Centipede
Height
By David H. Lippman
November 2012
In mid-October 1942, two months after the
initial American landings on Guadalcanal,
a new Japanese offensive begins taking shape.
The various convoys have brought the 38th
Infantry Division's 228th Regiment to Guadalcanal.
The Japanese have underestimated the American
defenses. They believe the Americans have
10,000 men on Guadalcanal. Actually, it's
more than 27,000. The Japanese believe the
Americans' southern area is weakly held.
The new 17th Army plan is complex, as usual.
It calls for the 2nd Division to march to
attack up the east bank of the Lunga to Henderson
Field. Second (Sendai) Division will attack
on three axes of advance. Secrecy is vital:
Cooking fires must not issue smoke, and soldiers
should eat only crackers after crossing the
Lunga River. Japanese engineers hack out a
trail, the Maruyama Road, 20 to 24 inches
wide, through the jungle, to lead up to the
assault. Gen. Harukichi Hyakutake's men are
on the move, using compasses to navigate through
the jungles. Each man staggers under the weight
of ammunition, an artillery shell, and 12
days' rations. Gunners disassemble their pieces
and carry them by hand.
On October 19th the 2nd Division reaches
the Lunga River and struggles across the water
after sunset, avoiding American airmen. The
move has been slow; the attack is delayed
to October 22nd. Lt. Gen. Masao Maruyama urges
his troops up the Maruyama Road, pushing himself
forward with his white cane. Maj. Gen. Yumio
Nasu, commanding Maruyama's left flank, tries
to keep pace, battling malaria. Everyone is
living off half rations of rice. The task
of man-hauling guns is too hard on the weary
troops, and they leave components of their
guns by the trail.
While this advance goes on, the Japanese launch a diversionary
attack on their extreme let flank, sending
the 4th Infantry Regiment and three tanks
under Col. Nakaguma against the 5th Marines.
The Japanese attack is greeted with heavy
American artillery fire. "One shot from
us brings down hundreds in retaliation,"
says Nakaguma.
Rusting Blades
The Americans react to these moves with some
confusion. They have no concrete information,
except a captured map suggesting a three-pronged
attack from south, east, and west. But air
searches see no sign of the eastern prongs.
The 164th Infantry Regiment, being new,
is assigned the east, the least likely area
to be attacked. Next is the 7th Marines, all
the way to Lunga, then the 1st, and finally
the 5th. The extreme left is "McKelvy
Group," a horseshoe-shaped area held
by 3rd Battalion, 7th Marines, and 3rd Battalion
1st Marines. Truck-mounted 3rd Battalion,
2nd Marines, is the reserve, along with the
M3 Stuart light tanks of 1st Tank Battalion.
The 1st Marine Division is exhausted from
two months of hard fighting and living. Supplies
are short.
By October 22nd Maruyama still has not reached
his line of departure, and the big attack
is postponed until October 23rd. Sendai Division
struggles on through Guadalcanal's jungles,
trailing around Mount Austen and splitting
in two. Nasu's left flank heads towards Henderson
Field. Maj. Gen. Kiyoke Kawaguchi's right
flank heads off to the southeast.
During the day, the Japanese open up with
artillery at the Matanikau, shelling, among
others, Gen. Thomas Holcomb, Commandant of
the Marine Corps. He calmly walks through
front-line positions as shells rain down.
At 1 p.m., Japanese Val dive-bombers add
to the din and Holcomb's impressions, pursuing
the destroyer USS Nicholas. Twenty-nine
fighters down two Vals. Nicholas goes
unhurt. The 11th Air Fleet's liaison officer
on Guadalcanal tells his bosses that American
airpower has been "generally suppressed."
In the evening, Maruyama's men reach the deployment
line and begin forming into their assembly
areas. Col. Masanobu Tsuji, on hand to help
plan the assault, chats with Kawaguchi as
the men get into line.
Kawaguchi doesn't like Tsuji's plan. Kawaguchi
wants to go around to the right, and avoid
a repetition of the Bloody Ridge battle. Tsuji
ignores Kawaguchi, regarding him as a complainer
who is reluctant to execute captured enemy
soldiers. Tsuji promises to take up the point
with Maruyama, but does not do so, confining
himself to wishing Kawaguchi success.
At dawn Maruyama's men are still not in position.
He postpones the attack a third time. The
Japanese troops fan out into their positions
for the line of departure, amid stinking jungle.
