Sunday, August 4, 2019
The Battle Of Midway In The Pacific :: War History American Historical Essays
 The Battle of Midway in the Pacific      Nothing distinguished the dawn of June 2, 1942, from countless other dawns that  had fallen over tiny Midway atoll in the North Pacific. Nothing, that is, except  the tension, the electric tension of men waiting for an enemy to make his move.  On Midway's two main islands, Sand and Eastern, 3,632 United States Navy and  Marine Corps personnel, along with a few Army Air Force aircrews, stood at  battle stations in and near their fighters, bombers, and seaplanes, waiting for  the Japanese attack they had been expecting for weeks. The carrier battle of  Midway, one of the decisive naval battles in history, is well documented. But  the role played by the Midway garrison, which manned the naval air station on  the atoll during the battle, is not as well known. Midway lies 1,135 miles west-  northwest of Pearl Harbor, Oahu. The entire atoll is barely six miles in  diameter and consists of Sand and Eastern islands surrounded by a coral reef  enclosing a shallow lagoon. Midway was discovered in 1859 and annexed by the  United States in August 1867. Between 1903 and 1940, it served both as a cable  station on the Honoluluà Guamà Manila underwater telegraph line and as an airport  for the Pan American Airways China Clipper (Miracle 5). In March 1940, after a  report on U.S. Navy Pacific bases declared Midway second only to Pearl Harbor in  importance, construction of a formal naval air station began. Midway Naval Air  Station was placed in commission in August 1941. By that time, Midway's  facilities included a large seaplane hangar and ramps, artificial harbor, fuel  storage tanks and several buildings. Sand Island was populated by hundreds of  civilian construction workers and a defense battalion of the Fleet Marine Force,  while Eastern Island boasted a 5,300-foot airstrip. Commander Cyril T. Simard, a  veteran naval pilot who had served as air officer on the carrier USS Langley and  as executive officer at the San Diego Air Station, was designated the atoll's  commanding officer. Along with the naval personnel manning the air station was a  detachment of Marines. The first detachment was from the Marine 3rd Defense  Battalion; it was relieved on September 11, 1941, by 34 officers and 750 men  from the 6th Defense Battalion under the command of Lt. Col. Harold D. Shannon,  a veteran of World War I and duty in Panama and Hawaii. Shannon and Simard  meshed into an effective team right away. World War II began for Midway at 6:30  a.m. December 7, 1941, when the garrison received word of the Japanese attack on    					    
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