The 3d Marine Division and Its Regiments

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The 3d Marine Division

and Its Regiments


by
Reference Section
Historical Branch

HISTORY AND MUSEUMS DIVISION


HEADQUARTERS, U.S. MARINE CORPS
WASHINGTON, D.C.
1983

PCN 19000317400
Table of Contents

THE 3D MARINE DIVISION . 1

3d Division Commanding Generals. 7

3d Marine Division Lineage 9


3d Marine Division Honors 10
The 3d Division Patch 11

Ti-ni 3D MARINES 12
Commanding Officers, 3d Marines. 15
3d Marines Lineage. . 18
3d Marines Honors. . . 20

THE 4TH MARINES. 21


Commanding Officers, 4th Marines 24
4th Marines Lineage. 27
4th Marines Honors. 30

THE 9TH MARINES. 31

Commanding Officers, 9th Marines 34


9th Marines Lineage. 36
9th Marines Honors. 38

THE 12.'rH MARINES.... 39


Commanding Officers, 12th Marines 42
12th Marines Lineage. 44
12th Marines Honors. 46

THE uST MARINES. 47


Commanding Officers, 21st Marines 49
21st Marines Lineage. 50
21st Marines Honors. 51

THE 2.6TH MARINES... 52


Commanding Officers, 26th Marines. 55
26th Marines Lineage. 56
26th Marines Honors. .58

Ii'
The 3d Marine Division

THE 3D M1cIUNE DivisioN, officially activated 16 IN JANUARY AND FEBaUARY 1943, the division moved
September 1942, at Camp Elliott, San Diego, California, from Camp Elliott to Auckland, New Zealand. On 23 May
was built around the 9th Marines. Major General Charles 1943, the 3d Marines (Reinforced), then on Samoa, joined
D. Barrett became the first commanding general of the the 3d Marine Division, replacing the 23d Marines.
division. As the year drew to a close, the 3d Division, still
in the process of training and organization, consisted of B AUGUST 1943, all major units of the division were sta-
three infantry regiments, the 9th, 21st, and 23d Marines; tioned on Guadalcanal where special training and rehear-
an artillery regiment, the 12th Marines; an engineer regi- sals for the Bougainville operation were intensified. On 1
ment, the 19th Marines; special troops composed of the 3d November 1943, the division, with the 3d and 9th Marines
Headquarters Battalion, the 3d Parachute Battalion, the in assault, landed at Empress Augusta Bay, Bougainville;
3d Tank Battalion, and the 3d Special Weapons Battalion; the 21st Marines followed io six days. For approximately
the 3d Service Battalion; the 3d. Medical Battalion; and the two months the division, now commanded by Major
3d Amphibian Tractor Battalion. All of these units were General Allen H. Turnage, fought in the front lines
located at Camp Elliott, except the 21st and 23d Marines, against stiff and heavy enemy resistance. On 16 January
which were at New River, North Carolina. 1944, with the transfer of command in the area to the Ar-

Facing camera at a World War II strategy session, Admiral William F. Halsey, Com-
mander, Third Fleet, seated second from rzght, confers with Major General Roy S.
Geiger, Commander of I Marine Amphibious Corps, seated at Halsey's left, and Major
GeneralAllen H. Turnage, Commanding General of the 3d Marine Division, seated at
Halsey's right, at the division headquarters on Bougainville Island in November 1943,
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Third Division unit wearing camouflaged uniforms takes a short break along a jungle
track as it moves up to the front lines on Bougainville on 4 November 1944.

my's XIV Corps, the last elements of the 3d Marine Divi-


sion returned to Guadalcanal.

FOLLOWING THE BOUGArNVThLE OPERATION, the division


began training for the next campaign. Verbal instructions
received in February 1944 led to planning fot an operation
against the Japanese on Emirau Island. The projected
'-4 Emirau operation was subsequently cancelled and verbal
instructions were received to initiate planning for an opera-
tion against enemy forces at Kavieng, New Ireland. This
operation was also called off, and a few days later the divi-
sion received word to start training for the amphibious
assault against Guam in the Mariana Islands.

THE DIVISION EMBARKED AT GUADALCANAL, 2 and 3June

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1944, and sailed for Kwajalein, Marshall Islands, enroute
to the Marianas. It remained afloat off Saipan from 15 to
28 June 1944, as part of the reserve forte for the Saipan
operation then being carried out by the 2d and 4th Marine
Divisions in conjunction with the 27th Infantry Division.
With the situation on Saipan well controlled, the 3d
Third Division Marines pursue retreating Japanese Marine Division returned to its restaging area awaiting a
along a jungle trail on Guam on 29 July 1944. new target date for the Guam operation.

2
ON ii JULY 1944, as a part of the Southern Troops and
Landing Force, the 3d Marine Division, with three
regiments abreast, landed on the western beaches of
Guam, in the vicinity of Asan Point. After 20 days of
savage fighting, the division troops teached the notthccn
coast of the island. On 10 August 1944 Guam was declared
secure. Until its departure for the IwoJima campaign, the
division remained on Guam taking part in the mopping-
up operations.

BY THE MIDDLE OF FEBRUARY i94, the 3d Marine Division


completed embarkation at Guam preparatory to patticipa-
don in the Iwo Jima operation. Initially the division re-
mained afloat off Iwo Jima as Expeditionary Troops
Reserve. One regiment, the 2lsr Marines, landed on 21
February. The remaining units (less the 3d Marines in
floating reserve) landed on 24 February, and the next mnr- —
fling the 3d Marine Division launched an attack in its zone — "a- -S-S'
between the 4th and 5th Marine Divisions.
Rubble litters the streets ofAgana, Guam, capital of
THE 3D MARiNE DIVISION faced well-organized and deter- the island and the first American city of any size to
mined enemy resistance. The terrain, ideal for defense, be liberatedfrom the Japanese during World War H,
was heavily fortified by piliboxes, caves, and covered ar- as 3d Division Marines advance against the enemy.

A Marine Sherman tank blasts ajapanesepillbox in advance of 3d Division infantrymen


on Guam in August1944. Marine at right carries a souvenirJapanese sword on his pack.

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tillery emplacements. Progress was slow and casualties
heavy during the first few days of fighting. The division
slowly pushed the enemy back and by 3 March had severed
the last enemy east-west artery of communication by occu-
pying positions overlooking the sea. The 3d Division
secured its zone of action on 11 March and then initiated
intensive patrolling and mopping-up operations. On 16
March, units of the 3d Division relieved elements of the
5th Division and delivered the final attack of the Iwojima
operation—a drive toward Kitano Point. Iwo Jima was
declared secure on the same day. On 4 April, the 3d
Marine Division was relieved by Army units.

BY MID-APRIL '945, all units of the division were back on


Guam, preparing for the next operation. In addition, the
division patrolled the southern part of the island. On 3
August 1945, the 3d Marine Division received initial plans
for Operation Olympic which called for an amphibious
landing on the Japanese home island of Kyushu about 1
November 1945. The 3d Marine Division, along with the
2d and 5th Marine Divisions, was assigned to the V Am- 1. —

• -.
phibious Corps for the projected operation. Japan's agree- .4

ment to cease hostilities and subsequent surrender cancell-


ed Olympic, and the 3d Marine Division remained on 3d Division Marines man hastily prepared frosition
Guam until the date of its deactivation on 28 December amid the ruins of an Iwo Jima sulfur mine and
1945. refinery west of Motoyama Village in March 1945.

Lieutenant General Holland M. Smith, right, Commanding General, Fleet Marine


Force Pacific, who commanded the Marines in the seizure of Iwo Jima, congratulates
Major General Graves .8. Erskine, Commander of the 3d Marine Division, on the divi-
sion 's valorous service in breaking the backbone of Japanese resistance on the island.

V
Ti-ic 3D MARINE DIvISiON was reactivated on 7 January
1952, at Camp Pendleton, California. Brigadier General
-v
Merrill B. Twining became temporary division commander
until the arrival of Major Genera! Robert I-I. Pepper on 15
February 1952. Immediately after its activation and still in
its organizational state, the division began intensive com-
bat training, including new tactics and maneuvers based
on lessons learned in the Korean War. During the remain-
ing part of 1952, elements of the division participated in
numetous exercises and training problems, including ver-
tical envelopment (helicopter landing), airborne opera-
tions and attack, and defense against atomic weapons and
missiles. By the end of 1952 the division consisted of all its
organic elements; three infantry regiments (the 3d, 4th,
and 9th Marines); an artillery regiment (the 12th Marines);
and all divisional support elements.

IN AUGUST 1953, the bulk of the 3d Marine Division,


commanded by General Pepper, arrived in Japan to sup-
port the 1st Marine Division in Korea in the defense of the
Far Eastern area. The division remained in Japan until ear-
ly 1956 when it redeployed to Okinawa. The 4th Marines
and various supporting elements became part of the 1st
Brigade in Hawaii.

ON 6 MARCH 196$, forward elements of the division made


an amphibious landing at Da Nang, Republic of Vietnam.
S.
Early in April, division units were helilifted to Hue/Phu
Bai to assume defense of the area. The headquarters, 3d
Marine Division Forward, under the command of Major Marines of the 1st Platoon, Company G, 2d Bat-
Genetal William R. Collins, was located in Da Nang on 6 talion, 3d Marines, wade a shallow stream on patrol
May. The Chu Lai area came under control of the 3d Divi- on 6 May 1965, shortly after arrival in Vietnam-
sion on 12 May. Major General Lewis W. Walt assumed
conimand of the division inJune 1965. DIVISiON UNiTS AGAIN STOPPED a breakthrough attempt
by the NVA south of the DMZ in the Cam Lo area during
Avreit a 1 July Viet Cong attack on Da Nang air base, the Operation Prairie II. The determined resistance the 3d
division extended the Da Nang defense area to the south Marine Division made against the NVA as Hills 881 Notch
and southeast. Additional units were brought in from and South and Hill 861 in the Khe Sanh area showed the
Okinawa and on 8July, elements of the division landed at enemy the U.S. was going to stay in the isolated
Qui Nhon, 146 miles south of Da Nang, creating a fourth northwestern corner of South Vietnam.
operational area.
OVER THE NEXT FOUR YEARS the division successfully ex- REPEATED ARTILLERY and rocket attacks on the Dong Ha
ecuted more than 120 major operations, including Starlire, combat base generated many attacks and sweeps by divi-
Hastings, Scotland, Napoleon/Saline, and Dewey Ca- sion units south of the DMZ. They cleared the area below
nyon. In Operation Hastings, division units stopped a the zone and penetrated the southern half of the buffer
North Vietnamese Army (NVA) drive into South Vietnam, strip to clear our troop concentrations and again stop inva-
and laid groundwork for the division's move north, which sion threats by the Norrh Vietnamese.
occurred on 9 October 1966. Many of its units had already
been committed to sealing the De- Ti-ic 3D DivisIoN remained in Vieniam until the fall of
militarized Zone (DMZ) against the northern infiltrators. 1969. Division headquarters, under the command of Ma-
The two northernmost provinces, Quang Tn and Thua jor General William K. Jones, returned to Okinawa in
Thien, now became the responsibility of the division. November 1969. Since that time, elements of the 3d

5
Marine Division have embarked in ships of the Seventh
Fleet as battalion landing teams. Other units of the 3d
Marine Division returned to Indochina to aid in the
evacuation of Americans and Vietnamese and Cambodian
nationals in the spring of 1975. Marines also served as
security detachments on board U.S. Navy ships and
American merchant ships during the sea evatuation of Da
Nang and as ground security forces at Saigon and Phnom
Penh during air evacuations. Elements of the 3d Marine
Division played an integral tole in the rescue of the crew of
the SS Mayaguez captured off the coast of Cambodia in
May 1975.

zfl:
THE 3D MARINE DivisioN continues to maintain its
combat-ready posture as a forte-in-readiness in the 1SA.
Western Pacific and Indian Ocean areas. In numerous am-
"7..
phibious landings and training exercises throughout the
region during the 1970s and early 19805, the Division, as A tank infantry team from 3d Tank Battalion and
the ground combat element of ill Marine Amphibious Company B, 1st Battalion, 3dMarines, leaves its line
Force, has remained a highly visible reminder of American of departure in an operation along the coastal
commitment to regional stability. lowlands of Quang Tn Province in Vietnam in 1968.

Company G, 2dBattalion, 4th Marines, particzating in Operation Hastings in Vietnam


in July 1966, moves through hrgh grass south of the Demilitarized Zone.

