Guestbook


We are glad you could visit our website. 

You are invited to sign our guestbook and leave your comments.

Here is a link to a recent article which interviewed a few of our Survivors. http://www.courant.com/news/connecticut/hc-branford-iwo-jima-event0810-20100809,0,37805.story
webmaster
August 13,2010
CT

Brian Williams News story about the men who fought on Iwo Jima.
webmaster
August 9,2010
CT

Newington Cable Channel did a story about the upcoming Candlelight Vigil. "Talk to the Mayor" program for August 2, 2010 with host Steve Parker.
Webmaster
August 9,2010
Connecticut

Survivor, Daniel Vece, appeared on News Channel 8, the CT Style program for July 30, 2010.
Marianne
August 9,2010
Connecticut

Great job with the site Marianne. I'm sorry i cannot attend the dinner because i'll be away. My Uncle was Joseph Lenzi 5th Div, 3rd Batt, G-company. We met at the memorial and I was introduce to you by my Aunt, Adeline Carone . My middle son Stefan is a Marine Cadet in New Haven. His Captain Tony Debiase has taken out an add in the add book for the Cadet program . Keep up the good work!
Michael Persico
July 30,2010
East Haven ,CT

Over the last 10 years or so, I have become a very amateur Iwo Jima historian. Having read scores of books, watched virtually every single documentary and looked for every picture possibile, I am still in awe of the your men who fought this battle. Here's the thing that escapes most people, these boys were 17 to 20 years old in most cases. As I look around at the kids of today, do I think they could do the same? Sure. What I wonder though is what type of effort would the military have to do to get them in that frame of mind and body? Ask an Iwo survivor. I'll bet they can tell you. Great site and thanks for all the information.
Jim Wheaton
June 18,2010
Ashburn, Virginia

The Iwo Jima Survivors are holding their final 65th anniversary reunion on August 15, 2010.. Details and application at: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Support-Our-Survivors-of-Iwo-Jima/191703677604?v=wall
Marianne
June 15,2010
CT

Arvy Geurin, Thank you for your service and thank you for writing about it so we will never forget !
Marianne
June 14,2010
CT

On 18 February 1945, the USS NAPA/APA 157 was part of the US Navy convoy to engage in the battle of Iwo Jima. As a radioman and a part of the Beach Battalion, I went ashore on 19 Feb with the Marines and other Navy Radiomen. That day in hell will be forever imprinted in my memory. Those heroes we left behind there are forever in my prayers. Arvy A. Geurin, RM3/C, USN, WWI, Battle of Iwo Jima (Walking Through Fire: An Iwo Jima Survivor's Remembrance [Amazon.com])
Arvy A. Geurin
June 14,2010
California

