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Individual Record for: John Homer (Jr.) Sanders (male)
Full Name: John Homer (Jr.) Sanders Jr.
| Event |
Date |
Details |
| Birth |
31 MAR 1919 |
Place: AL
|
| Death |
17 JUN 1944 |
Place: Saipan, Northern Marina Islands
|
| Census |
1930 |
Place: Selfville Blount Co, AL
- Notes:
-
Household Record :
1930 Selfville Blount Co, AL
ED 17, sht 4A
William L. Sanders 53 TN TN TN
Minnie 55 AL TN TN
next door: (Son)
John H. Sanders 32 TN
Myrtle 28 AL
John H. 11 AL
Herchel C. 9 AL
Jessie W. 7 AL
James Edward 5 AL
Pauline 2 & 11 mos AL
Herbert L. 0 mos AL
|
| Burial |
1944 |
Place: Trafford Cemetery Jefferson County Alabama
- Notes:
-
Name: John H Sanders MIA
Inducted From: Alabama
Rank: Private First Class
Combat Organization: 165th Infantry Regiment 27th Division
Death Date: Jun 17 1944
Monument: Honolulu, Hawaii, United States
Last Known Status: Missing
U.S. Awards: Purple Heart Medal
Bronze Star Medal
165th Infantry 27th Division
A gravesite and headstone for John H Sanders Jr was found (next to his
family members) at the Baptist Church Cemetery in Trafford, Alabama.
John's Tombstone Inscription reads as follows:
John H. Sanders, Jr.
Born: 31 MAR 1919
Inducted From: ALABAMA
PFC Co.1 163 Infantry
DIED 17 JUN 1944
I have this tombstone image on file courtsey of Uncle Ed Sanders of Mason
Ohio.
Even though this is speculation, it would seem likley that John H Sanders, Jr is
simply being memorialized at the Baptist Church Cem in Trafford, Alabama,
and that he is not physically interred there. I am basing this assumption on the
record (above) that was originally found within the United States. NARA
Register, World War II Dead Interred in American Military Cemeteries on
Foreign Soil and World War II and Korea Missing or Lost or Buried at Sea.
Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 19xx.
Alma Harings
aharings@cox.net
Descr
Extended Description:
The records were taken from RG330 in the National Archives.
This database may not contain all U.S. servicemen who died in either the
Second World War or the Korean Conflict and were interred outside of the
contiguous United States.
Notes Source: World War II Veterans Interred Overseas
Notes Source: American Memorial Park Saipan, Northern Mariana Islands
- Notes:
-
UPDATE: The following was sent from my Uncle Kenneth Sanders of Trafford,
Alabama in July 2004.
Hello Alma;
I have done a little research as you requested concerning the burial site of
John Sanders Jr. I recently visited the cemetary and obsserved the Military
Memorial at his grave site and also have talked with some of the older citizens
and particularly, Ruth Myrick who is the overseer of the cemetary and they all
say that a coffin was buried there with Military Honors.
If you would like to contact Mrs. Myrick, you can reach her at (205)647-9670
or you may wish to write her at Gen. Del., Trafford, Al. 35172.
I also observed the other burial sites of most of our senior family members
and I also noticed the burial site of Herbert L. Sanders born Mar. 14, 1930 but
does not reflect the deceased date. It appears that it is a recent grave. If you
know of this person, pleas let me know.
Love,
Uncle Kenneth
- Source:
- Trafford Cemetery
Quality: Primary Source Text: Image on file
- Picture:
- Gone but Not Forgotten
|
- Picture:
- History of the 165th ( Battle of Saipan The Mariana's Islands)
- Picture:
- A Short & Tragic Life: Gone But Not Forgotten
- Picture:
- American Battle Monment Honolulu
- Notes:
-
Battle on Saipan (Pacific Theater) June 1944
This article focuses on the events on Saipan where my ancestor Pvt. John Homer
Sanders Jr. of the 165th Infantry Regiment_27th Army Division was killed in action on
June 17th 1944. PFC Sanders was awarded the Purple Heart and the Bronze Star and is
currently listed as missing in action. A memorial acknowledging PFC Sanders
participation in that Battle was found inscribed in granite at the American Memorial
Park in Saipan, Northern Mariana Islands.