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6
3d Division
Commanding Generals

MajGen Charles D. Barrett 16 September 1942 - 14 September 1943


MajGen Allen H. Turnage 15 September 1943- 14 September 1944
BGen Alfred H. Noble 15 September 1944 - 13 October 1944
MajGen Graves B. Erskine 14-October 1944 . 20 October 1945
BGen William E. Riley 21 October 1945 - 28 December 1945

BGèn Merrill B. Twining 7 January 1952 - 14 February 1952


MajGen Robert H. Pepper 15 February 19)2 - 9 May 1954
MajGenJames P. Risely 10 May 1954. 3OJune 1955
MajGeti Thomas A. Wornham iJuly 1955 - 26Ju1y 1956
BGen Victor H. Krulak 27Ju1y 19)6 - 6 September 1956

MajGen Alan Shapley 7 September 1956- iJuly 1957


MajGen Francis M. McAlister 2July 1957 - 28 March 1958
MajGen David M. Shoup 29 March 1958 - 1 April 1959
Col Rathvon McC. Tompkins (Acting) 2 April 1959 - 8 May 1959
BGen Lewis C. Hudson 9 May 1959- l9June 1959

MajGen Robert B. Luckey 2OJune 1959-31 August 1960


MajGen Donald M. Weller 1 September 1960- 1 September 1961
MajGen Robert F. Cushman,Jr 2 September 1961 - 3 June 1962
MajGen Henry W. Buse,Jr 4Junc 1962 .9 May 1963
MajGenJames M, Masters, Sr 10 May 1963 - l6June 1964

MajGen William R. Collins l7June 1964 - 4June 1965


MajGen Lewis W. Walt 5 June 1965 - 17 March 1966
MajGen Wood B. Kyle 18 March 1966- 17 March 1967
MajGen Bruno A. Hochmuth 18 March 1967 - 14 November 1967
BGen Louis Metzgcr (Acting) 15 November 1967 - 27 November 1967

MajGen Rathvon McC. Tompkins 28 November 1967 - 20 May 1968


MajGen Raymond G. Davis 21 May 1968- 14 April 1969
MajGen William K. Jones 15 April 1969- 30 March 1970
MajGen Louis H. Wilson 31 March 1970.22 March 1971
MajGen Louis Metzger 23 March 1971 - 7January 1972

MajGenJoseph C. Fegan 8January 1972 - 7January 1973


MajGen Michael P. Ryan 8January 1973- 31 August 1973
MajGen Fred E. Haynes,Jr 1 September 1973 . 22 August 1974
MajGen KennethJ. Houghton 23 August 1974 - 13 August 1975
MajGen HerbertL. Wilkerson 14 August 1975- l9July 1976

7
MajGen George W. Smith . 2OJuly 1976 - l6JuIy 1977
MajGen Adolph G. Schwenk 17 July 1977- lOJuly 1978
MajGen CalhounJ. Killeen liJuly 1978- liJuly 1979
MajGen Kenneth L. Robinson1Jr l2JuIy 1979- 243u1y 1980
MajGen Stephen G. Olmstead 25July 1980- 2lJune 1982

MajGenRobertE. Haebe! 22June 1982- present

8
3d Marine Division

LINFA GE

1942. - 1945

ACTIVATED i6 SEPTEMBER 1941 AT CAMP ELLIOT, CALIFORNIA, AS THE


3D MARINE DIVISION
DEPLOYED DURING JANUARY-FEBRUARY 1943 TO AUCKLAND, NEW ZEALAND
PARTICIPATED IN THE FOLLOWING WORLD WAR II CAMPAIGNS:
BOUGAINVILLE
NORTHERN SOLOMONS
GUAM
IWO JIMA
DEACTIVATED 2.8 DECEMBER '945

1951- 1964

REACTIVATED 7 JANUARY 1952. AT CAMP PENDLETON, CALIFORNIA AS THE


3D MARINE DIVISION
REDEPLOYED DURING AUGUST TO CAMP GIFU, JAPAN
REDEPLOYED DURING FEBRUARY 1956 TO CAMP COURTNEY, OKINAWA

1965 - 1983

REDEPLOYED DURING APRIL-MAY 1965 TO THE REPUBLIC OF VIETNAM


PARTICIPATED IN THE WAR IN VIETNAM, APRIL 1965 - NOVEMBER 1969, OPERATING FROM:
QUANG TRI PROVINCE
QUANG NAM PROVINCE
THUA THIEN PROVINCE
REDEPLOYED DURING NOVEMBER 1969 TO CAMP COURTNEY, OKINAWA
ELEMENTS PARTICIPATED IN EVACUATION OPERATIONS IN VIETNAM AND
CAMBODIA, MARCH-MAY 1975
PARTICIPATED IN NUMEROUS TRAINING EXERCISES THROUGHOUT THE i97OS

9
3d Marine Division

HONORS

PRESIDENTIAL UNIT CITATION STREAMER WITH ONE BRONZE STAR


WORLD WAR II
IWO JIMA - 1945
VIETNAM 1965 - 1967

NAVY UNIT COMMENDATION STREAMER


WORLD WAR II
Iwo JIMA - 1945

ASIATIC-PACIFIC CAMPAIGN STREAMER WITH FOUR BRONZE STARS

WORLD WAR II VICTORY STREAMER

NATIONAL DEFENSE SERVICE STREAMER WITH ONE BRONZE STAR

KOREAN SERVICE STREAMER

VIETNAM SERVICE STREAMER WITH TWO SILVER STARS AND ONE BRONZE STAR

VIETNAM CROSS OF GALLANTRY STREAMER WITH PALM

10
THE 3D MARINE DIViSION PATCH
The 3d Marine Division shoulder patch worn during World
UYar 11 is in scarlet and gold, the official colors of the Marine
Corps, and consists of a scarlet triangular shield with a narrow
gold line near the outer edge. In the center of the shield is a
gold and black caltrap, an ancient military instrument with
four metalpoints so disposed that any three of them being on
the ground the other projects upward, thereby impeding the
progress of the enemy's cavalry. Literally. Don't step on me!
Also the three visible points of the caltrap represent ihe divi-
sion number. This insignia was authorized in August 1943.
In 1947, the wearing of unit shoulder patches by all Marine
Corps units was discontinued.

11
The 3d Marines

Ti-rn 3t) MARINES was originally activated as the 3d Regi- the 1st Battalion, 3d Marines received heavy fire before
ment of Marines on 20 December 1916 at Santo Domingo, landing on its assigned beach. The next day, the Marines
Dominican Republic, under the command of Colonel expanded their beachhead and pushed inland. Extension
Theodore A. Kane. As part of the 2d Provisional Brigade, of the beachhead continued as the 3d Marines battled a
the regiment's duties in the early part of the occupation persistent enemy. The 1st Battalion, 3d Marines blunted a
consisted of the administration of the military govern- Japanese attack on 7 November in the Laruma River area.
ment, disarming of the population, and control of ban- By 21 November, the 1st and 3d Batralions occupied
ditry. Because the fundamental aim of the occupation was critical terrain in the Piva Forks area, thereby cutting
to bring peace to the Dominican Republic and enable the Japanese supply and communications lines. The regiment
Dominicans to govern themselves, a native constabulary, had been committed for 27 consecutive days before it ex-
the Guardia Nacional Dominicana was formed. Trained changed sectors with the 9th Marines. From 28 November
and officered in part by Marines of the 3d Regiment, the until 22 December, the 3d Marines occupied the extreme
Guardia was gradually able to assume the duties of protec- southern flank of the division line where its patrols had
ting life and property and suppressing the bandits that in- several sharp skirmishes with the Japanese. On Christmas
fested the countryside. Throughout World War I, the 3d Day, the 3d embarked for Guadalcanal.
Regiment remained in the Dominican Republic. The unit
was deactivated there nn 1 August 1922. Smoke and flames billow from a gasoline and oil
dump set afire by a large Japanese air raid on 3d
THE 3D MARINES was reactivated on 16 June 1942 at New Marine Division positions at Empress Augusta Bay
River, North Carolina under Colonel Oscar 11. Cauldwell. on the island of Bougainvile on 20 November1943.
Built around a cadre of officers and enlisted men remain-
ing at New River after the 1st Marine Division had
mounted out, the new regiment was quickly brought up to
strength by a daily influx of recruits arriving directly from
Parris Island. In August, the 3d Marines left New River for
San Diego. The following month it was deployed overseas,
first to Samoa and then to New Zealand. The 3d Marines
was reorganized and incorporated as a unit of the 3d
Marine Division in June 1943. Combat training continued
for the 3d Marines while in New Zealand. The 3d Marine
Division was first inspected as a whole in June 1943 and
was found fit and combat ready. The division then moved
to Guadalcanal, a staging area prior to its commitment to
combat.

THE FIRST COMBAT ASSIGNMENT for the regiment, now


commanded by Colonel George W. McHenry, was to take S
part in the invasion of the Japanese-held island of
Bougainville. Rehearsals were held at Efate, New Hebrides
in October. Assault elements of the 2d Battalion, 3d if
Marines were the first to hit the beaches of Bougainville on
1 November 1943. The initial waves of the 2d and 3d Bat-
talions reached the beaches with only light opposition, but
r2' -

12
not land and soon returned to Guam. Guam was still far
from being peaceful as many japanese continued to roam
the island. Following Japan's surrender, the 1st Battalion,
3d Marines arrived on Chichi Jima on 10 October 1945 to
receive the surrender of the japanese fnrces on the island.
The 3d Marines sailed for San Diego in December 1945
and was deactivated at Camp Pendleton on 13 january
1946.

LESS THAN TWO YEARS LATER the 3d Marines was reac-


tivated as a battalion-sized organization in Tsingtao,
China on 1 October 1947 commanded by Colonel jaime
Sabater. The political situation began to deteriorate as the
Chinese Communists made a rapid and successful advance
against Chinese Nationalist forces. By December 1948,
most American nationals had left China, The 3d Marines
went on board ships in February 1949 and sailed for
Shanghai the following month to aid in the evacuation of
American and foreign nationals. The task completed, the
3d Marines returned to Tsingtao to pick up elements left
there, and then sailed for the United States in May. The 3d
Marines was stationed at Camp Pendleton until its deac-
tivation on 1 October 1949.

-p DURING THE KOREAN WAR the 3d Marines, under the


command of Lieutenant Colonel john j. Gormley, was
Private First Class Luther Skaggs, Jr., receives the
reactivated at Camp Pendleton on 20 June 1951 as part of
Medal of Ho nor from President Truman, for heroic the 3d Marine Brigade. Six months later, injanuary 1952,
service with the 3d Battalion, 3d Marines on Guam. it was reassigned to the 3d Marine Division. The division
went to Japan in August 1953 and the 3d Marines set up
SEvEN MONTHS LATER, the regiment, now commanded by quarters at Camp Fuji-McNair. During its stay in japan,
Colonel William C. Hall, was headed for its second combat the regiment conducted many field and landing exercises,
mission—the invasion of Guam. The 1st and 3d Battalions The 3d Marines was relocated to Camp Sukiran, Okinawa,
of the 3d Marines received intense mortar and artillery fife in March 1957. Elements of the regiment were deployed to
during their assault landing on 2lJuly 1944. As the first various areas in the Far East when political upheavals or
day wore on the 3d Marines met stiff opposition over in- crises occurred between 1957 and 1964.
creasingly difficult terrain, The fighting for the regiment
continued with great intensity fot the next few days, but As AMERICAN INVOLVEMENT in the war in Vietnam grew,
the 3d Marines continued to advance. During the night of the 1st Battalion, 3d Marines was airlifted to Da Nang in
25.26 July, after an exhaustive artillery and mortar March 1965. The remainder of the regiment, now com-
preparation, the enemy began to counterattack all along manded by Colonel Edwin B. Wheeler, was deployed to
the Marine line. The Japanese were driven back with heavy Vietnam during April and May 1965. After setting up and
losses, but small groups infiltrated the lines only to be occupying positions from the north to the south-central
systematically mopped-up on the morning of the 26th. On sector of the Da Nang perimeter, the 3d Marines' mission
10 August 1944 the island was declared secure although was to eliminate the Viet Cong from its sector, In October
sporadic resistance continued. The 3d Marines remained 1966, regimental headquarters under Colonel Edward E.
on Guam for mopping-up operations. Hammerbeck deployed to Camp Carroll in an area im-
mediately south of the demilitarized zone. For the next
THE 3D MARINES nexc combat assignment was that of year, the 3d Marines participated in such ,operations as
floating reserve for the Iwo Jima operation in February Prairie, Cimarron, Hickory, and Lancaster in the Camp
1945. The regiment, under Colonel james A. Stuart, did Carroll area.

13
IN FEBRUARY 1968 the 3d Marines took part in Operation REDEPLOYMENT TO THE UNITED STATES was completed in
Napokon/Saline along the Cua Viet River. Its mission was November 1969 when the regiment arrived at Camp
to conduct combat operations on both sides of the river to Pendleton and was assigned to the 5th Marine Amphibious
insure free shipping on the river and to deny the enemy ac- Brigade. In June 1971 the 3d Marines relocated to the
cess to rocket positions which couid be used to fire on Marine Corps Air Station, Kaneohe, Hawaii, and was
Dong Ha and Quang Tn. The 3d Marines participated in reassigned to the 1st Marine Brigade, Fleet Marine Force.
Operation Kentucky in December 1968 and assisted Viet-
namese forces in pacification of Cam I,o and Huong Hoa SINCE TI-US TIME, the regiment ha continued to maintain
District. Operation Maine Crag began in March 1969 the highest level of combat readiness for amphibious war-
when the 3d Marines began sweep and cleat operations fare by maintaining a rigorous training schedule on all
south of the old Khe Sanh Combat Base. The 3d Marines levels of unit operations, engaging in numerous field and
participated in Operations Virginia Ridge and Idaho Ca- fleet cxcrcises, and by providing battalion landing teams
nyon before leaving Vietnam in October 1969. for deployment to the Western Pacific.

CI-i-46 helicopters land to pick up the 2d Battalion, 3d Marines, at the beginning of


Operation Larn'aster II near the Demilitarized Zone in South Vietnam on 1 7 July 1968.

