The Aleutians
The Lands of 50 mph Fog
The 50th Engineers
Yasuyo Yamasaki was appointed Commanding Officer of the
Japanese 2nd District Force of the North Sea Defense Force in
February of 1943. Transported to Attu by submarine in April of
1943, Yamasaki’s tasking was that he should hold Attu with no
assurances of additional support from Japan in the near future.
By the 28th of May 1943 Colonel Yamasaki, now commander of
the Japanese 301st Independent Infantry Battalion (which had
attacked and captured Attu earlier on the 7th of June 1942),
was running out of options, supplies, and manpower.
Col. Yamasaki planned a final all-out attack against the
American forces on Attu using the remaining 800 or so of his
men that could still walk, crawl or otherwise even carry a stick.
His men were by now starving, having resorted to eating
thistles during their final days at war, and they were running
out of arms and ammunition.
The target of this attack was the American 105mm Howitzer
cannon emplacements located on a hill overlooking Massacre
Bay. The objective of this attack would be to capture the
cannons and aim them towards the American troops and
supplies amassed on the beaches of Massacre Bay, site of the
American forces landing on the 11th of May, 1943. This rear
area was inhabited by thousands of American troops and
supplies, including ammunition. If this hill had been taken by
Col. Yamasaki, thus giving him command of the high ground,
he would be able to inflict high casualties amongst the
Americans, and they in turn would be forced to engage in yet
another battle against the Japanese to regain the hill.
The success of this venture would also be realized if they were
able to locate and procure food along with additional arms and
ammunition, which would then make available the option of
withdrawing to more secure locations on Attu where they
would await the arrival of reinforcements and resupply that
ultimately would never happen.
Some say the Colonel formulated this attack knowing how
futile his situation had become. His plan was in keeping with
the Bushido (Warrior's) code that he and those in the Japanese
military lived by which forbade the Japanese soldier the option
of surrendering to their enemy. The Japanese soldier was to
die in battle or commit suicide rather than being captured alive.
On the 29th of May, 1943, Company E of the 50th Combat
Engineer Battalion played a pivotal role contributing to the
winning of the last battle on Attu. On the 17th of May, 1943, six
days after landing on Massacre Bay, Company E set up camp
at a location on a hill of a little over 500' elevation overlooking
Massacre Bay to the south and Sarana Valley to the east. It was
a tedious hike uphill through the wet, slippery tundra, ice, and
snow. It had been snowing and/or raining just about every day
since their arrival on Attu. There was no shelter for these men
save for their foxholes. Their initial tasking as combat
engineers upon landing on the beach was in part to keep
mortar crews supplied with ammunition. Now their job was
expanding to points further east as the Americans continued to
push the Japanese forces towards Chichagof Harbor, the main
Japanese encampment.
The 50th reached the top of the hill by the sixth day. The front
lines were now located down Jim Fish Valley several miles to
the east-northeast of their camp. All supplies were "muled in"
by the men on foot across the volcanic rock and tundra. There
were initially no existing roads that would make their jobs any
easier. The arrival of a bulldozer shortly afterwards soon
enabled a hastily built semblance of a road leading down the
hill and along the valley bottom that would enable supplies to
be more easily moved up to the Infantry fighting the Japanese
at the other end.
This hill was now part of a rear area that was home to the
artillery and the Combat Engineers. The artillery’s 105mm
Howitzers were located near or on the top of the hill, and were
directed to fire towards the eastern end of the valley…shooting
support missions for the Infantry at the forward edge of the
battle area (FEBA) located 2-3 miles away. Company E of the
50th Combat Engineers was located several hundred yards
down the hill east of the artillery emplacements.
An aid station operated by the 14th Field Hospital Unit was
situated across Sarana Valley about 400 yards below and to the
east of the 50th Combat Engineers on the hill. This aid station
consisted of three large GP Tents, each capable of holding
about 30-40 people. Wounded American infantry soldiers
received their first treatments there, many the result of the
raging battle with the Japanese further down the valley.
