Schneider, Ervin A., Cpl

Deceased
 
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 Service Details
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Last Rank
Corporal
Last Primary MOS
1300-Basic Engineer, Construction, and Equipment Marine
Last MOSGroup
Engineer, Construction And Equipment
Primary Unit
1944-1945, 1375, 6th Marine Division
Service Years
1942 - 1945
Enlisted Collar Insignia
Corporal

 Last Photo 
 Personal Details 



Home State
Wisconsin
Wisconsin
Year of Birth
1922
 
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This Remembrance Profile was originally created by Cpl Roger Rape (Mouse) - Deceased
 
Contact Info
Home Town
Wausau
Last Address
Wausau
Date of Passing
Aug 05, 2012
 

 Official Badges 

WW II Honorable Discharge Pin


 Unofficial Badges 




 Additional Information
Last Known Activity:



                                                  BURIED AT THE PINE GROVE CEMETERY IN WAUSAU, WISC

   

  1944-1945, 1375, 6th Marine Division



From Month/Year
- / 1944
To Month/Year
- / 1945
Unit
6th Marine Division Unit Page
Rank
Corporal
MOS
1375-Demolition Man
Base, Station or City
Not Specified
State/Country
Okinawa
 
 
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 6th Marine Division Details

6th Marine Division
World War II infantry division formed in September 1944. During the invasion of Okinawa it saw combat at Yae-Take and Sugar Loaf Hill and was awarded a Presidential Unit Citation. The 6th Division had also prepared for the invasion of Japan before the war ended. After the war it served in Tsingtao, China where the division was disbanded on April 1, 1946, being the only Marine division to be formed and disbanded overseas and never set foot in the United States.
World War II
Formation on the Solomon Islands
The 6th Marine Division was formed on Guadalcanal in the southern Solomon Islands on September 7, 1944. The 6th division was formed from three infantry regiments, the 4th, 22nd and 29th Marines, and other units such as Engineer, Medical, Pioneer, Motor Transport, Tank, Headquarters, and Service battalions. The core cadre around which the division was formed was the former 1st Provisional Marine Brigade, which included the 4th and 22nd Marine Regiments, plus their supporting artillery battalions - these artillery battalions were later consolidated into the 15th Marine Regiment.
The Battle of Guam ended in August 1944 and the 1st Provisional Marine Brigade was called to Guadalcanal along with the 1st Battalion, 29th Marines, which had served with the 2nd Marine Division in the Battle of Saipan on the Mariana Islands. With a core of all these veterans incorporated into the new division, the 6th was not considered "green" despite being a new formation- most of the men were veterans of at least one campaign and many were serving a second combat tour, half the forces in the 3 Infantry Regiments were all veterans, and some units were even 70% veterans. The 2nd and 3rd Battalions, 29th Marines disembarked from the United States on 1 August 1944, and landed on Guadalcanal on 7 September 1944 to further stand-up the Division. The now fully manned 6th division underwent "rugged" training on Guadalcanal between October and January before it was shipped 6,000 miles to land as part of the III Amphibious Corps on the island of Okinawa on 1 April 1945.
Okinawa
The Division's initial objectives in the amphibious landing was the capture of Yontan Airfield while protecting the left (North) Flank. Despite a Japanese battalion in their zone the Division met only light resistance and by the 3rd day was approaching Iskhikawa, twelve days ahead of schedule. By 14 April, the division had swept all through the northern Ishikawa Isthmus â?? 55 miles from the original landings. The division's rapid advance continued until eventually they encountered prepared and dug-in defenders at Yae-Take, where the majority of the Udo Force was entrenched. The Udo Force, or Kunigami Detachment, under Colonel Takehiko Udo was built around the 2d Infantry Unit of the 44th Independent Mixed Brigade â?? reinforced by having absorbed both former sea-raiding suicide squadrons and remnants of the Battalion earlier destroyed by the 6th â?? was responsible for defense of the Motobu Peninsula and Ie Shima. The 6th Division's drive captured most of northern Okinawa and the Division won praise for its fast campaign â?? Brigadier General Oliver P. Smith wrote: "The campaign in the north should dispel the belief held by some that Marines are beach-bound and are not capable of rapid movement."