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'4
Commanding Officers
3d Marines

Col Theodore A. Kane 20 December 1916- 31 December 1916


Maj Hiram I. Bearss ijanuary 1917- 20 March 1917
LtColjohn H. Russell,jr 21 March 1917. 18 April 1917
LtCol William McKelvy 19 April 1917 - 27 May 1917
LtCot George C. Thorpe 28 May 1917 - 19 October 1917

Cot William McKelvy 20 October 1917 - 16 December 1917


LtCol George C. Thorpe 17 December 1917 - 1 February 1918
Col Philip M. Bannon 2 February 1918- 20 November 1918
Col Carl Gamborg-Andresen 21 November 1918- 24Apr11 1920
LtCol Bdward A. Greene 25 April 1920 - 1 August 1920

LrCol Charles B. Taylor 2 August 1920- 25 August 1920


Maj Charles S. MeReynokis 26 August 1920- 12 September 1920
itCol 14ë?r.y C. Davis 13 September 1920- 23 june 1922
LrCol EdwarB. Manwaring 24June 1922 - 2Ojuly 1922
Ccl Carroll e. Carpenter 2lJuly 1922 - 1 August 1922

Cot Osda?k Cauldwelt l6june 1942- 14 September 1943


Col George W. McHenry 15 September 1943- 16 December 1943
Ccl Walter A. Wachrler 17 December 1943 - 27 December 1943
LrCol George Van Orden 28 December 1943 - 21 january 1944
Ccl William C. Hall 22january 1944 - 28 july 1944

Col James A. Stuart 29ju(y 1944 - 30 March 1945


LtCol Newton B. Barktey 1 April 1945 - 22 April 1945
Col Lester S. Hamel 23 Aprit 1945 - 12 October 1945
Ccl Prentice S. Geer 13 October 1945 - 23 October 1945
LtCol Ewart S. Laue 24 October 1945 - l3january 1946

ColJaime Sabater 1 October 1947- 1 April 1948


Ccl Frederick L. Wieseman 2 April 1948 - 17 August 1948
Ccl Waifried M. Fromhold 18 August 1948 - 24 October 1948
LtColThomasJ. Colley 25 October 1948- 15 April 1949
LtCol Robcrt 0. Bowen 16 April 1949 - 28 April 1949

LrCol Williamj. McKennan 29 April 1949 - 25 july 1949


LtCol Raymond L. Murray 26july 1949 - 1 October 1949
LrColjohnj. Gormley 20 june 1951 - lSjuly 1951
Ccl Michael S. Currin lOJuly 1951- 14 March 1952
Ccl John G. Bouker 15 March 1952 - 1 August 1952

15
Col Robert H. Williams .2 August 1952 - 27 March 1954
LtCol Eugene 1-I. Strayhorn 28 March 1954- 1 April 1954
Go! Parker R. Colmer 2 April 1954 - 3July 1954
LiCol Cecil W. Shuler 4JuIy 1954 - 26July 1954
CoiRoberrE. Hill 27july 1954- 28 February 1955

Col Edmund M. Williams 1 March 1955 - 2Ojune 1955


LtColRoberrE. Snider 2lJune 1955-11 August 1955
Col Merrill M. Day 12 August 1955 -28 February 1956
Col Willard C. Fiske 1 March 1956 - 15 May 1956
ColJohn P. Stafford 16 May 1956- 25 August 1956

LtCol Earl A. Cash 26 August 1956- 27 August 1956


Col John G. Bouker 28 August 1956- 31 August 1957
Col William S. McCormack 1 September 1957 - 3 May 1958
Col Richard Nutting 4 May 1958 - 10 October 1958
Coljess P. Ferrill,Jr 11 October 1958-20 May 1959

Col George B. Kantner 21 May 1959- 3 October 1959


Col Louis C. Griffin 4 October 1959- 10 December 1959
LtColJames C. Short 11 December 1959 - 29january 1960
Col Walter Holomon 3OJanuary 1960 - 9 September 1960
Go! Theodore F. Beeman 10 September 1960-3 March 1961

LtColArthurL. Adams 4 March 1.961-26 March 1961


Col Charles A. Rigaud 27 March 1961- 6July 1961
Cot Albert F. Lucas 7july 1961- lOApril 1962
Col Edward H. Hurst 11 April1962- 10 April 1963
Col Spencer B. Pratt 11 April 1963-3 April 1964

LtCol Lawrence L. Graham 4 April 1964- 19 May 1964


Col Virgil W. Banning 20 May 1964 - 31 July 1964
Col Edwin B. Wheeler 1 August 1964 -22 May 1965
Col Frank E. Garretson 23 May 1965- liJune 1965
Col Edwin B. Wheeler 12 june 1965 - 16 August 1965

Col Norman R. Nickerson 17 August 1965 -23 November 1965


Col Thell H. Fisher 24 November 1965 - 15 April 1966
Col Harold A. Hayes,Jr 16 April 1966 - 18 August 1966
Col Edward F. Hammerbeck 19 August 1966 - 12 December 1966
Col John P. Larsigan 13 December 1966- 17 May 1967

ColJames R. Stockman 18 May 1967 - 25 August 1967


ColJoseph E. Loprete 26 August 1967- 17 February 1968
Col Milton A. Hull 18 February 1968 - l4July 1968
LtCol Vaughn R. Stuart lSJuly 1968 - 3lJuly 1968
Col Richard L. Michael,Jr 1 August 1968 - 8 November 1968

Cot Michael M. Spark 9 November 1968- 15 january 1969


Col Paul D. Lafond I6january 1969 - 27June 1969
ColWilburF. Simlik 28june 1969-21 September 1969

16
Col FrancisR. Kraince .22 September 1969-26 November 1969
Col Richard R. Breen 27 November 1969- 8 December 1969

Col Warren A. Butcher 9 December 1969- 12 November 1970


ColAnthonyA. Moon 13 November 1970- 14 April 1971
LrCol Keith L. Christensen 15 April 1971 - 2ljune 1971
LrCol Howard W. Wahifeld 22 june 1971 - l8july 1971
Col James P. Connolly, 11 l9July 1971 - 18 july 1973

Coljohnj. Grace 19ju1 1973 - 20 December 1974


Colj. C. Rappe 21 December1974- 27 August 1976
Col John C. Studt 28 August 1976 - 5 March 1978
Col Paul D. Slack 6 March 1978- 31 December 1979
CoiRobertE. Loehe iJanuary 1980- l3july 1980

Col Louis H. Buehl l4July 1980- 7 April 1982


Col Edward M. Mockler 8 April 1982- 5 August 1982
Col Henryj. M. Radcliffe 6 August 1982 - present

17
3d Marines

LINEAGE

ACTIVATED w DECEMBER 1916 AS THE 3D REGIMENT AT SANTO DOMINGO,


DOMINICAN REPUBLIC, AND ASSIGNED TO THE iD PROVISIONAL BRIGADE
PARTICIPATED IN THE OCCUPATION OF THE DOMINICAN REPUBLIC,
DECEMBER 1916 - AUGUST 19n
DEACTIVATED I AUGUST 19n

1941 - 1946

REACTIVATED i6 JUNE 1941 AS THE 3D MARINES AT NEW RIVER, NORTH CAROLINA,


AND ASSIGNED TO FLEET MARINE FORCE
RELOCATED DURING AUGUST 1941 TO SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA
DEPLOYED DURING SEPTEMBER 1941 TO TIJTUILA, AMERICAN SAMOA, AND REASSIGNED TO
THE inJ MARINE BRIGADE
REASSIGNED DURING JUNE '943 TO THE 3D MARINE DIVISION
PARTICIPATED IN THE FOLLOWING WORLD WAR II CAMPAIGNS
BOUGAINVILLE
NORTHERN SOLOMONS
GUAM
IWO JIMA
RELOCATED DURING DECEMBER 1945 TO CAMP PENDLETON, CALIFORNIA
DEACTIVATED 13 JANUARY 1946

'947 - '949

REACTIVATED I OCTOBER 1947 AT TSINGTAO, CHINA AND ASSIGNED TO FLEET MARINE


FORCE, WESTERN PACIFIC
PARTICIPATED IN THE OCCUPATION OF NORTH CHINA. OCTOBER 1947 - MAY 1949
RELOCATED DURING MAY 1949 TO CAMP PENDLETON, CALIFORNIA, AND REASSIGNED TO
THE iST MARINE DIVISION
DEACTIVATED, OCTOBER 1949

195' - 1964

REACTIVATED ON to JUNE 1951 AT CAMP PENDLETON, CALIFORNIA AND ASSIGNED TO

18
THE 3D MARINE BRIGADE
REASSIGNED DURING JANUARY 1951 TO THE 3D MARINE DIVISION
DEPLOYED DURING JULY 1953 TO KANEOHE BAY, TERRITORY OF HAWAII
REDEPLOYED DURING AUGUST 1953 TO CAMP FUJI-MCNAIR, JAPAN
REDEPLOYED DURING MARCH 1957 TO CAMP SUKIRAN, OKINAWA

1965 - 1983

REDEPLOYED DURING MARCH-MAY 1965 TO THE REPUBLIC OF VIETNAM


PARTICIPATED IN THE WAR IN VIETNAM, MARCH 1965 - SEPTEMBER 1969, OPERATING FROM:
DA NANG CON THIEN
CHU LAI CAMP CARROLL
HUE/PHU BAI DONG HA
KI-iE SANH QUANG TRI
RELOCATED DURING OCTOBER-NOVEMBER 1969 TO CAMP PENDLETON, CALIFORNIA AND
REASSIGNED TO THE 5TH MARINE AMPHIBIOUS BRIGADE
REASSIGNED DURING APRIL '971 TO ThE iST MARINE DIVISION
DEPLOYED DURING JUNE 1971 TO KANEOHE BAY, HAWAII AND REASSIGNED
TO THE iST MARINE BRIGADE, FLEET MARINE FORCE
ELEMENTS OF THE REGIMENT PARTICIPATED IN THE SOUTHEAST ASIA EVACUATIONS, APRIL '975

19
3d Marines

HONORS

PRESIDENTIAL UNIT CITATION STREAMER WITH ONE BRONZE STAR


WORLD WAR 11
GUAM - '944
VIETNAM 1965 - 1967

NAVY UNIT COMMENDATION STREAMER


WORLD WAR II
BOUGAINVILLE - 1943
VIETNAM - 1968

MARINE CORPS EXPEDITIONARY STREAMER

WORLD WAR I VICTORY STREAMER WITH WEST INDIES CLASP

ASIATIC-PACIFIC CAMPAIGN STREAMER WITH FOUR BRONZE STARS

WoRLD WAR II VICTORY STREAMER

NAVY OCCUPATION SERVICE STREAMER WITH "ASIA"

CHINA SERVICE STREAMER

NATIONAL DEFENSE SERVICE STREAMER WITH ONE BRONZE STAR

KOREAN SERVICE STREAMER

VIETNAM SERVICE STREAMER WITH TWO SILVER STARS

VIETNAM CROSS OF GALLANTRY STREAMER WITH PALM

20
The 4th Marines

REVOLUTIONARY TROUBLE IN MExICO precipitated the ac- itial mission became one of reinforcing the Marines already
tivation of the 4th Regiment of Marines at Marine Bar- in Shanghai in the prevention of rioting and mob violence
racks, Puget Sound, Washington, on 16 April 1914 under within the American sector. A few days after the landing of
the command of Colonel Joseph A. Pendleton. Three the 4th Regiment, Brigadier General Smedley D. Butler
times during its first two years the 4th Regiment embark- arrived in Shanghai to take command of all Marine forces
ed, stood by afloat off various Mexican west coast ports ashore. His command was designated as the 3d Brigade.
prepared to land on order. In each case no landing was re-
quired, nor did the regiment engage in combat. SHANGHAI FOR THE NEXT FEW YEARS was relatively
peaceful and garrison duty for the 4th Regiment passed
IN THE SPRING OF 1916, civil war broke out in the uneventfully. The 3d Brigade left China in early 1929 leav-
Dominican Republic. Fears for the safety of American and ing the 4th Regiment behind. Irs February 1930 the regi-
other foreign citizens in the country convinced the ment's designation was officially changed to the 4th
American government that intervention in the situation Marines. The security of Shanghai was once again threaten-
was necessary. Colonel Pendleton's 4th Regiment departed ed in early 1932 after hostilities broke out between the
San Diego by rail for New Orleans on 6 June where it Chinese and the Japanese. In 1937 the fighting became so
boarded the USS Hancock. The regiment arrived in the
Dominican Republic on 21 June 1916. In the vigorous
campaigning that followed immediately, the 4th Regiment
won its first battle honors and sustained its first battle Color guard of the 4th Marines participates in a
casualties. As additional Marines were committed, it
parade in Shanghai, China, prior to World War IL
became one component of the three-regiment 2d Provi-
sional Brigade, The 4th Regiment was destined to spend
eight years in the Dominican Republic. As in most 'bush"
or "banana" wars, Marines performed a variety of tasks
from policing the hinterland to running the railroads.
They also trained a native constabulary to take over their
chore of maintaining order once a stable civil government
could he established. This occurred in October 1922, and
the 4th Regiment sailed for San Diego in the summer of
1924.

FOLLOWING A PERIOD of routine garrison duties and a tour


guarding the U.S. mails during the robbery epidemic of
1926-27, the regiment drew the assignment which was to
win it fame and the descriptive nickname, the "China
Regiment." The cause for alarm in the Far East in early
1927 stemmed from the threat that the Chinese Na-
tionalists would seize Shanghai and endanger the foreign
residents there. After standing by on 24-hour alert, the 4th
Regiment, under Colonel Charles S. Hill, embarked in the
USS Chaumont and sailed from San Diego on 3 February
1927. With the declaration of a state of emergency on 21
March, the 4th Regiment went ashore. The regiment's in-

21
intense that the 4th Marines, now commanded by Colonel Japanese gained a toehold on the island. At noon on 6 May
Charles F.B. Price, and other foreign troops manned the 1942 the Americans on Corregidor surrendered. The men
barricades of the International Settlement in Shanghai. of the 4th Marines burned their colors and went into cap-
The 1937 situation developed into a series of potentially tivity. The regiment temporarily went out of existence.
explosive crises as both sides resorted to aerial bombing
with considerable carelessness and accompanying in- THE 4TH MARINEs was reborn on 1 February 1944 when it
discriminate antiaircraft and artillery fire. Again rein- was reconstituted from units of the 1st Raider Regiment on
forcements were rushed in to support the 4th Marines. The Guadalcanal under the command of Lieutenant Colonel
2d Brigade arrived in Shanghai in September 1937. The Alan Shapley. The Raider regiment's battalions had fought
brigade was withdrawn early in 1938 when a shift of the at Guadalcanal, New Georgia, and Bougainville. Follow-
scene of Sino-japanese hostilities left Shanghai relatively ing its initial operation in its new capacity, an unopposed
safe. The 4th Marines once again remained behind. seizure of Emirau Island, the regiment returned to
Guadalcanal where it was integrated into the 1st Provi-
As THE THREAT of war between Japan and the United sional Marine Brigade on 19 April 1944.
States became greater, the 4th Marines, now commanded
by Colonel Samuel L. Howard, departed Shanghai fnr the THE iST PRovISIoNAL BmGADE was assigned to snuthern
Philippines in November 1941. A few days after the beaches in the Agat-Bangi Point area fur the assault on
Japanese attack on the Philippines on 8 December, the 4th Guam. Lieutenant Colonel Shapley's 4th Marines was in
Marines, under tactical command nf the Army, moved to the first assault waves that hit the beaches on 2 IJuly 1944.
Corregidor. Marines in the regiment worked feverishly As the regiment moved inland it encountered stiff
throughout the protracted siege of the island fortress on resistance and the heavy fighting continued throughout
defense measures and installations. The Japanese made the day. During the ensuing night the 4th Marines suc-
their assault landing during the dark hours of 5-6 May cessfully withstood several enemy counterattacks. The
1942. In spite of dogged resistance by the defenders, the following day the regiment reached the cop of Mourir

Twenty-fifth Company, lit Battalion, 4th Marines, commanded by First Lieutenant IV.
H. Hoiingswortb, passes in review at a parade in Shanghai, China, in February 1932.