Close to this aid station in a gorge at the foot of the first steep
rise down Jim Fish Valley and over near the left side of the
valley was also located a supply dump and kitchens set up by
the 2nd Battalion of the 32nd.
At 0300hrs on Attu during the month of May there is still some
semblance of twilight, not the darkness of night as one would
expect. Night appears as the light at dusk seen at lower
latitudes for only about two hours during this time of year.
Influencing the environment to a greater extent was the
overabundant presence of fog. The fog enshrouding the
islands results from the warm Japan Current flowing into the
cold freezing waters of the Bearing Sea, home of the Aleutian
Islands. This fog was used by the Japanese in the Aleutians to
both their offensive and defensive advantages by providing
concealment of their activities and their positions.
Shortly after 0300hrs on the 29th of May, 1943, Colonel
Yamasaki along with somewhere between 600 and 800 of his
men marched through this fog as they advanced towards their
primary objective, the American 105mm Howitzer positions at
the top of the hill. The hastily built and rather crude road built
by the Americans provided an enhanced trail for the Japanese
forces, for now they could travel more easily and faster on foot
using the road as opposed to marching through the wet,
snowy, slippery tundra.
The first obstacle encountered by the attacking Japanese
forces and their targeted American 105mm Howitzers on the
hill was the supply dump and aid station. The advancing
Japanese were hidden from the Americans view by the same
fog that kept the dump and aid station area hidden from the
Japanese. The Japanese attackers upon reaching the dump
and aid station knew that in order to achieve their objective
they would have to neutralize this encampment. They began
bayoneting and shooting those inside the tents and engaged in
hand-to-hand and up close combat with the supply dump and
aid station personnel (medics, administration, cooks, etc.). The
intensity of this fighting was evidenced by the intermingling of
both Japanese and American bodies as seen during inspection
after the battle was over.
Extracts from the book "The Capture of Attu, As Told By The
Men Who Fought there" reveals the events as they unfolded at
the Supply Dump and Aid Station:
The Story of a Supply Dump, by Private 1st Class Thomas
Allen Sexton, HQ Company, 32nd Infantry...”Sexton was the
assistant company clerk for Company F and in the battle days
every available man had been used to push ammunition and
rations to the front-line boys. The 2nd Battalion of the 32nd
had established the forward supply dump and set up kitchens
there. The battle [at the other end of the valley] was going
along pretty well and it was in the final stages. The Japs had
been squeezed into a small area, and the pressure on them
was increasing every hour. Everyone was nearing exhaustion
from constant exposure to numbing cold and from constant
driving. The haul up the mountain from the supply dump to the
front lines was a five-hour back breaker, and Sexton had
returned at 0100 May 29, from lugging a box of rations up the
mountain and he was just about tuckered out. Staff Sergeant
Joseph B. Orlow, the mess sergeant of Company F, and
Corporal Wilson L. Johnson, the company clerk, had pitched a
pup tent near the twenty-foot bank where the kitchens were set
up. They got hold of Sexton and the three of them crawled into
their sacks with Sexton in the middle.
About 0430 Sexton woke up. There was firing up the valley.
This was not unusual, so they stayed in their sacks and
listened for a few minutes. The firing was increasing in
intensity to such a degree that the men started to get out of
their sacks. Suddenly the volume of firing, and, for the first
time, shouting mushroomed into bedlam. The three men
scrambled to get out of the sacks when the first grenade went
off in the area.
