1, but the area around White Beach 2 was sown with antiboat mines on the beach and antipersonnel mines ashore, which the UDTs, bomb disposal teams and engineers took until 13:37 to clear. Three LVTs were disabled by mines when they ventured inland from White Beach 2.[61][62] The 4th Tank Battalion had trouble negotiating the reefs, potholes and mines on White Beach 2 and was diverted to White Beach 1. Despite its small size, nearly all vehicles were landed over White Beach 1. This included the M3 Stuart light tanks of Company D with Ronson flamethrowers. In the afternoon, Company A came ashore on White Beach 2 without mishap.[63]

    All three assault battalions were ashore by 08:20, and DUKWs carrying the artillery began landing on White Beach 2 at 13:15. The 23rd Marines began landing at 14:00 and the 2nd Marine Division's 1st Battalion, 8th Marines, followed at 17:00. The planned beachhead was occupied, and the marines strung barbed wire and established fields of fire in anticipation of a Japanese counterattack. Two pontoon causeway piers were placed during the night, allowing loaded trucks to come ashore from LSTs. By the evening, 15,614 marines, soldiers and sailors had landed on Tinian, at a cost of 15 men killed and 225 wounded.[64][65]

    Counterattack edit

     
    Marines inspect a knocked out Japanese tank

    At around 02:00 on 25 July, a force of about 600 Japanese sailors encountered the 1st Battalion, 24th Marines, on the left of the American beachhead, and charged into machine gun, mortar, rifle and 37 mm antitank gun canister shot fire. A furious fight ensued, in which Company A was reduced to just 30 men, but by 07:00 476 Japanese lay dead.[66][67]

    In the center of the American another attack developed at the boundary between the 24th and 25th Marines. About 200 Japanese soldiers broke through the lines of Company K, 25th Marines. They divided into two groups; one attacked Battery D, 14th Marines. The attack was halted with the help of Browning .50 caliber machine gun fire from Batteries E and F. Company C of the 8th Marines was sent to their aid, but found the situation in hand. About 100 dead Japanese were found in the area; two men of Battery D were killed. The other group were engaged in a wooded area by 60 mm mortars. The attack in the center cost the Japanese about 500 dead, most of whom were from the 1st Battalion, 135th Infantry Regiment. Many were caught on the barbed wire and killed by machine gun fire.[66][68]

    On the right, the 23rd Marines were attacked by five or six Japanese tanks, accompanied by infantry of the 1st and 2nd Battalions, 50th Infantry Regiment, and the 1st Battalion, 135th Infantry Regiment. The moonless night was lit up by Navy star shells. Five Japanese tanks were knocked out by bazookas, 75 mm halftracks and 37 mm antitank guns. The Japanese infantry charged the lines of the 2nd battalion, 23rd Marines, and 2nd Battalion, 25th Marines. Some broke through their lines, only to encounter the 1st Battalion, 23rd Marines. In the morning, 267 Japanese dead were counted in this sector. In all, the counterattack cost Ogata about 1,200 dead.[66][69]

    Drive south edit

     
    The 2nd Marine Division wades ashore

    The nighttime actions had depleted the 4th Marine Division's ammunition, so Cates delayed attacking on 25 July until 10:00 to allow time to replenish. In the meantime, the rest of the 2nd Marine Division began landing.[70] Moving north along the coast through terrain charaterized by coral rocks and thick undergrowth, the 1st Battalion, 8th Marines, was held up by a force of 20 to 25 Japanese that took the marines until 11:30 to overcome. On their right, the 2nd Battalion, 8th Marines, reached the Ushi Point airfield, and the 24th Marines reached airfield No. 3.[71][72] The 25th Marines was confronted by the most formidable obstacle of the day, Mount Maga, which was captured with a double envelopment.[71][73]

    The following day, the 25th Marines captured the steeper and more imposing Mount Lasso without opposition, as the Japanese had pulled out during the night. The advance had now begun to outrun the range of the artillery on Saipan, so the 105 mm howitzer battalions of the 10th and 14th Marines displaced to Tinian on 26 and 27 July and rejoined their divisions.[74][73] The marines pressed forward on 27 and 28 July against sporadic Japanese resistance.[75]