Iwo Jima Seabees Stay Unsung Navy construction battalion units, whose main purpose was to unload supplies and build roads and airstrips, fought alongside combat troops storming the black sandy beaches of Iwo Jima. Now, some of the Seabee veterans think they deserved more recognition for what they did. During this fierce assault on Iwo Jima in February 1945, Navy construction battalions (NCB's or Seabees) had two functions. To secure the beaches as the first assault troops went inland to engage the enemy and to unload supplies and provide runners to keep contact between the beach and the forward battle lines. Four days after D-Day, the 133rd NCB inherited another job - repairing the newly won airfield that had been shattered and shellpocked by the battle that had swept across it. I was the assistant company commander, Headquarters Company of this unit. The 133rd Companies A, B, and C and Company A of the 4th Marine Division Pioneer Battalion composed the shore party for the 23rd Regimental Combat Team. Company D of the 133rd NCB and Companies B and C of the 4th Pioneer Battalion composed the shore party for the 25th Regimental Combat Team. These two teams were the lead units for the assault troops of the 4th Marine Division. Seabee staff correspondent Robert V, Evans outlined the activities of the 133rd NCB best: Two battalions of the 41st Seabee Regiment at Iwo Jima - the 133rd NCB attached to the 4th Marine Division and the 31st NCB attached to the 5th Marine Division - hit the Iwo Jima beaches on the second wave of the initial assault, landing less than 60 minutes behind the assault wave made up of amphibious tanks and armored tractors. In the face of heavy fire from mortars already zeroed on beach positions, the Seabees unloaded cranes and bulldozers and Steel matting to be laid over the volcanic sand in which many vehicles were stuck almost at the water edge. The matting placed by the Seabees permitted medium tanks to enter into the battle, reinforcing the lightly-armored amphibious tractors which had taken the brunt of the first attack on enemy pill-boxes and strongholds, ordinarily the job of light and medium tanks. With the entire surface of the rocky island ablaze with combat, the Seabees worked day and night to put the airfield into shape for U.S. planes. Japanese gunners, emplaced in caves that honeycombed the hills, laid down a heavy but intermittent fire on the field. Marine fliers started to use the Seabee-repaired southern airfield on 26 February, providing land-based air support for thee ground troops and a U.S. airfield less than 750 miles from Tokyo. The second wave, including the Seabees, was permitted to land on the beach without strong opposition from enemy positions in the hills. The Japanese then unleashed heavy fire against the third and succeeding waves and concentrated on the beach positions. Our ships and aircraft had pounded the volcanic Mt. Suribachi until no one could believe that anything or anyone was left alive. But the Japanese continued firing. The defenders in the mountainside caves resumed serving their mortars after we stopped. One Marine said that the mortars used against the Seabees and Marines on the beach were the largest ever used against us. On many beaches, mortar fire pinned down the Seabees and Marines for as long as 12 hours straight. The barren landscape provided little cover, and it was impossible to dig adequate foxholes. At Yellow Beach One, on the central portion of Iwo Jima's eastern coast, elements of the 133rd NCB were pinned down by mortar fire on D-Day from mid-morning until after sunset. Shellfire from 75-mm guns set up the ridge also rained down from several hundred yards away. In the shallow, crumbling foxholes, many men were wounded or killed. Unofficial reports said casualties were highest among members of the beach parties, who had to work without seeking cover. Because only a few trucks were able to get ashore early, Seabees and Marines were forced to haul supplies by hand for two days under heavy enemy fire. Even some of the powerful bulldozers were unable to gain traction on the shifting volcanic sand. An earthen shelf slowed vehicles and made them easy targets for the artillerymen on the high ground. On D+3, a heavy rain affected our activities, but a large quantity of material had been unloaded already. Flares and searchlights from ships were used to prevent enemy infiltration during the night. Headquarters Company of the 133rd NCB was assigned to provide a perimeter defense against a counterattack from the sea. The security unit consisted of two 30-man infantry platoons and two 4-man light machine gun sections. The Japanese did not attempt any counterattacks either from the sea or on the front lines in our area. Credit for the fact that security unit had only one man killed in action goes to the special training provided by a Gunnery Sergeant named Hickman of the 23rd Marines. When I realized that we were going to be involved in serious combat and that any advice from a combat veteran would be helpful, I asked my company commander to secure the services of a Marine to help train my security units. Sergeant Hickman held forth every afternoon from 13:00 to 16:00 for three weeks. After we landed, he emphasized, we should get away from the water's edge as quickly as possible and avoid seeking shelter in any shell holes or depressions because enemy gunners would no doubt be zeroed in on them already. It would be safer to lie on the open ground, he told us. This meant going beyond the first two terraces, inland about 250 yards from the beach. Unfortunately, one of my men in the machine-gun crew jumped into a 16-inch shell hole with other men, and all were killed by a mortar shell. I will always appreciate the help we received from Sergeant Hickman, the pride of Mississippi. The Seabee companies were mainly involved in regular shore-parry duties, unloading landing craft at the water's edge and establishing and operating dumps of food, ammunition, fuel, and water. We also loaded the transport units for delivery to the troops at the front. During the 26-day battle for Iwo Jima, elements of the 133rd NCB bulldozed debris on the beaches and made access roads. A vehicle maintenance group kept trucks, jeeps, tractors, and other equipment running. Surveyors and draftsmen were assigned intelligence tasks and kept daily maps and reports for the Marines. Corpsmen and doctors worked with evacuation station personnel, and the medical units were hit hard, with one corpsman killed in action, one corpsman wounded in action, and one doctor missing in action. Two other doctors, the dentist, and the chaplain were wounded. All casualties except one were evacuated. The 133rd NCB suffered 370] casualties - 42 Killed & 328 wounded. - the highest total of any Seabee unit in history. The totals exceeded the casualties of the 4th Marine Division Pioneer Battalion. The members of the 133rd NCB wore Marine uniforms, were subject to Marine regulations, and were active participants of the 4th Marine Division assault team and were not identified as part of a support group. After Iwo Jima was declared secure, the 4th Marine Division returned to Maui, Hawaii, and the 133rd NCB, reduced by casualties to 75% of its full strength, remained on the island to help build B-29 airfields. The battalion worked two 12-hour shifts seven days a week and was subjected to occasional night air raid alerts, several attacks, and daytime sniper fire from enemy survivors still living in numerous tunnels and caves that remained intact after the battle. The B-29 airfields on Iwo Jima saved the lives of more than 25,000 Army Air Corpsmen whose planes were so damaged from air raids over Japan that they never could have returned to their home bases on Guam and Tinian. This was some consolation for those of us who saw the sacrifices made by the 3rd, 4th and 5th Marine Divisions and their attached units. Since Marine veterans have said that Iwo Jima was the toughest battle they ever fought, it seems fitting and appropriate that the survivors of the 133rd NCB finally get their due. WHAT ABOUT A PUC? Veterans of the 133rd Naval Construction Battalion wonder why their unit was not awarded a Presidential Unit Citation (PUC) for the Iwo Jima campaign as part of the 4th Marine Division. The Marine units of the 25th Regimental Combat Team (RCT) received the PUC. Company D of the 133rd NCB - part of the 25th RCT - did not. Company A of the 4th Pioneer Battalion in the 23rd RCT received the PUC. Headquarters Company and Companies A, B, and C of the 133rd NCB did not. The 4th Marine Division had only one Pioneer battalion - the 4th - which was assigned to the 25th RCT. Therefore, another Pioneer battalion was needed for the 23rd RCT. According to veterans of the battalion, the 133rd NCB, with the 4th Pioneer Company A., satisfied that need. Official 4th Marine Division documents prove that the 133rd NCB was part of the assault units of the 4th Marine Division for the Iwo Jima campaign. Did the 133rd NCB deserve a Presidential Unit Citation? Commander Marra and his fellow Seabee veterans think so.
John Ratomski
June 5,2010
Westbury, N.Y.