Sexton was dazed. Just a few seconds after the grenades
landed, one of the guards, a Mexican boy, shrieked. He had
been bayoneted, and only then did Sexton realize that the Japs
were actually upon them. A horde of screaming, chattering
Japs poured down over the bank onto the sleeping or only
half-awake men. They had rifles, grenades, machine guns, and
bayonets tied on sticks. The bedlam was numbing. Johnson
showed marvelous presence of mind. The three men were
sitting up, still in their sacks, and in the tent. Johnson was
firing his rifle toward the top of the bank. He emptied his clip
and made a grab for his pistol, a pistol he had picked up the
day before. One of the sentries had fallen back and was
standing just outside the tent. He was firing frantically. Orlow
kept repeating, "What will we do? What will we do?" The sentry
outside bent over and shouted to him, "Give me your gun,
mine's empty." Orlow handed his rifle out. Johnson fired twice
with his pistol.
A Jap fell just outside the tent. Sexton heard a bullet whistle
and thump into Johnson's body. Johnson gasped, but
continued to fire his .45.
Then the Jap bayonets began plunging into the tent. Sexton
felt Orlow lurch as a bayonet got him. Johnson fired again.
Bayonets were ripping into the tent from all sides. Sexton had
his carbine going and was firing through the tent at each
bayonet thrust. Then Johnson got stabbed again. He and
Orlow went down together. Sexton fell back with them. The
Japs were screaming all around the tent. Sexton felt someone
lift the tattered tent and heard a short Japanese phrase spoken
over his head. Two English words were being repeated with
frenzy outside, words he will never forget because they were
so familiar and yet so alien that morning. The Japs were
raiding the supply dump and repeated "grenades" and
"cigarettes" over and over. The fight was over in a few minutes,
and most of the Japs moved across the valley."
A Day in Hiding, by Corporal Virgil F. Montgomery, 1st Platoon,
14th Field Hospital "The 1st Platoon of the 14th Field Hospital
had been used almost entirely for evacuation, because that
was the big problem - moving the wounded men back from the
front over the steep mountains and the slippery tundra filled
with deep, treacherous holes.
The front lines were down Jim Fish Valley quite a ways so we
had set up an advanced aid station across Sarana Valley from
Engineer Hill, and for three days we had used it as a sort of
combination aid tent and collecting station. Major Robert J.
Kamish was working the station and there were seventeen men
from our platoon with him. We had foxholes dug around the
tent and pup tents had been pitched over many of them.
The night of May 28, Brown my buddy, and I were sleeping
together a short distance from the aid tent in our shelter. The
2nd Battalion of the 32nd Infantry had established a kitchen
and a supply dump in a draw to the left of our draw, maybe 400
yards, and the first we heard of anything wrong was a lot of
shouting and some shooting coming from over there. I raised
up to listen. It was about 0500 in the morning and still so dark
that it was hard to distinguish objects. Firing from down the
valley was the usual thing, but there had been comparatively
little firing as far back as the supply dumps, so this sudden
outburst worried me. I woke Cletus A. Brown up and we
watched and listened. Then we saw six men moving out of the
draw and coming our way. Although I could barely see them,
something in the way they walked made me believe they were
Japs. Others around us had heard the commotion and were
getting up. We climbed out of our bags, and grabbed our boots
and coats; the rest of our clothes were on; we had been
sleeping in them right along. Other men had spotted the first
group of Japs and had started to move out. We went toward
the aid tent first, only to meet another column of Japs, who
were running and chattering like monkeys, swinging in from
the right. Brown was ahead of me and he started to run,
shouting, "Up here!" We ran along the only route open to us,
right up the hill between our draw and the draw the 2nd
Battalion's kitchens were in. As we broke to run, the Japs
spotted us and began firing. We ran frantically until we got into
a small nook on the hill. Brown stopped, breathless, and I
caught up with him. We were panting from the hard run. The
shouting and chattering and firing of the melee behind us was
terrible. Brown was looking back down the hill, "Hell, here they
come!" he said, and he turned and started on up the hill. I took
a quick look and six or seven Japs had just come into view
over the crest of the little flat we were on. They began firing
again. I ran a few feet and hit dirt. Brown kept running ahead. I
had made three or four dashes, the bullets whistling around
me, and I hit the dirt again; this time my left leg had gone into a
hole in the tundra clear up to my hip. Brown was shouting at
me. I looked up. He was skylined at the crest of the hill. While I
looked he let out a cry and fell. He had been hit."
