THE RIGHT TO FIGHT: African-American Marines in World War II
by Bernard C. Nalty
Combat Service Support
By the spring of 1943, the Marine Corps discovered a
need for full-time stevedores within the logistics system that channeled
supplies from factories and warehouses in the United States, through
rear area and forward support bases, over the beaches, to the Marines
fighting their way inland. To provide the missing segment of the supply
line, the Marine Corps organized two kinds of units, depot companies and
ammunition companies. Their comparatively compact size companies
rather than battalions meant that the new organizations could be
formed and trained rapidly and deployed in numbers that corresponded to
the size of the amphibious forces being supported.
According to Edgar Huff, whose wartime assignments
included first sergeant of a depot company, the new units consisted
largely of recruits who had just returned from the rifle range. He
conceded, however, that "all they needed was a strong back . . . to load
and unload ships and haul ammunition to the line for the fighting
troops"; further training might vary from a few weeks for the depot
companies to a couple of months for the ammunition outfits. Black
Marines assigned to the ammunition companies in part, perhaps,
because of the longer training and the danger inherent in handling
explosives tended to develop noticeably higher morale, along with
sound discipline and a strong sense of purpose.
White officers led both kinds of units, with black
noncommissioned officers ultimately taking over in the depot companies
from first sergeant downward. In contrast, the ammunition companies had
white noncommissioned officers down to the level of buck sergeant. The
fuzes and shells handled by the ammunition companies required
noncommissioned officers with technical knowledge and the ability to use
this knowledge in enforcing safety rules, but in the midst of war the
Marine Corps felt it did not have time to train inexperienced blacks for
these duties and relied instead on previously trained whites. Because
Marine Corps policy forbade a black platoon sergeant, for example, from
giving orders to a junior noncommissioned officer who was white, the
highest ranking African-American in an ammunition company could be only
a buck sergeant, while the senior enlisted ranks remained exclusively
white. The mess sergeant, who had no white cooks working for him,
enjoyed the status of a staff noncommissioned officer, but he could not
join the clubs available to whites of comparable rank, a source of
annoyance to black enlisted men.
Although the Marine Corps envisioned these combat
service support units as a source of labor, and the two defense
battalions as combat outfits, wartime reality proved far different. The
combat battalions fired not even a dozen rounds at what may have been a
Japanese submarine, and their combat consisted of a few months of patrol
action against surviving Japanese on the captured island of Guam. The
depot and ammunition companies, however, saw savage fighting on the
battlefields of Saipan, Tinian, Guam, Peleliu, Iwo Jima, and Okinawa.
The combat service units suffered most of the casualties among
African-American Marines, who had seven of their number killed in
action, two dead of wounds, 78 wounded in action, and nine victims of
combat fatigue.
The 1st Marine Depot Company, the first of 51 such
units, was activated on 8 March 1943 under Captain Jason M. Austin, Jr.,
assisted by two other officers. The initial enlisted complement
consisted of nine white noncommissioned officers, who would serve only
until blacks replaced them, 100 privates fresh from boot camp at
Montford Point, and one African-American assistant cook, Ulysses J.
Lucas, for a total of 110. Finding the necessary black noncommissioned
officers proved so difficult that whites accompanied some of the depot
companies over seas and remained with them until replacements became
available, through either promotion or transfers from other black
outfits.
The 1st Marine Ammunition Company was formed at
Montford Point on 1 October 1943 under 2d Lieutenant Placido A. Gomez.
This unit, as the 11 that followed, consisted of eight officers and 251
enlisted men, the latter including specialists not available from the
pool of black Marines at Montford Point, and had its own trucks, jeeps,
and trailers for hauling ammunition. Because their job was considered
more dangerous than the work of the depot companies, the ammunition
companies trained for two months instead of three weeks. Some of the
black noncommissioned officers underwent instruction in camouflage or
the rudiments of ammunition handling, but only whites had the training
or experience to fill the billets requiring higher-ranking
technicians.
Although the organization of the ammunition companies
remained essentially unchanged, the depot companies added a third
platoon during the summer of 1943, increasing the aggregate strength to
four officers and 162 enlisted men. In both types of units, the Marines
carried rifles, carbines, or submachine guns, but had no mortars or
machine guns. Between October 1943, when Lieutenant Gomez assumed
command of the 1st Marine Ammunition Company, and September 1944, when
the 12th and last of these units came into existence, Montford Point
organized one ammunition company and two depot companies each month. The
Marine Corps continued to form depot companies, with the last four
the 46th, 47th, 48th, and 49th being organized in October
1945, a month after the war had ended. The anomaly in numbers, 51
companies but the highest number being the 49th Marine Depot Company,
resulted from the organization of two 5th and two 6th Marine Depot
Companies. The first pair went overseas in August 1943, provided
reinforcements for previously deployed units so that each could add the
authorized fourth platoon, and afterward disbanded.
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The
Marine Ammunition Companies and Marine Depot Companies helped deposit
cargo on the beach, as at Iwo Jima, and move the supplies to the Marines
fighting their way inland. They often were inserted into the front lines
as riflemen. Department of Defense Photo (USMC) 111947
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Three weeks after its organization, the 1st Marine
Depot Company boarded a train for the three-day journey to the West
Coast. A veteran of a subsequent transcontinental deployment told of his
company boarding a "sealed" train that stopped only for maintenance or
emergencies. The Marines on board subsisted on rations loaded at
Montford Point. Cars were crowded, toilets few, and showers
non-existent. A fastidious few tried to take sponge baths. Every one,
however, had to shave every day or endure the consequences of the
appearance of stubble: whatever number of push-ups a noncommissioned
officer might demand.
The 1st Marine Depot Company arrived at San Diego on
5 April 1943, and according to the base newspaper, put on a
"demonstration of close order drill that left observers gaping." On 16
April, the unit sailed for Noumea, New Caledonia, the initial
destination of the first five depot companies dispatched to the Pacific.
The organizations soon deployed to the Solomon and Russell Islands to
support operations in the South Pacific and Central Pacific. The 2d and
4th Marine Ammunition Companies also arrived in the Solomons to prepare
for future action.
Meanwhile, the Hawaiian Islands became a principal
staging area for the thrust across the Central Pacific, and the 1st and
3d Marine Ammunition Companies went directly there. Also in Hawaii were
five depot companies, including two that had spent nine months in
Funafuti in the Ellice group, loading supplies destined for the fighting
in the Gilbert and Marshall Islands, early objectives of the Central
Pacific offensive. The combat support companies sent to the Hawaiian
Islands arrived there in time to help load the ships that carried the 2d
and 4th Marine Divisions to Saipan and to join the shore parties in
unloading and distributing car go at the objective.
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