fbpx
Wikipedia

442nd Infantry Regiment (United States)

The 442nd Infantry Regiment (Japanese: 第442歩兵連隊) was an infantry regiment of the United States Army. The regiment is best known as the most decorated in U.S. military history and as a fighting unit composed almost entirely of second-generation American soldiers of Japanese ancestry (Nisei) who fought in World War II. Beginning in 1944, the regiment fought primarily in the European Theatre,[4] in particular Italy, southern France, and Germany. The 442nd Regimental Combat Team (RCT) was organized on March 23, 1943, in response to the War Department's call for volunteers to form the segregated Japanese American army combat unit. More than 12,000 Nisei (second-generation Japanese American) volunteers answered the call. Ultimately 2,686 from Hawaii and 1,500 from mainland U.S. internment camps assembled at Camp Shelby, Mississippi in April 1943 for a year of infantry training.[5] Many of the soldiers from the continental U.S. had families in internment camps while they fought abroad.[6] The unit's motto was "Go for Broke".

442nd Regimental Combat Team
Historic Distinctive unit insignia of the 442d RCT
Active1944–1946
Country United States
Branch United States Army
TypeRegimental combat team (historical)
RoleInfantry
Size~4000
Nickname(s)Purple Heart Battalion belongs to the 100th Infantry Battalion (Separate)[1]
Motto(s)"Go for Broke"
ColorsBlue and White
Engagements
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Col Charles W. Pence
Col Virgil R. Miller
Insignia
Shoulder sleeve insignia[2]

The 442nd Regiment is the most decorated unit in U.S. military history.[7] Created as the 442nd Regimental Combat Team (Japanese: 第442連隊戦闘団,[8][9][10][11] Dai Yonhyakuyonjūni Rentai Sentōdan) when it was activated 1 February 1943, the unit quickly grew to its fighting complement of about 4,000 men by April 1943, and an eventual total of about 10,000 men[12] served in the combined 100th Infantry Battalion and 442nd RCT. The combined units[5] earned, in less than two years, more than 4,000[5] Purple Hearts and 4,000 Bronze Star Medals. The unit was awarded seven Presidential Unit Citations (seven between 1944 and 1946,[13] five earned in one month).[14] Twenty-one of its members were awarded the Medal of Honor.[4] In 2010, Congress approved the granting of the Congressional Gold Medal to the 442nd Regimental Combat Team and associated units who served during World War II,[15] and in 2012, all surviving members were made chevaliers of the French Légion d'Honneur for their actions contributing to the liberation of France and their heroic rescue of the Lost Battalion.[16]

Arriving in the European Theatre, the 442nd Regimental Combat Team, with its second and third infantry battalions, one artillery battalion and associated HQ and service companies, was attached to the 34th Infantry Division. On 11 June 1944, near Civitavecchia, Italy, the 100th Infantry Battalion, another all-Nisei fighting unit which had already been in combat since September 1943, was transferred from the 133rd Infantry Regiment to the 442nd Regimental Combat Team. Because of its combat record, the 100th was allowed to keep their original designation as the 100th Infantry Battalion.[17] The related 522nd Field Artillery Battalion liberated at least one of the satellite labor camps of Dachau concentration camp and saved survivors of a death march near Waakirchen.

The 442nd RCT was inactivated in 1946 and reactivated as a reserve battalion in 1947, garrisoned at Fort Shafter, Hawaii. The 442nd lives on through the 100th Battalion/442nd Infantry Regiment, and is the only current infantry formation in the Army Reserve. More information about the current 100th Battalion/442nd Infantry Regiment and its current alignment with the active 25th Infantry Division, the reserve 9th Mission Support Command, and its combat duty in the Vietnam War and the Iraq War can be found at 100th Infantry Battalion (United States).

The 100th/442nd's current members carry on the honors and traditions of the historical unit. In recognition of its storied combat record, the 100th/442nd was also one of the last units allowed to use its individual shoulder sleeve insignia.[18]

Background edit

Most Japanese Americans who fought in World War II were Nisei, born in the United States to immigrant parents. Shortly after the Imperial Japanese Navy's attack on Pearl Harbor on 7 December 1941, Japanese-American men were initially categorized as 4C (enemy alien) and therefore not subject to the draft. On 19 February 1942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066, which authorized the Secretary of War

to prescribe military areas in such places and of such extent as he or the appropriate Military Commander may determine, from which any or all persons may be excluded, and with respect to which, the right of any person to enter, remain in, or leave shall be subject to whatever restrictions the Secretary of War or the appropriate Military Commander may impose in his discretion.