After heavy fighting in the south, the division was ordered to replace the Army 27th Infantry Division on the western flank. The 6th division advanced south to partake in the assault against the strong Japanese defense line, called the Shuri Line, that had been constructed across the southern coastline. The Shuri Line was located in hills that were honeycombed with caves and passages, and the Marines had to traverse the hills to cross the line. The division was ordered to capture the Sugar Loaf Hill Complex, 3 hills which formed the western anchor of the Shuri Line defense. The Marines that had assaulted the line were attacked by heavy Japanese mortar and artillery fire, which made it more difficult to secure the line. After a week of fighting, the hill had been taken.
After Sugarloaf the Division advanced through Naha, conducted a shore-to-shore amphibious assault on, and subsequent 10-day battle to capture, the Oroku peninsula (defended by Admiral �?ta's forces), and partook in mop-up operations in the south. The battle on Okinawa ended on 21 June 1945. The Sixth division was credited with over 23,839 enemy soldiers killed or captured, and with helping to capture �??2â??3 of the island, but at the cost of heavy casualties, including 576 casualties on one day (May 16) alone, â?? a day described as the "bitterest" fighting of the Okinawa campaign where "the regiments had attacked with all the effort at their command and had been unsuccessful"
For its actions at Okinawa, the 6th Marine Division (and reinforcing units) earned a Presidential Unit Citation. The citation reads:
For extraordinary heroism in action against enemy Japanese forces during the assault and capture of Okinawa, April 1 to June 21, 1945. Seizing Yontan Airfield in its initial operation, the SIXTH Marine Division, Reinforced, smashed through organized resistance to capture Ishikawa Isthmus, the town of Nago and heavily fortified Motobu Peninsula in 13 days. Later committed to the southern front, units of the Division withstood overwhelming artillery and mortar barrages, repulsed furious counterattacks and staunchly pushed over the rocky terrain to reduce almost impregnable defenses and capture Sugar Loaf Hill. Turning southeast, they took the capital city of Naha and executed surprise shore-to-shore landings on Oroku Peninsula, securing the area with its prized Naha Airfield and Harbor after nine days of fierce fighting. Reentering the lines in the south, SIXTH Division Marines sought out enemy forces entrenched in a series of rocky ridges extending to the southern tip of the island, advancing relentlessly and rendering decisive support until the last remnants of enemy opposition were exterminated and the island secured. By their valor and tenacity, the officers and men of the SIXTH Marine Division, Reinforced contributed materially to the conquest of Okinawa, and their gallantry in overcoming a fanatic enemy in the face of extraordinary danger and difficulty adds new luster to Marine Corps history, and to the traditions of the United States Naval Service.
â??â??Secretary of the Navy James Forrestal for the President
Guam and China
In July 1945, the 6th division was withdrawn from Okinawa to the island of Guam to prepare for Operation Coronet, the planned invasion of Honshū, Japan that was supposed to occur in April 1946 but the Japanese surrendered in August 1945. While the 4th Marines were sent for brief occupation duty in Japan, the rest of the 6th spent September in Guam preparing for duty in China
The division arrived in Tsingtao, China on 11 October 1945 where it remained until it was disbanded on April 1, 1946, being replaced by the 3d Marine Brigade. In its time at Tsingtao the division not only accepted the surrender of local Japanese forces (on Oct 25) but also oversaw their subsequent repatriation to Japan; prevented the communists from attacking the surrendered Japanese forces and dissuaded communist forces from advancing on the city, restored and maintained order, and came to be seen as the protector of minority groups in the former German concession.
Commanders
The 6th Division had 2 commanders during its short existence:
  • Major General Lemuel C. Shepherd, Jr., 7 Sep. 1944 â?? 24 Dec. 1945
  • Major General Archie F. Howard, 24 Dec. 1945 â?? 1 Apr. 1946
The Assistant Division Commander was Brigadier General William T. Clement
 
Type
Support
 
Parent Unit
Divisions
Strength
USMC Division
Created/Owned By
Not Specified
   

Last Updated: Jun 13, 2018
   
   
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188 Members Also There at Same Time
6th Marine Division

