I Was Expendable: A Lookout on the Bridge of the Muskallunge (SS-262)

Lookout silhouetted on the bridge of a submarine studies the sky as well as the sea.

by Val Scanlon Jr.

Quartermaster with binoculars, lay to the bridge immediately!" ordered the Officer of the Deck (OOD).

That meant me. Quickly moving to the forward end of the conning tower, I lifted the cover to the binocular stowage locker, grabbing a pair of 7×50 powered glasses, and sped up the short ladder to the bridge.

"Request permission to come on the bridge," I asked as my head and shoulders passed through the conning tower hatch to the bridge level.

"Come up," replied the OOD.

With my entire body emerging, I cleared the hatch and stood erect, facing the OOD. "QM reporting as ordered, sir!"

"Very well. Man your aircraft lookout station. Conduct a careful continuous and thorough search for enemy aircraft. We are within their land-based range now and I do not want to be surprised and possibly caught on the surface today."

"Aye, aye, sir!"

Cautiously climbing to my lookout station atop the periscope shears, I passed within whispering distance of the starboard lookout. He said, "Watch your step up there. This gale is fierce and these side rolls could easily toss you overboard. If you did go over we would have one hell of a time trying to find you in this raging sea."

"Thanks, Bill. Keep an eye on me!"

Reaching my lookout perch, I sat down very carefully on the narrow, six-inch wide, 18-inch long strip of hard steel and tried to twine my feet into a holding-on position. There was no way to hold on with my hands. I had to use both hands for binocular support while conducting my aircraft searches. It was a very precarious situation at best and doubly perilous in the storm-like riding a wild, bucking bronco, with no hands! I was now approximately 25 feet above the bridge level and 47 feet above sea level. The submarine rolled continuously, 20 degrees to starboard, then back 40 degrees to port, with a quick, sharp, teeth-chattering motion.

The stormy day was dark and gloomy, with low-hanging, formless nimbostratus rain clouds. Visibility was limited to a few hundred yards.

The United States submarine Muskallunge was conducting a combat patrol in the vicinity of the Japanese-held island of Palau, in the Western Pacific Ocean. Assigned a "seek out and destroy" mission, "Muskie" with her ship's complement of eight commissioned officers and seventy-five enlisted men, was near the end of "on station" patrolling. Although Palau was noted for its rich, fertile contacts, for some strange reason not one enemy ship or plane contact had been made. Every previous patrol conducted in this area had disclosed a ripe and continuous flow of enemy shipping. Many of the larger convoys had been escorted by medium-sized bombers and a few of the U.S. submarines assigned the area had been attacked and successfully bombed. It was possible the severe storm had discouraged even the bravest plane pilots—I hoped!

Hanging on as best I could with feet and legs, time after time I first made a careful search with my naked eyes, covering the full 360-degree horizon area, then the entire sky area, before employing the use of my binoculars.

At last, during one of my searches with the binoculars, I sighted four columns of smoke! I made the report, "Four columns of smoke bearing 075 relative, hull down on the horizon!" (i.e., four ships without masts and hulls visible).

A sudden course change toward the smoke columns was then made and "Muskie" slowly but surely closed the distance.

My lookout perch was between the stowed positions of our Number One and Number Two periscopes. Without warning, Number Two periscope was suddenly raised, almost catching me in the rear end, and almost pitching me overboard.

I yelled, "What the hell do you think you're doing down there?"

"What happened?" asked the OOD.

"Someone raised Number Two periscope without warning and nearly knocked me over the side!"

"Sorry about that! Watch your step up there!"

Still in a rage and a state of shock, I shouted, "Thanks, you stupid clown! Why don't you come up here and try it for a while… the boat's rolling back and forth like crazy and me trying to hang on with my toenails…"

The distance between "Muskie" and the smoke contacts steadily decreased. The lower level starboard lookout reported masts and superstructures in sight. Excited and nosey, for the moment I forgot my aircraft searching to concentrate watching the contacts.

Then suddenly something made me turn my eyes toward the port side. I could hardly believe what I saw—a Japanese bomber, emerging from the rain squall, so close I could clearly see the nose gunner hunched over his machine gun, an amazed look on his face as he spotted us!

