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Jim graduated High School in 1942 when he was 16 and
joined the CORP right afterward. So why did he join the CORP? “
The uniform…,but the funny part is, I never had dress blues in
the Marine Corp. I got them way, way afterwards”, Jim told me.
In fact I got them at Desert Storm. I was in so many color guards and
they thought they were going to bring so many bodies and they wanted me
to fill. Fortunately we didn’t have to.”
Jim was assigned to E-Co-2nd BN, 23rd Regt, 4th Marine
Division and was wounded twice. He received a Purple Heart and a Gold
Star in lieu of a second Purple Heart. He was wounded on Saipan and Iwo
Jima. But what was he really proud of? The 4th Marine Division had received
two Presidential Citations. “The citation to a Unit is like a Medal
of Honor to an individual,” he said. Most divisions had received
one citation. Jim said that his division was the only one that he knew
of that received two.
Don’t ask Jim what part of his Marine service
he is proud of.. “That’s kind of bragging and you don’t
look at it that way”. But ask him if he remembers his first engagement
and his eyes light up…”very much so, very much so. I’ll
never forget that as long as I live.” Jim explained his combat experience
this way. It was on the island of Roi in the Marshall Islands. The fourth
Marine Division has the distinction to be the only unit to have embarked
from the states on ship and directly into battle. When they landed on
the beach at Roi there was no resistance. There was a little hiss going
up from the beach and Jim, a BAR assistant, told the BAR man that he would
go up top and take a look around. He got on top of the hill, on his belly,
and there was a 50 gallon oil drum next to him. “all of a sudden
I heard a bing-bing-bing next to me”. There was a sniper on top
of an airplane hanger and his “sights must have been bad because
he was hitting the oil drum instead of me!” He slipped back down
off the hill back to his BAR and he said “Jesse they’re shooting
at me!” Jim recalled Jesse’s comment laughing, “Well,
what the hell do think they are going to do?!” Jim and Jesse kept
in touch and used to laugh about that. They kept in touch until Jesse
passed away about a year ago.
Here was Jim, lying on the beach on Roi, having just
been shot at by a sniper and he thought he'd been shot. He felt something
move under his chest and he always heard that you never really feel pain
when you were shot, so all he could think about was that he had been shot.
He was afraid to look or feel and having never been shot, he really did
not know what to expect. But he rose up a little to check and he said
laughing, “There was a big land crab that went out from underneath
me and scooted out. Now that is something I’ll never forget as long
as I live”.
What Jim really wants us to know about is an incident
that he was involved with that many people were unaware of. The reason
for that is the Military kept it classified for many years. He calls it
“The Second Pearl Harbor”. The story never got out until Jim
was interviewed by the Dallas Morning News 6 or 7 years ago and then it
blossomed from there. The incident occurred when the Marines were preparing
for the invasion of Saipan.
They were aboard LST’s (Landing Ship, Tank) on
maneuvers preparing for the invasion of Saipan. This was to be the D-Day
of the Pacific. A storm came up and there was one particular LST that
was hauling/piggybacking an LCI (Landing Craft, Infantry) and the LCI
slipped off, 15-20 marines were drowned. They went back and pulled into
Pearl Harbor. There were 34 LST tied up in groups of 7 or 8. Jim was in
one group about 3 from the outside and the outer one caught fire and exploded.
A chain reaction ensued and when it was over, 163 died and the injured
totaled 396. A total of 6 LST’s were destroyed along with 3 LCI’s.
“So what was homecoming like”? asked Karen.
When Jim got back to Minneapolis, he explained “it was the first
time in 3 years that I was by myself overnight”. At that time, his
family lived in Northern Minnesota and he had to get a room overnight
until he could get transportation home. You could tell from his voice
that he remembers how well he felt back then. “Here I was, by myself,
free to do anything I want to. It was such an odd experience!” He
remembers the outpouring of appreciation. “I couldn’t buy
a drink, I couldn’t buy ’nuttin’. People would hound
ya!” When he was alone in his room, he did something that he hadn’t
done in three years. “In those days they only had bath tubs: they
didn’t have showers, and I bet I took three baths. And there would
be a ring around the tub from the dirt coming out of my skin, because
all the time I was on Maui you had cold water showers and aboard ship
you had salt water showers, so you really never got clean.” He laughed,
“I bet you for 10-15 baths there was a ring around [the tub], you
know from stuff coming out of your pours. That’s how dirty you were!”
The next day, he got on Greyhound bus for the 200 mile
trip to his parents home. It was crowded and he had to stand. There were
a couple of “little old ladies and I could hear them whispering
…who is he?” Jim explained they never saw a Marine in Greens,
they only knew them in Blues. Well, he let them continue their wondering
until he explained that he was “in the United States Marine Corp”.
That little piece of information made its way through the bus and at the
next stop, they were fighting over who would buy me a drink, he laughed.
When he got off the bus, he was met by his mother, father
and brother. His other younger brother came running. This is where Marine
Jim could not hold back his emotions. Tears came to his eyes, Karen started
tearing up and I did all I could to not start as well. He had already
given his folks and brother a hug. At this point Jim had to stop for a
moment because he could not hold back the tears any longer. Jim's other
younger brother, who was around 14 at the time, was standing back and
just looking at him. Jim explained, “[his brother] stood for a long
time.” His brother told him later that he didn’t think Jim
was going to have legs or arms. His brother has passed but he will never
forget his brother’s reactions. Jim's brother just wanted to make
sure he was OK and all in one piece.
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