Battle of Tarawa order of battle

On 10 November, 1944, men of the United States Marine Corps invaded the island of Betio, located at the southwest corner of Tarawa Atoll in the Gilbert Islands chain in the Central Pacific. This invasion, known as Operation Galvanic, was a phase of the Pacific Theatre of World War II.

Tarawa Atoll
Betio Island is at lower left

The landings on Betio were the Americans' third amphibious operation of the Pacific War, after Guadalcanal Island and Cape Torokina on Bougainville Island, but the first in which the Japanese vigorously resisted the landings on the beaches, pinning the Marines down with machine-gun and mortar fire. Worse, American planners at Pearl Harbor had grievously misjudged the timing of high tide at Betio, leaving the landing craft stranded on the shallow coral reefs where the Marines were slaughtered.

The island was declared secure after three days. Given the small size of Betio (0.59 sq. mi.), planners had expected it to take one.

American

Naval commanders for Operation Galvanic
Adm. Chester W. Nimitz
Adm. Raymond A. Spruance
Vice Adm. Richmond Kelly Turner
United States Pacific Fleet
Admiral Chester W. Nimitz HQ at Pearl Harbor
United States Fifth Fleet
Admiral Raymond A. Spruance in heavy cruiser Indianapolis
Operation Galvanic Assault Force
Rear Admiral Richmond Kelly Turner in battleship Pennsylvania
V Amphibious Corps
Major General Holland M. "Howlin' Mad" Smith[lower-alpha 1]
Tarawa: 2nd Marine Division (Major General Julian C. Smith)
Makin: 27th Infantry Division (Army) (Major General Ralph C. Smith)
Ground force commanders at Tarawa
Lieut. Gen. Holland M. Smith
Maj. Gen. Julian C. Smith
Leo D. Hermle as a major general

Ground forces – Tarawa

Col. David M. Shoup on Betio Island; he was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor for his extraordinary leadership during the chaos of the initial assault.
A Japanese Type 95 Ha-Go tank at Tarawa after the battle. Three disabled U.S. Marine Corps LVT-1s are visible in the background.
Five Japanese prisoners taken on Tarawa.
Maj. Gen. Ralph C. Smith, USA
2nd Marine Division
Major General Julian C. Smith
Asst. Div. Cmdr.: Brig. Gen. Leo D. Hermle
Chief of Staff: Col. Merritt A. Edson
Personnel officer (G-1): Lt. Col. C.P. van Ness
Intelligence officer (G-2): Lt. Col. Thomas J. Colley
Operations officer (G-3): Lt. Col. James P. Riseley
Logistics officer (G-4): Lt. Col Jesse S. Cook
Eastern landing area:
8th Marine Regiment
Colonel Elmer E. Hall
Exec. Ofc.: Lt. Col. Paul D. Sherman
First Wave (Red Beach 3): 2nd Battalion (Maj. Henry P. Crowe)
Second Wave (Red Beach 3): 3rd Battalion (Maj. Robert H. Ruud)
Third Wave (Red Beach 2): 1st Battalion (Maj. Lawrence C. Hays Jr.)
Central landing area:
2nd Marine Regiment
Colonel David M. Shoup[lower-alpha 2]
Exec. Ofc.: Lt. Col. Dixon Goen
First Wave (Red Beach 1): 3rd Battalion (Maj. John F. Schoettel)
First Wave (Red Beach 2): 2nd Battalion (Lt. Col. Herbert R. Amey, Jr. (KIA 20 Nov), then Lt. Col. Walter I. Jordan)
Second Wave (Red Beach 2): 1st Battalion (Major Wood B. Kyle)
Western landing area:
6th Marine Regiment
Colonel Maurice G. Holmes
Exec. Ofc.: Lt. Col. Russell Lloyd
Third Wave (Green Beach): 1st Battalion (Maj. William K. Jones)
21–24 Nov (Outer Islands of Tarawa): 2nd Battalion (Lt. Col. Raymond L. Murray)
Fourth Wave (Green Beach): 3rd Battalion (Lt. Col. Kenneth F. McLeod)
10th Marine Regiment (Artillery)
Colonel Thomas E. Bourke
Exec. Ofc.: Lt. Col. Ralph E. Forsyth
1st Battalion (Lt. Col. Presley M. Rixey)
2nd Battalion (Lt. Col. George R. E. Shell)
3rd Battalion (Lt. Col. Manly L. Curry)
4th Battalion (Lt. Col. Kenneth A. Jorgensen)
5th Battalion (Maj. Howard V. Hiett)
18th Marine Regiment (Engineer)
Colonel Cyril W. Martyr
Exec. Ofc.: Lt. Col. Ewart S. Laue
1st Battalion (Engineers) (Maj. George L.H. Cooper)
2nd Battalion (Pioneers) (Lt. Col. Chester J. Salazar)
3rd Battalion (Seabees) (Cmdr. Lawrence E. Tull, USN)
Other units
2nd Defense Battalion[lower-alpha 3]
2nd Amphibian Tractor Battalion (Maj. Henry C. Drewes (KIA 20 Nov))
2nd Tank Battalion (Lt. Col. Alexander B. Swenceski)

Ground forces – Makin

27th Infantry Division (Army)
Major General Ralph C. Smith
165th Regimental Combat Team
3rd Battalion / 105th Infantry Regiment ("Appleknockers")

Japanese

Rear Adm. Keiji Shibazaki

Gilbert Islands defense forces
Rear Admiral Keiji Shibazaki (KIA 20 Nov)
Approx. 5,000 total men under arms

3rd Special Base Force[lower-alpha 4]
7th Sasebo SNLF
111th Construction Unit
4th Fleet Construction Dept. (detachment)

See also

Orders of battle involving United States Marine forces in the Pacific Theatre of World War II:

Sources

  • Clark, George B. (2006). The Six Marine Divisions in the Pacific: Every Campaign of World War II. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland and Co. ISBN 978-0-7864-2769-7.
  • Morison, Samuel Eliot (1951). Aleutians, Gilberts and Marshalls: June 1942 April 1944. History of United States Naval Operations in World War II. Vol. VII. Boston: Little, Brown and Co. ISBN 978-0-31658-307-7.

Notes

  1. Generated so much ill-will between the services that he was eventually reassigned stateside.
  2. Also commander of landed troops; awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor for his extraordinary leadership during the chaos of the initial assault.
  3. Pvt. Edward D. Wood, later a producer of low-budget movies such as Plan 9 from Outer Space, served in this unit on Betio.
  4. Formerly 6th Yokosuka SNLF
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