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2 July, 1944

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Calhoun's Diary: |
Fresh eggs mixed with
dehydrated eggs, salt pork, and bread for breakfast. Of course we
always had coffee for breakfast. Bread was seldom available, so it was
always a treat. Inspection this morning. Salmon patties, dehydrated
potatoes, bread, and rice pudding for lunch. |
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Lt. McRoberts
briefed the company officers at 1430 using a sand table.
The mission is
Noemfoor Island. Enemy strength at 2800, 1600 are combat troops, and they
may be reinforced by a battalion from Manokwari only 70 miles across the bay
and possibly by some troops escaping from Biak by barge at night.
This last
source of information did not make sense. The reason that it became
necessary to take Noemfoor Island, code name is Table Tennis, was that the
Japs were using this island as a staging point to send reinforcements to Biak. That was the basis for the operation, code name Cyclone. Biak was
proving to be a hard nut to crack, and the issue was still in doubt. The
reinforcing of the Biak defenders had to be stopped.
Our battalion goes in
D+3, Wednesday, 5 July. The Bn jump order will be: F Co, first;
Bn Hq Co, second; D Co, third; and E Co, last. Jump masters in F Co by
plane will be: #1, Lt. McRoberts; “2, Lt. Miller; #3, Lt. LaVanchure; #4,
Lt. Brock; #5, Lt. Clyde; #6, Lt. Flash; #7, Lt. Calhoun. The company
officers at this time were: 1st Lt. McRoberts,
CO; 1st Lt. Tom Clyde, Ex. O; 2nd Lt. William Calhoun, 1st platoon ldr; 2nd
Lt. Edward Flash, 2nd platoon ldr; 1st Lt. William LaVanchure, 3rd platoon ldr; 2nd Lt. Emory Ball, ass’t
1st platoon ldr; 2nd Lt. Charles Attmore, ass’t
2nd platoon ldr; and 2nd Lt. Sidney Brock, ass’t 3rd platoon ldr. Lt. Col.
John Britten, Bn CO; Capt. Lawson Caskey, Bn Ex O.
The 3d
platoon will secure the area. The 2nd platoon will be the advance
party. The 1st platoon will be the assault platoon. The mission
will be given about 30 minutes after we assemble. The assembly area is 100
yards from point 2 near the middle of the strip. Intelligence men will mark
the Bn assembly area at point 2 with yellow smoke. As soon as a platoon is
assembled the platoon leader will notify the company commander by SCR 536
stating that the platoon is assembled and give the number of known injured
men and the missing men.
Flying time
from Hollandia to Noemfoor is two and one half to two and three quarters
hours. There will be a time interval of ten minutes from the time we
pass over the strip until we circle to the “Go” point. With the 1st
battalion jumping D+1 and the third battalion jumping D+2 the jumping
procedures should be well refined. The landing area is the coral strip the
Japs constructed at Kamiri Airdrome. This sounds like a pretty hard surface
to land upon.
The big worry
is bombing by the Japs. There are 139 bombers and 260 fighters at Halmahera,
Sarong, and Manokwari. Within six hours are an additional 100 bombers and
100 fighters. This report evidently does not take into account that our air
forces had decimated the Jap air force.
Our
Naval support consists of one heavy cruiser, five destroyers, and a number
of submarines.
Noemfoor is approximately 18 miles long, north-south, and 12 miles wide.
There are a number of good trails. Highest point is a mountain 670 feet.
General slope is to the west. There are streams along the coast and many
swamps around the streams and bays. The interior is heavy rain forest.
Predesignated points on the map will be used in describing positions. Use
approximate distances in yards directly from the nearest point.
Jump casualties will be given first aid treatment by aid men. The aid men
will then join the platoon to which they are assigned. If jumpers are
missing do not look for them. Regimental HQ Co and Service Co will be
searching for and salvaging bundles and containers. They will find missing
jump casualties.
Namber strip to the south on the west coast is serviceable. Kornasoren Strip
to the west is an emergency strip under construction. The strip we jump on,
Kamari, is on the northwest corner of the island.
Men will dig in as soon
as we move into a position for the night. Distances from Hollandia to:
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Noemfoor
Island
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415 miles |
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Japan Island |
275 miles |
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Halmahera |
850 miles |
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Sarong |
670 miles |
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Manakwari |
475 miles |
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2 JULY, 1944 |
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From 0800 the enemy opened fire. Two cruisers, 8 destroyers and
several PT boats. The noise of the gun fire was terrible. With the
shipping and planes combined, it is terrible. Our Imperial Army, however
remains calm. |
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Source: Diary taken from
KIA, 7
August 1944 near BAWE |
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EQUIPMENT FOR JUMP
1.
All combat equipment.
2.
Musette Bag:
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a.
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Poncho |
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b. |
Mosquito head net |
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c. |
Rations |
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d. |
Mosquito repellant, extra bottle |
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e. |
Salt tablets, extra |
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f. |
Waterproof food and clothing bag |
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g. |
2
pair socks |
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h. |
Cleaning and preserving equipment |
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i. |
Leather gloves |
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j. |
Pair of coveralls |
3.
Barracks bags will be tagged with men’s name, rank, and serial number plus
his organization. The bags will be stacked in the mess tent. A duplicate
tag will be placed in the barracks bag. All equipment not being jumped will
be placed in barracks bags.
4.
Rations to carry on jump:
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a. |
One
can of C Rations with B unit can. |
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b. |
One
D Bar. |
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c. |
One
tenth of a 10-In-One Ration. |
5.
APO is #704. This is the same APO we had at Port Moresby.
6.
Jump list will be made out in triplicate. One list will go to the Bn
Adjutant, one will go to the pilot or crew chief, and one will be retained
by the jumpmaster.
7.
Jump masters in "F" Co by plane will
be:
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#1: |
Lt. McRoberts |
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#2: |
Lt. Miller |
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#3: |
Lt. LaVanchure |
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#4: |
Lt. Brock |
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#5: |
Lt. Clyde |
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#6: |
Lt. Flash |
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#7: |
Lt. Calhoun |
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3 July, 1944