    Weather breaks edit

     
    USS LST-340 at the pontoon pier on White Beach 2

    The weather abruptly worsened on the afternoon of 28 July.[76] A typhoon in the Philippine Sea caused heavy swells.[75] At 18:00 all unloading ceased. USS LST-340 ran aground on the reef, and efforts to refloat her were unsuccessful. On 13 August, she was pulled off the reef and towed to Tanapag Harbor, where she was beached. A control craft, LCC-25473, was washed up on the reef at White Beach 1, but was salvaged the following day. The pontoon causeways were damaged on the night of 29 July. The one at White Beach 1 broached and the one at White Beach 2 broke in two. The White Beach 1 causeway was restored to service on 31 July, only to broach again.[77][78]

    With the Ushi Point airfield in American hands, the 121st Naval Construction Battalion commenced its repair on 27 July, filling in the bomb and shell craters. By that evening, an airstrip 2,500 feet (760 m) long and 150 feet (46 m) wide was ready for use, and it was fully restored to its 4,700-foot (1,400 m) length the next day.[79] On 29 July, a P-47 landed and took off again.[80] Hill summoned the 9th Troop Carrier Squadron from Eniwetok and its Douglas C-47 Skytrains, together with the Curtiss C-46 Commandos of VMR-252, delivered 33,000 rations from Saipan on 31 July. On the return trip they carried wounded. A parachute drop of 30 short tons (27 t) of supplies was prepared, but was not necessary.[81][78]

     
    Marines move across the wreckage of the Japanese airfield at Ushi Point

    The rough seas precluded unloading to all but DUKWs.[75] These were the preferred transport for supplies, as they did not damage the roads like the LVTs did. In some places engineers constructed parallel roads for LVTs.[52] One important task for the DUKWs was hauling ammunition from the ammunition ships SS Rockland Victory, which arrived off Tinian on 26 July, and MS Sea Witch, which arrived the following day. The DUKWs also had to haul 600 to 800 drums of fuel each day from the floating barges. A gasoline shortage was averted by the capture of Japanese stocks.[82]

    On 30 July the 24th Marines occupied Tinian town and the 25th Marines overran airfield no. 4.[83] The land mines were cleared away, and LCTs began landing on Green Beach. The water off the south pier was not deep enough to allow LSTs to dock there, so pontoon causeways were brought from White Beach 1 and Saipan, allowing the first LST to dock on 4 August. The beach between the two piers was cleared of land mines by 5 August, and was resurfaced with coral, allowing up to fifteen LCMs to beach there simultaneously. The harbor had not been mined, but there were sunken wrecks, which the UDTs demolished.[84]

    Tinian taken edit

    Japanese remnants made a final stand in the caves and ravines of a limestone ridge on the south portion of the island,[85] where the terrain rose in a brush and rock strewn plateau 5,000 yards (4,600 m) long and 2,000 yards (1,800 m) wide. On the evening of 30 July, Schmidt ordered his divisions to occupy the coastline between Lalo and Mapo Points, and annihilate the remaining Japanese forces.[86] The next morning, the battleships USS Tennessee and California and cruisers USS Louisville, Montpelier and Birmingham unleashed 615 short tons (558 t) of shells on the plateau, and aircraft dropped 69 short tons (63 t) of bombs.[87][88]

     
    A 75mm pack howitzer, nicknamed "Miss Connie", is fired into a Japanese-held cave on Tinian. The gun was locked securely in this unusual position after the parts were hand-carried to the cliff's edge.

    The rugged terrain hampered the tanks but the flamethrower tanks of Company D, 4th Tank Battalion, were adept at burning sections of undergrowth where Japanese soldiers tried to hide.[87] As the 23rd Marines approached the plateau, they came under intense small arms fire from a small village and the cliff face. The accompanying tanks of Company C, 4th Tank Battalion, were engaged by a concealed Japanese 47 mm antitank gun, which scored six hits on one tank. Although penetrated, the tank remained operational and was able to back away. It used smoke to mark the suspected location of the gun for rockets and naval and tank gunfire. The advance resumed, only to have another tank hit by the same gun. Although also penetrated, it too remained operational, and this time the target was spotted, and engaged by tanks that destroyed the gun and machine gunned twenty Japanese crewmen who tried to escape.[89][90]

