Beach on Iwo flaming hell, wounded say
100 victims flown to Pearl Harbor
NAVAL HOSPITAL, Pearl Harbor (UP) – Iwo’s beach was “a mess” … “a blazing blur” … “a flaming hell” …
Those impressions, along with unforgettable memories of American heroism, were carried today by first combat casualties from Iwo as they tested here en route home in flying Army ambulances.
More than 100 Marine, Navy and Seabee wounded, who were hurt in the first day and a half after the landing, arrived yesterday from Guam to where they first had been evacuated.
Torrent of Jap fire
A Marine public relations officer from Ohio grinned from his hospital cot as he told of the torrent of artillery, mortar, rocket and small arms fire that poured down on the first waves to hit the Iwo beaches.
Mortar fire had broken his leg. He stayed all night in a foxhole under heavy fire and finally was evacuated to Guam after one landing craft was sunk under him on the way to the hospital ship.
He said:
The beach was a mess when we landed. We could see that something was wrong. Tanks, barges and supplies were piled up on the shore and men were trying to dig in with their bare hands.
The Japs were raking the beach furiously from Mt. Suribachi and from a quarry to the north. Everybody was pinned down.
Cigar between teeth
The bravest man I saw was a young Marine about 19 with a carbine slung over his shoulder and a big cigar clamped between his teeth. He leaped out of his foxhole every time a barge landed to haul supplies forward with a tractor while hell whistled around him.
One 5th Division Marine from Staten Island, New York, had difficulty recalling his impression of the landing.
“I got mine from mortars within 10 minutes after landing. Iwo was just a blazing blur to me,” he said.
Another Staten Island Marine, veteran of the Tinian and Saipan invasions, said:
It was a Jap rocket that got me. You can’t hear them or see them coming your way like you can the mortars. Two 1,000-pound rocket bombs landed among a bunch of corpsmen and doctors and a third one got me five hours after the landings.
Japs from all sides
A Marine captain from Texas said:
Jap fire seemed to come from all sides – before, behind and above – as I moved up with the men.
I saw three Marines and three Japs pegging grenades back and forth from a foxhole just a few yards apart during one lull. The Marines must have won because I saw them move up later.