I panicked! Scrambling down from my perch and while passing through the conning tower hatch, I yelled, "AIRCRAFT!… CLOSE!"

I heard the OOD yell, "CLEAR THE BRIDGE!… DIVE!… DIVE!"

Then came two blasts on the diving alarm… "ARRRRUGGA! ARRRRUGGA!" and "Muskie" headed down… deep!

We had reached a depth of 150 feet when the blast came—WHHAAAOOOOMM! The bomb exploded close enough to be heard and felt throughout the submarine. The bomber had dropped a bomb into the water turbulence created by the submerging boat… right on target! Miraculously, "Muskie" was not damaged.

Still shaking, I went on down into the control room and turning aft, staggered into the crew's messing compartment. With trembling hands I drew a cup of scalding coffee from the 30-gallon urn and sat down at a mess table. I gulped hot coffee, trying to keep it from slopping out of the cup. Upset? You know it! Definitely!

I heard words passed over the submarine's general announcing system but I was too dazed to understand them. A shipmate at the table called out to me, "Hey, they want you in the control room at once."

I got up then and walked into the control room. When recognition had been made, the commanding officer made an announcement to the diving officer:

"If you are required to leave personnel on the bridge in order to save this ship and the other personnel on board, do not hesitate to do so!"

Still shocked by my experience and completely out of control with rage, I screamed, "So, I'm expendable… Well, let me tell you something… if you ever leave me up there, be prepared to go down forever along with everyone on board, because somehow, some way, I'll bust open that upper conning tower hatch and flood this sewer pipe!"

Muskallunge (SS-262) port side view underway, off Pearl Harbor 4 September 1943. She cleared Pearl Harbor 7 September for her first war patrol, taking station off the Palau Islands. Muskallunge carried the first electric torpedoes to be fired in the war by an American submarine.

 
LtCdr. John R. Madison prepares to go up ladder from control room of USS Muskallunge (SS-262) at Submarine Base New London, Connecticut. Lt. William B. Robb is at his station.

Diving station in submarine control room.

Submarine control room diving station in action.

Control room during battle stations.

Torpedo room.

Lookouts above bridge on submarine.

View from lookout perch on submarine.

First Engagement: A Battalion's Introduction to Combat in the Battle of the Bulge

American soldiers of the 289th Infantry Regiment march along the snow-covered road on their way to cut off the Saint Vith-Houffalize road in Belgium on 24 January 1945.

by August A. Stellwag

Christmas Eve, 1944: For many of the green, young foot-soldiers of the 289th Regimental Combat Team, this would be their first Christmas away from home. Just a short two months ago they had been boarding troopships on the Hudson River at Camp Shanks, New York. Now they found themselves marching along a rutted dirt road leading to the small village of Grandmenil, Belgium. Grandmenil, at this time, had been momentarily raised from obscurity to become a pivotal point on the northern perimeter of what would soon be described in Stateside newspapers as the "Battle of the Bulge." The 289th was one of two regiments of the recently arrived 75th Infantry Division which had been hastily detached and assigned to the 3rd Armored Div. in an attempt to stem the German advance now reaching its zenith. Despite a jolting rail trip of 250 miles in French boxcars, cold rations, and dampness portending more snow, the troops were n good spirits, laughing and joking with the resiliency of youth.

For one of the young soldiers of Company M, 3rd Battalion, of the 289th Regimental Combat Team, Pvt. James Foley, the memory of his last visit home was still fresh. He lived with his parents on a quiet street in the northwest corner of New York City, an area of the city that in the 1940s still had a suburban atmosphere. His home was only 20 miles south of Camp Shanks and on the night before the 75th Division's debarkation, his platoon sergeant, Durward B. Stroud, had bent the rules a bit and given Jim Foley permission to spend this last night at home.

Had the young men of the 289th RCT realized what lay ahead of them, their spirits would have been as damp as the weather. Chaos still ruled over most of the American defensive positions. The town of Grandmenil lay in the path of the fanatical and battle-hardened 2nd SS Panzer Division. Advance elements of this division had captured Manhay, one mile to the west, had passed through Grandmenil, and were now pursuing the battered elements of the U.S. 3rd and 7th Armored Divisions.

