Wednesday, February 20, 2019

ALL CONFLICTS SEEM THE SAME GUADALCANAL



FIRST MARINE RAIDERS   GUADELCANAL
As a young, brash Marine heading to the PacificTheater in the summer of 1942, William S. Parks "didn’t think much about surviving--that was a given." Taking part in the Guadalcanal campaign quickly proved him wrong. He lost his best friend, a member of his machine gun squad, in August 1942, and found that life on the island posed threats beyond enemy bullets. He spent the six-month campaign subsisting on minimal provisions--including food he could forage, such as taro roots, and captured Japanese rations--and weathered two bouts of malaria. He was one of the lucky ones: of the 44 men in his platoon, roughly a dozen survived. When he finally made it to New Zealand for rest and relaxation, he and his comrades spent several weeks gorging themselves on the fresh milk and produce at "milk bars," as the local soda fountains were called. He would go on to see combat on Tarawa, a battle he describes as a "barroom brawl.
"All of us had malaria. And there was jungle rot and coral poisoning and just about every kind of disease and vermin. If you could find it in the jungle, Guadalcanal had it."

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