'
''U

at'
•t-t l!iVIS
a

'l•
r
7tt.
-
12
Alifan across difficult terrain and secured the entire ridge The division was deployed tojapan in August 1953. While
line. Shortly before daybreak on 26 July1 the 4th Marines stationed there the 4th Marines was engaged in numerous
led off the offensive on the Orote Peninsula. This objective exercises to maintain its combat efficiency. Less than 18
was finally taken on the 29th, The end of organized months after its arrival inJapan, the regiment was transfer-
resistance on Guam was announced on 10 August. The job red to the Territory of Hawaii in February 1955 to become
of mopping-up Japanese survivors remained and the regi- the ground echelon of the 1st Provisional Marine Air-
ment stayed on Guam for nearly three weeks to aid in this Ground Task Force which was located at Kaneohe Bay.
task. It then moved back to its Guadalcanal base. Redesignation of the task force to the 1st Marine Brigade
took plate on 1 May 1956.
THE iST PROWSIONAL MAm BRIGADE was redesignated
as the 6th Marine Division on 7 September 1944. The divi-
sion's initial combat mission was to secure the northern
half of Okinawa. Lack of opposition during the landing on THE 4Th MARINES' combat readiness was put to the test in
1 April 1945 enabled the Marines to make significant gains early 1965 when the American involvement in the war in
in the first few days. The division reached Motobu Penin- Vietnam was enlarged. After arriving at Chu Lai in May
sula on 8 April and encountered its first serious opposition. 1965, the regiment, now commanded by Colonel Edward
Mount Yaetake formed the core of the Japanese defense P. Dupras,Jr., rejoined its parent 3d Marine Division. The
and was the primary target of the 4th Marines, The strug- first major engagement for the regiment was Operation
gle for the mountain was bitterly contested until 16 April Starlite. The remainder of 1965 saw elements of the 4th
when Marines from the 3d Battalion secured the summit. Marines engaging the enemy mostly in small unit actions.
The 6th Marine Division moved south after northern During the spring of 1966, the regiment shifted its opera-
Okinawa was declared secure. During the opening phase of tions from the southern to the northern part of the I Corps
the drive, the 4th Marines remained in division reserve. On Tactical Zone of South Vietnam.
19 May, the regiment relieved the exhausted 29th Marines
and played a major role in the advance that resulted in the DURING THE TET OFFENSIVE, launched in January 1968,
capture of Naha. The next assignment of the 6th Division Viet Cong and North Vietnamese attacked cities and
was the seizure of Oroku Peninsula. For a week the 4th military installations throughout South Vietnam. The 2d
Marines, with the 29th Marines, fought a well-entrenched Battalion in April 1968 was involved in especially bitter
enemy. Finally on l3June the peninsula was undisputably clashes near Dong Ha and along the Cua Viet River. Con.
in American hands. tact with enemy fortes tapered off for the 4th Marines in
the fall of 1968, although the regiment continued to con-
duct operations into the middle of 1969. With the an-
Tue 6TH MAmr'e DivIsioN returned to Guam to set up a
nounced withdrawal of American troops in 1969, the 4th
new base and trained for the planned invasion ofJapan. It
Marines, now commanded by Colonel Gilbert R. Hershey,
was during this time that Japan surrendered. The 4th
was ordered to Okinawa. All elements were redeployed by
Marines received the honor of spearheading the U.S. oc-
the end of November.
cupation ofjapan, while the 6th Division was slated for oc-
cupation duty in North China. The regiment, now com- DURING ThE EARLY 1970s the 4th Marines was involved
manded by Lieutenant Colonel Fred D. Beans, landed at with intensive training programs for amphibious warfare,
Yokosuka on 30 August 1945 to take over naval and air civil disturbance, air mount-out, weapons requalification,
facilities. Early in 1946 the regiment redeployed to Ts- and physical readiness.
ingtao, China. In September 1946 the 4th Marines
departed China for Norfolk, Virginia leaving behind the THE 4TH MARINEs Headquarters was acrivitated as
3d Battalion which was deactivated there on 1 October Regimental Landing Team . 4, 9th Marine Amphibious
1947. The rest of the 4th Marines was assigned to the 2d Brigade from 18 April to 12 May 1975 to aid in the evacua-
Marine Division at Camp Lejeune and reassigned to the 2d tions of Americans, Vietnamese, and Cambodians from
Provisional Marine Regiment in early 1949. The 4th Saigon and the surrounding areas. Under the command of
Marines was deactivated on 17 October 1949. Colonel Alfred M. Gray, the unit provided battalion lan-
ding teams and an air contingency battalion landing team
THE 4TH MARINEs, under the command of Colonel Robert for operations during this period.
0. Bowen, was reactivated at Camp Pendleton, California IN APRIL 1979, the 4th Marines relocated from Camp
on 2 September 1952 as pan of the 3d Marine Division. Hansen to Camp Schwab, Okinawa.

23
Commanding Officers
4th Marines

Col joseph H. Pendleton 16 April 1914- 11 December 1916


Maj ArthurT. Marix 12 December 1916-31 December 1916
Col Theodore P. Kane ijanuary 1917 - 4 May 1917
LtCol John H. Russell 5 May 1917 - 2 November 1917
LtCol Arthur T. Marix 3 November 1917 - 20 December 1917

Col William N. McKclvy 21 December 1917 - 17 April 1919


Col Dion Williams 18 April 1919- 14 May 1921
Col Charles H. Lyman 15 May 1921 -9 May 1923
LrColRoberrY. Rhea 10 May 1923- 22july 1923
Col Alexander S. Williams 23 july 1923 - 7 March 1926

LtCol Ellis B. Miller 8 March 1926- 27June 1926


Col Charles S. Hill 28june 1926- 4 September 1927
LrCol Fred D. Kilgore 5 September 1927 - 6 October 1927
Col Henry C. Davis 7 October 1927 - 26 September 1928
LtCol Fred D. Kilgore 27 September 1928- l3january 1929

Col Charles H. Lyman 14 january 1929- 20 November 1930


Col Richard S. Hooker 21 November 1930-23 December 1932
LtCol Emile P. Moses 24 December 1932 - 12 March 1933
Col Fred D. Kilgore 13 March 1933 -6 May 1933
LtCol Emile P. Moses 7 May 1933 - lOjuly 1933

ColJohn C. Beaumont lIjuly 1933 -6 May 1936


Col Charles F. B. Price 7 May 1936- 23 October 1938
Cot Joseph C. Fegan 24 October 1938- 3 December 1939
LtCol Charles I. Murray 4 December 1939- 2january 1940
Cot DeWitt Peck 3january 1940- 13 May 1941

Col Samuel L. Howard 14 May 1941 - 6 May 1942


LtCol Alan Shapley 1 February 1944 - 3July 1945
LtCol Fred D. Beans 4july 1945 - 27january 1946
2dLt Paul W. Srone 28January 1946- 7 February 1946
2dLt Lawrence H. Cuthart,Jr 8 February 1946 - 6 March 1946

Cot WilliamJ. Whaling 7 March 1946 - 25 March 1946


Cot john D. Blanchard 26 March 1946 - 8june 1946
BGen William T. Clement 9june 1946- 24 August 1946
LtCol Robert L. Denig 25 August 1946- 20 October 1946
LtCol Wesley McC. Platt 21 October 1946 - lOjuly 1947

24
Col Robert B. Luckey
LtCol Robert M. Reinecke
LtCol Doriald.J. Decker
Maj Donald E. Asbury
LtColJohn F. Dunlap

Col RobertO. Bowen


ColJohn C. Miller,Jr
Col Frederick A. Ramsey
LtCol Richard L. Boll
Col Wood B. Kyle

LtCoi John E. Decher,Jr


Col Robert E. Hill
Coijames M. Masters, Sr
Col Bryghte D. Godbold
Col George A. Roll

Coljohn H. Masters
Col CharlesJ. Bailey,Jr
Col John W. Antonelli
Col Allan Sutter
. liJuly 1947- 11 November 1947
12 November 1947 - 28 October 1948
29 October 1948-8 May 1949
9 May 1949 - l9Junc 1949
2OJune 1949 - 17 October 1949

2 September 1952 - 2 October 1953


3 October 1953 -6 April 1954
7 April 1954 - 21 August 1954
22 August 1954- 23 September 1954
24 September 1954- 5 June 1955

6Jurie 1955 - 22June 1955


23June 1955 - 18 August 1955
19 August 1955 - SJune 1956
9June 1956 - 24 August 1957
25 August 1957- 2 May 1958

3 May 1958 - 3July 1959


4July 1959 - 6July 1959
7July 1959- 1 August 1961
2 August 1961 - SJune 1962
Col William H. Marsh óJune 1962 - 1 September 1963

ColDonaldJ. Robinson 2 September 1963- 22January 1964


Col Jules M. Rouse 23January 1964- 24 April 1964
Cot Edward P. Dupras,Jr 25 April 1964 - 2SJuly 1965
Col James F. McClanahan 26July 1965 - 24January 1966
Col Donald W. Sherman 25Jariuary 1966 - 29Ju1y 1966

Col Alexander D. Cereghino 3OJuly 1966 - 15 February 1967


Col Roy H. Thompson 16 February 1967 - 9July 1967
Col William L. Dick 10 July 1967 - 25 February 1968
ColEdwardJ. Millet . .26 February 1968- 13 September 1968
Col MartinJ. Sexton . 14 September 1968 - 31 December 1968

Col William F. Goggin IJanuary 1969- 9 August 1969


Col Gilbert R. Hershey 10 August 1969 - 3 December 1969
Col William E. Barrineau 4 December 1969 - 9July 1970
LtCol Bain McClintock lOJuly 1970-4 August 1970
ColRobertT. Hanifin,Jr 5 August 1970- 2lJuly 1971

Col RobertJ. Perrich 22July 1971 -9 August 1972


Col Charles M. C.Jones,Jr.. . . . . 10 August 1972- 14 March 1973
Col Donald L. Evans . . . . 15 March 1973 - 8 August 1973
Col Gary Wilder 9 August 1973 - 29Ju1y 1974
Col Alfred M. Gray,Jr 3OJuly 1974 - 8 August 1975

Cot Robert R. Haebel 9 August 1975 - 1 April 1976


Col Ernest C. Cheatham,Jr 2 April 1976 - 16 March 1977
Col ClairE. Willcox 17 March 1977- 13 March 1978

25
Cot Richard A. Sulik 14 March 1978- 23June 1978
Cot Joseph E. Hopkins 24June 1978- 14 April 1979

Cot Warren H. Wiedhahn,Jr 15 April 1979- 23June 1979


Col Charles H. Knowles 24June 1979- 27 January 1980
Col William R. Etnyre 28January 1980- 27June 1980
Cot Martin E. O'Connor 28June 1980- 8June 1981
Col Roger E. Knapper 9June 1981 - 9June 1982)

Col James P. McWilliams lOjune 1982 - 5 May 1983

Col James R. McEtroy,Jr 6 May 1983 - 30 May 1983


Col William T. Sweeney 31 May 1983 - present

26
4th Marines

LINEA GE

1914 - 192.5

ACTIVATED i6 APRIL 1914 AT PUGET SOUND, WASHINGTON AS THE 4TH REGIMENT


DEPLOYED DURING APRIL-MAY 1914 TO MEXICAN WATERS
RELOCATED DURING JULY 1914 TO SAN DIEGO, CAUFORNIA
ELEMENTS OF THE REGIMENT DEPLOYED DURING NOVEMBER 1915 - FEBRUARY 1916
IN MEXICAN WATERS
DEPLOYED DURING JUNE 1916 TO THE DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
ASSIGNED DURING NOVEMBER 1916 TO THE iD BRIGADE
RELOCATED DURING AUGUST 1914 TO SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA, AND DETACHED FROM
THE iD BRIGADE

1916 - '940

ELEMENTS OF THE REGIMENT PARTICIPATED IN MAIL GUARD DUTY iN THE WESTERN


UNITED STATES, OCTOBER 1916 - FEBRUARY 192-7
DEPLOYED DURING FEBRUARY 1917 TO SHANGHAI, CHINA
ASSIGNED DURING APRIL 192.7 TO THE 3D BRIGADE
DETACHED DURING JANUARY 192-9 FROM THE 3D BRIGADE
REDESIGNATED 13 FEBRUARY [930 AS THE 4TH MARINES
EMPLOYED IN GUARDING THE BOUNDARIES OF THE INTERNATIONAL SETTLEMENT, SHANGHAI,
FEBRUARY - JUNE 1931 AND AUGUST - NOVEMBER j9p-
ASSIGNED DURING SEPTEMBER 1937 TO THE D MARINE BRIGADE
DETACHED DURING FEBRUARY 1938 FROM THE iD MARINE BRIGADE