Although the order did not refer specifically to people of Japanese ancestry, it was targeted largely for the internment of people of Japanese ancestry from the West Coast. In March 1942, Lieutenant General John L. DeWitt, head of the Western Defense Command and Fourth Army, issued the first of 108 military proclamations that resulted in the forced relocation from their residences to guarded concentration camps of more than 110,000 people of Japanese ancestry from the West Coast, the great majority of the ethnic community. Two-thirds were born in the United States.[19]

In Hawaii, the military imposed martial law, complete with curfews and blackouts. As a large portion of the population was of Japanese ancestry (150,000 out of 400,000 people in 1937), internment was deemed not practical; it was strongly opposed by the island's business community, which was heavily dependent on the labor force of those of Japanese ancestry (this contrasts with the business communities on the mainland that competed with Japanese American businesses, and which exploited the opportunity to buy up Japanese American properties that had to be surrendered). It was accurately believed that an internment of Japanese Americans and Japanese immigrants in Hawaii would have had catastrophic results for the Hawaiian economy; intelligence reports at the time noted that "the Japanese, through a concentration of effort in select industries, had achieved essential roles in several key sectors of the economy in Hawaii."[20] In addition, other reports indicated that those of Japanese descent in Hawaii "had access to virtually all jobs in the economy, including high-status, high-paying jobs (e.g., professional and managerial jobs)," suggesting that a mass internment of people of Japanese descent in Hawaii would have negatively impacted every sector of the Hawaiian economy.[21] When the War Department called for the removal of all soldiers of Japanese ancestry from active service in early 1942, General Delos C. Emmons, commander of the U.S. Army in Hawaii, decided to discharge those in the Hawaii Territorial Guard, which was composed mainly of ROTC students from the University of Hawaii. However, he permitted the more than 1,300 Japanese-American soldiers of the 298th and 299th Infantry Regiment regiments of the Hawaii National Guard to remain in service. The discharged members of the Hawaii Territorial Guard petitioned General Emmons to allow them to assist in the war effort. The petition was granted and they formed a group called the Varsity Victory Volunteers, which performed various military construction jobs. General Emmons, worried about the loyalty of Japanese-American soldiers in the event of a Japanese invasion, recommended to the War Department that those in the 298th and 299th regiments be organized into a "Hawaiian Provisional Battalion" and sent to the mainland. The move was authorized, and on 5 June 1942, the Hawaiian Provisional Battalion set sail for training. They landed at Oakland, California on 10 June 1942 and two days later were sent to Camp McCoy, Wisconsin. On 15 June 1942, the battalion was designated the 100th Infantry Battalion (Separate)—the "One Puka Puka".

 
100th Infantry soldiers receiving grenade training in 1943

Mainly because of the actions of the 100th and the Varsity Victory Volunteers, the War Department directed that a Japanese-American Combat Team should be activated comprising the 442d Infantry Regiment, the 522d Field Artillery Battalion (Japanese: 第522野戦砲兵大隊), and the 232d Engineer Combat Company (Japanese: 第232戦闘工兵中隊).

The order dated 22 January 1943, directed, "All cadre men must be American citizens of Japanese ancestry who have resided in the United States since birth" and "Officers of field grade and captains furnished under the provisions of subparagraphs a, b and c above, will be white American citizens. Other officers will be of Japanese ancestry insofar as practicable."[22]

In accordance with those orders, the 442d Combat Team was activated 1 February 1943, by General Orders, Headquarters Third Army. Colonel Charles W. Pence took command, with Lieutenant Colonel Merritt B. Booth as executive officer. Lieutenant Colonel Keith K. Tatom commanded the 1st Battalion, Lieutenant Colonel James M. Hanley the 2d Battalion, and Lieutenant Colonel Sherwood Dixon the 3d Battalion. Lieutenant Colonel Baya M. Harrison commanded the 522d Field Artillery, and Captain Pershing Nakada commanded the 232d Engineers.[23]

