Battle of Tinian
Part of the Mariana and Palau Islands campaign of the Pacific Theater (World War II)

U.S. Marines wading ashore on Tinian.
Date24 July – 1 August 1944
(1 week and 1 day)
Location
Result American victory
Belligerents
 United States  Japan
Commanders and leaders
Harry Schmidt
Richmond K. Turner
Thomas E. Watson
Clifton B. Cates
Kiyochi Ogata 
Kakuji Kakuta 
Goichi Oie 
Units involved

V Amphibious Corps

Additional Support units

31st Army

  • 29th Infantry Division
    • 50th Inf. Regiment
Additional Support units
Strength
41,364 Marines[1]:34 8,039[1]:89
Casualties and losses
Marines:[2]
(As of 1 Aug.)
368 battle deaths
1,921 wounded[3]
Navy/Ships personnel:
Organic to Marine units:
26 battle deaths
40 wounded
Ships personnel:[4]
63 killed
177 wounded
5,745 dead
(buried 15 Aug.)[5]

404 prisoners (10 Aug.)[6]
Remaining stragglers later died or were captured.
Up to 4,000 Japanese civilians killed (including many suicides)[1]:89
Marines liberating Tinian Island
Marines investigate a Japanese tank knocked out of action.
A wrecked Japanese plane in a hangar on Tinian Island, 30 July 1944

The Battle of Tinian was a battle of the Pacific campaign of World War II, fought on the island of Tinian in the Mariana Islands from 24 July until 1 August 1944. The 8,000-man Japanese garrison was eliminated, and the island joined Saipan and Guam as a base for the Twentieth Air Force.[1]:72

Background

Map of the battle

A two-prong attack through the Central Pacific and the Philippines was adopted at the 1943 Cairo Conference.[1]:8 Operation Granite II was a U.S. Navy devised strategy of island hopping, calling for the seizure of Saipan, Tinian and Guam.[1]:8 The Gilbert and Marshall Islands had been seized by the summer of 1944, while some Japanese garrisons were left to starve.[1]:7 Following the conclusion of the Battle of Saipan on 9 July, the US began preparations for attacking nearby Tinian.

Tinian was part of Japan's South Seas Mandate. By June 1944, it had a population of 15,700 Japanese civilians, including 2,700 ethnic Koreans and 22 ethnic Chamorro. The Japanese defending the island, the 50th Infantry Regiment, which was originally part of 29th Division, were commanded by Colonel Kiyochi Ogata.[1]:31 On 12 May 1943 there were also 2,349 marines of the 3rd Special Base Force (第 3 特別 根 地 隊, Dai-3 Tokubetsu Konkyochitai) and 950 marines of the 56th Naval Guards, who had been transferred there from Truk. These soldiers were under the command of Captain Goichi Oie. The naval forces took over the defense of the airfields, as they belonged to the facilities of naval aviation. The Japanese naval troops also took over all the heavy artillery guns around the airfields and the 39 heavy anti-aircraft guns, which were set up directly around the slopes. In addition, there were construction crews, flight technicians and staff, for a total of about 4,110 soldiers of various units defending the airfields. Vice Admiral Kakuji Kakuta, commander of First Air Fleet, was headquartered in Manila but was on Tinian on an inspection tour when the invasion started. Kakuta exercised no command authority over the army troops on the island, and the naval troops were not subject to his direct command.[1]:31[7]

The US naval bombardment commenced on 16 July with three battleships, five cruisers and sixteen destroyers.[1]:75 The battleship Colorado and the destroyer Norman Scott were both hit by 150mm Japanese shore batteries. Colorado was hit 22 times, killing 43 men and wounding 198. Norman Scott was hit six times, killing the captain, Seymore Owens, and 18 of his seamen plus wounding 47.[1]:76

Battle

The 4th Marine Division landed on 24 July 1944, supported by naval bombardment and Marine artillery firing across the strait from Saipan.[1]:72 With the help of the Seabees, the Marines were able to land along the northwest coast with its two small beaches and low coral.[8] The rest of the island had coral cliffs up to 15 feet (4.6 m) high at the water's edge, negating any assault plans.