At dusk on Christmas Eve, the 3rd Battalion of the 289th RCT was moving into its final assembly area in the woods west of Grandmenil, preparatory to starting its initial action of the war—to attack at 0800 hours, 25 December, and take the high ground west of Grandmenil. Because of inexperience, the battalion was not in a staggered battle formation, but rather in a solid column of two's on either side of the narrow road. They had gone only about a mile toward their objective when the fateful contact was made. The young foot soldiers gave little notice to the Sherman tank that had come over the crest of the hill or to the other silhouettes behind it. Scattered elements of the 3rd Armored Division had been passing them since they had moved out. They had no way of knowing that the Sherman was a captured tank manned by Germans and that the silhouettes behind it were those of eight Royal Tiger tanks of the 2nd SS Panzer Division. Indeed, this was the same column that had moved through several 3rd Armored road blocks by the same ruse.

The lead Sherman opened up with machine guns on the columns of Americans. The two columns split and tried to take cover in the forest of small fir trees on either side of the road. The 3rd Battalion jeeps were run over by the Sherman and knocked to the side of the road. Meanwhile, the column of Tigers moved up, turned on their spotlights and raked the woods with their machine guns and 88 mm cannon. Finally, they moved down the road leaving behind the shattered 3rd Battalion. As Sgt. Durward Stroud tried to regroup his platoon, one of his men told him that Pvt. Jim Foley had somehow managed to reach the high ground. Stroud took two men and found Foley alone and mortally wounded. He died within a few minutes after asking his companions to say the Lord's Prayer with him. Durward Stroud's thoughts went back to that last night at Camp Shanks and to the overnight pass that he had given to Jim Foley. He knew then that he had bent the rules in the right direction.

The surviving members of the 3rd Battalion became instant veterans. The column of Tiger tanks did not get much farther. A man from Co. K, whose identity is still not known to this day, succeeded in putting a bazooka shell directly into the lead Tiger at a narrow part of the road between a cliff and a ravine. Although he paid with his life, his action blocked the road and prevented the column from advancing. The German tanks withdrew to Grandmenil.

Despite this devastating initial engagement, the 3rd Battalion and its two sister battalions of the 289th RCT were able to regroup, and by 26 December had captured the village of Grandmenil. Within two days, the green Americans had become seasoned fighters. But the price had been high—the 3rd Battalion alone had shown losses of 130 enlisted men and seven officers for the two-day period.

The 75th Division continued to battle its way across Europe, its activities culminating in mid-April 1945 with the clearing of the Ruhr Valley. But for many veterans of the division, like Durward Stroud, now enjoying retirement in California, the most vivid memory will always be that of the surprise attack on a Christmas Eve over fifty years ago.

Bibliography

Cole, Hugh M. U.S. Army in World War II: The European Theater of Operations: The Ardennes: Battle of the Bulge. OCMH, Dept. of the Army, Washington, D.C., 1965.

Runte, Walter G. The Operations of the 289th Infantry Regiment (75th Infantry Division) in the Grandmenil-Erezee, Belgium Sector, 25 December 1944-6 January 1945 (Ardennes Alsace Campaign). The Infantry School, Fort Benning, Georgia, 1950.

The 75th Infantry Division in Combat. N.p., 1945.

Stroud, Durward B. Personal recollections, 27 April 1977.


Sgt. Robert McHaney, 289th Regiment.

 
289th Regimental Crest. The mule reflects the Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri, heritage of the Regiment.

Defenders of Wake Island, 1941

Painting by artist Albin Henning shows Marines firing a .30-caliber Browning machine gun as Japanese landing force sailors splash ashore. While inaccurate in details (barbed wire, for example, is an artist's invention because no such obstruction existed at Wake Island, since the coral reef surrounding the atoll was bare of any holding ground for the stakes or anchors necessary to keep them in place), it does capture the desperate nature of the Marines' final day's fighting.

by George Shulsky

Four days before the attack on Pearl Harbor, Captain Henry T. Elrod, Marine Corps pilot, was standing on the deck of the aircraft carrier Hornet, awaiting orders for take-off, with great anticipation. They were to take off for Wake Island. But it was not until the carrier was out at sea for some days that the Marine Air Group 211 learned of their destination.