The Japanese attackers re-grouped and continued their efforts
to close in on their objective. They took a quick turn and
hurried up the fog-enshrouded hill...towards the bulldozer
which had been used earlier by the Americans to smooth out
the road leading down from their camp. The bulldozer was
located just below the 50th Combat Engineers, Company E's
dug in positions; the next and final obstacle on the way to
reaching the 105mm Howitzers.
Meet the 50th Combat Engineers
There were apparently no communications or runners in place
whereby members of the aid station or supply dump could
notify those units located further up the hill and in line with the
Japanese offensive. 1st Lt. Fred Messing and two NCOs of the
50th Combat Engineers were finally alerted by a sentry to the
commotion and gunfire coming from the aid station area down
the hill from them. They then ran about 25 yards through the
fog and down the hill from their forward foxholes reaching the
bulldozer just as the Japanese had approached uphill to within
about 30 yards of it.
Messing had initially reached a point slightly beyond the
bulldozer in an attempt to make sure the commotion wasn't
coming from friendly forces made up of retreating American
infantrymen. When he and his two companions heard
Japanese being spoken in low voices off in the distance as the
Japanese leaders were giving orders to their men, they knew
they had to quickly return to their lines...but, by the time they
made it back to the bulldozer they realized they weren't going
to be able to reach their lines in time being hampered by the
slick, thick, snow-covered tundra. They also knew that they
themselves might be mistaken as enemy combatants by their
own men and thus might be shot at as they approached their
own positions! In light of all these considerations they made
the final decision to quickly take up defensive positions at the
bulldozer.
By now Messing and the two NCOs were separated from the
Japanese attackers by only 15 yards. Luckily, two cases of
hand grenades had been accidentally left on the bulldozer's
driver's seat. These grenades, along with one M-1 Carbine and
Messing's .45 pistol were all the arms they possessed to fend
off the initial attack. Messing and the two NCOs fired at the
Japanese from positions behind the bulldozer while at the
same time throwing all 24 of the four-second fused grenades at
the Japanese attackers who had been slowly advancing
shoulder-to-shoulder towards the 50th CE's positions. The
noise of the exploding grenades and gunfire gave the
remaining Engineers, who were sacked out in their foxholes
and bunkers, time to man their positions and engage the battle.
One of the positions included a .50 Cal M-2 machine gun, a
formidable weapon, which began tearing into the invading
Japanese attackers.
The artillerymen, located above the Engineer's positions at
about 200 yards up the hill, only became engaged in the battle
about 15 minutes after the Combat Engineers were initially
attacked. They were now firing on the Japanese attackers with
small arms, having to shoot through the Engineer's positions
located between the artillery and the invading Japanese.
Unfortunately, several Engineers were wounded or killed by
friendly fire as a result.
An extract from the book "The Capture of Attu, As Told By The
Men Who Fought There" provides some further insight as to
the conduct of the battle:
First Sergeant Jessie H. Clonts, Jr., Company D, 50th
Engineers "We had worked all night and up until noon of the
27th carrying supplies up to the front, then we slept four hours
and worked almost all night again. We were so tired when we
finally did get into our sacks that I didn't think anything could
wake us up, but the 37 mm shell that smacked through the tent
did it.