Colonel Charles W. Pence, a World War I veteran and military science professor, commanded the regiment until he was wounded during the rescue of the "Lost Battalion" in October 1944. He was then replaced by Lieutenant Colonel Virgil R. Miller.[24]

The US government required that all internees answer a loyalty questionnaire, which was used to register the Nisei for the draft. Question 27 of the questionnaire asked eligible males, "Are you willing to serve in the armed forces of the United States on combat duty, wherever ordered?" and question 28 asked, "Will you swear unqualified allegiance to the United States of America and faithfully defend the United States from any or all attack by foreign or domestic forces, and forswear any form of allegiance or obedience to the Japanese emperor, or any other foreign government, power or organization?"

Nearly a quarter of the Nisei males answered with a no or a qualified answer to both questions in protest, resenting the implication they ever had allegiance to Japan; some left them blank. Qualified answers included those who said, yes, but criticized the internment of the Japanese or racism. Many who responded that way were imprisoned for evading the draft. Such refusal is the subject of the postwar novel No-No Boy. But more than 75% indicated that they were willing to enlist and swear allegiance to the U.S. The U.S. Army called for 1,500 volunteers from Hawaii and 3,000 from the mainland. An overwhelming 10,000 men from Hawaii volunteered. The announcement was met with less enthusiasm on the mainland, where most draft-age men of Japanese ancestry and their families were held in concentration camps. The Army revised the quota, calling for 2,900 men from Hawaii, and 1,500 from the mainland. Only 1,256 volunteered from the mainland during this initial call for volunteers. As a result, around 3,000 men from Hawaii and 800 men from the mainland were inducted.

Roosevelt announced the formation of the 442nd Infantry Regimental Combat Team, saying, "Americanism is not, and never was, a matter of race or ancestry."[25] Ultimately, the draft was reinstated to obtain more Japanese Americans from the mainland to become part of the 10,000 men who eventually served in the 100th Infantry Battalion and 442nd Regiment.[26]

Training and organization edit

 
442nd recruits building then attacking across a pontoon bridge at Camp Shelby

The 100th Infantry Battalion relocated to Camp Shelby in Mississippi. Eventually, the 100th was joined by 3,000 volunteers from Hawaii and 800 from the mainland internment camps. As a regimental combat team (RCT), the 442nd RCT was a self-sufficient fighting formation of three infantry battalions (originally 1st, 2nd, and 3rd Battalions, 442nd Infantry, and later the 100th Infantry Battalion in place of the 1st), the 522nd Field Artillery Battalion, the 232nd Engineer Company, an anti-tank company, cannon company, service company, medical detachment, headquarters companies, and the 206th Army Band.[27]

Although they were permitted to volunteer to fight, Americans of Japanese ancestry were generally forbidden to fight in combat in the Pacific Theater. No such limitations were placed on Americans of German or Italian ancestry, who were assigned to units fighting against the Axis Powers in the European Theater. There were many more German and Italian Americans than Japanese Americans, and their political and economic power reduced the restrictions against them. Many men deemed proficient enough in the Japanese language were approached, or sometimes ordered, to join the Military Intelligence Service (MIS) to serve as translators/interpreters and spies in the Pacific, as well as in the China Burma India Theater. These men were sent to the MIS Language School at Camp Savage, Minnesota to develop their language skills and receive training in military intelligence. While the 442nd trained in Mississippi, the 100th departed for Oran in North Africa to join the forces destined to invade Italy.[28]

Reunion with the 100th edit

 
Organization chart of the 442nd RCT after its reunion with the 100th Battalion in 1944

The 442nd Combat Team, less its 1st Battalion, which had remained in the U.S. to train Nisei replacements after many of its members were levied as replacements for the 100th, sailed from Hampton Roads, Virginia, on 1 May 1944 and landed at Anzio on 28 May. The 442nd would join the 100th Battalion in Civitavecchia north of Rome on 11 June 1944, attached to the 34th Infantry Division. The 100th was placed under the command of the 442nd on 15 June 1944 but on 14 August 1944, the 100th Battalion was officially assigned to the 442nd as its 1st battalion, but was allowed to keep its unit designation in recognition of its distinguished fighting record. The 1st Battalion, 442nd Infantry at Camp Shelby was then redesignated the 171st Infantry Battalion (Separate) on 5 September 1944. The 100th Battalion's high casualty rate at Anzio and Monte Cassino earned it the unofficial nickname "Purple Heart Battalion."[29]

First contact edit

 
A 442nd RCT squad leader, Sergeant Goichi Suehiro,[30] checks for German units in France in November 1944.