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15:00
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"Flash! - The 2nd Bn will prepare to be able to
leave for Cyclops Airdome at
04:00 hr. Barracks bags will be turned in to R.S.O.
immediately after supper and parachutes drawn. Jungle hammocks will be
rolled in bundles of 20, properly tagged, and will be dropped to us by
resupply, C rations, "D" bars and “10 and 1” will be issued to Co.’s, and
broken down to individuals. Rations for one day will be jumped on
person. |
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18:45 |
Flash No. 2 for the day. We will revert to original plan. 3rd Bn move
out at
04:00
hr., July 4th. The Bn. jungle hammocks have been
struck, barracks bags begun to be transported to R.S.O. and camp in general
struck. I have heard bitching but the reaction to the news that the
move is off ‘till July 5th tied the best of it.
Instead of
03:00 hr reveille will be at
07:15
hr tomorrow." |
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Calhoun's Diary |
Reports from Noemfoor are that the landing field is clear. Heavy resistance
is being encountered in the hill. Jump altitude is 450 feet.
News
has come down that we will jump tomorrow, 4 July. This would be a good
day to jump, the biggest Fourth we ever had.
We packed our stuff into barracks bags and took them to the
Bn mess tent. After everything was stowed there word came that they
had moved our jump back to the 5th. We took our barracks bags back to
our area and set up for the night. |
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4 July, 1944

