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The United States Marines in the Occupation of Japan is a concise
narrative of the major events which took place when Marine air and
ground units were deployed to the main islands of Japan at the
close of World War II. The text is based on official records,
interviews with participants in the operations described, and
reliable secondary sources. The pamphlet is published for the
information of Marines and others interested in this significant
period of Marine Corps history.
Since 1920 the historians of the United States Marine Corps have
produced several hundred works on Marine Corps history. These have
ranged in length from a few pages of mimeographed material to
lengthy case-bound histories sold by the Government Printing Office
(GPO) through the Superintendent of Documents. This catalog is in
two parts. The first lists those publications still in print and
available from the Superintendent of Documents or only from the
History and Museums Division. The second part of the catalog is a
chronological list of all significant historical publications that
were officially produced or sponsored by the History and Museums
Division and its predecessors. Operational and administrative
histories of the Marine Corps are listed in chronological order
under the "General Histories" section of this catalog. The division
is currently engaged in writing a nine-volume chronological history
of Marine Corps operations in Vietnam, the first five volumes of
which are listed in this catalog.
On 1 September 1939, German armored columns and attack aircraft
crossed the Polish border on a broad front and World War II began.
Within days most of Europe was deeply involved in the conflict as
nations took side for and against Germany and its leader, Adolph
Hitler, according to their history, alliances, and self-interest.
Soviet Russia, a natural enemy of Germany's eastward expansion,
became a wary partner in Poland's quick defeat and subsequent
partition in order to maintain a buffer zone against the German
advance. Inevitably, however, after German successes in the west
and the fall of France, Holland, and Belgium, in 1940, Hitler
attacked Russia, in 1941. In the United States, a week after the
fighting in Poland started, President Franklin D. Roosevelt
declared a limited national emergency, a move which, among other
measures authorized the recall to active duty of retired Armed
Forces regulars. Even before this declaration, in keeping with the
temper of the times, the President also stated that the country
would remain neutral in the new European war. During the next two
years, however, the United States increasingly shifted from a
stance of public neutrality to one of preparation for possible war
and quite open support of the beleaguered nation allied against
Germany. This book addresses the Marine Corps' preparation for
World War II.
"The United States Marines in North China, 1945-1949" is a concise
narrative of the major events which took place when Marine ground
and air units were deployed to the Asian mainland at the close of
World War II. The text and appendices are based on official
records, interviews with participants in the operations described,
and reliable secondary sources. The pamphlet is published for the
information of Marines and others interested in this significant
period of Marine Corps history.
When this monograph was published almost 30 years ago, then History
and Museums Director Brigadier General Edwin H. Simmons wrote:
"Today's generation of Marines serve in a fully integrated Corps
where blacks constitute almost one-fifth of our strength. Black
officers, noncommissioned officers, and privates are omnipresent,
their service so normal a part of Marine life that it escapes
special notice. The fact that this was not always so and that as
little as 34 years ago (in 1941) there were no black Marines
deserves explanation." This statement holds true for this edition
of Blacks in the Marine Corps, which has already gone through
several previous reprintings. What has occurred since the first
edition of Blacks in the Marine Corps has been considerable
scholarship and additional writing on the subject that deserve
mention to a new generation of readers, both in and outside the
Corps. First and foremost is Morris J. MacGregor, Jr.'s Integration
of the Armed Forces 1940-1965 (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Army Center
of Military History, 1981) that documents the Armed Forces efforts
as part of the Defense Studies Series. The volume is an excellent
history of a social topic often difficult for Service historical
offices to deal with.
"First Offensive: The Marine Campaign for Guadalcanal" provides an
account of the first American victory over Japanese ground forces,
told at the level of companies, platoons, and individuals.
Demonstrates the relationships between air, ground and surface
forces in World War II. Includes maps, tables, charts,
illustrations, appendixes, bibliographical note, glossary and
index.