1941 - 1945

REDEPLOYED DURING NOVEMBER 1941 TO OLONGAPO, PHILIPPINES


REDEPLOYED DURING DECEMBER 1941 TO CORREGIDOR, PHILIPPINES
PARTICIPATED IN THE DEFENSE OF CORREGIDOR, JANUARY - MAY 1942.
CAPTURED BY ENEMY FORCES ON 6 MAY 1942.. TEMPORARILY CEASED TO EXIST
REACTIVATED , FEBRUARY 1944 ON GUADALCANAL BY REDESIGNATION FROM THE iST
RAIDER REGIMENT
ASSIGNED DURING APRIL 1944 TO THE iST PROVISIONAL BRIGADE

27
REASSIGNED DURING SEPTEMBER '944 TO THE 6TH MARINE DIVISION
PARTICIPATED IN THE FOLLOWING WORLD WAR II CAMPAIGNS
PHILIPPINES
NEW GEORGIA
BOUGAINVILLE
NORTHERN SOLOMONS
BISMARCK ARCHIPELAGO
GUAM
OKINAWA
REDEPLOYED DURING AUGUST '94 TO YOKOSUKA, JAPAN
REASSIGNED DURING NOVEMBER 1945 TO FLEET MARINE FORCE, PACIFIC
REDEPLOYED DURING JANUARY - MARCH 1946 TO TSINGTAO, CHINA
REASSIGNED DURING JANUARY 1946 TO THE 6TH MARINE DIVISION
PARTICIPATED IN THE OCCUPATION OF NORTH CHINA, MARCH 1946 - SEPTEMBER 1946
REASSIGNED DURING APRIL 1946 TO THE 3D MARINE BRIGADE
REASSIGNED DURING JUNE [946 TO THE iST MARINE D1vISION
RELOCATED DURiNG SEPTEMBER 1946 TO CAMP LEJEUNE, NORTH CAROLINA
AND REASSIGNED TO THE tD MARINE DIVISION
REASSIGNED DURING JANUARY 1949 TO THE iD PROVISIONAL MARINE REGIMENT
DEACTIVATED , OCTOBER 2949

1952. - 1964

REACTIVATED LSEPTEMBER 1952. AT CAMP PENDLETON, CALIFORNIA AND ASSIGNED TO


THE 3D MARINE DIVISION
DEPLOYED DURING AUGUST i9 TO CAMP NARA, JAPAN
RELOCATED DURING FEBRUARY 1955 TO KANEOHE BAY, TERRITORY OF HAWAII AND
ASSIGNED TO THE iST PROVISIONAL MARINE AIR-GROUND TASK FORCE
iST PROVISIONAL MARINE AIR-GROUND TASK FORCE REDESIGNATED DURING MAY 1956
TO THE iST MARINE BRIGADE

1965 - 1983

DEPLOYED DURING MAY 1965 TO THE REPUBLIC OF VIETNAM AND REASSIGNED TO THE
3D MARINE DIVISION
PARTICIPATED IN THE WAR IN VIETNAM, MAY 1965 - NOVEMBER 1969, OPERATING FROM
CIrEJ LAI
PHU BAI
DONG HA
Co BI THANH TAN
CAMP EVANS
CAMP CARROLL
CAM Lo

28
REDEPLOYED DURING NOVEMBER 1969 TO CAMP HANSEN, OKINAWA
ELEMENTS OF THE REGIMENT PARTICIPATED IN THE SOUTHEAST ASIA EVACUATIONS, APRIL 1975
RELOCATED DURING APRIL '979 TO CAMP SCHWAB, OKINAWA

29
4th Marines

HONORS

PRESIDENTIAL UNIT CITATION STREAMER WITH ONE BRONZE STAR


WoaD WAR 11
OKINAWA '945
-

VIETNAM 1965 - 1967

PRESIDENTIAL UNIT CITATION (Aimiy) STREAMER WITH ONE BRONZE OAK LEAF CLUSTER
WORLD WAR II
PHILIPPINES - 1941 - 1942.

PHILIPPINES - 1942.

NAVY UNIT COMMENDATION STREAMER


WORLD WAR II
GUAM - 1944
SOUTHEAST ASIA EVACUATIONS - 1975

MEXICAN SERVICE STREAMER


DOMINICAN CAMPAIGN STREAMER
MARINE CORPS EXPEDITIONARY STREAMER WITH ONE BRONZE STAR
WORLD WAR I VICTORY STREAMER WITH "WEST INDIES"
YANGTZE SERVICE STREAMER
CHINA SERVICE STREAMER WITH ONE BRONZE STAR
AMERICAN DEFENSE SERVICE STREAMER WITH ONE BRONZE STAR
ASIATIC-PACIFIC CAMPAIGN STREAMER WITH ONE SILVER AND TWO BRONZE STARS
WORLD WAR II VICTORY STREAMER
NAVY OCCUPATION SERVICE STREAMER WITH "ASIA" AND "EUROPE"
NATIONAL DEFENSE SERVICE STREAMER WITH ONE BRONZE STAR
KOREAN SERVICE STREAMER
ARMED FORCES EXPEDITIONARY STREAMER
VIETNAM SERVICE STREAMER WITH TWO SILVER AND ONE BRONZE STAR
PHILIPPINE DEFENSE STREAMER WITH ONE BRONZE STAR
PHILIPPINE PRESIDENTIAL UNIT CITATION STREAMER
VIETNAM CROSS OF GALLANTRY STREAMER WITH PALM

30
The 9th Marines

TIlE 9TH MARmES was originally activated on 20 November rying the first assault waves of Colonel Craig's 9th Marines
1917 at Quantico, Virginia as the 9th Regiment of came ashore on the island in the face of Japanese defen-
Marines. Several days after its activation, Lieuteoant Col- ding fire. The next day the regiment pushed rapidly south
onel Frederic L. Bradman took command of the regiment. along the shore to seize the Phi Navy Yard, and then mov-
It was part of the great expansion of the Marine Corps dur- ed into the hills to help drive out thejapanese. With this
ing World War I. After a few short weeks of training the task accomplished, the unit became involved in securing
regiment was ordered to the Caribbean. Cuban sugar was the northern portion of Guam. The 9th reached the cliffs
vitally needed for the Allied war effort and the United on the north coast on the afternoon of 9 August. With the
States feared German influence in the area. After its arrival end of organized resistance, the regiment participated in
at Guanranamo Bay, Cuba, on 24 December 1917 the 9th mopping-up operations on Guam.
Regiment was joined with the 7th Regiment to become the
3d Provisional Brigade. The situation in Cuba improved
and Marines of the 9th Regiment were ordered to Texas to
forestall the possible disruption by German agents of vital
shipments from the Mexican oil fields. Upon arrival at
Galveston in August 1918, the regiment went into camp at
Fort Crockett. Through the remainder of World War I, the
Marines spent their time in training and guard duty.
When the war ended, the 9th embarked for Philadelphia
where, on 25 April 1919, it was deactivated.

THE 9TH MARINES was reactivated on 12 February 1942 at


Camp Elliott, San Diego as part of the 2d Marine Division.
Colonel Lemuel C. Shepherd, Jr., took command of the
regiment in March 1942. In September 1942 the 9th
Marines was reassigned to the newly activated 3d Marine
Division at Camp Pendleton. The regiment was deployed
to Auckland, New Zealand in January-February 1943.
Here intensive jungle and amphibious training was held.
Approximately 18 months after its activation, the 9th
Marines was ordered into combat. Qn D-Day, 1 November
1943, the 9th Marines, now commanded by Colonel Ed-
ward A. Craig, landed on beaches at Empress Augusta
Bay, Bougainville, then advanced inland. By 23 November
it had moved as far as the impassable swamps to its front
would allow. After exchanging sectors with the 3d
Marines, the unit participated in the battle of Piva Forks.
The 9th Marines was relieved on the front lines after spen-
ding 57 days helping to clear the Japanese from the Em.
press Augusta Bay area.
A working party carries food and ammunition to a
GuArvi WAS THE NEXT OBJECTIVE for the men of the 9th 3d Marine Division unit on Hand Grenade Hill on
Marines. Early on 2lJuly 1944, the amphibian tractors car- Bougainvile. The narrow trail hampered resupply.

31
EMBARKING ON BOARD sHws in February 1945, the 9th was permanently stationed on Okinawa until it was com-
Marines sailed from Guam for Iwo Jima, arriving in the mitted to Vietnam in 1965.
floating reserve area on D-Day, 19 February. Five days
later, the regiment, now commanded by Colonel Howard BATtALION LANDING TEAT,s (BLT) 319 landed on the
N. Kenyon, landed and moved up to the front. The beaches of Da Nang, Republic of Vietnam, on 8 March
Japanese controlled the rough, high ground and the 3d 1965 to spearhead the landing of Marine ground units.
Marine Division was tasked with clearing the critical central Marines of the 3d Battalion immediately took up the mis-
portion of the Motoyama Plateau by means of a frontal sion of providing security for the Da Nang Air Base. The
assault. On the morning of 25 February, the 9th Marines battalion continued the security of the air base and its im-
passed through the front lines on the southern edge of mediate area until relieved by the 1st Battalion, 9th
Motoyama Airfield No. 2. For three days the Marines Marines on 17 June when the 3d Battalion returned to
fought on and around the airfield. The Marines were able Okinawa. On 4 july 1965, the 9th Marines regimental
to drive the Japanese from two hills before being relieved Headquarters, commanded by Colonel Frank F. Garret-
by the 21st Marines. On 1 March, the 9th Marines again son, and the 2d Battalion, 9th Marines arrived in Da Nang
went into the lines, this time just east of the village of from Okinawa. The 3d Battalion returned to Vietnam in
Motoyama. The fighting continued for the 9th Marines the middle of August.
until 16 March. After mopping-up operations, the unit
returned to Guam. With the end of the war, the regiment
FROM ITS INITIAL LANDING until early 1967, the regiment
returned to Camp Pendleton where it was deactivated on
operated in the area south of Da Nang. Throughout the
31 December 1945.
months of 1966 and early 1967, the 9th Marines conducted
numerous search and clear operations to find the enemy,
THE 9TH MARINES came back into existence on 1 October while strengthening the civic action programs to secure
1947 on Guam, under the command of Lieutenant Col- relations with the Vietnamese people, and free the people
onel Ralph A. Collins,Jr. For the next year, the 9th, which from the constant threat of Viet Cong terrorism. Notewor-
was activated at battalion strength, was occupied with thy operations during this period were Macon, Mississippi,
usual peacetime activities. By November 1948 the civil war Independence, and Gulf.
in China began seriously to endanger the safety of many
Americans. The 9th Marines embarked for China. It re-
mained on board ships ready to land should American lives --
and property be threatened. One rifle company and some
of the reinforcing units went ashore to serve as a reserve
force at Tsingtao. For the next three months, the 9th was
engaged in evacuation operations, performing the Marines'
traditional role of protectors of American lives, interests,
and property in the Shanghai area. The 9th Marines then
sailed for Camp Lejeune, arriving there in May 1949 and
was assigned to the 2d Provisional Marine Regiment. On
17 October, the unit was deactivated.

DURING THE KOREAN WAR, the 9th Marines was again


reactivated under the command of Colonel John J.
Gormley at Camp Pendleton on 17 March 1952 as part of
the 3d Marine Division. In the summer of 1953, the 3d
Marine Division was ordered to Japan. The regiment with
other elements of the division was constantly undergoing
intensive training in amphibious and land warfare while in
If-k
• ,L sn--
Japan. InJanuary 1956, the 9th was redeployed to Sukiran,
Okinawa, where the training continued. When a Com- Marine nj/Yemen of the 9th Marines combine
munist buildup in Southeast Asia threatened Thailand, firepower with tankers as they engage a well-dug-in
the 3d Battalion, 9th Marines proceeded to the Udorn area North Vietnamese Army unit during Operation
and remained there until the danger passed. The regiment Kentucky in the northern part of South Vietnam.

32
THE REGIMENT MOVED NORTH to Dong Ha where, for more mainder of its time in Vietnam, the regiment participated
than a year, elements of the 9th Marines operated in such in Operations Apache Snow and Cameron Falls.
places as Con Thien, Camp Carroll, and Gio Linh. Late in THE 9Th MARINES redeployed during July and August
January 1968, during the Tet Offensive, an element of the 1969 to Camp Schwab, Okinawa, and came under the
regiment was sent to the Khe Sanh area where it par- of the 9th Marine Amphibious
operational control
ticipated in Operation Scotland. Under the operational Brigade. During November 1969, the regiment was
control of the 26th Marines, men from the 1st Battalion, reassigned to the 3d Marine Division.
9th Marines helped to hold the beseiged Khe Sanh Com- THROUGHOUT THE i97oS and early 1980s, the 9th Marines
bat Base against North Vietnamese attacks. After the has conducted numerous training exercises, amphibious
breakour at Khe Sanh, the 9th Marines began conducting demonstrations, and battalion landing team tactical tests.
operations around the Rnckpile and Vandegrift Combat The alert operational posture of the regiment was suc-
Base. cessfully tested in April 1975 when elements of the 9th
Marines participated in the emergency evacuations in
South Vietnam.
THE 9TH MARINES was given the task of denying the enemy As THE "STRIKING NINTH" moves through the 1980s, the
access to the Ashau Valley in January 1969. This marked regiment continues to maintain a high degree of combat
the beginning of Operation Dewey Canyon. For the re- readiness in all operational areas.

The 3dfiattalion, 9th Marines climbs the battle-scan-ed slopes of "Tzger Mountain" dur-
ing Operation Dewey Canyon near South Vietnam's A Shau Valley in February 1969.

.I..J% rc 7*'. i•c.• :$9d'.. là

A?

