Brings together the wartime experience of Company G through the words of their veterans.
An all-round account of the actions of Company G of the 163rd Infantry Regiment, 41st Division, U.S. Army, during World War II in the Pacific. The narrative follows the company from training in the Pacific Northwest, to Australia, New Guinea, the Philippines, and onto Japan. Each of the actions in which Company G participated is described at every level—divisional, regimental, battalion, company, and individual—to show how strategies and decisions made at the highest levels were experienced by individual soldiers.
At the heart of the book are the stories of some of the men of Company G, including Jack Anderson, who had been with the 163rd as a National Guardsman before the war and served through the occupation of Japan; Doyle Bruce, a draftee from Texas who joined the U.S. Army in the weeks before Pearl Harbor and served through Company G’s last combat mission; Bruce Baird, a draftee from Ogden, Utah whose injuries at Biak resulted in rotation home in 1945; and Hargis Westerfield, who joined Company G as a replacement after the unit’s first combat mission and survived to the end of the war. By combining their experiences with the elements of a more traditional military history the book provides a complete picture of one company's war.
Introduction
1: Before Deployment, December 7, 1941–April 6, 1942
2: Australia, April 6–December 25, 1942
3: New Guinea: Buna-Sanananda, December 25, 1942–February 1, 1943
4: The Kumusi River Patrol, February 1–14, 1943
5: Rest for Some, Combat for Others, February 15–July 14, 1943
6: Return to Australia, July 14,1943–March 23, 1944
7: Hollandia and Aitape, March 23–May 17, 1944
8: Wakde, May 17–26, 1944
9: Biak, May 27, 1944–February 27,1945
10: The Philippines, February 27–April 1, 1945
11: The Sulu Archipelago, April 21–July 4, 1945
12: The End of the War and the Occupation of Japan, July 4–October 30, 1945
Epilogue