    Meanwhile, the 8th Marines made their way onto the plateau, where vegetation covered caves and fissures where Japanese riflemen and machine gunners lurked. While the vegetation concealed them from observation by the Americans, it also restricted their own fields of view. There was one winding road to the top, but it was mined. Engineers removed the mines, allowing tanks to proceed up the road and destroy Japanese positions, while the accompanying infantry battled their way through the brush. At 16:50, Company A reached the top. Five minutes later they were joined by a platoon from Company C. Company E, following up the road, was attacked by between 75 and 100 Japanese, who were eventually repelled. It then made it way to the top. Company G followed, reaching the top at 18:45, which was sunset. During the night, the Japanese attempted to cut the Americans on the summit off. They captured some vehicles, but were unsuccessful. At 05:15 the marines' positions were attacked by more than 600 Japanese soldiers and sailors. An hour later, the 8th Maries had 74 casualties and 200 Japanese were dead. The Japanese then withdrew to the woods and cliffs in the southwest of the island.[91][92]

    Lolo Point was reached at 18:00, and 55 minutes later, Schmidt declared that organized resistance had ended, and the island was secure.[93]

    Casualties edit

    In his report on the Tinian operation, Turner reported the 2nd Marine Division's losses in the period from 24 July to 9 August as 104 killed, 654 wounded and 3 missing, a total of 761. The 4th Marine Division lost 182 killed, 844 wounded and 20 missing, a total of 1,046. Four men of the XXIV Corps Artillery were wounded, and there were 4 killed, 13 wounded and 1 missing among the V Amphibious Corps troops, for a total of 290 killed, 1,515 wounded and 24 missing, giving a grand total of 1,829 casualties.[94][95] Another 63 sailors and marines were killed and 177 wounded aboard ships.[96][60] The dead included two men who were posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor for using their bodies to protect their comrades from hand grenades, Private Joseph W. Ozbourn and Private First Class Robert L. Wilson.[97]

    By 10 August, Japanese casualties included 404 taken prisoner and 5,745 dead that were buried by the Americans.[94]

    Aftermath edit

    Mopping up edit

     
    Marines bathe a Tinian girl after she and her family had been removed from a hillside dugout.

    On 6 August, Brigadier General Merrit A. Edson, the deputy commander of the 2nd Marine Division, assumed tactical responsibility as commander of Ground Forces Tinian. The 8th Marines assumed responsibility for the whole 2nd Marine Division's sector, two days later, allowing the rest of the division could return to Saipan for rest and reorganization. On 10 August it took over the 4th Marine Division's sector as well, so it could return to Hawaii.[98] Major General James L. Underhill was appointed Island Commander on 1 August 1944. Nine days later, all forces on Tinian were transferred to his command.[99][100] He was succeeded by Brigadier General Frederick V. H. Kimble on 28 November 1944.[101]

    The 8th Marines patroled the island, mopping up Japanese holdouts. On 25 October, the 8th Marines joined the rest of the 2nd Marine Division on Saipan, leaving the 1st Battalion behind on Tinian. It continued mopping up patrols until 1 January 1945, when it too departed for Saipan. Between 1 August 1944 and 1 January 1945, the 8th Marines lost another 38 killed and 125 wounded; 542 Japanese soldiers were killed.[102] Responsibility for the defence of Tinian was handed over to the marines of the 16th Antiaircraft Artillery Battalion.[103] It departed for Okinawa in April 1945, but the 17th and 18th Antiaircraft Artillery Battalions remained to defend the airbases.[104]

    The garrison on Aguiguan Island off the southwest cape of Tinian, commanded by Lieutenant Kinichi Yamada, held out until the end of the war, surrendering on 4 September 1945. The entire garrison of 67 troops, along with 172 Japanese and 128 Korean civilians, was interned in Camp Churo on Tinian.[105] The last holdout on Tinian, Murata Susumu, was captured in 1953.[106][107]

    Military government edit

    There were 16,029 civilians on Tinian on 15 April 1944, of whom 1,658, mostly women, children and the elderly, were evacuated to Japan before the American invasion.[108][109] An estimated 2,610 civilians died in the battle.[110] Journalist Robert Sherrod noted that most died as result of the fighting; the Americans made great use of artillery, aerial and naval bombardment, and civilians often sheltered with soldiers. Some died from disease, dehydration or malnutrition.[111] Some were murdered by Japanese soldiers.[112] In one instance Japanese soldiers tied 40 to 50 civilians together and threw a grenade at them.[113] Some died by suicide, and there were instances of mass suicide, most notably off the 120-foot (37 m) "Suicide Cliff" between Mapo and Lalo Points.[114]