¼ 4.•¶
'C

-ks
33
Commanding Officers
9th Marines

lstLt Robert W. Williams 20 November 1917 - 22 November 1917


Maj Rush R. Wallace 23 November 1917 - 25 November 1917
LtCol Frederic L. Bradman 26 November 1917- 23 january 1918
Col Thomas C. Treadwell 24January 1918- 17 August 1918
Col George C. Reid 18 August 1918-25 April 1919

LtCol William B. Onley 12 February 1942 - 15 March 1942


Col Lemuel C. Shepherd,Jr 16 March 1942 - l9July 1943
Col Edward A. Craig 2OJuly 1943-21 September 1944
Col Howard N. Kenyori 22 September 1944 - 13 October 1945
ItCol William R. Williams 14 October 1945 - 26 November 1945

LtColJames H. Tinsley 27 November 1945 - 30 December 1945


LtCol Ralph A. Collins,Jr 1 October 1947 - 29 February 1948
Col Thomas B. Hughes 1 March 1948- 18 May 1949
LtCol Williamj. Piper,Jr 19 May 1949- 28Ju1y 1949
LtCol Frederick R. Dowsett 29Ju1y 1949 - 17 October 1949

ColJohnJ. Gormley 18 March 1952 - 15 November 1952


Col William W. Buchanan 16 November 1952 - 2 April 1954
Col George A. Roll 3 April 1954 - 7 September 1954
LtCol John A. Copeland 8 September 1954 - 24 October 1954
Col Cliff Atkinson,Jr 25 October 1954- l2July 1955

LtCol HenryJ. Revane l3July 1955 - 16 August 1955


ColHowardB.Benge 17 August 1955- lMarch 1956
Col PeterJ. Speckman 2 March 1956- 3OJune 1956
Col Carl A. Laster iJuly 1956-28 December 1956
LtCol James A. Donovan,Jr. (Acting) 29 December 1956- SJanuary 1957

ColJamesC. Murray,jr 6January 1957- l4July 1957


Col Clyde R. Nelson l5july 1957 - May 1958
1

Col Francis W. Benson 2 May 1958- 16 September 1958


Col Leonard M. Mason 17 September 1958- 1 April 1959
ColRoyj. Batterton,Jr 2 April 1959- 16 October 1959

Col Randall L. Stallings 17 October 1959- 7 May 1960


Col Wilbur R. Homer 8 May 1960- 8 November 1960
Col William A. Stiles 9 November 1960- 28 june 1961
Go] Samuel D. Maridevil]e,Jr 29June 1961 -8 May 1962
ColJohn H. McMillan 9 May 1962 -4 September 1962

34
Cot Gordon D. Gayle 5 September 1962 - 16 February 1963
Cot George R. Stallings 17 February 1963 - 10 December 1963
Col Cleland E. Early 11 December 1963- 3lJuly 1964
Col Frank E. Garretson 1 August 1964 - 13 August 1965
ColJohn E. Gorman 14 August 1965 - 15 February 1966

Cot Edwin H. Simmons 16 February 1966 - 4July 1966


Col Drew). Barrett.Jr SJuly 1966-6 October 1966
Cot Robert M. Richards 7 October 1966 - 4 Aprit 1967
Cot Robert M.Jenkins 5 Aprit 1967- 17 May 1967
Col Edward E.Hammerbeck 18 May 1967 - 28 May 1967

LtCotJosephJ. Kelly 29 May 1967 - 3June 1967


Cot GeorgeE.Jerue 4june 1967-12 September 1967
Col Richard B. Smith 13 September 1967- l3July 1968
Cot Robert H. Barrow l4Juty 1968 - 8 April 1969
Col Edward F. Danowitz 9 Aprit 1969 - 7 September 1969

Cotjo M. Van Meter 8 September 1969 3 December 1969


ColRobertJ. Thomas 4 December 1969 - 19 August 1970
CotJoseph V. McLernan 20 August 1970- 23July 1971
Cot Randlett T. Lawrence 24JU1y 1971 - 3 March 1972
Cot Vincente T. BIaz 4 March 1972 - 16 August 1972

LtCot Frank R. Koethe 17 August 1972 - 4July 1973


Cot Stephen G. Olmstead 5Juty 1973 - 7 May 1974
Col Gordon M. B. Livingston 8 May 1973 - SJuty 1974
Cot WillardJ. Woodring,Jr 9July 1974 - 7 October 1974
Col Jack D. Rowley 8 October. 1974 - 27 March 1975

Col Wylie W. Taylor,Jr 28 March 1975 - 25 May 1975


LtCot Robert C. Wise 26 May 1975 - 8 August 1975
Cot Witliarn Weise 9 August 1975 - 11 August 1976
Col Robert H. Thompson 12 August 1976- 27Ju1y 1977
Cot George M. Edmondson.Jr 2SJuty 1977 - l3July 1978

Cot Warren H. Wiedhahn l4July 1978 - 14 Aprit 1979


Cot Joseph E. Hopkins is April 1979- l8June 1979
Coijoseph B. Knotts l9June 1979-31 May 1980
CotHughT. Ketr iJune 1980- 28 March 1981
LtCol Reginatd G. Ponsfotd 29 March 1981 - 15 May 1981

ColJohn S. Grinalds 16 May 1981 - 3 May 1982


Cot Robert D. Shoptaw 4 May 1982 - 25 February 1983
Col William H. Dabney 26 February 1983 - 8Juty 1983
Cot Herbert L. Seay 9Juty 1983 - present

35
9th Marines

LiNEAGE

1917 1919

ACTIVATED 10 NOVEMBER 1917 AT QUANTICO, VIRGINIA, AS THE 9TH REGIMENT


DEPLOYED DURING DECEMBER '917 TO GUANTANAMO BAY, CUBA, AND AVFACHED TO THE
3D PROVISIONAL BRIGADE
RELOCATED DURING AUGUST 1918 To FORT CROCKETt, GALVESTON, TEXAS,
AND DETACHED FROM THE 3D PROVISIONAL BRIGADE
RELOCATED DURING APRIL 191.9 TO PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA
DEACTIVATED 15 APRIL 1919

'942.

REACTIVATED Il FEBRUARY 1942. AT CAMP ELLIOT, SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA,


AS THE 9TH MARINES, ilD MARINE DIVISION, FLEET MARINE FORCE
REDES1GNATED AUGUST 1942. AS THE 9TH MARINES, AMPHIBIOUS CORPS,
PACIFIC FLEET
REASSIGNED DURING SEPTEMBER 1942. TO THE 3D MARINE DIVISION, FLEET MARINE FORCE

1943 - '945

DEPLOYED DURING FEBRUARY 1943 TO AUCKLAND, NEW ZEALAND


PARTICIPATED IN THE FOLLOWING WORLD WAR II CAMPAIGNS
BOUGAINVILLE
NORTHERN SOLOMONS
GUAM
IWO JIMA
RELOCATED DURING DECEMBER 1945 TO CAMP PENDLETON, CALIFORNIA
DEACT1VATED 31 DECEMBER 2945

1947 - 2949

REACTIVATED 1 OCTOBER 1947 ON GUAM As THE 9TH MARINES, FLEET MARINE FORCE
DEPLOYED DURING NOVEMBER 1948 TO TSINGTAO, CHINA
REDEPLOYED DURING DECEMBER '948 TO SHANGHAI, CHINA

36
RELOCATED DURING MAY '949 TO CAMP LEJEUNE, NORTH CAROLINA, AND ASSIGNED TO
THE iD PROVISIONAL MARINE REGIMENT
DEACTIVATED r' OCTOBER 1949

1951 - 1964

REACTIVATED '7 MARCH 1951 AT CAMP PENDLETON, CALIFORNIA, AS THE 9TH MARINES,
3D MARINE DWISI0N, FLEET MARINE FORCE
DEPLOYED DURING OCTOBER 1953 TO CAMP GWU, JAPAN
REDEPLOYED DURING FEBRUARY 1954 TO CAMP SHINODAYAMA, JAPAN
REDEPLOYED DURING JULY i94 TO CAMP SAKAI, JAPAN
REDEPLOYED DURING JULY i9 TO CAMP NAPUNJA, OKINAWA
REDEPLOYED DURING JANUARY 1956 TO CAMP SUKIRAN, OKINAWA
ELEMENTS PARTICIPATED IN THE DEPLOYMENT TO UDORN, THAILAND, MAY - JULY 1961

1965 - 1983

DEPLOYED DURING MARCH 1965 TO DA NANG, REPUBLIC OF VIETNAM


PARTICIPATED IN THE WAR IN VIETNAM, MARCH ,965-AUGUST 1969
OPERATING FROM
DA NANG
DONG HA
RELOCATED DURING AUGUST 1969 TO CAMP SCHWAB, OKINAWA AND REASSIGNED TO THE 9TH MARINE AM-
PHIBIOUS BRIGADE, FLEET MARINE FORCE
REASSIGNED DURING NOVEMBER 1969 TO THE 3D MARINE DIVISION
ELEMENTS OF THE REGIMENT PARTICIPATED IN THE SOUTHEAST ASIA EVACUATIONS, APRIL i9

37
9th Marines

HONORS

PRESIDENTIAL UNiT CITATION STREAMER WITH ONE BRONZE STAR


WORLD WAR II
Iwo JIMA - 1945

VIETNAM 1965 - 1967

PRESIDENTIAL UNIT CITATION (ARMY) STREAMER


VIETNAM
1969

NAVY UNIT COMMENDATION STREAMER


VIETNAM
1968

MERITORIOUS UNIT COMMENDATION STREAMER WITH ONE BRONZE STAR


VIETNAM
1967 - 1968
1968 - 1969

WORLD WAR I VICTORY STREAMER WITH "WEST INDIES'


ASIATIC-PACIFIC CAMPAIGN STREAMER WITH FOUR BRONZE STARS
WORLD WAR II VICTORY STREAMER
CHINA SERVICE STREAMER
NATIONAL DEFENSE SERVICE STREAMER WITH ONE BRONZE STAR
KOREAN SERVICE STREAMER
MARINE CORPS EXPEDITIONARY STREAMER
ARrI€D FORCES EXPEDITIONARY STREAMER
VIETNAM SERVICE STREAMER WITH TWO SILVER STARS
VIETNAM CROSS OF GALLANTRY STREAMER WITH PALM

38
The 12th Marines

THE nTH REGIMENT of Marines (Infantry), commanded by estimate that half the enemy dead in the Empress Augusta
Lieutenant Colonel Jesse F. Dyer, was originally activated Bay area were the result of artillery shelling. The artillery
at Tientsin, China, on 4 October 1927 as a part of the 3d preparation for the Piva Forks battle was described by Ma-
Brigade. The brigade, under the command of Brigadier jor General Allen H. Turnage, the 3d Marine Division
General Smedley D. Butler, was engaged in security commander, as; "Probably the most accurate I have ever
measures for the protection of American lives and interests known."
in the Tientsin-Shanghai area. However, the need for the
THE NEXT CAMPAIGN for Colonel Wilson's 12th Marines
Marine Corps to exercise rigid economy in the employment
was the recapture of Guam, with the initial landing on 21
of its officer and enlisted personnel because of unusual
July 1944. The 3d Battalion, 12th Marines landed early
demands on the Corps in both China and Nicaragua led
and was in action less than four hours after the fast wave
Major General CommandantJohn A. LeJeune to order the
hit the beach. All the artillery was ashore with all batteries
deactivation of the regiment. On 22 April 1928, it was in position and firing later that aftetnoon. The battle for
deactivated with one battalion going to the 4th Regiment Guam placed emphasis upon the fact that the key to effec-
and the other to the 6th Regiment.
tive fire suppOrt was rapid and efficient communication
between forward observers and fire direction centers. The
TI4E siTh MARINES, under the command of ColonelJohn
regiment used radios when neccessary but wire com-
B. Wilson, was reactivated at Camp Elliott, California, on
munication was employed for most message traffic.
1 September 1942, as the artillery regiment of the 3d
Marine Division. It moved to Camp Dunlap, Niland, IN SEPTEMBER 1944, Admiral Niinitz advised Lieutenant
California, a month later. The regiment began moving by General Holland M. Smith, commanding FMFPac, that it
increments to New Zealand injanuary 1943. Although the was desirable to retain both the 2d and 3d Marine Divi-
artival of the 3d Battalion in May 1943 brought all four sions in the Marianas for the planned attack on Iwo Jima.
battalions to New Zealand, the regiment was hardly The plans being developed called for the 3d Division to be
physically united, as the battalions were attached to a reserve afloat and available on D-plus 3. The 12th
regimentat combat teams and were widely dispersed ovet Marines, now commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Ray-
the northern part of the island. mond F. Crist, Jr., entered the picture on D-plus 5 (24
February 1945) landing just after noon, The days of the
BOUGAINVILLE, the largest island in the Solomon Islands, battle for Iwo Jima were marked by continuous artillery
became the Allies' target after the capture of Guadalcanal fire, day and night, in an attempt to soften the Japanese
and New Georgia. The first itep was tq move the 3d positions for the hard-pressed Marine infantrymen.
Marine Division from New Zealand to Guadalcanal for
training. The division then proceeded to Efatc, New AFTER THE CAMPAIGN, the 12th MarmnesT returned to
Hebrides, in October for a complete rehearsal of the pro- Guam to rebuild and retrain for the next operation—the
jected landing. After the week-long exercises were com- invasion of the home islands nfJapan. By August 1945 the
pleted, the division embarked for Bougainville. 12th Marines and the rest of the 3d Division were ready for
the campaign, but the end of the war made this final effort
Thoos OF THE iam MARINES were busily engaged in get- unnecessary. The regimental strength dwindled with the
ting guns and ammunition ashore on D-Day, 1 November end of the war. On 31 October 1945, the 3d Battalion,
1943, and various batteries were in position by the end of 12th Marines was deactivated on Guam. The regiment was
the day, fifing several registrations in preparation for detached from the 3d Marine Division on 1 December
don the fast night. The remaining batteries were ready for 1945 and embarked that same day for the United States.
support missions the following day. The effectiveness of The 12th Marines was deactivated on 8 January 1946 at
the artillery on Bougainville may be measured by the Camp Pendleton.