This tiny atoll in the middle of the vast Pacific Ocean some 2,600 miles from Honolulu, and approximately 2,200 miles to Tokyo, was frantically being turned into "battle stations readiness" as the war clouds loomed ominously in the Western Pacific.

In the early months of 1941, more than 1,200 construction men descended on this island and went to work, with great haste, building a naval air base. A monumental undertaking which took the combined forces of the eight largest U.S. construction companies.

The work proceeded with great speed in spite of the physical hardships the men had to endure under this tropical sun. Installations of every description had to be erected: power plant, machine shops, store houses, living quarters, cold-storage reefers, water distillation plant, mess and sanitation facilities, a whole city had to be constructed from the ground up.

A coral runway, 5,000 feet long and 200 feet wide, with another 1,000-foot parking area was carved out from a tough, waist-high brush.

In October, Major James Devereux arrived on Wake Island to take command of a small detachment of U.S. Marines, some 180 men, and proceeded in constructing defense installations. Their entire arsenal consisted of three 5 inch batteries, of two guns each, and three 5-inch batteries of four guns each, a total of eighteen guns. For ground defense they had twenty-four .50 caliber machine guns for anti-aircraft fire, and thirty .30-caliber for ground defense, plus assorted small arms and plenty of ammunition. This, then, together with slight manpower reinforcement in the last moments, brought the entire fighting force of Wake Island to 378 men.

The work proceeded with great speed under command of Major Devereux, who worked incessantly and inspired his men and even civilian workers, who were not officially recruited to aid the Marines in defense construction. However, they did help the Marines in building revetments and bomb shelters and other vital defense installations.

In the midst of all this activity, Marine Fighting Squadron 211 came down, one by one, on the newly-built runway. They were met by Commander Walter Cunningham, the Naval senior officer on the island, Major Devereux, Mr. Teters, the civilian construction manager, and scores of eager onlookers. The arrival of the Wildcats was nearly upstaged by the landing of twelve huge Navy PBYs a few days earlier, whose mission was to patrol in the vicinity of Wake Island.

The newly arrived squadron settled down to the routine of unpacking and getting the air station into working order. They faced several logistic and technical problems, such as the inability to fit the existing bombs into their bomb racks. With some ingenuity and improvisation, they managed to hook up two 100-pounders to each plane.

In charge of this resourceful Marine squadron was a 38-year-old Iowan, Major Paul A. Putnam, reported to be an excellent pilot but even better organizer. When on 6 December the huge PBYs left as suddenly as they appeared, it was up to the Marine squadron to take up patrolling duties.

As the morning dawned on 8 December on Wake Island, a radio message was picked up of the Pearl Harbor attack. In the usual manner, the Stars and Stripes went up the flag pole during reveille but did not come down until two weeks later when it was taken down by the Japanese invaders.

"Battle stations" was sounded throughout the island sending the Marines to their gun emplacements. The four Wildcats were already in the air on their morning patrol, the remaining eight planes were dispersed on the side of the runway and concealed as much as possible. The civilians went for cover anywhere they could.

At 11:58 a formation of twenty-four twin-engined Japanese bombers appeared low on the horizon, reported lower than 2,000 feet, completely unnoticed by the patrolling Wildcats which circled the island at some 12,000 feet.

Bombs fell on Wake Island's newly-built installations with a devastating result. The Japanese went for all the visible defense and logistic installations first. They apparently knew the location of each installation with great precision. They blasted the fuel dump, hit all the planes on the ground and rained terror throughout the island installations. The raid lasted approximately ten minutes and then it was all over, leaving behind them a scene of total devastation.

When the smoke cleared somewhat, the defenders counted their dead and wounded and their shattered defenses. Of the eight planes on the ground only one was still intact. When the four-plane Wildcat patrol came down after the raid (they did not know of the attack because the ground-air radio was still inoperative), they found the runway cleared of most of the debris but there were many pot holes, and Captain Elrod's plane broke a propeller on landing. As a result of the attack and Elrod's damaged plane, Wake's air force was down to just four serviceable planes.