This book, "Central Pacific Drive: History of U.S. Marine Corps
Operations in World War II, Volume III," the third in a projected
five-volume series, continues the comprehensive history of Marine
Corps operations in World War II. The story of individual
campaigns, once told in separate detail in preliminary monographs,
has been reevaluated and rewritten to show events in proper
proportion to each other and in correct perspective to the war as a
whole. New material, particularly from Japanese sources, which has
become available since the writing of the monographs, has been
included to provide fresh insight into the Marine Corps'
contribution to the final victory in the Pacific. During the period
covered in these pages, we learned a great deal about the theory
and practice of amphibious warfare. But most of all we confirmed
the basic soundness of the doctrine which had been developed in
prewar years by a dedicated and farsighted group of Navy and Marine
Corps officers. These men, the leaders and workers in the evolution
of modern amphibious tactics and techniques, served their country
well. Anticipating the demands of a vast naval campaign in the
Pacific, they developed requirements and tested prototypes for the
landing craft and vehicles which first began to appear in large
numbers at the time of the Central Pacific battles. Many of the
senior officers among these prewar teachers and planners were the
commanders who led the forces afloat and ashore in the Gilberts,
Marshalls, and Marianas. Allied strategy envisioned two converging
drives upon the inner core of Japanese defenses, one mounted in the
Southwest Pacific under General MacArthur's command, the other in
the Central Pacific under Admiral Nimitz. Although Marines fought
on land and in the air in the campaign to isolate Rabaul, and
played a part significant beyond their numbers, it was in the
Central Pacific that the majority of Fleet Marine Force units saw
action. Here, a smoothly functioning Navy-Marine Corps team, ably
supported by Army ground and air units, took part in a series of
tiny and heavily-defended islets, where there was little room for
maneuver and no respite from combat, to large islands where two and
three divisions could advance in concert. As the narrative of this
volume clearly shows, victory against a foe as determined and as
competent as the Japanese could not have been won without a high
cost in the lives of the men who did the fighting. Our advance from
Tarawa to Guam was paid for in the blood of brave men, ordinary
Americans whose sacrifice for their country should never be
forgotten. Nor will it be by those who were honored to serve with
them.
This book, "Isolation of Rabaul: History of U. S. Marine Corps
Operations in World War II, Volume II," the second in a projected
five-volume series, continues the comprehensive history of Marine
Corps operations in World War II. The story of individual
campaigns, once told in separate detail in preliminary monographs,
has been largely rewritten and woven together to show events in
proper proportion to each other and in correct perspective to the
war as a whole. New material, particularly from Japanese sources,
which has become available in profusion since the writing of the
monographs, has been included to provide fresh insight into the
Marine Corps' contributions to the final victory in the Pacific.
The period covered in these pages was a time of transition in the
fighting when the Allied offensive gradually shifted into high gear
after a grinding start at Guadalcanal. As the situation changed,
the make-up of the Fleet Marine Force changed, too. We passed
through the era of hit and run and through the time for defensive
strategy. Our raider and parachute battalions were absorbed in
regular infantry units, the seacoast batteries of our defense
battalions became field artillery, and our air squadrons were
re-equipped with newer and deadlier planes. In the converging
drives that made the Japanese fortress Rabaul their goal - one
under Navy command and the other under Army leadership - Marines
played a significant part well out of proportion to their numbers.
In those days, as in these, the use of trained amphibious troops in
a naval campaign overloaded the scale in our favor. As one hard-won
success followed another in the Solomons and on New Guinea, a
progression of airfields wrested from island jungles gave us the
means to emasculate Rabaul. While the enemy garrison waited
helplessly for an assault that never came, we seized encircling
bases that choked the life out of a once-potent stronghold. Once
the front lines passed by Rabaul, other island battles seized the
headlines - battle of the great tow-pronged advance on Japan, which
was made possible in large part by the victories of 1943 in the
Southwest Pacific. For thousands of Americans, Australians, and New
Zealanders, however, the campaign against Rabaul never ended until
the last day of the war. In this unheralded epilogue of blockade
and harassment, Marine air units took the lead just as they had in
the all-out aerial battle that preceded. The outstanding aspect of
all the operations covered in this volume, one evident in every
section of the narrative, was the spirit of cooperation between
different services and national forces. No finer example exists in
recent history of the awesome combine power of distinct military
forces pursuing a common goal.
This book, "Pearl Harbor to Guadalcanal: History of U. S. Marine
Corps Operations in World War II, Volume I," covers Marine Corps
participation through the first precarious year of World War II,
when disaster piled on disaster and there seemed no way to check
Japanese aggression. Advanced bases and garrisons were isolated and
destroyed; Guam, Wake, and the Philippines. The sneak attack on
Pearl Harbor, "day that will live in infamy," seriously crippled
the U. S. Pacific Fleet; yet that cripple rose to turn the tide of
the entire war at Midway. Shortly thereafter, the U. S. Marines
launched on Guadalcanal an offensive which was destined to end only
on the home islands of the Empire. The country in general, and the
Marine Corps in particular, entered World War II in a better state
of preparedness than had been the case in any other previous
conflict. But that is a comparative term and does not merit mention
in the same sentence with the degree of Japanese preparedness. What
the Marine Corps did bring into the way, however, was the priceless
ingredient developed during the years of pence: the amphibious
doctrines and techniques that made possible the trans-Pacific
advance - and, for that matter, the invasion of North Africa and
the European continent. By publishing this operations history in a
durable form, it is hoped to make the Marine Corps record
permanently available for the study of military personnel, the
edification of the general public, and the contemplation of serious
scholars of military history.
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