39
THE REGIMENT WAS REACTIVATED on 17 March 1952 at
Camp Pendleton. In August 1953, the 12th Marines, now
under Colonel Leonard F. Chapman, Jr., sailed from San
Diego for Yokohama. Upon arrival in Japan the regiment
was sent to Camp McNair where a program of continuous
training began. Specialized training included participation
in Operation Lotus in Okinawa in January 1954 where the
troops received extensive training in the harsh ridges and
the tough undergrowth.

THE irrH MARINES (less the 3d Battalion) participated in


an amphibious exercise on Iwo Jima in Feburary 1956.
Following this exercise, the regiment was transferred to
Okinawa. The period of time from 1956 to 1964 was mark-
ed by routine training exercises including many SEATO
maneuvers, This relative calm was interrupted in 1957 by a
brief deployment of 1st Battalion, 12th Marines as part of a
task force of the 3d Division that stood by offshore during
a governmental crisis in Indonesia when American and
foreign citizens were in danger. Later in May 1962, when
the government of Thailand requested military assistance
from SEATO, maneuvers in the Philippines were broken
off, and BLT 3/9 was ordered to meet the request. The
unit was transported to Bangkok and sent ashore.
Detachments of Headquarters Battery and Battery F from Artillerymen of the 2d Battalion, 12th Marines, at
the 2d Battalion were attached to BLT 3/9 for this opera- Con Thien, South Vietnam, fire high explosive and
tion. white phosphorous shells from a 105mm howitzer at
a North Vietnamese Army unit on 19 October 1967.

ABOUT THIS TIME several new batteries were organized for


service with the 12th Marines. Two new 4.2-inch mortar
batteries, one for the 1st Battalion and one for the 2d Bat- close of 1967, the 12th Marines had become the largest de
talion, and a 107mm battery, designated the Howtar Bat- facto regiment in Marine Corps history with eleven bat.
tery, were all activated on 25 June 1962. talions, including three Army battalions, under the opera-
tional control of the 12th regimental headquarters.
DuRING 1964 elements of the 12th Marines (seldom more
than a battery) were afloat off the coast of Vietnam in the Tue ARRIVAL OF TET, the Vietnamese New Year, in
South China Sea with the Marine Special Landing Force January 1968 brought with it major attacks by enemy
(SLF). The first elements of the regiment landed in Viet- forces. Batteries of the 12th Marines in Quang Tn Province
nam on 8 March 1965 and were followed by additional were heavily involved in the fighting. During the re-
units. By July 1965 nearly the entire regiment, now com- mainder of 1968, elements of the regiment fixed a number
manded by Colonel James K. Callender, was in Vietnam, of artillery missions into the demilitarized zone and the
actively participating in the conflict as a part of the 3d southern panhandle of North Vietnam. Combat opera-
Marine Division, III Marine Amphibious Force. tions, although fewer in number in 1969, carried the fight
to the enemy's western base areas, cutting his lines of com-
ELEMENTS OF THE REGIMENT participated in a number of munication and supply and destroying his hidden war
operations in 1965 and 1966 including Starlite, Prairie, material. In mid-1969 the American withdrawal from Viet-
New York, and Hastings. On 6January 1967 at Phu Bai, nam began. The 2d Battalion, 12th Marines redeployed to
after the regiment received additional self-propelled Okinawa in July 1969. The last elements of the 12th
155mm howitzers, the 1st Provisional 155mm Howitzer Marines, then under the command of Colonel Wallace W.
Battery, 4th Battalion, 12th Marines was activated. By the Crompton, left Vietnam in December 1969.

40
DURING APRIL AND MAY 1975 elements of the 12th Marine Division by participating in battalion landing team
Marines supported Operations Eagle Pull and Frequent deployments and in division and regimental command
Wind in Cambodia and South Vietnam. The deployment post exercises and field firing exercises on Okinawa, in
of two ships' detachments and five batteries in support of Japan, the Philippines, and the Republic of Korea.
these contingencies with little or no advance notification Numerous combined exercises have been conducted
reflected the high state of operational and embarkation throughout this period with the Republic of Korea
readiness of the 12th Marines. Marines.
THE 12.TH MARINES is meeting the challenges of the 1980s
THROUGHOUT THE i97oS and early 1980s, the 12th Marines and is confident of its readiness and ability to support the
has continued to provide artillery support for the 3d mission of the 3d Marine Division.

Expended artillery shell casings litter the ground beside a 105mm howitzer position of
Battery F, 2dBattalion, 12th Marines, located at the Con Thien Combat Base in South
Vietnam, as it fires at North Vietnamese Army positions on Thanksgiving Day 1967.

-' :.

41
Commanding Officers
12th Marines

LtColJesse F. Dyer 4 October 1927 - 1 April 1928


ColJohn B. Wilson 1 September 1942 - ijanuary 1945
LtCol Raymond F. Crist,Jr 2January 1945 - 1 April 1945
Coljoseph W. Earnshaw 2 April 1945 - 8January 1946
LtCoI EarlJ. Rowse 17 March 1952 - 3 April 1952

LtCoI Hoyt U. Bookhart,Jr 4 April 1952-25 July 1952


Col Leonard F. Chapman,Jr 26Ju1y 1952.23 May 1954
Co! Kenneth A. Jorgenson 24 May 1954 - 1 October 1954
Go! Louis A. Ennis 2 October 1954- 2lJuly 1955
LtCol Peter H. Hahn 22Ju1y 1955- 12 September 1955

Col William C. Capehart 13 September 1955 - I Match 1956


Col John S. Twitchell 2 March1956 - 2QJune 1956
LtCol William G. Muller,Jr 2lJune 1956- 2SJuly 1956
Col Forest C. Thompson 29July 1956- lIJune 1957
Go! William F. Kramer l2June 1957 - 2lJune 1958

Col Norman A. Miller,Jr 22June 1958- 17 September 1958


LtColJoe B. Russell . . . . 18 September 1958 - 31 December 1959
LtCoI Walter C. Wells iJanuary 1960- 25 February 1960
Col James P. Rathbun 26 February 1960- 28 March 1961
Col Grant S. Baze 29 March 1961 - 22Ju1y 1961

Col Clifford B. Drake 23July 1961 - 3 August 1962


Col Nat M. Pace 4 August 1962 - 11 August 1963
ColWinsory. Crockett,Jr 12 August 1963-6 May 1964
Col William P Pala 7 May 1964- l5July 1965
LtCol Walter E. Stuenkel l6July 1965 - 3OJuly 1965

CoijamesK. Callender 3lJuly 1965- 3OJune 1966


Col Benjamin S. Read iJuly 1966 - 23Januaiy 1967
ColWilliamR. Morrison 24January 1-967 - 2OJuly 1967
Col Edwin S. Schick, Jr 2lJuly 1967- 21 May 1968
Col Wilson A. Kluckman 22 May 1968 - 4 July 1968

Col Peterj. Mulroney 5July 1968- liJuly 1969


Col Wallace W. Crompton l2July 1969- 25 February 1970
Col Robert E. Parrott 26 February 1970- 2 August 1970
ColJorisJ. Snyder 3 August 1970- liJune 1971
ColJohn P. O'Connell l2June 1971-21 October 1971

42
Col William A, Lawrence 22 October 1971 - l3july 1972
LtColJamesR. Bowser,Jr I4July 1972- 20 August 1972
CoijackE. Dausman 2lAugusr 1972- 10 August 1973
Coljames R. Gallman,Jr 11 August 1973 - 25Ju1y 1974
Col David B. Barker 26July 1974 - l6july 1975

Col Howard M. Koppenhaver l7July 1975 - 28 March 1976


Col Roy L. Belli 29 March 1976- l3january 1977
Col Andrew F. Bauei l4january 1977 - 29 September 1977
Col Clarence W. Dilworth .30 September 1977 - l2July 1978
Col Roger F. Scott,Jr 13 July 1978- 26 August 1978

Col Robert B. Gibson 27 August 1978- 27June 1979


Col Hollis F. Davison 28June 1979- 27 May 1980
Col Orville V. Lippold,Jr 28 May 1980 - 12 November 1980
Col James B. Schulken 13 November 1980- 13 Ocrober 1981
Col William C. Doerner 14 October 1981 - 11 September 1982
Col Robert M. Black 12 September 1982 - 18 Augusr 1983
Col FrancisX. Chambers 19 August 1983- present

43
12th Marines

LINEAGE

192.7 - 1918

ACTIvATED 4 OCTOBER 1917 AT TIENT5IN, CHINA As THE i.7H REGIMENT AND


ASSIGNED TO THE 3D MARINE BRIGADE
DEACTIVATED ii APR11. 1918

1942. - 1946

REACTIVATED I SEPTEMBER 2942. AT SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA AS THE 11TH


MARINES AND ASSIGNED TO THE 3D MARINE DIVISION
RELOCATED DURING OCTOBER 1942. TO CAMP DUNLAP, CALIFORNIA
DEPLOYED DURING MARCH 2943 TO AUCKLAND, NEW ZEALAND
REDEPLOYED DURING JULY 1943 TO GUADALCANAL
PARTICIPATED IN THE FOLLOWING WORLD WAR II CAMPAIGNS
BOUGAINVILLE
NORTHERN SOLOMONS
GUAM
IWO JIMA
RELOCATED DURING DECEMBER 1945 TO CAMP PENDLETON, CALIFORNIA
DEACTIVATED 8 JANUARY 1946

[952. -1964

REACTIVATED MARCH 1951 AT CAMP PENDLETON, CALIFORNIA, AND ASSIGNED TO THE


3D MARINE DIVISION
DEPLOYED DURING AUGUST I93 TO CAMP MCNAIR, JAPAN
REDEPLOYED DURING FEBRUARY 1956 TO OKINAWA

1965 - 1983

REDEPLOYED FROM MARCH-JULY 1965 TO THE REPUBLIC OF VIETNAM


PARTICIPATED IN THE WAR IN VIETNAM, MAY 1965-NOVEMBER 1969, OPERATING FROM
DA NANG
PHU BAI

44
CHU LAI
HUE
REDEPLOYED FROM AUGUST-NOVEMBER 1969 TO CAMP HANSEN, OICINAWA
RELOCATED DURING AUGUST 1971 TO CAMP HAUGE, OKINAWA
RELOCATED DURING AUGUST 1976 TO CAMP ZUKERAN, OKINAWA
CAMP ZUKERAN RENAMED CAMP FOSTER DURING MARCH 1980

45
12th Marines

HONORS

PRESIDENTIAL UNIT CiTATIoN STREAMER


VIETNAM
1965 - i967

NAvY UNIT COMMENDATION STREAMER WITH ONE BRONZE STAR

WORLD WAR II
B0UGAINvILLE - '943 - '944
Iwo JIMA - '945

MARINE CORPS EXPEDITIONARY STREAMER


ASIATIC-PACIFIC CAMPAIGN STREAMER WITH FOUR BRONZE STARS
WoRLD WAR 11 VICTORY STREAMER
NATIONAL DEFENSE SERvicE STREAMER WiTH ONE BRONZE STAR
KOREAN SERVICE STREAMER
VIETNAM SERVICE STREAMER WITH TWO SILVER AND ONE BRONZE STAR
VIETNAM CROSS OF GAllANTRY STREAMER WITH PALM

46
The 21st Marines

Ti-rn tiST MARINES was activated on 14 July 1942 at New THE REGIANT'S NEXT OPERATION was the recapture of
River, North Carolina. Colonel Daniel E. Campbell took Guam. On 2lJuly 1944, the 21st Marines went ashore in
command of the regiment at the end of the month. Dur- the first waves of troops in the center of the 3d Division's
ing July, August, and September, the three infantry bat- Asan beachhead. The steeply sloping terrain provided ex-
talions of the regiment were activated using men from the cellent cover for the,Japanese and precluded any rapid ad-
6th Marines as the nucleus and adding personnel from vance. Early on the morning of 26 JuLy the enemy launch-
Quantico and Parris Island. An intensive combat training ed a coordinated counterartack, including a wild bayonet
program was began. charge, against the Marines. The Japanese were driven
back with heavy losses. The 21st Marines, now under the
command of Colonel Arthur H. Butler, with the rest of the
IN OCTOBER the regiment became part of the 3d Marine 3d Division, prepared to drive northeast along the length
Division and was relocated to Camp Elliott, California, of the island. On 31 july, the 21st Marines left its line of
where training continued. Early in February 1943 the 21st departure and pushed steadily ahead through the rugged
Marines deployed to Auckland, New Zealand. Units of the terrain. The regiment, on 1 August, passed into division
regiment were billeted in a number of small camps over an reserve for a short time. Four days later, the 21st Marines
area of several square miles. The final training for the regi- with the 3d Marines moved toward Bijia Point meeting on-
ment was conducted on Guadalcanal before the 21st ly isolated pockets of resistance. As the Marines combed
Marines was otdered into combat. the notthern jungle, they encounteted only disorganized
remnants of the enemy. Guam was declared secure on 10
August, but the 21st Marines continued to patrol the nor-
DURING THE INITIAL PHASE of the Bougainville campaign thetn jungles for disorganized remnants of the enemy.
the 21st Marines, under the command of Colonel Evans 0-
Ames, remained offshore in division reserve. On 6
November the 1st Battalion, 21st Marines landed and was
attached to the 9th Marines. The remaining units of the
regiment went ashore between 11-17 November. One
company of the 3d Battalion was on board the USS-
McKean when it was attacked and sunk by enemy aircraft
in Empress Augusta Bay. Thirty-eight men were reported
missing. By the 20th all battalions had reverted to the 21st
Marines' control and the regiment moved south. For the
next few weeks fighting was light with no major action
against enemy forces. During the second week in
December 1943, however, the regiment became involved
in the fighting around Hellzapoppin Ridge, Hill 600, and
Hill 600A. The regiment's primary task was to reduce these
positions and drive the remaining Japanese east of the
Torokina River. The thick jungle and narrow trails added
to the Marines' difficulties as they attempted ro dislodge Major General Graves B. Erskine, seated rear, Com-
the enemy. [-lellzapoppin Ridge fell on IS December and manding General, 3dMarine Division, and Vice Ad-
Hill 600A was taken five days later. The 21st Marines was miral Richmond K. Turner, who commanded the
relieved by the 182d Infantry Regiment and on 9 January expeditionary forces, talk with Marines at the com-
1944 it embarked for the return to Guadalcanal. mand post of the 21st Marines on Iwo Jima in 1945.