The newly formed Nisei unit went into battle together on 26 June 1944 at the village of Belvedere in Suvereto, Tuscany. Although the 100th was attached to the 442nd, its actions earned it a separate Presidential Unit Citation. Second and Third Battalions were the first to engage the enemy, in a fierce firefight. F Company bore the worst fighting. A, B, and C Companies of the 100th were called into combat and advanced east using a covered route to reach the high ground northeast of Belvedere.[23]: 34  The enemy did not know that the 100th was flanking the German exit, trapping them in Belvedere. C Company blocked the town's entrance while A Company blocked the exit. Meanwhile, the 442nd's 2nd Battalion was receiving a heavy barrage by the Germans from inside Belvedere, and the Germans remained unaware of their situation. B Company stayed on the high ground and conducted a surprise attack on the German battalion's exposed east flank, forcing the Germans to flee and run into C Company, which then drove the Germans to A Company.[31]

All three companies went into action boldly facing murderous fire from all types of weapons and tanks and at times fighting without artillery support.... The stubborn desire of the men to close with a numerically superior enemy and the rapidity with which they fought enabled the 100th Infantry Battalion to destroy completely the right flank positions of a German Army.... The fortitude and intrepidity displayed by the officers and men of the 100th Infantry Battalion reflects the finest traditions of the Army of the United States.[32] Presidential Unit Citation Review

The 442nd, along with its first battalion, the 100th, kept driving the enemy north, engaging in multiple skirmishes until they had passed Sassetta. The battle of Belvedere showed that the 442nd could hold their own and showed them the kind of fighting the 100th Battalion had gone through in the prior months. After only a few days of rest, the united 442nd again entered into combat on 1 July, taking Cecina and moving towards the Arno River. On 2 July, as the 442nd approached the Arno, 5th Battalion engaged in a hard-fought battle to take Hill 140, while on 7 July the 100th fought for the town of Castellina Marittima.[33]

Hill 140 and Castellina edit

For the first three weeks of July, the 442nd and its 1st Battalion, the 100th, were constantly attacking German forces, leading to 1,100 enemy killed and 331 captured.[34]: 51 

Hill 140 was the main line of enemy resistance. A single German battalion held the hill and, along with the help of artillery, had completely wiped out a machine-gun squad of L Company of the 3rd Battalion and G Company of 2nd Battalion except for its commander.[23]: 36  A constant artillery barrage was launched against the 2nd and 3rd Battalions as they dug in at the hill's base. The 442nd gained very little ground in the coming days only improving their position slightly. The 232nd Engineers aided the 442nd by defusing landmines that lay in the 442nd's path. The entire 34th Division front encountered heavy resistance. "All along the 34th Infantry Division Front the Germans held more doggedly than at any time since the breakthrough at Cassino and Anzio."[23]: 37  Hill 140 had been dubbed "Little Cassino" as the resistance by the Germans was so fierce. "Hill 140, when the medics were just overrun with all the casualties; casualties you couldn't think to talk about."[35] The 2nd Battalion moved to the eastern front of Hill 140 and 3rd Battalion moved to the western front, both converging on the German flanks. It wasn't until 7 July, when the last German resistance was overcome, that the hill came under the 34th Division's control.

On the day Hill 140 fell, the battle for the town of Castellina Marittima began. The 100th began its assault on the northwestern side of the town taking the high ground. Just before dawn, 2nd Platoon C Company moved into town, encountering heavy resistance and multiple counterattacks by German forces but held them off. In the meantime Company B moved north into Castellina, encountering heavy resistance as well. First they helped defend 2nd and 3rd Battalions in the taking of Hill 140. Then with the help of the 522nd Field Artillery, they lay down a heavy barrage and forced the Germans to retreat by 1800 hours on 7 July.[23]: 38  The 100th dug in and waited for relief to arrive after spending an entire day securing the town.