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S-1 Journal, 2d
Bn.
4
July, 1944
08:00
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"There will
be one change in Bn. plan of jumping. Instead of flying in groups of two,
echeloned to right rear, the planes will fly in line. The 1st Bn had 51
casualties using the echelon right formation, because of the narrow jump
field." |
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09:00 |
"Lt. Phelan’s
plane conked out this morning, and just made it back to Cyclops Strip with
the one operating motor smoking. Lt. Phelan and his group of 17 3rd
Bn. men will jump with the 2nd Bn tomorrow. 32 planes will jump the 2nd
Bn., with one extra for Lt. Phelan.”
When we went from Biak to Noemfoor,
Phelan was on the "F" Company LCI. |
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"Barracks
bags turned in again along with jungle hammocks, chutes drawn again,
Battalion packed 49 bundles to be dropped. There was one bundle for each
rifle company, 42 bundles for battalion headquarters company, and four Red
Cross supply bundles. Breakfast was to be at 0300, load trucks at 04:00."
Trucks were numbered to correspond to the plane numbers.
If you were to fly and jump from plane number 17, then you would load
in truck number 17. |
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22:00 |
“Flash No. ?
- The 2n Bn
will not jump tomorrow."
The high percentage of casualties in the 1st &
3d
Bn caused by landing on the coral and cement-like mud of Kamiri Strip
prompted higher HQ’s to cancel our jump. The only places near suitable for
a jump area are Noemfoor’s three air strips which were all the same
composition. The ground here proved a bit tougher than the 'chutists. The 3
strips are swaths cut out of rainforest, which reaches up to 125 ft. high. |
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22:00 |
"Breakfast
will be at the regular time tomorrow morning." |
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Calhoun's Diary |
Cream of wheat
and dehydrated eggs for breakfast. About 1000 we packed up again and moved
everything to the storage tent again. Salmon patties for lunch. After
lunch drew our chutes and adjusted them. Many wrote letters, but we cannot
mail them until we reach Noemfoor. Morale is high. Everyone appears eager
to go tomorrow. Junk for supper. Most of us went to an engineering unit
nearby and saw the movie “The Navy Way”.
The paratroopers
jump in jump suits with web belts and suspenders, machete, entrenching
tool, ammo, and grenades. Riflemen carry 128 rounds. Rifle
grenadiers carry fragmentation and anti-tank rifle grenades. BAR
gunners jump with their BAR and 280 rounds of .30 cal ammo. The
assistant BAR gunner carries an M1 carbine with 105 rounds of ammo plus
280 rounds of BAR ammo. The BAR ammo bearer carries an M1 rifle with 128
rounds of ammo plus 280 rounds of BAR ammo. Each jumper carries two
hand grenades. One canteen is carried on the web belt. The
musette bag is carried in the parachute kitbag which hangs down in front
below the reserve chute. All of this, with a steel helmet, makes a
heavy load.
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4 July, 1944
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Commenced to move position. Entered the former FUHADA unit
quarters. Enemy naval gun fire is accurate. This afternoon, the enemy
made their first appearance in KANASI gardens. NISHIKA’s Battalion
immediately initiated attack, but failed. Major KONORI and his men
carried out successful night attack. Majority of men were killed
during the charge. Detachment headquarters and other forces began
night march. Naval gun fire is pursuing our movement.
Situation is grave.
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Source: Diary taken from body of enemy as five Japanese
soldiers fell in vicinity of MENUPURI. |
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5 July, 1944

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08:00
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The 2nd Bn
will turn their chutes in to R.S.O. , and draw jungle hammocks and barracks
bags. We are standing by for further orders.
The belief is we will land on
Kamiri Strip in C-47, or go to Noemfoor by LST. Anything would seem
plausible after four changes in two days. |
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10:00 |
"Camp is
again completely set up, awaiting what may come." |
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Calhoun's Diary |
Sausage,
bread, and jam for breakfast - great. Waited all morning. Just sitting and
waiting. What is going on? We are supposed to be jumping this morning.
The lunch was poor. Waited all afternoon. Dark came and we went to the
engineers’ movie again. The movie was "Andy Hardy’s Double Life”. Good smoko tonight. Everyone brought out what they had stashed away. |
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5 July, 1944
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Enemy planes flew over at low altitude chiefly to reconnoiter.
At
night, discussion was held as to future plans with Detachment Commander in
charge.
Decided to remain alive as long as possible and to hamper any enemy
movements. |
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Source: Diary taken from body of enemy as five Japanese
soldiers fell in vicinity of MENUPURI. |
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6 July, 1944

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08:00 |
"Still no
news from Reg’t. Hq. or the 1st & 3rd Bn’s that jumped on
Noemfoor. Improvement of camp and retention of combat gear at high
efficiency occupied day. |
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08:00 |
"No change." |
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09:10
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"Flash! - 2nd Bn will
be prepared to move from Ebli’s
Plantation tomorrow. We will go by C-47 planes to
Biak, and from there take LCI’s to Noemfoor. Barracks
bags, hammocks, and complete kitchen equipment will be taken. Particulars
will be issued later." |
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16:00 |
"Breakfast at
03:00
hr. tomorrow. Entruck at 04:00 hr in order of Hq, D,E,F for transportation
to Sentani Drome and Cyclops Dromw: 2 Co’s per drome.
Bn Hq
will have eight planes, each line Co, seven: A corresponding number of
trucks has been assigned to each
Co.
We are due in
Biak
Is. tomorrow, 8th at Mokmer Strip. From there we go under Navy
control for transport to Noemfoor by LCI on the 10th, giving the
Bn. one day on
Biak."
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Calhoun's Diary:
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Pancakes for
breakfast. Pancakes are considered a good breakfast as long as something
sweet is served with them. C Rations, biscuits, and canned fruit for
lunch. Inspection at 1300. We’re just hanging in limbo. Soup made from
the gallon cans of C Rations and fruit, canned. The show at the engineers
tonight, “They Got Me Covered” |
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7 July, 1944

