Author’s note -- I hope that you enjoy learning from this resource! To help me to continue to provide valuable free content, please consider showing your appreciation by leaving a donation HERE. Thank you and Happy Trails!
Last
week we talked about Pfc Desmond Doss and how he used a double bowline with a chest
safety hitch to lower wounded American soldiers down a 35 foot (10 meter) cliff
overhang.
But
there is more to Desmond Doss’s story than what Hollywood showed in the movie Hacksaw
Ridge. And “now for the rest of
the story” as Paul Harvey would say in that old time radio program.
Desmond
T. Doss was born on February 7, 1919, in Lynchburg, Virginia, and he died on
March 23, 2006, in Piedmont, Alabama.
Even though Doss was employed as a joiner at a shipyard in Newport News,
Virginia, and had a deferment because of his shipyard work, he enlisted April
1, 1942. Doss believed the war was just
and desired to do his part by saving lives, not taking them, that is why he described
himself as a “conscientious cooperator”.
The 77th landed in Guam in July 1944. For his bravery during the Second Battle of Guam (July 21 to August 10, 1944) in treating wounded men under fire, Doss was awarded a Bronze Star with the “V” device for valor. Whenever the cry, “medic” rang out across the battlefield, he never thought of his own safety, he repeatedly braved enemy fire to reach and treat a wounded soldier and carry him back to safety.
After
the Battle of Leyte, Doss and 307th fought at the Battle of Okinawa, (April 1 to
June 22, 1945) landing on Yakabi Shima and Zamami Shima before the main
landings of April 1st Later the 307th
would land on Ie Shima, before coming ashore on Okinawa and relieving the 96th
Division at Hacksaw Ridge. The Battle of
Okinawa was the bloodiest, fiercest, biggest and costliest battle of the
Pacific War, rivaling Normandy in size and complexity.
Doss
and Companies A and B of the 307th Infantry, began their attack on Hacksaw Ridge
on Sunday, April 29, using scaling ladders to get atop the cliff. According to the accounts by both “Private
First Class Desmond T. Doss Interview, March 20, 1987” and the “Desmond T.
Doss” Home of the Heroes, before climbing the cliff, Desmond Doss had prayed
and it wasn’t until he said “amen”, that the soldiers began climbing the
scaling ladders to reach the top of the escarpment. When they reached the top of the cliff, Co. B
was immediately pinned down by the heavy enemy fire. To their left, where Co. A was fighting to
secure its sector of the cliff edge, the first five men to the top were killed
and casualties climbed to the point that Co. A was unable to proceed. Headquarters radioed Co. B to report its
casualties. They radioed back that so
far there had been none. Co. B was
ordered to continue the assault and take the Maeda Escarpment, so the men of
Doss’s B company swept across the cliff edge, engaging the enemy, and knocking
out eight or nine pillboxes. At the end
of the day, they had taken their objective with not a single man was killed and
only one soldier wounded in the hand when a rock fell on it.
The
next day an inquiry was made to determine how Co. B had accomplished the assault
on the Maeda Escarpment cliff edge without a single casualty. A photographer was sent to take a picture on May
4, 1945, and Lieutenant Goronto of Co. B sent Pfc.
Desmond Doss back to the top of the escarpment to pose. There was no reasonable way to explain how Co.
B had pulled off the assault and taken the cliff edge without any casualties. “Desmond T. Doss” Home of the Heroes, with no
other way to conclude the report, the official answer was filed, “Doss
prayed”.
However,
Companies A and B remained stuck along the top of the cliff edge while the
majority of the Maeda Escarpment remained in Japanese hands. On May 2nd, under heavy artillery and mortar
fire, Co. B was ordered to withdraw from the clifftop. Desmond refused to withdraw and leave wounded
Americans behind, he voluntarily stayed behind to rescue and lower more than
seventy five wounded American soldiers down the 35 foot (10 meter) cliff
overhang of the Maeda Escarpment, while under constant enemy fire,
Please
come back next week to read the rest of Desmond Doss’s story in “Pfc. Desmond
Doss and the rest of the Story Part Two©”
I
hope that you continue to enjoy The Woodsman’s Journal Online and look for me
on YouTube at BandanaMan Productions for other related videos, HERE. Don’t forget to follow me on both The
Woodsman’s Journal Online, HERE,
and subscribe to BandanaMan Productions on YouTube. If you have questions, as always, feel free
to leave a comment on either site. I
announce new articles on Facebook at Eric Reynolds, on Instagram at
bandanamanaproductions, and on VK at Eric Reynolds, so watch for me.