Until 25 July, the 442nd encountered heavy resistance from each town when they reached the Arno River, ending the Rome-Arno Campaign. The 100/442 suffered casualties of 1,272 men (17 missing, 44 non-combat injuries, 972 wounded, and 239 killed) in the process, a distance of only 40 miles (64 km).[36] They rested from 25 July to 15 August, when the 442nd moved to patrol the Arno. Crossing the Arno on 31 August was relatively uneventful, as they were guarding the north side of the river in order for bridges to be built. On 11 September the 442nd was detached from the Fifth Army and then attached to the 36th Infantry Division of the Seventh Army.[citation needed]

Antitank Company edit

 
The 442nd Regimental Combat Team hiking up a muddy road in the Chambois Sector, France, in late 1944

On 15 July the Antitank Company was pulled from the frontlines and placed with the 517th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 1st Airborne Task Force. They had trained at an airfield south of Rome to prepare for the invasion of Southern France which took place on 15 August, landing near Le Muy, France. They trained for a few weeks to get used to, prepare, properly load, and fly gliders. These gliders were 48 feet (15 m) long and 15 feet (4.6 m) high, and could hold a jeep and a trailer filled with ammunition, or a British six-pounder antitank gun.[36][dead link] The Southern France Campaign, 15 August to 14 September, led the 442nd to its second Presidential Unit Citation for invading in gliders and the Combat Infantryman Badge for fighting with the infantrymen of the 7th Army. The soldiers of Antitank Company received the Glider Badge.[34]: 56–57  After many rough landings by the gliders, hitting trees or enemy flak, they held their positions for a few days until relieved by Allied troops coming in by sea. For the next two months the Antitank Company guarded the exposed right flank of the Seventh Army and protected the 517th Parachute Infantry. The unit also cleared mines, captured Germans, and guarded roads and tunnels.[37] In mid-to-late October, the Antitank Company rejoined the 442nd during the battle to find the "Lost Battalion."[38]

Vosges Mountains edit

After leaving Naples, the 442nd landed in Marseille on 30 September and for the next few weeks they traveled 500 miles (800 km) through the Rhone Valley, by walking and by boxcar, until 13 October. On 14 October 1944 the 442nd began moving into position in the late afternoon preparing the assault on Hills A, B, C, and D of Bruyères. Each hill was heavily guarded, as each hill was key in order to take and secure the city. Hill A was located Northwest of Bruyères, Hill B to the North, Hill C Northeast, and Hill D to the East. The 442nd had experienced mainly prairie in Italy, but the Vosges Mountains provided a very different terrain. The unit faced dense fog, mud, heavy rain, large trees, hills, and heavy enemy gunfire and artillery while moving through the Vosges. Hitler had ordered the German frontline to fight at all costs as this was the last barrier between the Allied forces and Germany. On 15 October 1944 the 442nd began its attack on Bruyères. The 100th Battalion moved on Hill A, which was held by the SS Polizei Regiment 19, as 2nd Battalion moved in on Hill B. Third Battalion was left to take Bruyères.[citation needed]

Bruyères edit

 
The 522nd Field Artillery Battalion fire 105mm shells in support of an infantry attack in Bruyères, France.

After heavy fighting dealing with enemy machine guns and snipers and a continuous artillery barrage placed onto the Germans, the 100th Battalion was eventually able to take Hill A by 3 a.m. on 18 October. 2nd Battalion took Hill B in a similar fashion only hours later. Once Hill A and B were secured, 3rd Battalion along with the 36th Infantry's 142nd Regiment began its assault from the south. After the 232nd broke through the concrete barriers around town hall of Bruyères, the 442nd captured 134 Wehrmacht members including Poles, Yugoslavs, Somalis, East Indians of the Regiment "Freies Indien", 2nd and 3rd Company of Fusilier Battalion 198, Grenadier Regiment 736, and Panzer Grenadier Regiment 192.[39] After three days of fighting Bruyères fell but was not yet secured. Germans on Hill C and D used that high-ground to launch artillery barrages on the town; Hills C and D needed to be taken to secure Bruyères.[34]: 60 

The 442nd initially took Hills C and D but did not secure them and they fell back into German hands. By noon of 19 October, Hill D was taken by 2nd and 3rd Battalions, who then were ordered to take a railroad embankment leaving Hill D unsecure. As the 100th began moving on Hill C on 20 October, German forces retook Hill D during the night.[23]: 57  The 100th Battalion was ordered back to Bruyères into reserve, allowing a German force onto Hill C, surprising another American division arriving into position. Retaking Hill C cost another 100 casualties.[34]: 62  Hill D fell back into Allied hands after a short time, finally securing the town. The 232nd Engineers had to dismantle roadblocks, clear away trees and clear mine fields all in the midst of the battle.[23]: 51, 54  The 100th rested, then was called to the battle for Biffontaine.