Bayonets fixed on the 19th are now rusty,
and men are hungry and exhausted. Capt. Jiro
Katsumata writes, "I cannot any longer
think of anything, the enemy, food, home or
even myself . . . (I am) only a spirit drifting
toward an undefined, unknowable world."
First Tanks Forward
Kawaguchi doesn't get the word until mid-afternoon,
when he's still a day and a half from his
departure line. He phones Maruyama to say
so, and discovers that Tsuji has lied.
The two officers shout at each other, and
Maruyama orders his subordinate to follow
orders to the letter. "I cannot take
responsibility for a frontal attack as a unit
commander," Kawaguchi shouts. That's
fine with Maruyama. He rings Kawaguchi again,
and summons him to division headquarters,
relieved of his duties.
Col. Toshinari Shoji is given command of the
right flank. Shoji, shivering with malaria,
protests that relieving officers on the eve
of battle is not the way of the samurai. He
is told, "Follow orders."
While the officers bicker, Maruyama and Hyakutake
quite forget to tell Maj. Gen. Tadashi Sumiyoshi
that the attack is delayed again. His diversionary
assault thus goes in a day ahead of time.
Sumiyoshi hurls his men into attack at 3 p.m.,
with the 1st Tank Company's T-97 and T-95
tanks in the lead. They rumble forward, covered
by artillery. As the sun sets, Sumiyoshi finally
gets word the attack is postponed. It's too
late to call it off. First and 2nd Battalion
of the 4th Infantry are marching on the Matanikau
River, covered by artillery.
At dusk, a heavy barrage hits the Matanikau
horseshoe and the Marines defending it. The
Americans are surprised to see T-97 tanks
driving up the coastal track, but are ready
with 37mm anti-tank guns. One gun blasts a
hole in the first tank. The second tank stops
near the foxhole of Marine Pvt. Joseph D.R.
Champagne, who hops out and places a grenade
on the tank's track, which stops it dead.
A Marine 75mm gun destroys the machine. Marines
fire flares to light up the night and enable
anti-tank guns to disable the Japanese. Of
the 44 men of 1st Independent Tank Company,
only 17 survive.
The Marines open up on pre-planned range ladders
with the firepower of 40 howitzers. SBD dive-bombers
add more high explosive to the din, but the
Marines can still hear Japanese troops groaning
and screaming under the bombardment. Six thousand
Marine rounds stop the attack before it can
get started, and rain at 9 p.m. puts out the
fires. Japanese losses are uncounted but heavy.
American losses are two dead and 11 wounded.
As dawn breaks on the 24th, Marines on the
Matanikau see a long column advancing on a
bare ridge, menacing the horseshoe from the
American left side. If the Japanese press
their advance, three battalions of Marines
will be cut off and surrounded. The Americans
move with alacrity, sending the 2nd Battalion,
7th Marines, to defend this area.
This move leaves only Lt. Col. Chesty Puller's
1st Battalion, 7th Marines, to hold the 2,500-yard
line in front of Henderson Field, from Bloody
Ridge to the east. Puller stretches his men
to hold Edson's Ridge as well, with a 46-man
platoon on the left flank under Platoon Sgt.
Ralph Briggs. Companies A, C, and B defend
the line. Puller himself walks the entire
front line to check his defenses, exemplifying
Marine leadership traditions. He orders his
men to plant more sandbags and pieces of metal
to act as tripwires.
Late that afternoon, Marine Scout-Snipers
spot Japanese "rice fires" and enemy
officers eyeing their positions with binoculars.
Clearly the Japanese are about to attack.
Banzai
Sendai Division finally reaches their start
lines at 2 p.m., and Maruyama sets attack
time at 7 p.m. But at 4 p.m., rain pours down
on the battlefield, turning the jungle into
bogs of mud. Clouds obscure the moon and units
lose cohesion during the night. At 7 p.m.,
the Japanese still can't attack. An exasperated
Maruyama holds off until 9 p.m., when the
rain stops and a full moon illuminates the
assault. By now Sendai Division's men are
fatigued , hungry, and soaked. Maruyama orders
them forward.
On the right flank, Shoji's men get lost in
the jungle, actually going through Briggs's
positions without a fight. Briggs and his
men spend the next few days working through
enemy lines back to their area, losing six
dead and 10 wounded. Some of Shoji's troops
stumble into Puller's lines at 10 p.m., and
Puller has his men hold their fire, figuring
the Japanese are merely lost. Hes right.
The Japanese wander off and never make contact
with the defenders.