The Japanese bombers came the next day again, at exactly the same time as the first day. The Wildcat patrol sighted the twenty-seven Japanese bombers south of Wake Island and tore into them with all their ferocity. Flying without a fighter escort, the Japanese bombers relied only on their own guns for defense. The two Wildcats managed to separate one bomber from the formation and sent him flaming into the sea, their first kill. The bombers proceeded to the island objective and delivered their deadly cargo. Again, it was the earth-shattering shock of bombs exploding, clouds of smoke and fires raging throughout the island. After dropping their bombs, the bombers came swooping low and strafed everything in sight. The attack lasted some ten minutes but the devastation was enormous.

The casualties were high. Fifty-five of the civilian workers were either killed or died that day from their wounds. Three of the aviation ground crew had been killed, while in the hospital.

It is due to the excellent record kept by Major Bayler, the Marine Communication Officer, that it is possible to reconstruct in some detail the last days of the Wildcats' valiant stand against great odds.

In his book, Last Man Off Wake Island, Major Bayler tells how in between raids, which seemed like an eternity to the defenders, they busied themselves around assigned tasks and caught moments of rest when they could. "Sometimes," he relates, "if enough of us wanted to, we hitched up a trailer to the reconnaissance car and go careening through the black of the night to Dan Teters' [the civilian construction camp] to see a motion picture show. Sometimes we would have noisy arguments, which we flatteringly termed debates, and in which Hank Elrod always shone. He would toss some provocative statement into the conversation, then defend it tooth-and-nail against criticism and attack. Elrod was a strong, well-built fellow who liked to take his pleasures the hard way. On one occasion, a few days before the first enemy attack, he and a huge, mustachioed gunner, Clarence McKinstry, put on a wrestling match. They went to it, half-naked, on the bare wooden floor, which was plenty rough itself and splintery. Both men emerged with scratches and colorful abrasions from stem to stern."

Elrod and Captain Frank Tharin, another pilot, were very good friends. They always flew the patrol together and developed a highly effective technique of attack based on their teamwork. Tharin called Elrod "Baron," no doubt after the World War I German air ace, and Elrod usually addressed Tharin as "Duke." They were, as Major Bayler called them, the "Damon and Pythias of aviation."

In the early morning of 11 December, under cover of darkness, a Japanese naval task force comprised of some twelve ships approached the island. It was obvious they would attempt to land.

The defenders were ready for anything the Japanese had in store for them. In the dim gray light of dawn, the Wildcats, Elrod and Tharin, dropped low enough to identify a gunboat, several destroyers and a couple of large ships that might have been either troop transports or supply ships. The Japanese task force was closing rapidly on the island. Seeing themselves discovered, the Japanese opened up with anti-aircraft fire. The planes answered with a pair of 100-pound bomb apiece, then turned and headed for the base to re-supply.

Rearmed and refueled, Elrod and Tharin were joined by the two remaining planes flown by Captain Freuler and Major Putnam. The Japanese had no aircraft carrier with their armada, so the Wildcats had only the ship's anti-aircraft to contend with. In his communication tent, Major Bayler could hear fragments of their inter-plane conversation.

"I felt a little like God," he wrote, "listening in remotely to all the languages, and somehow I was possessed by a conviction that God was hearing it, too, with some tolerance and sympathetic understanding …

" 'Hi, Duke! See that big, fat sonofabitch straight ahead?'

" 'I see him. Let's get him.' "

They went after the Japanese convoy with everything they had and managed to hit a cruiser, to their jubilation. Having emptied their guns, and low on fuel, the two pilots came in for a landing. While the planes were being rearmed and refueled, Elrod and Tharin would gulp a cup of coffee and puff on a cigarette.

As the Japanese ships came within the range of Wake Island, the Marines opened up with all their ferocity. While all six shore guns roared in deafening crash, the two Wildcats raced down the pitted runway. Between the guns on land and the two Wildcats in the air, the Japanese were badly crippled, with loss of two destroyers, Kasaragi and Hayate, and three cruisers, Yubari, Tatsuta, and Tenryu, plus a troop transport ship, the Kongo Maru, seriously damaged. Post-war records showed that indeed the troopship Kongo Maru, with some 500 men, never reached the Japanese base in the Marshalls.

If the defenders had anything to cheer about, this was the day indeed. They managed to avert a full-scale enemy invasion, sink enemy ships, and without a single loss of life to themselves.