Clement, William Tardy, LtGen, (1917-1952) 99 9903 Brigadier General
Louther, Karl, BGen, (1925-1956) 99 9906 Colonel
Luckey, Robert, LtGen, (1927-1963) 8 0802 Colonel
McQueen, John Crawford, LtGen, (1921-1958) 99 9906 Colonel
Whaling, William J, MGen, (1917-1954) 99 9906 Colonel
Shaw, Samuel, BGen, (1928-1962) 4 0402 Lieutenant Colonel
Franklin, William O., 1stLt, (1941-1945) 3 0306 First Lieutenant
King, Travis, 1stLt, (1943-1945) 3 0302 First Lieutenant
Monnett, Jr, Charles Guy, 1stLt, (1943-1945) 3 0302 First Lieutenant
Monnett, Jr, Charles Guy, 1stLt, (1943-1945) 3 0302 First Lieutenant
Ruess, Edward, 1stLt, (1942-1945) OF 1542 First Lieutenant
Schrier, Harold, LtCol, (1936-1961) 3 0302 First Lieutenant
Vanderpool, Edsel, Maj, (1942-1953) OF First Lieutenant
Beau, Jerome J C, Maj, (1940-1964) 3 0301 Second Lieutenant
Dahl, Clarence, Col, (1942-1976) 3 0302 Second Lieutenant
Gaumnitz, Rodney E, 2ndLt, (1942-1945) 3 0302 Second Lieutenant
Van Brunt, Fredrick B. ( Tad ), 1stLt, (1943-1959) 2 0294 Second Lieutenant
Deason, Alvin Jefferson, CWO4, (1929-1964) 15 1541 Chief Warrant Officer 3
Day, James Lewis, MGen, (1943-1986) 3 0311 Gunnery Sergeant
Zeimet, Wilfred, MGySgt, (1940-1966) 18 1814 Gunnery Sergeant
Bush, Richard, TSgt, (1942-1946) 3 0369 Technical Sergeant
McNutt, Mason, SSgt, (1943-1946) 3 0369 Staff Sergeant
Peskin, David, SSgt, (1942-1946) 46 4641 Staff Sergeant
Bones, Alfred, SSgt, (1940-1945) 3 0369 Staff Sergeant
Teal, Charles, SSgt, (1942-1946) 4 0441 Staff Sergeant
Ball, Iddo W, Sgt, (1937-1945) 3 0369 Sergeant
Bond, Jerry M., Sgt, (1940-1945) 521 Sergeant
Brown, James Wesley, Sgt, (1942-1946) 18 1814 Sergeant
Candelaria, Edward, Sgt, (1945-1947) 1 0143 Sergeant
Carlson, Vernon, Sgt, (1940-1946) 3 0341 Sergeant
Carlson, Vernon, Sgt, (1940-1946) 3 0341 Sergeant
Curtis, Chester, Sgt, (1942-1946) OF Sergeant
Kulikowski, Leopold, MSgt, (1938-1958) 3 0311 Sergeant
Marsh, Daniel Zaru, SSgt, (1941-1945) OF 521 Sergeant
Merrell, Louis Raymond, Sgt, (1942-1945) 3 0311 Sergeant
Mitchell, Dixie Gordon, Sgt, (1943-1946) 6 0629 Sergeant
Powers, Robert, Sgt, (1942-1946) 521 Sergeant
Sanday, Marland, SSgt, (1941-1946) 3 0332 Sergeant
Stewart, Isaac, Sgt, (1943-1946) 3 0311 Sergeant
Albritton, Garland, Cpl 3 0311 Corporal
Boerman, Robert T, Cpl, (1942-1945) OF 737 Corporal
CROWLEY, JOSEPH, Sgt, (1942-1951) 35 3531 Corporal
Cusack, Robert, Cpl, (1942-1946) 46 4631 Corporal
Dunham, Edward Henry, Cpl, (1943-1945) 3 0311 Corporal
Eblen, Bill Lee, Sgt, (1943-1953) OF 174 Corporal
Filipek, Walter Vincent, Cpl, (1943-1946) 3 0311 Corporal
Freeling, John Joseph, Cpl, (1942-1945) 521 Corporal
Gagnon, Rene, Cpl, (1943-1946) 58 5811 Corporal
Habben, William George, Cpl, (1944-1946) 3 0311 Corporal
Hickey, James Julius, Cpl, (1942-1945) 3 0311 Corporal
King, George Henry, Cpl, (1943-1945) OF 642 Corporal
Kinney, William Austin, Cpl, (1944-1946) 3 0311 Corporal
Marshak, Lawrence, PFC, (1944-1947) 8 0800 Corporal
Marshak, Lawrence 8 0800 Corporal
Morris, Joseph (Joe), Cpl, (1943-1946) OF 642 Corporal
North, Hugh Dorsey, Cpl, (1940-1945) OF 600 Corporal
O'Malley, William Peter, Cpl, (1943-1945) OF 607 Corporal
Oppleton, Alfred George, Cpl, (1942-1945) OF 603 Corporal
Reichert, Daniel, Cpl, (1943-1946) OF 522 Corporal

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