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Calhoun's Diary: |
Pancakes,
sugar and water syrup, and salt bacon. A good breakfast. Mail going out
again, so the officers had mail censoring duty. This was probably the most
hated by the junior officers of all their duties.
We
found out that jump casualties were so heavy in the 1st and 3rd
battalion that they cancelled our jump. We fly to
Biak
tomorrow morning. From there we will be transported by boat to
Noemfoor Island. We hear there has not been much action on
Noemfoor. They cannot find the 2800 Japs. Of course our Battalion is
saying that we’ll just have to go find them.
Bully
beef patties, bread, apricots, and synthetic lemonade for lunch. Heavy
rains started at 1400. We stayed in our jungle hammocks much of the
afternoon. The show tonight was very poor, “Jam Session”. We get up at
0245, eat at 0300, and leave at 0400. We are carrying our barracks bags
with us. Had a smoko and went to bed.
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8 July, 1944

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S-1 Journal, 2d
Bn.
8
July, 1944
0300 |
"Breakfast at
03:00 hr entrucked at
04:00
for move to airdrome. Hq & "D" went to Sentani Drome, "E" & "F" to Cyclops." |
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06:45 |
"Weather
closed in at Hollandia. Will sweat it out in planes until take off time." |
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09:00 |
"Weather at
Biak
is “5”, or visibility zero. If it doesn’t clear by 13:00, it will be too late to take off.”
This is
incorrect in part. As explained above "F" Company did depart from Cyclops
Strip and made it to Biak. |
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1300 |
"Weather
still bad. Personnel will spend nite in plane or under it, prepare for
early take off tomorrow." |
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Calhoun's Diary: |
"F" Co. and "E" Co.
went to Cyclops Drome. Bn Hq. Co. and "D" Co. went to Sentani Drome. F Co.
left at 0730 in heavy weather. The other companies were held back waiting
for a break in the weather. We were flying right down on the water and
still could not see. We were in plane #301. After a long time the crew
chief told me that the visibility was growing worse, and we were going to
turn and go back to Hollandia. Just about this time we broke out into the
clear and landed on
Biak
about 1100. By 1230 they had moved us to our area by trucks. The rest of
the Bn did not come in until the next day, and they had to walk about two
miles from Mokmer Drome.
Our
area was a low coral hill. It had once been covered with small trees, but
now these were denuded stakes. The shelling had been very heavy here. We had
difficulty setting up jungle hammocks, because the tree trunks were too small
to support the weight of a man. This area had been booby-trapped by our
troops. They had set these up with hand grenades. We found several and
removed them. George Harrigan unknowingly tripped one we had overlooked. Men
were all around it. I felt the heat on my back. Emory Ball was a few feet
further away chopping on a small tree trunk with his machete. Just before
the blade struck a grenade segment stuck the tree trunk near the spot where
the blade hit. No damage was done physically, but our faith in our
fragmentation grenades did suffer.
Looming a half mile to the north was a ridge of great length with high
cliffs towering above us. We could feel great pity for the men who had to
advance across this coastal plain to attack the cliffs. Most of us set out
for the cliffs to satisfy our curiosity and look for souvenirs. At the base
of the cliffs were many caves. Some were large extending back to no telling
where. The large cave entrances were reached by descending into deep pits
probably 50-75 feet deep and a couple of hundred feet in diameter. Narrow
trail wound down the sides of the pits to get to the bottom. This gave
perfect protection to the cave entrances from shell fire.
C-47’s would drop
55 gallon drums of gasoline into the pits. After a large number were
dropped in they would drop an explosive device and have a raging inferno for
a time. The problem was that the Japs could get well out of harm’s way back
into the depths of the caves. We climbed down into the pits of a couple of
caves and looked around the front parts. Many of the stalactites had broken
from the ceiling and fallen to the floor. We saw parts of Japs sticking out
from under several, so the naval shelling had some effect here. One large
cave still had a fire burning burning in the pit. The C-47’s had dropped
gasoline in it the morning of our arrival. This was the third burn-out for
this cave. With all the stalagmites and the wreckage of the stalagmites
among them it would had been very difficult to go back into the caves. The
face of the cliffs were pockmarked with small caves. Crowning the cliffs
were huge hardwood trees forming dense rain forest.
J
Rations for supper. No movies that we could find. There was still heavy
fighting taking place and some not too far away. Any movies would be by
small units in secluded places.
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