While the two Wildcats were being refueled and rearmed again, Tharin and Elrod looked fidgety, as if something was on their minds. They finally approached Major Putnam with a request to go after a Japanese cruiser, which they spotted some distance away, and suspected to be the flagship. Attacking a cruiser with two small fighter planes and four 100-pound bombs wasn't exactly according to the manual, but the situation was beyond any tactical books and so Putnam agreed.

"They departed gleefully for the pits, as happy as a pair of office boys going to a ball game," wrote Major Bayler.

The pair roared down the runway and off in pursuit of the Japanese cruiser. The ground crew could hear the two pilots as they exchanged conversation on their intercom. The pair made four separate trips, they dove four times through a hell of anti-aircraft fire and returned untouched. They sprayed the enemy with thousands of rounds of machine gun fire and dropped 16 bombs altogether, of which eight scored direct hits. The Japanese cruiser was ablaze from stem to stern, the flames billowing from her magazine and her crew in confusion and going overboard.

Tharin and Elrod returned to the base unhurt and beaming with joy. They had sunk an enemy cruiser with small bombs and from a land base. They won the second and decisive round against the invading enemy. How-ever, the jubilation did not last as a flotilla of enemy bombers appeared over the island later that day. The exhausted pilots scrambled once again for their planes to meet the enemy in the sky.

The raid was a quick sweep over and back, lasting no more than a few minutes, but to the besieged garrison it seemed like an eternity.

As the ground crew climbed out from their dugouts and shook the dust off themselves, they noticed returning a single Wildcat coming in for a landing, dangerously low, sweeping in from the sea. The plane was in trouble, losing altitude fast with its engines stopped. It could not make it to the airfield, and for a moment it didn't seem as if it would make it to the island at all. The pilot, however, handled the plane beautifully and brought the crippled aircraft onto the beach.

"I recognized Hank Elrod," wrote Major Bayler. "He was quite unhurt, but for a small cut on his right cheek.

"He stood a moment in silence, looking at his plane, then reached out and touched it gently."

Having lost all their aircraft, the pilots and ground crew went up to the unmanned gun position, just behind the flight line facing the southern shore. This was where they were going to make their stand.

Two days before Christmas, a Wake Island lookout reported seeing many flashing lights northeast of the island. Could it be the American task force coming to their rescue, they asked themselves. But as they argued and guessed the lights came closer. The men realized instinctively that it was the Japanese invasion force back for the kill.

With a greatly enlarged force, the Japanese added two aircraft carriers and increased their landing force to 1,500 men. Admiral Kajioka wasn't going to have another embarrassing episode like the one on 11 December; Wake Island had to be captured.

Under the cover of darkness, without even the customary gun battle, the Japanese invasion of some 1,000 men, jam-packed in two converted destroyers, ran on the reef on the south side of the airstrip, just at the precise location where the Marine aviators took up the defense positions. Supported by another gun crew close by, Major Putnam and his crew opened up with everything they had. For a moment this small band of determined and defiant Marines managed to push back several hundred Japanese invaders. For a while it appeared as though the Marines would succeed in turning back this assault and drive the Japanese back to the surf. Unfortunately, the odds were quite against them. They were facing a much greater force than they had imagined; they were outnumbered and out-gunned. The Japanese were already landing at several other points and closing in fast on the defenders.

Dead Japanese soldiers piled up in front of Putnam's little band of defenders but they were still coming out of the darkness of the ocean and charged in a banzai fashion.

Henry Elrod became a fury itself, standing upright and blasting his Tommy gun which broke the charge for a spell. The enemy soldiers fell close enough to touch him. When his Tommy gun failed, he began tossing grenades. At this moment, unseen among the dead, a Japanese soldier crawled in close enough to shoot the big Marine. Captain Henry Elrod fell to the ground still clutching tightly a grenade in his hand.