Biffontaine edit

The 100th was ordered to take the high-ground but was eventually ordered to move into the town, leading to a bitter fight after the 100th were encircled by German forces: cut off from the 442nd, outside radio contact, and outside artillery support. The 100th were in constant battle from 22 October until dusk of 23 October, engaging in house to house fighting and defending against multiple counterattacks. 3rd Battalion of the 442nd reached the 100th and helped drive out the remaining German forces, handing Biffontaine to the 36th.[32]: 182, 183  On 24 October the 143rd Infantry of the 36th Division relieved the 100th and 3rd Battalion who were sent to Belmont, another small town to the north, for some short-lived rest.[40]: 139  Nine days of constant fighting continued as they were then ordered to save T-Patchers, the 141st Regiment of the 36th Infantry, the "Lost Battalion."

Lost Battalion edit

After less than two days in reserve, the 442nd was ordered to attempt the rescue of the "Lost Battalion" two miles east of Biffontaine.[40]: 139  On 23 October Colonel Lundquist's 141st Regiment, soon to be known as the "Alamo" Regiment, began its attack on the German line that ran from Rambervillers to Biffontaine. Tuesday morning, 24 October, the left flank of the 141st, commanded by Technical Sergeant Charles H. Coolidge, ran into heavy action, fending off numerous German attacks throughout the days of 25 and 26 October. The right flank command post was overrun and 275 men of Lieutenant Colonel William Bird's 1st Battalion Companies A, B, C, and a platoon from Company D were cut off 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) behind enemy lines.[41] The "Lost Battalion" was cut off by German troops and was forced to dig in until help arrived. It was nearly a week before they saw friendly soldiers.

At 4 a.m. on Friday 27 October, General John E. Dahlquist ordered the 442nd to move out and rescue the cut-off battalion. The 442nd had the support of the 522nd and 133rd Field Artillery units but at first made little headway against German General Richter's infantry and artillery front line.[42] For the next few days the 442nd engaged in the heaviest fighting it had seen in the war, as the elements combined with the Germans to slow their advance. Dense fog and very dark nights prevented the men from seeing even twenty feet. Many men had to hang onto the man in front of him just to know where to go. Rainfall, snow, cold, mud, fatigue, trench foot, and even exploding trees plagued them as they moved deeper into the Vosges and closer to the German frontlines.[32]: 185, 187  The 141st continued fighting—in all directions.

When we realized we were cut off, we dug a circle at the top of the ridge. I had two heavy, water-cooled machine guns with us at this time, and about nine or ten men to handle them. I put one gun on the right front with about half of my men, and the other gun to the left. We cut down small trees to cover our holes and then piled as much dirt on top as we could. We were real low on supplies, so we pooled all of our food.

— SSgt. Jack Wilson of Newburgh, IN[43]

Airdrops with ammo and food for the 141st were called off by dense fog or landed in German hands. Many Germans did not know that they had cut off an American unit. "We didn't know that we had surrounded the Americans until they were being supplied by air. One of the supply containers, dropped by parachute, landed near us. The packages were divided up amongst us."[44] Only on 29 October was the 442nd told why they were being forced to attack the German front lines so intensely.

The fighting was intense for the Germans as well. Gebirgsjäger Battalion 202 from Salzburg was cut off from Gebirgsjager Battalion 201 from Garmisch.[45] Both sides eventually rescued their cut-off battalions.

