THE RIGHT TO FIGHT: African-American Marines in World War II
by Bernard C. Nalty
The 52d Defense Battalion
The second of the two African American defense
battalions took shape beginning on 15 December 1943 and rested firmly on
a foundation supplied by the first. Colonel Augustus W. Cockrell,
commanding officer of the 52d Defense Battalion, benefited from the
cadre of 400 officers and men transferred from Colonel Stephenson's 51st
Defense Battalion before it left Montford Point. These men, familiar
with equipment and procedures after three to six months with the 51st,
enabled the 52d to avoid using on-the-job trainees as technicians and
rapidly promoting men fresh from boot camp.
Like Woods, Stephenson, and LeGette, Cockrell was a
Southerner, a native of Florida. He had enlisted in the Marines in 1918
and received a commission four years later. He had recently returned
from the South Pacific, where he commanded the 2d and 8th Defense
Battalions in Samoa and on Wallis Island. As time passed, Cockrell
apparently won the affection of his noncommissioned officers, who
respectfully called him "Old Gus," though not within his hearing.
In February 1944, the 52d Defense Battalion moved
into the old CCC barracks at Camp Knox, which the last of Stephenson's
men had just vacated. The 7th Separate Pack Howitzer Battery, organized
originally as a component of the 51st Defense Battalion according to
since-rescinded tables of organization, disbanded in March 1944, and the
men joined Cockrell's command, providing an other infusion of
experience. A change to the tables of organization and equipment
deprived the battalion in June 1944 of its seacoast artillery. Men from
that component transferred to the Heavy Antiaircraft Group and formed a
fourth 90mm battery. At the same time, the Light Antiaircraft Group
(formerly the Special Weapons Group) substituted 40mm guns for its
lighter weapons.
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Black Marines practice climbing down a cargo net rigged
in the swimming pool at Montford Point, developing an essential skill
for amphibious warfare operations. National Archives Photo 127-N-8725
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The command structure of both the battalion and the
Montford Point Camp underwent change during July. Lieutenant Colonel
Joseph W. Earnshaw, a native of Kansas and a graduate of the Naval
Academy, arrived after duty at the Navy's Bureau of Ordnance in
Washington, D.C., and took over the 52d Defense Battalion. Cockrell
thereupon reported to camp headquarters as the designated replacement
for Colonel Woods.
The first task that Earnshaw faced was a move to the
Pacific Coast. The 52d Defense Battalion, instead of loading its heavy
gear on trains as the 51st had done, turned in its trucks, antiaircraft
guns, and other such equipment and divided into two groups. Earnshaw
commanded one and entrusted the other to his executive officer,
Lieutenant Colonel Thomas C. Moore, Jr., who hailed from Georgia and had
commanded the 3d Defense Battalion on Guadalcanal in the Solomon
Islands. The two contingents traveled on the same train to Camp
Pendleton, California, to make final preparations for deployment to the
islands of the Pacific.
The battalion arrived at Camp Pendleton on 24 August
1944, and on 21 September both components boarded the attack transport
USS Winged Arrow (AP 170), which brought them to Pearl Harbor and
thence to the Marshall Islands, where they took over from antiaircraft
units already in place. One half of the divided battalion, the part that
Moore led, landed at Majuro Atoll to protect Marine Aircraft Group 13
based there. The other, under Earnshaw, helped defend Roi and the
adjacent island of Namur in Kwajalein Atoll, where Marine Aircraft Group
31 was located. For six months, October 1944 to March 1945, the
battalion guarded against possible forays by increasingly feeble
Japanese air power and, at Majuro, formed reconnaissance parties that
boarded landing craft to search the smaller islands for Japanese and
remove the natives from harm's way.
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"Hashmark" Johnson, shown posing with the mascot of the
Montford Point Camp, became sergeant major of the 52d Defense Battalion
on Guam in July 1945.
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Lieutenant Colonel David W. Silvey, who had reported
to Montford Point in May 1944 from the 6th Defense Battalion at Midway
Island, replaced Earnshaw at Kwajalein on 10 January 1945. When the two
halves of the battalion reunited on the recaptured island of Guam on 4
May 1945, Moore, who was senior to Silvey, assumed command. At Guam, the
unit formed a part of the island's garrison.
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