The left wing, however, under Nasu, sends
three battalions in column against Puller,
with 1st Battalion, 29th Infantry, leading.
The Japanese move through the jungle, through
the dark, as the clock ticks to midnight.
The right flank flounders on through jungle,
but Col. Hiroshi Matsumoto, the operations
officer of the 2nd Division, suffering from
malaria, signals 17th Army: "2300 Banzai
a little before 2300 the Right Wing
captured the airfield." The 17th Army
is jubilant, but the right wing is actually
nowhere near Henderson Field.
General Nasu's left wing, however, does struggle
into battle, hitting the American defenses
east of Edson's Ridge at 12:30 a.m. The Japanese
advance and come under machine gun fire. Japanese
engineers break out cutters and snip passages
in barbed wire. Japanese troops of Capt. Jiro
Katsumata's 11th Company (3rd Battalion, 29th
Infantry) crawl through foot-tall grass. But
the Japanese are exhausted from the endless
marching, heavy rain, and lack of sleep. Katsumata's
men stand up and walk towards the enemy, shouting
battle cries. The noise draws down American
machine guns and mortars, which destroy Katsumata's
company by 1 a.m.
A few minutes later, at 1:15, the 9th Company
attacks with banzai yells and ferocity into
Puller's Company C. Sgt. John Basilone of
Newark, N.J., opens up with his machine gun
and begins a night of valor that earns him
the Medal of Honor. By 1:25, the 9th Company
is torn to pieces by American artillery.
Nonetheless, Puller realizes a major attack
is underway. He sends in three platoons of
Lt. Col. Robert Hall's 3rd Battalion, 164th
Infantry into the line, and asks for the rest
of the regiment. The National Guardsmen face
their first battle a night march along
a muddy jungle trail under a huge downpour.
At 3:45, Hall's men arrive at the front, and
are distributed piecemeal into the Marines
by squad and platoon.
As the battle continues, Gen. Kawaguchi,
in overall command, walks through the jungle
to Maruyama's headquarters. He hears the rumble
of American gunfire, which combines with the
rain to exhaust and depress the general. He
slumps against a tree in the rain, filled
with despair and self-pity. Seeing his career
over, he curls up in some tree roots and falls
asleep in the rain, wondering if it will wash
him away.
'Blood for Eleanor!'
Meanwhile the rest of the 29th Infantry struggles
through the muck. Col. Furumiya reaches the
front line just before dawn, and orders two
companies to charge. The Japanese mass and
move forward, bayonets fixed, against American
machine guns. Furumiya himself leads the 7th
"Color Escort" Company against the
heaviest defenses on the right flank. American
firepower cuts most of the Japanese down,
but with banzai spirit 100 Japanese are stopped
only at American lines. Marines and Guardsmen
counterattack and seize three Japanese machine
guns from a pile of 37 Japanese bodies.
Nasu's attack has failed. He reports to division.
Maruyama tells Nasu, "Soka. (That's it.)"
Maruyama also tells Nasu all divisional reserves
will be sent up for one more attack the following
night.
"Let me attack tonight," says Nasu,
racked by fever. Maruyama accedes, figuring
his subordinate, being on the scene, knows
best. Nasu then asks his surgeon for a shot
to control his temperature 104 degrees
and prays he'll be alive that evening
to lead the assault.
As dawn breaks, the rain stops, and the Americans
battle small groups of Japanese infiltrators,
killing 67. At least 300 Japanese lie dead
on the perimeter, and more beyond the American
lines, victims of American mortars and artillery.
That afternoon, Nasu makes one more try, with
his own reserve regiment, the 16th, and all
that's left of the 29th. The Sendai Division's
reserve will attack on the right.
Radio intelligence has warned the Americans
that another attack is brewing. Lt. Merillat
diaries, "Attempted landing tonight?
Looks like this is the night." Waiting
for the Japanese are the 1st Battalion, 7th
Marines, under Chesty Puller, and the 3rd
and 2nd Battalions of the 164th Infantry.
At 8 p.m., Sendai Division's guns open up.
There aren't many of them, and ammunition
is short. Nasu himself leads the first attack
on the 3rd/164th. He hobbles into battle,
using his sword as a cane. American machine
guns open up and rip open his chest. The Japanese
continue to charge, but the Americans continue
to hold. Once again, Sendai Division's right
flank drifts out of the battle, lost in the
jungle.
American and Japanese troops, fighting at
point-blank range, shout insults at each other.