     
    Staff Sergeant Frederico Claveria gives candy to an interned child.[115]

    Only 2,468 civilians had been accounted for by 1 August, but within three days that number had increased to 8,491.[99] The 2nd Marine established a stockade for civilians at the Ushi Point Airfield while the 4th Marine Division established one at the ruined village of Churo. The latter was chosen as a permanent camp site, and all the civilians were subsequently concentrated there.[116] By 15 October, there were 10,926 civilians at Camp Churo, of whom 8,625 were Japanese, 2,297 were Koreans, and 4 were Chinese. Nearly half were children under the age of 15.[109]

    The military government was unprepared to cater for the large number of civilians, and there were critical shortages of relief supplies of all kinds.[117] Seabees supervised the erection of tarpaulin shelters. These were gradually replaced by huts made from corrugated iron and timber salvaged from around the island. The internees also salvaged food supplies, and cultivated gardens. When firewood started to become scarce, Seabees made them improvised diesel stoves.[118]

    In late 1945, Spruance, who had succeeded Nimitz as CINCPOA, ordered the repatriation of all Japanese and Korean civilians. This was completed by late 1946.[119]

    Base development edit

     
    A Seabee waves at incoming Boeing B-29 Superfortress bombers

    Responsibility the transformation of Tinian into a base for Boeing B-29 Superfortress bombers was assigned to the 6th Naval Construction Brigade, under Halloran's command. For this work his brigade had the 29th and 30th Naval Construction Regiments; a third regiment, the 49th Naval Construction Regiment, arrived in March 1945.[120] Two air bases were constructed: North Field and West Field. These were on the site of the existing Japanese fields at Ushi Point and Gurguan Point respectively, but they had to be lengthened to 8,500 feet (2,600 m) and widened to 500 feet (150 m) to handle the B-29s. This task would have been easier if the plateau had been more than 7,000 feet (2,100 m) wide. As it was, large amounts of fill were required.[121]

    When work was completed on 5 May 1945, North Field had four parallel 8,500-foot (2,600 m) runways, with 8 miles (13 km) of taxiways, 265 hardstands, 173 Quonset huts and 92 other buildings. Its construction involved 2,109,800 cubic yards (1,613,100 m3) of excavations and 4,789,400 cubic yards (3,661,800 m3) of fill. West Field had two B-29 runways, 53,000 feet (16,000 m) of taxiways, 220 hardstands and 251 administration, maintenance and repair buildings. The adjacent base for naval aircraft had 16,000 feet (4,900 m) of taxiways, 70 hardstands, 345 Quonset huts, 33 administration, maintenance and repair buildings, and a 75-foot (23 m) tall control tower.[121]

     
    Tinian in 1945 after airbase construction was complete. North Field is in the foreground and West Field in the background.

    Initially, fuel had to be supplied in drums. Later, aviation gasoline was drawn from a barge known as YOGL that was anchored in Tinian Harbor. The fuel storage and distribution system was completed by 8 March 1945. This included storage tanks for 14,000 US barrels (1,700,000 L) of diesel oil, 20,000 US barrels (2,400,000 L) of motor gasoline and 165,000 US barrels (19,700,000 L) of aviation gasoline. Fuel was pumped over a submarine pipeline from an oil tanker moored north of Tinian Harbor and distributed over 86,000 feet (26,000 m) of pipeline.[122] Work on the harbor include dredging operations and the construction of a breakwater and quays for Liberty ships. Until it was completed in March 1945, cargo was brought ashore by LCMs and LCTs.[123]

    North Field became operational in February 1945 and West Field the following month.[124] The 313th Bombardment Wing arrived from the United States in December 1944 and was based at North Field. The 58th Bombardment Wing arrived from the China-Burma-India Theater in March 1945 and was based at West Field. A third formation, the 509th Composite Group arrived in May 1945 and moved to North Field, where it took over an area that had been specially constructed for it.[125][126] These formations participated in the campaign of air raids on Japan, including the bombing of Tokyo on 10 March 1945,[127] and the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki on 6 and 9 August 1945.[128]

