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Thomas Holcomb and the Advent of the Marine Corps Defense Battalion, 1936-1941 (Paperback)
Loot Price: R329
Discovery Miles 3 290
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Thomas Holcomb and the Advent of the Marine Corps Defense Battalion, 1936-1941 (Paperback)
Series: Occasional Papers
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Loot Price R329
Discovery Miles 3 290
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Historians of the Marine Corps have conducted significant research
on the development of the Fleet Marine Force's amphibious assault
mission. However, little has been written about the evolution of
the defense battalion. From 1900 until 1940, advanced base
defense's significance in Naval strategy surpassed or equaled
amphibious assault. During 1940 and 1941, establishing defense
battalions fell to the Corps' second priority. Likewise, few
studies have examined Thomas Holcomb. As Commandant from 1936
through 1943, he installed the Corps as the premier seaborne
support force and supervised its massive expansion. Commandant
Thomas Holcomb was an excellent strategist, manager, and publicist.
Understanding his actions will help illuminate the mentality and
institutions of the military and government prior to World War II.
The defense battalion provides a case study for examining Holcomb's
leadership. Defense battalions also clearly found their roots in
long standing advanced base defense theory. As Commandant from 1936
to 1943, Holcomb directed the Corps' expansion including the
creation of the heavily armed defense battalion. On a tactical
level, planners designed these units to defend island outposts
against air, sea, and amphibious assaults Likewise, in holding
island bases in the central and western Pacific, defense battalions
fit into the grand strategy of the United States Navy. They
comprised one half of the Corps' dual missions: amphibious assault
and base defense. Finally, defense battalions served an equally
pivotal public relations function Holcomb struggled to market the
Marine Corps as a vital and unique branch of the American military.
Serious challenges confronted Commandant Thomas Holcomb. For
example, he was plagued by lack of funds, promotion stagnation,
slow supply lines, and the isolationist tendencies of Congress and
the American public. Throughout this study, the Corps' complete
dependence on outside forces becomes abundantly clear. Sometimes
Holcomb benefited from events beyond his control. Other times, he
fought to turn seemingly damaging events into advantages for the
Corps.
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