"Blood for the Emperor!" roars a
Japanese soldier. "Blood for Eleanor!"
retorts a Marine.
The gravely wounded Nasu is carried back
to division headquarters. He holds out a feeble
hand to Maruyama there, and dies.
Lessons Ignored
While Nasu expends himself against Puller,
Oka attacks on the Matanikau with his 124th
Infantry, against the 2nd Battalion, 7th Marines.
The Japanese hold the high ground and pour
heavy rifle fire down on the Americans. Platoon
Sergeant Mitchell Paige leads his machine
gun section in defense of the position, but
Japanese fire cuts the defense down to Paige
himself. He maintains fire, dashing through
shot and shell to bring up reserve machine
guns, earning a Medal of Honor.
But at 5 a.m., the Japanese scale the hill
and eject the Americans. Maj. Odell M. Conoley,
the 2nd/7th's exec, assembles a 17-man counterattack
force, which includes his radiomen, messmen,
bandsmen, a cook, and some riflemen. This
ad hoc force charges at 5:40 a.m., joined
by Paige and two platoons from Company C,
5th Marines.
The motley group of Marines does its job
in movie fashion, catching the Japanese by
surprise. The Marines hurl grenades onto the
ridgetop, disrupting the defense. Conoley's
men recapture three machine guns and five
Japanese weapons, and hold the ridge.
By 6 a.m., the battle is over. The Americans
count 98 Japanese bodies on the ridge, and
200 more lie dead in the ravine and the trails
leading to the ravine.
The grand attack has failed. Maruyama has
no more reserves. Indeed, he has practically
no Sendai Division. The 29th Infantry Regiment
has lost 553 killed or missing and 479 wounded
among its 2,554 men. The 16th Regiment's losses
are uncounted, but the 164th's burial parties
handle 975 Japanese bodies. At least 300 Japanese
lie dead in Oka's attack. The American estimate
of 2,200 Japanese dead is probably too low.
The American battle toll is estimated at just
under 90.
At 17th Army HQ, exhausted staff officers
face the hammer blow of defeat. They are already
physically exhausted from endless rain, soaked
clothes, and scanty rations of rice, soybean
paste, and crackers. Many officers hobble
around with canes. Like all defeated officers,
they blame everyone else the Navy
for failing to provide supplies, the lack
of air cover, the shortage of troops and supplies.
Navy Commander Ohmae, however, blames the
17th Army. He notes that the 17th Army has
underestimated the terrain difficulties, which
has caused severe food and medicine shortages
at the front, and exhausted the troops. 17th
Army has made faulty assessments of American
positions despite the existence of aerial
photographs. And 17th Army is rife with dissension
Maruyama's headaches and neuralgia,
Oka's indifference to orders, and Nasu's incompetence.
"Nasu knew nothing but charging,"
Ohmae writes.
Another factor in the Japanese defeat is the
American defense. Vandegrift skillfully "dangled"
his men at the front, presenting a trap. When
the Japanese attacked, the trap sprang shut
with the steel vice of firepower and artillery.
Vandegrift has won this battle by ignoring
staff college teachings.
Meanwhile, the devastated 2nd Sendai Division
retreats from "Centipede Height"
their name for Edson's Ridge
in ruins. The medical teams are overwhelmed,
so each unit must care for its own sick and
wounded. Japanese soldiers struggle through
jungle trails amid pouring rain with no food.
Col. Masanobu Tsuji goes up the Maruyama Trail
to find out what's going on. He runs into
Col. Yoshitsune Minamoto, whose battalion
has been annihilated. Minamoto lies at the
side of the trail, the lower half of his body
covered in blood.
"Hold on," says Tsuji. "We'll
have someone come back for you."
"I haven't eaten since day before yesterday,"
Minamoto replies.
Tsuji takes two chopstick full of rice from
his bag and puts them in Minamoto's mouth.
Minamoto points to a group of men lying nearby.
They open their mouths, and Tusji feeds them
like a mother robin feeding her babies, putting
clumps of rice in the dying men's mouths.
Centipede Height
Edson's Ridge is yours for the taking
in Panzer
Grenadier: Guadalcanal and Jungle
Fighting.
David H. Lippman, an award-winning journalist
and graduate of the new School for Social
Research, has written many magazine articles
about World War II. He maintains the World
War II Plus 55 website and currently works
as a public information officer for the city
of Newark, N.J. We're pleased to add his work
to our Daily Content.
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