Commodore Paul J. Halloran, Seabee theater commander, provided drawings of a conceptual landing ramp for the 18th and 121st Construction Battalions to fabricate.[9] To construct these ramps, the plans called for the Seabees to mount steel beams salvaged from Saipan's abandoned sugar mill on LVT-2s. If they worked they would allow the Marines to outflank Tinian's prepared defenses. General Harry Schmidt was skeptical and ordered that the ramps be put through a 100-vehicle use test. The Seabee creation was named a Doodlebug.[9] It worked exactly as the Marines had hoped.[9] A successful feint for the major settlement of Tinian town diverted defenders from the actual landing site on the north of the island.[1]:76 The feint withstood a series of night counterattacks supported by tanks, and the 2nd Marine Division landed the next day.[1]:80

One of the "Satan" M3 Stuarts brought over from Saipan.

Another piece of Seabee handiwork was brought across from Saipan: the 24 "Satan" mechanized flamethrowers that Marine General Holland Smith had requested from the Army's Chemical Warfare Service Flame Tank Group in Hawaii. The terrain on Tinian was much more conducive to their use than Saipan.[10] Saipan and Tinian served as training grounds for the tank crews and proving grounds for the Marine Corps.

The weather worsened on 28 July, damaging the pontoon causeways and interrupting the unloading of supplies.[1]:81 By 29 July the Americans had captured half the island, and on 30 July the 4th Marine Division occupied Tinian town and the airfield.[1]:81

Japanese remnants made a final stand in the caves and ravines of a limestone ridge on the south portion of the island, making probes and counterattacks into the Marine lines.[1]:85 Resistance continued through 3 August, with some civilians murdered by the Japanese.[1]:87

Aftermath

By 10 August 1944, 13,000 Japanese civilians were interned, but up to 4,000 were dead through suicide, murdered by Japanese troops, or killed in combat.[1]:89 The garrison on Aguiguan Island off the southwest cape of Tinian, commanded by Lieutenant Kinichi Yamada, held out until the end of the war, surrendering on 4 September 1945. The last holdout on Tinian, Murata Susumu, was captured in 1953.[11]

After the battle, Tinian became an important base for further US operations in the Pacific campaign. Camps were built for 50,000 troops. Fifteen thousand Seabees turned the island into the busiest airfield of the war, with six 7,900-foot (2,400 m) runways for attacks by United States Army Air Forces B-29 Superfortress bombers on enemy targets in the Philippines, the Ryukyu Islands, and mainland Japan, including the 9/10 March 1945 Operation Meetinghouse firebombing of Tokyo and the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.[1]:89 North Field became operational in February 1945 and West Field and became operational in March 1945.[1]:89

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 Rottman, Gordon L. & Gerrard, Howard (2004). Saipan & Tinian 1944: Piercing the Japanese Empire. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 1841768049.
  2. History of U.S. Marine Corps Operations in World War II: Central Pacific Drive Appendix H, p. 636. Retrieved 24 February 2023
  3. Due to WWII casualty collection methodology, a "substantial" portion of whose who died of wounds—65 in total—were "double counted" as wounded.
  4. Commander Joint Expeditionary Force (Commander Amphibious Forces, U.S. Pacific Fleet); United States Navy, Pacific Fleet Task Force 51 (25 August 1944). "Report of amphibious operations for the capture of the Marianas Islands (Forager Operation)". p. 266. Retrieved 24 February 2023. This is the report concerning the major amphibious features of the operations of Task Force 51 (Joint Expeditionary Force) for the capture of the Marianas. The enclosures comprise a narrative of the operation, and a series of comments on certain technical matters which may be of interest in connection with future operations. The report includes in some detail the operations of Task Force 52 during the Occupation Phase of Saipan, and in less detail the operations of other task forces for the capture of Tinian and Guam. The reports of commanders of Task Forces 52 (No. 2), 53 and 56, and of various task group and unit and ship commanders may be expected to set forth details of the operations of their forces.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  5. As of 1 August, 2,683 Japanese dead were buried.
  6. "Enclosure "A," Annex 3". Report on the Capture of the Marianas. 25 August 1944. p. 2. Retrieved 24 February 2023.
  7. Klemen, L. (1999–2000). "Rear-Admiral Kakaji Kakuta". Forgotten Campaign: The Dutch East Indies Campaign 1941–1942. Archived from the original on 25 March 2012. Retrieved 1 June 2011.
  8. "doodlebug « U.S. Navy Seabee Museum".
  9. 1 2 3 The Doodlebug, Naval History and Heritage Command, U.S. Navy Seabee Museum webpage, Port Hueneme, Ca,
  10. The Fires of Hell, Tank Encyclopedia online, Mark Nash, 2018, tanks-encyclopedia.com
  11. "Registry". No Surrender Japanese Holdouts.

References

Further reading


15°00′N 145°38′E / 15.000°N 145.633°E / 15.000; 145.633

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