Today marked the 60th anniversary of D-Day. The day allied Troops stormed the
beaches at Normandy. How ironic to find the following history on this very special day
of rememberance and reflection. June 1944 would find the United States Navy
involved in more than one ambitious naval expedition, on oppisite sides of the globe.
Even as Operation Overlord returned the Allies to France, Operation Forager was
about to deliver the Marines and Army onto the Marianas Islands. Here is an excerpt
from that battle history eloquently written by Soren Swigart.
Alma Harings
aharings@cox.net
The World at War
Operation Forager
The Invasion of Saipan, Tinian and Guam
The Marianas Islands were considered important for several reasons. The first was
the Chief of Naval Operations, Admiral Ernest King’s conviction that the Marianas
were the key to the Central Pacific because they dominated the communications with
Japan’s "Inner South Seas Empire”. Capture of the islands would provide the Pacific
Fleet with bases from which they could attack the enemy’s air-sea communications and
strike with equal ease at Palau, the Philippines, Formosa or China. Navy planners also
felt that a bold strike into the vitals of the Japanese position would force the
Combined Fleet to give battle and hazard itself to destruction at the hands of US
Navy.
The Army Air Corps also had an equally important need for bases from which its new
long range bomber, the B-29, could make non-stop strategic strikes on the Japanese
home islands.
The Marianas Islands consist largely of rugged wooded mountains (though this is
somewhat less true of Tinian) and are quite large compared with Tarawa. Guam is more
than 30 miles long, Saipan about 14. They are ringed with coral reefs which compound
the difficulties of amphibious assault by channelizing the approach to the beaches. The
Japanese defenders by mid-1944 numbered some 60,000, about half of them on Saipan.
Situated more than a thousand miles from the nearest US base, this enemy force
represented the most remote and formidable target the Navy/Marine team had so far
attempted. The Navy would find its logistical capabilities stretched to the limit to
support the largest amphibious operation yet mounted in the Pacific.
US intelligence estimated the Japanese force on Saipan at 19,000. In fact there
were more than 29,000. Three quarters of this number were Army including the 43rd
Infantry Division, 47th Independent Mixed Brigade, (essentially a regimental combat
team with extra artillery), a tank regiment, two engineer regiments, an antiaircraft
regiment and other smaller units. These troops were commanded by General Y. Saito
The Navy made up the rest of the forces. They were commanded by Admiral Nagumo of
Pearl Harbor fame. The Navy was concentrated around Tanapag Harbor, were well
fortified and manned a variety of heavy artillery including a battery of 8 inch guns.
There were also three airfields on Saipan but their planes had long been destroyed by
the 5th Fleet’s fighters.
Admiral Raymond Spruance’s 5th Fleet, some 800 ships, was charged with transporting
80,000 Marines and nearly 50,000 soldiers to the landing beaches. They would be
escorted by Task Force 58, Admiral Marc Mitscher’s superb force of 12 fast aircraft
carriers flying some 800 aircraft and accompanied by 8 battleships and 80 other
warships. TF 58 was the weapon with which the US Navy planned to destroy the
Japanese Combined Fleet when and if it ventured forth to support the Marianas
garrisons.
The Expeditionary Troops comprising 3 Marine Divisions, a reinforced Marine
Brigade and 2 Army Infantry Divisions were commanded by Lt General Holland M.
Smith, USMC. This force was divided into the Northern Troops and Landing Force, for
the assault of Saipan and Tinian, commanded directly by General Smith, and the
Southern Troops and Landing Force, for the following operation against Guam,
commanded by Maj. General Roy Geiger, USMC.
After intense air operations on the 11th and 12th of June, followed on the 13th by a
daylong bombardment from the fast battleships of TF 58, the plan called for the 2nd
and 4th Marine Divisions to land abreast on about four miles of beaches on the west
side of Saipan south of Garapan, the 2nd on the left and the 4th on the right. In
reserve would be the 27th Infantry Division part of which had fought at Makin and
Eniwetok. To the north above Tanapag units of this floating reserve would stage a
demonstration to draw Japanese attention away from the real landings. The immediate
objective of the landings was to seize a line far enough inland to preclude Japanese
direct fire on the beaches. To do this rapidly over 700 amphibian tractors, some
armored models mounting a 75mm infantry gun, had the job of pushing the first waves
about a mile inland before debarking. This was a bold plan but it would come up short in
execution.
