How the Confederate Flag
Made its Way to Okinawa
Thanks
to GySgt Stephen Wallace, U.S.M.C., Cambridgeshire, England for sending this Article (Low Camp Member)
Only the Normandy D-Day invasion surpassed Okinawa in its scope, preparation
and forces employed. More than 548,000 Americans participated in the Okinawa invasion. American
service members were surprised to find virtually no resistance as they stormed the beaches on Easter 1945. They soon discovered
that the Japanese Imperial Army and Navy had literally gone underground having spent a year forcing Okinawan slaves to dig
their underground defenses. It required 83 days of combat to defeat the Japanese.
The invasion of Okinawa
was by the newly organized American 10th Army. The 10th, commanded by Lt. Gen. Simon Bolivar Buckner, was composed of the
XXIV Corps, made up of veteran Army units including the 7th, 27th, 77th, and 96th Infantry divisions, and the III Amphibious
Corps, with three battle-hardened Marine divisions, the 1st, 2nd, and
6th.
One of the most significant milestones
in the Okinawan campaign was the taking of Shuri Castle, the underground headquarters of the Japanese Imperial Army. After two months
of fighting the Japanese, the 6th Marines and the Army’s 7th Division were moving south, nearing Shuri Castle. The 6th Marines were commanded
by Maj. Gen. Pedro del Valle. Following a hard fight at Dakeshi
Town, del Valle’s Marines engaged in a bloody battle at Wana Draw.
Wana Draw stretched 800 yards and was covered by Japanese guns from its 400-yard entrance to its narrow exit. The
exit provided the key to Shuri Castle.
The Japanese were holed up in caves the entire length of the gully, and had to be eradicated in man-to-man combat.
While
the Marines battled through the mud and blood up the draw, the Army’s 77th Division was approaching Shuri from the east.
To the west, the 6th Marines were pushing into the capital city of Naha.
Faced with this overwhelming force, Japanese Gen. Ushijima’s army retreated to the south. On May 29, 1945, A Company,
Red Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, commanded by Capt. Julius Dusenberg, approached to within 800 yards of Shuri Castle. The castle lay within the zone
of the 77th Infantry Division, known as the Statue of Liberty Boys. However, Gen. Ushijima’s rear guard had stalled
the 77th’s advance.
Impatient, Maj. Gen. del Valle ordered Capt. Dusenberg to “take that damned place
if you can. I’ll make the explanations.”
Dusenberg radioed back, “Will do!”
Dusenberg’s Marines stormed the stone fortress, quickly dispatching a detachment of Japanese soldiers
who had remained behind. Once the castle had been taken, Dusenberg took off his helmet and removed a flag
he had been carrying for just such a special occasion. He raised the flag at the highest point of the castle and let loose
with a rebel yell. The flag waving overhead was not the Stars and Stripes, but the Confederate
Stars and Bars. Most of the Marines joined in the yell, but a disapproving New Englander supposedly remarked, “What
does he want now? Should we sing ‘Dixie’?”
Maj.
Gen. Andrew Bruce, the commanding general of the 77th Division, protested to the 10th Army that the Marines had stolen his
prize. But Lt. Gen. Buckner only mildly chided Gen. del Valle, saying, “How can I be sore at him? My father fought under
that flag!” Gen. Buckner’s father was the Confederate Gen. Buckner who had surrendered Fort Donelson to Gen. Ulysses S. Grant in 1862.
The flag flew only two days over Shuri Castle
when it was formally raised on May 31, 1945. Dusenberg’s flag was first lowered and presented to Gen. Buckner as a souvenir.
Gen. Buckner remarked, “OK! Now, let’s get on with the war!” Tragically, just days before Okinawa
fell, Gen. Buckner was killed by an enemy shell on June 18, 1945, on Mezido Ridge while observing a Marine attack.