The Denver Post delivers again. Some of these are pretty famous photographs that we’ve all seen before, some are just so compelling. Gritty, inspiring, horrifying…its in there.
Hey, no problem. I often find myself reflecting on what was once a great and somewhat noble America back in those days, and find myself moved by what I see.
I noticed that too. That’s the old 16" M1905 bayonet from WWI, even though the soldier (I think he’s a soldier, not a Marine, by the shape of his dogtags) has an Garand M1. A lot of guys still had to use the 1903 Springfield.
Given the amount of hand-to-hand fighting on Guadalcanal I don’t find it at all surprising that someone would have retrofitted a Springfield bayonet to an M1.
I don’t usually get in to this sort of thing but I really enjoyed these pictures. I played around with Google Earth to check out some of the areas and how they look now as I studied the photos.
My uncle, William Homer Genaust, lies in the caves under Mt. Suribachi. He shot the moving picture of the flag raising on Iwo Jima. Wish I had met him.
Good eye and good question. I suppose not, at least not right away. A live unpinned grenade will explode underwater. It looks like it just fell or was torn off some GI’s LBE during the invasion and is just laying there with the pin (obviously) still in it. I imagine seawater would eventually have its way with it at some point.
Images 14, 22, 38, and 68 are particularly interesting to me - The first three are M2A4 tanks on Guadalcanal, which means that those are from A Company of the Marine Corps 1st Tank Battalion. That’s an early example of the Marines making good use of Army casts-off. In fact, depsite being functionally obsolete, it was very well-suited for jungle combat, with four machine guns, a short hull, light weight, and mechanically reliable. Pretty much every crew member had a machine gun to themselves - One on each wing of the hull superstructure, one coaxially with the main gun, and one atop the turret. Plus a 37mm cannon. And scads of ammo, including cannister for the main gun. In close-quarters like jungle warfare, it’s a heavily-armed mobile pill box - a well-supplied one, at that. Unfortunately, US armor doctrine was even more obsolete than the tanks, and it wasn’t until Saipan that things were sorted out.
Image 68 is one of the very few M2A4s left in frontline service - by that time, all remaining M2A4s in the Marines were retrofitted with flame-throwers.
The predecessor AFV actually had eight machine guns - including two pointing up through the roof of the hull for anti-aircraft use. Very few were made.