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Craig Carmichael
Winter
address: 6175 N. Hogahn Avenue, Paradise Valley, AZ 85253-3955, (602)
553-1935, Summer address: 2748 Hyatts Road, Powell, OH 43065,
(740) 369-3505, Email:
craiglou@aol.com
I was a Navy
radioman who landed behind the 4th Division Marines on the morning of Feb.
3, 1944 after Roi was secured. I was part of a 40 man mobile radar
team who set up our gear on Roi to warn of all approaching aircraft until
the larger permanent radars of Argus 21 were set up about a week to 10 days
later, since they arrived on a different ship than the advance radar team.
Our team's equipment consisted of 4 mobile units: 1 radar van, 1 radio van,
1 generator van, and a smaller open-topped trailer with an auxiliary
generator just in case. On 3 Feb. 1944 - 1000 hours, we were offloaded from
the brand new 10,000 ton, AKA 61, U.S.C.G.S. Aquarius into four LCVP's and
pulled ashore by tracked diesel tractors on the south beach of Roi, then
hauled off the beach up to the edge of the airstrip. We were
immediately greeted by the grisly sights and smells of war's devastation.
Lying where they fell were hundreds of Japanese corpses strewn over the two
hundred acres of the former Jap airfield with its figure 4 landing strips.
After lying for two days in the hot tropic sun the stench of the corpses,
along with the smell of cordite and the acrid smell of smoke from burned
buildings and rotting vegetation, all intermingled in a cloying mantle of
sweet and sour foulness of odors difficult to describe unless you've
experienced it for yourself. After waiting for an hour in the blazing
sun amidst the foul stench of the corpses on every side, we were finally
hauled about 300 yards farther inland to a position about the center of the
island. There we set up the equipment and were operating within a few
hours. Around noon the next day we picked up enemy surveillance
aircraft at the extreme range of the radar and tracked him in to five or 10
miles. It became a regular daily occurrence at about noon and
continued until the night of 12 Feb. 0200 hours when 10 to 12 Jap Mavis
flying boats from Truk, staged through Ponape, hit us on a clear night in
the light of a full moon, so bright you could read newsprint. In a
matter of 15 minutes from the wail of the warning sirens, the deadly
shish-shish-shish of the first bombs plummeted to earth and slammed with a
thud into the coral island. In a millisecond a hurricane blast erupted
with a thunderclap of such force it lifted me up and slammed me down again
like the blow from a giant fist. That first horrendous blast came from
a direct hit on the big bomb dump at the south edge of the Marine and
Seabees bivouac area, where most of the 38 KIA and the 675 WIA were
suffered. The explosion of the other bombs and incendiaries dropped
were lost in that first big blast, but in a matter of only a very few
minutes the entire supply dump of 20 to 30 acres was set ablaze in a wall of
flame that leaped upward hundreds of feet into the moonlit night, and fed by
winds from the periphery, vented upward through a cumulous cloud strata at
the ten thousand foot level then continued upward until it was twisted to
the southeast by higher wind streams in a long black plume that stretched
for miles. All this and many more stories are contained in several
articles written for the Roi-Namur News, published several times annually
since 1998. If you wish to be added to the mailing list, send me (craiglou@aol.com) your
mailing address. We don't solicit dues or fees, which are contributed
on a purely voluntary basis, by our members who receive the R.N. News simply
because it helps keep us in touch with each other in between our bi-annual
reunions. Members write me and I publish their letters and answers, if
applicable, as a clearing house for the information of other members, who
have in common the fact we all served at some time on Roi-Namur in the
Kwajalein Atoll, although, there are an increasing number of veterans who
simply like to read its contents, which may contain various accounts by
veterans from other services. As a guide to your free will, voluntary
contribution for printing and postage, I offer only that the average cost of
printing and postage is approx. $2 per edition, and I never solicit money
from anyone, except to remind members about once a year to write for the
purpose of letting us know the status of your health and address changes, if
any. I answer every letter sent to me as expeditiously as possible,
and publish its contents, sometimes compressed or edited for brevity or
clarity, if necessary. Sincerely, Craig Carmichael, Editor, Roi-Namur
News.

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