That
is all for now, and as always, until next time, Happy Trails!
Sources
Desmonddoss.com;
“Desmond Doss: The Real Story”, https://desmonddoss.com/bio/bio-real.php,
accessed May 17, 2025
Home
of Heroes; “Desmond T. Doss”, [© 2018 by Legal Help for Veterans, PLLC], https://homeofheroes.com/heroes-stories/world-war-ii/desmond-t-doss/#:~:text=After%20soundly%20defeating%20the%20Japanese,released%20by%20Lionsgate%20in%202016,
accessed May 17, 2025
National
WW2 Museum; “Private First Class Desmond Thomas Doss Medal of Honor”, October
12, 2020, https://www.nationalww2museum.org/war/articles/private-first-class-desmond-thomas-doss-medal-of-honor,
accessed May 10, 2025
Prefer,
Nathan N.; “Hell on Hacksaw Ridge”, August 2021, https://warfarehistorynetwork.com/article/hell-on-hacksaw-ridge/#:~:text=Doss%2C%20the%20only%20surviving%20aid%20man%20in,to%20GIs%20below%2C%20saving%2075%20wounded%20Americans,
accessed May 10, 2025
United States Civil
Defense; Rescue Skills and Techniques TM-14-1, [Federal Civil Defense
Administration, United States Government Printing Office, October 1957], page
21-22, https://books.google.com/books?id=JezBftEUj7EC&pg=PP3&dq=%22Rescue+Techniques+and+Operations+TM-14-1+%22&hl=en&newbks=1&newbks_redir=0&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjGkYeR45KNAxUjK1kFHQ1wIf0Q6AF6BAgJEAM#v=onepage&q=%22Rescue%20Techniques%20and%20Operations%20TM-14-1%20%22&f=false,
accessed May 10, 2025
United State Civil
Defense Office; Technical Manual: TM., Issue 14, [Federal Civil Defense
Administration, United States Government Printing Office, September 1952], page
21, https://books.google.com/books?id=LvvDCx5EwOkC&pg=PA20&dq=%22civil+defense%22+%22life+basket%22&hl=en&newbks=1&newbks_redir=0&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwiVmsvW4JKNAxX0EFkFHZedL0cQ6AF6BAgJEAM#v=onepage&q=%22civil%20defense%22%20%22life%20basket%22&f=false,
accessed May 10, 2025
Unknown, “Desmond Doss: The
Real Story”, https://desmonddoss.com/bio/bio-real.php,
accessed May 17, 2025
U.S, Army; “Private First
Class Desmond T. Doss Interview, March 20, 1987”, https://web.archive.org/web/20161108195456/http://ameddregiment.amedd.army.mil/moh/bios/dossInt.html,
accessed May 17, 2025
van Dujin, Tina, et. al; Can
analogy instructions help older people (re)learn activities of daily living?,
July 2024, https://www.researchgate.net/figure/Description-of-the-bowline-knot-by-the-rabbit-analogy-Source_fig1_382735870,
accessed May 10, 2025
Wikimedia;
“Citation for PFC Desmond Doss (1944 - 1945) 10325_2006_001”, January 6, 2006, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Citatie_Desmond_Doss.jpg,
accessed May 10, 2025
Wikimedia;
“Citation for PFC Desmond Doss(1944 - 1945) 10325_2006_002”, January 6, 2006, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Citatie_2_Desmond_Doss.jpg,
accessed May 10, 2025
Wikimedia;
“Desmond Doss, on top of the Maeda Escarpment, Battle of Okinawa”, May 4, 1945,
by United States Army, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Doss_Maeda.jpg,
accessed May 10, 2025
Wikimedia; “The grave of
Desmond Doss in the Chattanooga National Cemetery”, April 24, 2011, by Fred
Bullmer, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Desmond_Doss_Grave.jpg,
accessed May 10, 2025
Wikimedia; “Doss wearing
an HBT jacket with a medic’s kit bag around his neck on Okinawa”, 1945, by United
States Army, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Desmond_Doss_in_Okinawa.jpg,
accessed May 10, 2025
Wikimedia, “Americans_on_Okinawa_hear_of_victory_in_Europe”,
1945 by United States Army, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Americans_on_Okinawa_hear_of_victory_in_Europe.jpg,
accessed May 17, 2025
History vs Hollywood; “Hacksaw
Ridge (2016)”, https://web.archive.org/web/20161118225423/http://www.historyvshollywood.com/reelfaces/hacksaw-ridge,
accessed May 17, 2025
No comments:
Post a Comment