A. Duncan and Al Perry after 10 days of fighting on the "meatgrinder" on Iwo Jima |
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Taken on Tinian, 50 men left after losing 101 to a Japanese Banzai attack |
"A" Company the 26 surviving of all 4 battle campaigns in front of 24th Regiment Memorial 4th Marine Division Maui 1945 |
A Company End of Iwo Jima, the 37 survivors out of 228 who landed |
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In January 1944 the 4th Marine Division
sailed from San Diego for the Marshall Islands, Roi-Namur in the Kwajalein
Atoll. Operation "Flintlock" was the first objective for the
Division. Six hours after landing on 1 February 1944 Roi Island was
declared secured, and Namur Island was secured just 24 hours and 15
minutes after the first troops landed.
The 4th Marine Division set three new records on its first operation: [1] It became the first Division to go directly into combat from the States; [2] It was the first to capture Japanese mandated territory in the Pacific; [3] And it secured its objective in a shorter time than any other important operation since the attack on Pearl Harbor. The 4th Marine Division landed on Saipan 15 June 1944. The
severity of this battle was indicated by the 2,000 casualties suffered in
the first two days of battle. The Flag was raised on Saipan after 25
grueling and bitter days of combat. The Division sustained 5,981
casualties killed, wounded and missing. This represented 27.6 percent of
the Division's strength. The Japanese count was 23,811 known dead and
1,810 prisoners were taken. The combat record of the 4th Marine Division in World War II was exemplary. In the short space of one year and 19 days it participated in four major amphibious assaults and won two Presidential Unit Citations. The Division suffered a total of 17,722 battle casualties during the four assault landings on Roi-Namur, Saipan, Tinian and Iwo Jima. (14,424 wounded and 3,298 killed or died of wounds.) |
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see the following link for more information about the 4th Marine Division in WWII |
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