IMMEDIATE PRESS RELEASE The public is invited to attend Memorial Day ceremonies on Sunday, May 30th at the National Iwo Jima Memorial Monument and Park in Newington. The National Iwo Jima Memorial Historical Foundation, Inc. will hold their ceremony starting at 5:00 pm. Members of the Iwo Jima Survivors Association and the Memorial Historical Foundation will be present. Included in the ceremony will be a reading of the names of the 100 men KIA from Connecticut who are listed on the monument. Any relatives of the men are especially invited to toll a bell for each. The special guest speaker will be Col. Carl Venditto. A Color Guard from Charlie Company will be present along with our Bagpiper, Pat Whelan. Earlier that same day, the Hardware City Division of the Marine Corps League of New Britain will hold a ceremony at the park as part of their New Britain monument stops. The will arrive at the park sometime between 12 noon and 1:00 pm (most likely around 12:30) after their ceremony at the Captain Letendre Monument. The National Iwo Jima Memorial Monument is located on the northeast side of the CCSU campus at the intersection of Ella Grasso Boulevard and Route 9 (exit 29) at the Newington-New Britain town line. For further information, call Gary at (860) 291-9666.
Webmaster
May 28,2010
Connecticut

The Navajo Code Talkers were a very important and speical group of Marines, assigned to the 3rd, 4th and 5th Marine Division for the Iwo Jima campaign. They came in on the 2nd Wave with their radios, set up for the HeadQuarters Signal Co. Sgt. Harold Y.Foster-Navajo Code Talker was with the 5th Marine Division, 27th Regt. 3rd Bttn. and landed on Red 2. IF IT WERE NOT FOR THE NAVAJOS-THEY WOULD HAVE NEVER TAKEN IWO JIMA//Li'i'binaa" Na'a'dzi'i' (Horse Eye Has Heal) Long Live the Navajo Warriors of the South Pacific.
Larry P. Foster
May 25,2010
Gallup, NM

ATTENTION!...................... I have been unable to access my account to update this website.....................until further notice, I will be posting all updates to Facebook which can be accessed from our Home page.
Webmaster
May 20,2010
Connecticut

The Iwo Jima Survivors are co-sponsoring a MOTORCYCLE POKER RUN. It will be MAY 23, 2010 starting at Gengras Harley Davidson in East Hartford, CT. Please check the SOS Facebook page by accessing it from the home page. It will give you more details.
Marianne
May 5,2010
Connecticut

Very good site, a great honor to all Iwo Survivors, one of whom was my Dad SGT Leon Padell, please check out the website I did for his HQ Company in all 4 battles the 4th was in www.hq224usmc.com
Jeffrey Padell
March 26,2010
East Walpole, MA

served on iwo jima 3rd marine div 21st reg
willard a lucas
February 19,2010
lisbon nh 03585

Looks great!
Bill Maune
February 8,2010
Middletown CT

Good Job...will await all the updates. We MUST give thanks to ALL our veterans and keep passing the word...Freedom wasn\'t free. Thanks for all your work.
Chuck and Nancy
February 8,2010
Clinton,Ct.

VERY GOOD VERY WELL DONE
Gary
February 3,2010
CT

Please be patient. I am still constructing this website. I know some pages are not complete yet. After I get the text in, I will add more pictures. I am learning.
Marianne
February 2,2010
Connecticut

We hope you like this new website. Please let us know what you think. Come visit us often to find out what is new.
Marianne
January 31,2010
Connecticut



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