    Notes edit

    1. ^ Crowl 1960, pp. 2–3.
    2. ^ Crowl 1960, pp. 6–7.
    3. ^ Hayes 1982, p. 280.
    4. ^ Aandahl, Franklin & Slany 1958, p. 549.
    5. ^ Crowl 1960, pp. 11–12.
    6. ^ Cate 1953, pp. 17–19.
    7. ^ Franklin & Gerber 1961, p. 780.
    8. ^ Crowl 1960, pp. 12–13.
    9. ^ Hayes 1982, pp. 555–560.
    10. ^ Crowl 1960, p. 271.
    11. ^ a b Prefer 2012, p. 37.
    12. ^ a b Hoffman 1951, p. 5.
    13. ^ Rottman & Gerrard 2004, pp. 7–8.
    14. ^ Hoffman 1951, p. 2.
    15. ^ a b c Hoffman 1951, pp. 4–7.
    16. ^ a b Rottman 2002, p. 380.
    17. ^ a b Dyer 1969, pp. 952–954.
    18. ^ Rottman & Gerrard 2004, p. 31.
    19. ^ a b Hoffman 1951, pp. 7–9.
    20. ^ Hoffman 1951, p. 156.
    21. ^ a b Prefer 2012, pp. 20–21.
    22. ^ Prefer 2012, p. 20.
    23. ^ Hoffman 1951, pp. 12–16.
    24. ^ Prefer 2012, pp. 21–23.
    25. ^ Shaw, Nalty & Turnbladh 1994, p. 239.
    26. ^ a b Shaw, Nalty & Turnbladh 1994, p. 365.
    27. ^ Hoffman 1951, p. 20.
    28. ^ a b Prefer 2012, p. 57.
    29. ^ Shaw, Nalty & Turnbladh 1994, pp. 241–242.
    30. ^ Crowl 1960, pp. 276–277.
    31. ^ Moore 1998, p. 81.
    32. ^ "H-032-1 Operation Forager and the Battle of Philippine Sea". Naval History and Heritage Command. Retrieved 17 March 2024.
    33. ^ Moore 1998, p. 82.
    34. ^ Crowl 1960, p. 279.
    35. ^ a b Crowl 1960, p. 272.
    36. ^ a b Hoffman 1951, pp. 20–21, 161–162.
    37. ^ Smith 1989, p. 206.
    38. ^ a b c Crowl 1960, pp. 272–274.
    39. ^ a b Hoffman 1951, p. 22.
    40. ^ Jones 1944, Annex E.
    41. ^ Jones 1944, Annexes C and D.
    42. ^ Hoffman 1951, p. 23.
    43. ^ Dyer 1969, pp. 956–957.
    44. ^ Hoffman 1951, p. 24.
    45. ^ a b Shaw, Nalty & Turnbladh 1994, p. 361.
    46. ^ Raines 2000, p. 251.
    47. ^ Bosworth 1944, Air Officer's Report.
    48. ^ Shaw, Nalty & Turnbladh 1994, p. 364.
    49. ^ Shaw, Nalty & Turnbladh 1994, p. 362.
    50. ^ a b c Morison 1953, pp. 359–360.
    51. ^ Morison 1953, pp. 361–362.
    52. ^ a b c d e f Shaw, Nalty & Turnbladh 1994, p. 371.
    53. ^ a b c Shaw, Nalty & Turnbladh 1994, p. 372.
    54. ^ Hoffman 1951, p. 25.
    55. ^ a b Shaw, Nalty & Turnbladh 1994, p. 373.
    56. ^ Morison 1953, p. 362.
    57. ^ a b Crowl 1960, p. 275.
    58. ^ "The Doodlebug". Naval History and Heritage Command, U.S. Navy Seabee Museum. Retrieved 21 March 2024.
    59. ^ Rottman & Gerrard 2004, p. 76.
    60. ^ a b Shaw, Nalty & Turnbladh 1994, p. 378.
    61. ^ a b Morison 1953, pp. 362–363.
    62. ^ a b Shaw, Nalty & Turnbladh 1994, pp. 381–383.
    63. ^ Shaw, Nalty & Turnbladh 1994, pp. 384–385.
    64. ^ Morison 1953, pp. 363–364.
    65. ^ Shaw, Nalty & Turnbladh 1994, pp. 383–384.
    66. ^ a b c Shaw, Nalty & Turnbladh 1994, pp. 389–391.