As June 15th dawned bright and clear, a specially trained bombardment squadron
consisting of 4 old but effective battleships, 8 cruisers and 7 destroyers moved close
aboard the Charen Kanoa beaches and commenced firing. The Marines came on four
regiments abreast led by the armored amphibians. Preceding them were 24 rocket firing
LCI-gunboats. Overhead, Marine and Navy fliers dropped bombs and made strafing runs
on suspected enemy strongpoints. A thick pall of smoke and dust obscured the low
ridges which rose in the rear of the beaches. Battleship Tennessee fired her big guns
point blank at the fortifications on Agingan Point that flanked the 4th Division’s
landing beaches. Everything that could be done had been done. Admiral Turner signaled
the traditional order to "Land the landing force” In waves the Marines went in. As the
first LVTs clambered over the coral reef they seemed to explode under a torrent of
Japanese shells. The Japanese had positioned colored flags in the lagoon to mark the
range of the landing forces and now heavy artillery and mortar fire rained down on
them with pin-point accuracy. Out of the 68 armored amphibians which had led the 6th
and 8th Marine Regiments to the beach, 31 were destroyed or disabled. While the
leading waves landed and debarked far short of the plan, the Japanese opened an
accurate long range grazing fire with heavy machine guns sited in the hills around. Far
from being suppressed by the prelanding bombardment, they had survived with most of
their artillery and fortifications intact. The Marines found themselves being pounded
by heavy guns firing from defillade while taking continuous flanking fire from Agingan
and Afetna Points. Losses among officers was very high. 2nd Battalion, 6th Marines,
had four different commanders before nightfall. Over 2,000 casualties were sustained
during the landing.
The next two days, June 16 and 17, were spent struggling to expand the beachhead
enough to prevent the Japanese from observing and taking every move of the Landing
Forces under fire. The 2nd Marine Division had tough going as it fought to gain the
slopes of Mounts Tapotchau and Tipo Pale. On the night of the 15th, the 8th Marines
repelled a strong counterattack while the next night, B Company, 6th Marines, were
overrun by the first large scale tank attack faced by Marines during the war. Morning
light would reveal the derelict hulks of 31 destroyed tanks inside B Company’s wire.
Meanwhile developments at sea had taken a fortuitous turn for Admiral Spruance.
The Japanese Fleet was coming out. It was decided to delay the landings on Guam and to
land the Army’s 27th Infantry Division on Saipan immediately. After night fell on June
17th, Spruance and the 5th Fleet sortied to meet the Japanese in a battle later known
as "The Marianas Turkey Shoot”.
Although the fleet and most of the naval gunfire was absent, conditions were
improving onshore. Gen. Holland Smith had landed and set up his headquarters at Charan
Kanoa. With the arrival of the 27th Division, all of the Northern Landing Force were
ashore. After fierce resistance the Japanese were beginning to feel the constant
pressure the Marines were exerting. On the night of June 18th, Saito ordered his
secret papers and codebooks destroyed and sent a message to Tokyo: "By becoming the
bulwark of the Pacific with 10,000 deaths we hope to requite the Imperial favor.” That
day the Marines pushed across the cane fields towards Magicienne Bay on Saipan’s east
side. On the right of the 4th Marine Division, the 165th Infantry secured Aslito
airfield with no opposition. By the 20th, the island was bisected when the 4th Marine
Division reached the sea on the opposite side of the island.
While the Marine Divisions formed line abreast to drive north to the end of the
island, Spruance’s 5th Fleet was scoring a huge victory with the destruction of
Japanese naval aviation in the Battle of the Philippine Sea. Spruance comes in for
criticism from some quarters for not chasing Ozawa’s battered force as they withdrew
but the Marines were glad to see the return of the fleet and its big guns.
The terrain of the north end of Saipan was described by one officer as "a nightmare
of sheer cliffs and precipitous hills,". The fighting was characterized by the use of the
flame-thrower, satchel charge, grenade and bulldozer. Suicidal charges by the trapped
Japanese led to many episodes of hand-to-hand combat.