47
THE uST MARINES remained on Guam until it received
ordersfor its next objective—Iwo Jima. The regiment left
Guam a day earlier than the rest nf the 3d Division, but
when the unit arrived off Iwo, it went into corps reserve.
On D plus 1, 20 February 1945, the regiment, now com-
manded by Colonel Hartnoll 3. Withers, was ordered to
land. The confusion and congestion on the beaches made
the landing dangerous. The 21st Marines finally came
ashore in heavy surf on 21 February. Early the next morn-
ing the regiment moved out to relieve the 23d Marines and
was ordered to advance on the high ground between Air-
fields No. 1 and No. 2. The scarred and pitted terrain
made progess slow and costly. On D plus 5 elements of the
21st Marines crossed Airfield No. 2 and were involved in
heavy fighting in the area. The regiment went into reserve
the following day. At dawn on D plus it passed through
the 9th Marines and resumed the attack. The 1st Battalion,
21st Marines advanced rapidly and captuted the village of
Mntoyama and the high ground above Airfield No. 3. The S
21st Marines continued forward in spite of heavy losses. On '
7 Match, the 21st Marines with the 9th Marines par-
ticipated in a flanking movement to isolate an enemy
strongpoint known as "Cushman's Pocket." It was finally
destroyed on 16 March and Iwo Jima was declared secure.

WiTH THE BATtLE of Iwo Jima over, the 21st Marines


returned to Guam. Here training continued for the plann-
ed invasion of the Japanese homeland. After the surrender
of Japan, the 2d Battalion, 21st Marines occupied the
island of Truk. The 21st Marines was deactivated on Guam Wary Marines of a 60mm mortar crew of Company
on 20 December 1945. The 2d Battalion left Truk in L, 3dBattalion, 21st Marines, pause in the attack on
February and was deactivated on Guam on 5 March 1946. Airstrrt No. 2 on Iwo Jima on 24 February 1945.

A member of Company L, 3d Battalion, 21st Marines, takes cover from heavy mortar
and machine gunfire in the attack on Iwo Jima's Airstnt No. 2 on 24 February 1945.
Commanding Officers
21st Marines

ColDanielE. Campbell l4July 1942- lljanuary 1943


Col Evans 0. Ames I2January 1943- l9January 1944
LrCol Arthur H. Butler 2Ojanuary 1944 - 3ljanuary 1944
Cot Robert Blake 1 February 1944 - 20 April 1944
Col Arthur H. Butler 21 April 1944- 30 November 1944

Col HartnoilJ. Withers 1 December 1944 - 6 May 1945


Col Samuel B. Griffith II 7 May 1945 - 20 December 1945

49
21st Marines

LINEAGE

1942. - I94

ACTIVATED i4 JULY 1941 AT NEw RIVER, NORTH CAROLINA, AS THE uST MARINES

ASSIGNED DURING OCTOBER 1942. TO THE 3D MARINE DIVISION

RELOCATED DURING NOVEMBER 1942 TO SAN DIEGO, CALiFORNIA

DEPLOYED DURING FEBRUARY-MARCH 1943 TO AUCKLAND, NEW ZEALAND

PARTICIPATED IN THE L1OLLOWING WORLD WAR II CAMPAIGNS

NORTHERN SOLOMONS
BOUGAINVILLE
GUAM
Iwo JIMA

DEACTIVATED io DECEMBER 1945 AT GUAM, MARIANA ISLANDS

50
21st Marines

HONORS

PRESIDENTIAL UNIT CITATION STREAMER

WORLD WAR 11
IWO JIMA - 1945

NAvY UNIT COMMENDATION STREAMER

WORLD WAR II
GUAM - 1944

ASIATIC-PACIFIC CAMPAJGN STREAMER WITH FOUR BRONZE STARS

WORLD WAR II VICTORY STREAMER

51
The 26th Marines

THE i6TH MARINES was activated at Camp Pendleton, Hilo, Hawaii 10 days later. Once there the 26th Marines
California on 10 January 1944 as part of the 5th Marine was sent 65 miles inland to the former camp of the 2d
Division. Lieutenant Colonel Lester S. Hamel was the regi- Marine Division on the Parker Ranch at Kamuela known as
ment's first commanding officer. During early July. the "Camp Tarawa." Training anti amphibious maneuvers
regiment participated in exercises on San Clcmente Island, continued while the regiment was in the Hawaiian Islands.
some 60 miles off the coast of California. The regiment In late January 1945, the 26th Marines sailed from Pearl
embarked on board the USS Elliott, Baxter. Clay, and Ar- Harbor. The convoy reached Eniwetok for refueling and
thur Middleton at San Diego on 21 July and arrived at then sailed on to Saipan. IwoJima was now the next stop.

The flame thrower section and 81mm mortar platoon of the recently reactivated 1st Bat-
talion, 26th Marines, files aboard a Navy transport for Operation Silver Point I in June
1966 as part of training prior to deployment to the Western Pacific and South Vietnam.

j I

//
52
A perimeter guard turns away from the dust raired by a CH-46 as it lands near the lit
Battalion, 26th Marines, during training at Camp Pendleton, California, in June 1966.

ALTHOUGH THE a6TH MARINes had been placed in reserve, convoy arrived at dawn on 22 September off Sasebo in nor-
the entire regiment, commanded by Colonel Chester B. thwestern Kyushu. The Marines were to dispose of enemy
Graham, was on Iwojima by dusk on D-Day, 19 February war materiel and supervise both the return of Japanese to
1945. The regiment held the center of the 5th Division's their homeland and the repatriation of Chinese and
beachhead during the first night, but continued in divi- Korean citizens.
sion reserve for the next couple of days. On D plus 3 the
regiment passed through the 27th Marines' lines and slow- THE REGIMENT, which had responsibility for patrolling the
ly advanced to the northeast. The 26th Marines par- areas north and east of Sasebo, was alerted on 13 October
ticipated in the attack on Airfield No. 2 and then moved for transfer to the Palau Islands and arrived there two
northwest toward Hill 362A. Once rhe battle for 362A was weeks later. Elements of the regiment took up garrison du-
over, the 26th Marines faced bloody fighting around the ty on Koror, Malakal, and Arakabesan. In late January
rocky retrain of Hill 362B and Nishi Ridge. At times the 1946, the 26th Marines, at greatly reduced strength, sailed
Marines were involved in fierce hand-to-hand combat. for the United Statcs. The regiment was deactivated at
Casualties were high. By the end of the campaign, the Camp Pendleton on 5 March 1946.
26th Marines had lost 650 men killed in action and died of
wounds and 2,025 wounded in action. As the regiment
reduced the last enemy resistance in the northwest, its 1st As me VIETNAM WAR intensified, the 26th Marines was
Battalion broke through to the sea. On 16 March 1945 Iwo reactivated on 1 March 1966 at Camp Pendleton. The first
Jima was declared secure. elements of the regiment were deployed to the Republic of
Vietnam in August 1966, when the 1st and 2d Battalions
THE t6TH MAmNES sailed back to Hawaii at the end of landed at Da Nang. The regimental headquarters reached
March. By mid-April the 26th had reached Hilo and Okinawa in the same month. The 3d Battalion arrived in
returned to its former camp site to begin the process of Vietnam in October, completing the deployment of the
rebuilding. The return of many of the wounded as well as 26th Marines' battalions. In April 1967, the headquarters
replacement drafts soon restored the regiment to strength departed Okinawa for Phu Bai and was assigned to the 3d
while drill and training went on for the anticipated assault Marine Division. The following month, the headquarters
on southern Kyushu, in thejapanese islands. The uncon- and the 1st Battalion relieved other 3d Marine Division
ditional surrender of Japan on 14 August 1945 made this units at the Khe Sanh Combat Base in western Quang Tti
assault unnecessary. The 5th Division wasordered tojapan Province. The 3d Battalion arrived at Khe Sanh in June
for occupation duty. The 26th Marines boarded ships on 1967. During the next few months these units participated
23 August and sailed from Pearl Harbor a week later. The in Operations Crockett, Ardmore, and Scotland I.

53
IN JANUARY 1968, the 2d Battalion, 26th Marines arrived up to the base, the 26th Marines participated in Operation
at Khe Sanh, bringing the entire regiment together for the Scotland II from 15-18 April 1968. On 18 May, the regi-
first time since its arrival in Vietnam. The 26th Marines ment moved to the Da Nang area where it took part in a
was now commanded by Colonel David E. Lownds. Khe number of operations including Mameluke Thrust,
Sanh became the focal point of enemy activity in I Corps as Houston, and Meade River.
the enemy continued a major buildup in the area, heavily
shelled the base, and attacked the surrounding hill out-
DuRING 1969, elements of the 26th Marines operated as
posts. As the weather improved in early March , an exodus
the Special Landing Force off the coast of Vietnam. With
of major North Vietnamese units from the Khe Sanh area
the withdrawal of the 3d Marine Division in the fall of
began to take place, although the enemy still maintained
1969, the 26th Marines was reassigned to the 1st Division.
pressure on the combat base.
In March 1970, the regiment returned to Camp Pendleton
As THE BATrLE OF KHE SANS-I ENDED and the roads opened where it was deactivated on 30 April 1970.

Members of Company E, 2d Battalion, 26th Marines, cariy a casualty to a CH-34


medevac helicopthr following a 1968 attack on their position on Hill 861A, which
overlooks the combat base at Khe Sanh. (Photo courtesy of David Douglas Duncan)

t2
-
.J•:a,$rJ . V.
t'**s
P..

-. 11
in- , •/

54
Commanding Officers
26th Marines

LrCol Lester S. Hamel 10 January 1944 - 23 February 1944


Col Chester B. Graham 24 February 1944- 5 March 1946
LtCol Harvey L. Jensen 1 March 1966- 2 April 1966
ColJohnJ. Padley 3 April 1966- 11 August 1967
Col David E. Lownds.. 12 August 1967- 11 April 1968

Col Bruce F. Meyers. 12 April 1968- 12 August 1968


Col Clyde W. Hunter 13 August 1968- 11 February 1969
Co! Ray N. Jones • .12 February 1969- 13 June 1969
.

Col Ralph A. Heywood • .l4June 1969 - 12 December 1969

ColjamesE. Harrell 12 December1969- 30 April 1970

55
26th Marines

LINEAGE

'944 - 1946

ACTIVATED Ia JANUARY 1944 AT CAMP PENDLETON, CALIFORNIA, AS THE


i6TH MARINES AND ASSIGNED TO THE 5TH MARINE DIVISION
DEPLOYED DURING JULY 1944 TO HIL0, HAWAII
PARTICIPATED IN THE FOLLOWING WORLD WAR II CAMPAIGN

IWO JIMA

REDEPLOYED DURING SEPTEMBER 1945 TO SASEBO, JAPAN


REDEPLOYED DURING OCTOBER TO PELELIU, PALAU ISLANDS, AND

DETACHED FROM THE 5TH MARINE DIVISION


RELOCATED DURING JANUARY-FEBRUARY 1946
AT CAMP PENDLETON, CALIFORNIA
DEACTIVATED MARCH 1946

1966 - 1970

REACTIVATED, MARCH 1966 AT CAMP PENDLETON, CALIFORNIA


ASSIGNED DURING MAY '966 TO FORCE TROOPS, FnET MARINE FORCE, PACIFIC
DEPLOYED DURING JULY-AUGUST 1966 TO CAMP SCHWAB, OKINAWA AND
REASSIGNED TO THE 9TH MARINE AMPHIBIOUS BRIGADE
REDEPLOYED DURING APRIL 1967 TO P1-rn BAI, REPUBLIC OF VIETNAM
AND REASSIGNED TO THE 3D MARINE DIVISION
PARTICIPATED IN THE WAR IN VIETNAM, APRIL 1967 - MARCH '970,
OPERATING FROM

KHE SANH
DA NANG
QUANG NAM

REASSIGNED DURING OCTOBER 1969 TO THE 'ST MARINE DIVISION

56
RELOCATED DURING MARCH 1970 TO CAMP PENDLETON, CALIFORNIA AND
REASSIGNED TO THE 5TH MARINE EXPEDITIONARY BRIGADE

DEACTIVATED 30 APRIL 1970

57
26th Marines

HONORS

PRESIDENTIAL UNIT CITATION STREAMER WITH TWO BRONZE STARS

WORLD WAR II
IWOJIMA - '945

VIETNAM
[967
1968

ASIATIC-PACIFIC CAMPAIGN STREAMER WITH ONE BRONZE STAR

WORLD WAR II VICTORY STREAMER

NAVY OCCUPATION SERVICE STREAMER WITH "ASIA'

NATIONAL DEFENSE SERVICE STREAMER

VIETNAM SERVICE STREAMER WITH ONE SJLVER AND FOUR BRONZE STARS

VIETNAM CROSS OF GALLANTRY STREAMER WITH PALM

VIETNAM MERITORIOUS UNIT CITATION CIVIL ACTIONS STREAMER

58

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