    67. ^ Hoffman 1951, p. 63.
    68. ^ Hoffman 1951, pp. 64–65.
    69. ^ Hoffman 1951, pp. 65–66.
    70. ^ Hoffman 1951, pp. 69–71.
    71. ^ a b Shaw, Nalty & Turnbladh 1994, pp. 394–395.
    72. ^ Hoffman 1951, pp. 74–75.
    73. ^ a b Hoffman 1951, pp. 71–74.
    74. ^ Shaw, Nalty & Turnbladh 1994, pp. 398–399.
    75. ^ a b c Shaw, Nalty & Turnbladh 1994, p. 402.
    76. ^ Rottman & Gerrard 2004, p. 81.
    77. ^ Hoffman 1951, p. 92.
    78. ^ a b Shaw, Nalty & Turnbladh 1994, p. 403.
    79. ^ Building the Navy's Bases 1947, p. 359.
    80. ^ Shaw, Nalty & Turnbladh 1994, p. 398.
    81. ^ Hoffman 1951, p. 93.
    82. ^ Shaw, Nalty & Turnbladh 1994, pp. 403–404.
    83. ^ Hoffman 1951, pp. 94–98.
    84. ^ Shaw, Nalty & Turnbladh 1994, pp. 423–424.
    85. ^ Rottman & Gerrard 2004, p. 85.
    86. ^ Shaw, Nalty & Turnbladh 1994, pp. 408–409.
    87. ^ a b Hoffman 1951, p. 102.
    88. ^ Shaw, Nalty & Turnbladh 1994, p. 411.
    89. ^ Hoffman 1951, pp. 104–105.
    90. ^ Harwood 1994, p. 24.
    91. ^ Hoffman 1951, pp. 107–109.
    92. ^ Shaw, Nalty & Turnbladh 1994, pp. 412–413.
    93. ^ Shaw, Nalty & Turnbladh 1994, pp. 420–421.
    94. ^ a b Turner 1944, p. 79.
    95. ^ Hoffman 1951, p. 150.
    96. ^ Turner 1944, p. 266.
    97. ^ Hoffman 1951, pp. 98, 117.
    98. ^ Hoffman 1951, pp. 120–121.
    99. ^ a b Hoffman 1951, p. 140.
    100. ^ Richard 1957, p. 535.
    101. ^ Richard 1957, p. 539.
    102. ^ Shaw, Nalty & Turnbladh 1994, pp. 422–423.
    103. ^ Prefer 2012, p. 157.
    104. ^ Melson 1996, p. 32.
    105. ^ Richard 1957, pp. 21–22.
    106. ^ "Japanese Holdouts: Registry". Pacific Wreck Database. Retrieved 23 March 2024.
    107. ^ Prefer 2012, p. 167.
    108. ^ Astroth 2019, p. 165.
    109. ^ a b Richard 1957, p. 553.
    110. ^ Astroth 2019, pp. 166–168.
    111. ^ Astroth 2019, pp. 127–131.
    112. ^ Astroth 2019, pp. 132–139.
    113. ^ Smith 1989, p. 211.
    114. ^ Astroth 2019, p. 85.
    115. ^ Harwood 1994, p. 31.
    116. ^ Richard 1957, p. 537.
    117. ^ Astroth 2019, pp. 153–155.
    118. ^ Building the Navy's Bases 1947, pp. 369–370.
    119. ^ Astroth 2019, p. 172.
    120. ^ "6th Naval Construction Brigade Log: Task on Tinian" (PDF). United States Navy Seabee Museum. Retrieved 22 March 2024.
    121. ^ a b Building the Navy's Bases 1947, pp. 358–362.
    122. ^ Building the Navy's Bases 1947, p. 365.
    123. ^ Building the Navy's Bases 1947, pp. 366–367.
    124. ^ Rottman & Gerrard 2004, p. 89.
    125. ^ Cate 1953, p. 166.
    126. ^ Taylor et al. 1953, pp. 519–525.
    127. ^ Taylor et al. 1953, pp. 614–617.
    128. ^ Taylor et al. 1953, pp. 713–725.

    References edit

    External links edit

    15°00′N 145°38′E / 15.000°N 145.633°E / 15.000; 145.633