While the Japanese refused the opportunity to surrender and suffered nearly total
casualties in every encounter with the Marines, Corporal John Basilone, a Japanese
speaking Marine from Los Angeles was successful in talking nearly a 1,000 Japanese
into surrendering and thus saving their lives. For this Basilone was awarded the
Congressional Medal of Honor, his country's highest military award.
On June 22nd, the 27th Infantry Division was inserted into the center of the line
between the two Marine divisions. Unfortunately the Army regiments were unable to
maintain pace with the battle-hardened Marines on their flanks and soon the line took
on a concave U shape. By the end of the day General Holland Smith could no longer hide
his concern over the poor showing of the 27th Infantry Division. Major General
Sanderford Jarman, USA, senior army officer on Saipan was asked by General Smith to
go to the commander of the 27th, General Ralph Smith, USA, and impress upon him the
need for haste. Jarman found Smith despondent over his division’s lack of fight and
quoted him as saying if the division did not do better on the morrow that he (General
Smith) should be relieved. Unfortunately this came to pass the next afternoon when
Holland Smith exercised his prerogative and replaced him with the aforesaid General
Jarman. This episode would create much bitter inter-service rivalry between the
Marines and the Army that would have repercussions later on in the war. While the
27th Division tried to work out its command problems, the 2nd Marine Division in a
bold attack captured Mount Tapochau. This was the beginning of the end for the
Japanese. On July 1st the battle for Saipan entered its final stage. The 2nd Division
over three days of sustained fighting captured the shattered ruins of Garapan and
Tanapag Harbor.
As the remaining defenders were compressed into an ever smaller area, General
Holland Smith became concerned about the possibility of a final banzai charge and on
July 2nd he paid a visit to the headquarters of the 27th Infantry Division to warn
them to expect such an attack that night. At 0445 the next morning 2,500 ragged
Japanese soldiers, short of weapons, ammunition and food surged down upon the 105th
Infantry Regiment. Despite the warnings a gap of 500 yards separated two of the
Regiment’s battalions and it was here that the weight of the attack fell. In a fight
only too reminiscent of Custer’s Last Stand, a battalion commander was killed in his
command post manning a .30 cal. machine-gun to the last. During this ordeal the
regiment’s third battalion posted nearby, stayed put and took no part in the fight. In
the rear of the 105th Infantry the attack swept into the 3rd Battalion, 10th Marines.
Here the marine gunners cut the fuzes down to muzzle burst and fired their 105s point
blank into the enraged enemy. The attack finally ended in a hand-to-hand fight among
the fox holes of the 10th Marines. The artillery battalion suffered the loss of 136 men
including the commander, killed at his guns. The two army battalions suffered a loss of
668 casualties and were evacuated the next day.
Before the final banzai attack, General Saito, too ill to take part, gathered his
staff for a farewell feast of sake and canned crab meat which ended with the General’s
ritual suicide. A day later in a cave not far from the scene of Saito’s death, Admiral
Nagumo, who had launched the attack on Pearl Harbor, took his life.
Although the island was declared secure on July 9th, some Japanese would hold out
like shadows for months to come. The final mop up operations would see some of the
most pathetic scenes of the Pacific War as Japanese civilians choose to leap to their
deaths from the crags of Marpi Point rather than surrender to the Marines who were
powerless to stop them.
Aftermath
Saipan cost the United States 16,525 casualties including 3,426 killed in action but it
provided the first B-29 base in the Pacific. Japanese losses were over 29,000. A
Japanese Admiral said, "Our war was lost with the loss of Saipan. I feel it was a
decisive battle." General Holland Smith considered Saipan the decisive battle of the
Pacific offensives.
----------
Private First Class John H Sanders of Blount County Alabama was an infantryman with
the 165th Infantry Regiment 27th Division. His was reported missing in action on
the 17th day of June 1944. John was awarded the Purple Heart & Bronze Star.
Name: John H Sanders, Jr.
Serial 34163205
Inducted From: Alabama
Rank: Private First Class
Combat Organization: 165th Infantry Regiment 27th Division
Death Date: Jun 17 1944
Monument: Honolulu, Hawaii, United States
Last Known Status: Missing
U.S. Awards: Purple Heart Medal
US Awards: Bronze Star Medal
Sources:
http://www.abmc.gov/listww.asp
Notes Source: American Memorial Park Saipan, Northern Mariana Islands
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