Appendix

The President of the United States takes pride in presenting the Medal of Honor posthumously to Captain Henry T. Elrod, United States Marine Corps, for service as set forth in the following citation:

For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty while attached to Marine Fighting Squadron 211, during action against enemy Japanese land, surface and aerial units at Wake Island, from 8 to 23 December 1941. Engaging vastly superior forces of enemy bombers and warships on 9 and 12 December, Captain Elrod shot down two of a flight of twenty-two hostile planes and, executing repeated bombing and strafing runs at extremely low altitude and close range, succeeded in inflicting deadly damage upon a large Japanese vessel, thereby sinking the first major warship to be destroyed by small caliber bombs delivered from a fighter-type aircraft. When his plane was disabled by hostile fire and no other ships were operative, Captain Elrod assumed command of one flank of the line set up in defiance of the enemy landing and, conducting a brilliant defense, enabled his men to hold their positions and repulse determined Japanese attacks, repeatedly proceeding through intense hostile fusillades to provide covering fire for unarmed ammunition carriers. Capturing an automatic weapon during one enemy rush in force, he gave his own firearm to one of his men and fought on vigorously against the Japanese. Responsible in a large measure for the strength of his sector's gallant resistance, on 23 December, Captain Elrod led his men with bold aggressiveness until he fell, mortally wounded. His superb skill as a pilot, daring leadership and unswerving devotion to duty distinguished him among the defenders of Wake Island, and his valiant conduct reflects the highest credit upon himself and the United States Naval Service. He gallantly gave his life for his country.

Major Henry T. Elrod, USMC.

 

Aerial photograph of Wake Island taken from a Consolidated PBY patrol plane on 25 May 1941, looking west along the northern side of Wake, with Peale Island in the center and right middle distance and Wilkes Island in the left distance. The views shows civilian Camp Number Two on Wake, the bridge connecting Wake and Peale islands, the Pan American Airways facility on Peale Boeing "Clipper" is docked at the pier and seven PBYs moored to bouys in the lagoon off Peale. (Naval History & Heritage Command U.S. Navy photo 80-G-411160)

Wake’s artillery batteries fought day and night to keep at bay a flotilla of enemy cruisers, destroyers, and transports. (U.S. Marine Corps)

Imperial Japanese Navy destroyer Hayate on trials, circa 1925. Sunk by U.S. Marine Corps gun batteries during the initial defense of Wake Island.

The Japanese destroyer Kisaragi, destroyed by Marine Wildcats in the successful first defense of Wake Island.

Two Japanese naval patrol boats beached during the attack on the island.

A U.S. Marine Corps plane on Wake Island is examined by the Japanese after their capture of the island. The Japanese naval officer nearest the camera seems to be taking a picture. The defenders of the island surrendered after a 15-day siege.

Civilian contractors are marched off to captivity after the Japanese captured Wake. Some, deemed important by the Japanese to finish construction projects, were retained there. Fearing a fifth column rising, the Japanese executed 98 contractors in October 1943, an atrocity for which atoll commander, Rear Adm. Shigematsu Sakaibara, was hanged after the war.

The memorial on Wake Island dedicated to the Marines, Navy, Army and civilians, who defended the island against the overwhelming Japanese invasion force. In October 1943, 98 captured civilian workers were executed by the Japanese.

Wrecked U.S. Marine Corps Grumman F4F-3 Wildcat fighters of Marine Fighting Squadron 211 (VMF-211), photographed by by the Wake Island airstrip sometime after the Japanese captured the island on Dec. 23, 1941. The plane in the foreground, “211-F-11” was flown by Capt. Henry T. Elrod during the Dec. 11 attacks that sank the Japanese destroyer Kisaragi. Damaged beyond repair at that time, “211-F-11” was subsequently used as a source of parts to keep other planes operational. (National Archives photo)

Smiling for the Japanese propaganda cameras some of the Wake island defenders, now POWs aboard the transport ship Nitta Maru. Commander Winfield Scott Cunningham, seated in the dark uniform would be awarded the Navy Cross for his leadership. (National Archives)

Vice Adm. William S. Pye, whose decision to abandon the relief of Wake Island was never forgiven by the U.S. Marine Corps. (National Archives photo)

Aerial of Wake Island at the height of the attack by U.S. carrier-based planes and ship bombardment on October 5-6, 1943. A fire burns near the airfield while in the foreground are the remains of a Japanese ship that was beached after being hit in December 1941 by Marines defending the base when it fell to the invading Japanese. (Naval History & Heritage Command 80-G-85197)

Col Walter L. J. Bayler, reputedly "the last Marine off Wake" in December 1941, is the first to set foot on the island in 1945. (Department of Defense Photo USMC 133688)

Defense Installations on Wake, 8-23 December 1941. (USMC)