The shell was the first indication we had that the Japs had
broken through. We had just gotten up before they hit us and
things really began to pop. It was foggy and dark, which made
it almost impossible to tell Americans from Jap during the
early part of the fight. Lt. John H. Green saw a man walking out
ahead of him, and he hollered for the guy to get the hell down
in a hole, the fellow replied, "Me do, me do," but he didn't get
down fast enough because Lt. Green shot him. They were right
in with us. Lt. Jack J. Dillon and I were trying to establish a line
and our best protection was to walk up straight. We decided
we'd take a chance on stray bullets; both of us being over six
feet tall was pretty good identification for us so our own boys
wouldn't shoot us. The captain had a loud voice and all
morning he shouted directions and pep talks that could be
heard, even above the racket of the fight, all over the hill. We
put two BARs in, one on each flank of our line, and they got in
some good licks with tracer ammunition which marked our
own line for our men, and also pointed out targets. I saw
Sergeant Allstead right in the thick of things, and he is not the
type of person you'd expect to find in the middle of a good
fight. I asked him what he was doing up there and he said,
"Goddammit! I've got as much right to be here as you have,"
just like it was a party or something.
The line we had established held, and very few Japs got
through it. When daylight came we discovered a whole bunch
of Japs pinned in a ditch in front of the road along which we
had been fighting. While the boys kept firing to keep the Japs
down, several others of us crawled up the bank and threw
grenades into them. Helmets, rifles, and Japs flew out of the
ditch. We were astonished at the mess of them. They had been
lying three deep in the ditch trying to hide."
The Battle at Engineer Hill, Attu, AK WWIIThere were an
estimated 600 or so Japanese soldiers engaged in the battle.
As the battle raged, many of the remaining attacking Japanese
soldiers, seeing their attempted takeover of the hill and the
American Howitzers was failing, began committing suicide. It
was around 0900hrs on the morning of the 29th of May, 1943.
While this battle for Attu was over, searches continued
throughout the day for any remaining Japanese forces. The
American defenders saved this day for victory and this
location where the final battle for Attu was fought, this hill,
would become known forever more as "Engineer Hill."
Pvt. 1st Class Robert W. Watson, an Infantry cook, was killed
on this day. Bob Watson, his son and a contributor and
frequent visitor to the Aleutian websites, presented us with a
copy of the letter sent to his mother, Gladys, from U. S. Maj.
General Larkin, dated the 27th of January 1947 regarding the
burial location of Bob's dad at Attu’s Little Falls Cemetery.
There would be many more letters sent to the families of those
who paid the ultimate price at Engineer Hill and surrounding
camps on that day, the 29th of May, 1943.
The Japanese bodies were buried in a mass grave, covered in
dirt by the same bulldozer used to shelter Messing and the two
NCOs of the 50th CEs as the Japanese attack ensued. In the
end, there were only 28 surviving Japanese combatants who
surrendered rather than commit suicide, none of them were
members of the Japanese officer corp.
In Japan it was reported that all of the [Japanese] defenders of
Attu died. The government of Japan's Prime Minister General
Tojo (and it's media) called this "Gyokusai." This term in
Japanese means "broken as a jewel," and comes from a
Chinese saying "Not to preserve yourself as a tile, rather be
broken in pieces as a jewel." This was the first of the gyokusai
battles in the Pacific war. There were more than 10 gyokusai
battles before the end of the war (ref. Dr. Kaji).
1st Lt. Messing received the Bronze Star "V" for Valor Citation
for Bravery as a result of his part played in the Battle for Attu
as a member of the 50th Combat Engineers. Lt. Messing's
wound to the upper right arm was from a Japanese .25 Cal
bullet, front to back, which resulted in Lt. Messing also being
awarded the Purple Heart. He joked that he had to worry about
being shot in the ass, as it was facing up the hill towards the
artillerymen during the attack!
In the final days of the war on Attu, around 100 trucks and
Jeeps, along with the bulldozer, were driven off a cliff and into
the sea so as to not have to ship them back to the United
States or to other theaters of war. These vehicles were in bad
shape, and the units would get new equipment for the pending
invasion of Japan.
[Updated 12 May 2010 with material and information supplied
by Fred Messing's son, Andy, also a frequent contributor to the
Aleutian’s websites, and from excerpts from "The Capture of
Attu, As Told By The Men Who Fought There."]
Current Update: 03/08/2022 07:43