As the men of the 442nd went deeper and deeper they became more hesitant, until reaching the point where they would not move from behind a tree or come out of a foxhole. However, this all changed in an instant. The men of Companies I and K of 3rd Battalion had their backs against the wall, but as each one saw another rise to attack, then another also rose. Then every Nisei charged the Germans screaming, and many screaming "Banzai!"[34]: 83  Through gunfire, artillery shells, and fragments from trees, and Nisei going down one after another, they charged.

Colonel Rolin's grenadiers put up a desperate fight, but nothing could stop the Nisei rushing up the steep slopes, shouting, firing from the hip, and lobbing hand grenades into dugouts. Finally the German defenses broke and the surviving grenadiers fled in disarray. That afternoon the American aid stations were crowded with casualties. The 2nd platoon of Company I had only two men left, and the 1st platoon was down to twenty."[46] On the afternoon of 30 October, 3rd Battalion broke through and reached the 141st, rescuing 211 T-Patchers at the cost of 800 men in five days. However, the fighting continued for the 442nd as they moved past the 141st. The drive continued until they reached Saint-Die on 17 November when they were finally pulled back. The 100th fielded 1,432 men a year earlier, but was now down to 239 infantrymen and 21 officers. Second Battalion was down to 316 riflemen and 17 officers, while not a single company in 3rd Battalion had over 100 riflemen; the entire 100th/442nd Regimental Combat Team was down to less than 800 soldiers. Earlier (on 13 October) when attached to the 36th Infantry, the unit was at 2,943 riflemen and officers, thus in only three weeks 140 were killed and a further 1,800 had been wounded, while 43 were missing.[34]: 83, 85 

General Dahlquist's legacy edit

 
A Japanese-American unit moves out of its old command post. The unit, Company F, 2nd Battalion, 442nd Regimental Combat Team, is holding a section of the front lines near St. Die Area, France, 13 November 1944.
 
"Go for Broke" at the US Army Center of Military History

As the division commander, General Dahlquist's utilization of the 442nd received mixed reviews, chiefly from the unit's officers who believed that Dahlquist considered their Nisei soldiers to be expendable cannon fodder. Despite examples of ostensibly courageous behavior, his decisions were undermined by the failure to tally victories without considerable costs. A particular example was when his aide Lieutenant Wells Lewis, the eldest son of novelist Sinclair Lewis, was killed while Dahlquist was issuing orders standing in the open during a battle.[34]: 82  When Dahlquist ordered the 442nd to take Biffontaine, it was despite the sparsely populated farming town being militarily insignificant, out of the range of artillery and radio contact. In another example, Lieutenant Allan M. Ohata was ordered to charge with his men up a hill toward the enemy, who were dug in and well supplied. Ohata considered the order a certain suicide mission. Despite the threat of court-martial and demotion he refused, insisting that the men would be better off attacking the position "their own way."[32]: 190  Lt. Ohata's Distinguished Service Cross, for his actions in Italy as a staff sergeant, was ultimately upgraded to the Medal of Honor.

On 12 November, General Dahlquist ordered the entire 442nd to stand in formation for a recognition and award ceremony. Of the 400 men originally assigned, only eighteen surviving members of K Company and eight of I Company turned out. Upon reviewing the meager assemblage Dahlquist became irritated, ignorant of the sacrifices that the unit had made in serving his orders. He demanded of Colonel Virgil R. Miller, "I want all your men to stand for this formation." Miller responded simply, "That's all of K company left, sir."[34]: 95 

Some time later, while the former commander of the 1st Battalion, Lieutenant Colonel Gordon Singles was filling the role of brigadier general at Fort Bragg (North Carolina), General Dahlquist arrived as part of a review. When he recognized Colonel Singles he approached him and offered the colonel his hand saying, "Let bygones be bygones. It's all water under the bridge, isn't it?" In the presence of the entire III Corps, Colonel Singles continued to salute General Dahlquist but refused to take Dahlquist's hand.[34]: 91 [47][48]

During and after the war, the 442nd was repeatedly commemorated for their efforts in the Vosges Mountains. A commissioned painting now hangs in The Pentagon depicting their fight to reach the "Lost Battalion."[34]: 89  A memorial was erected in Biffontaine by Gerard Henry, later the town's mayor. A monument was established in Bruyeres to mark the liberation of that city. At first a narrow road led to the monument, but the road was later widened to accommodate four tour buses and is now named "The Avenue of the 442nd Infantry Regiment" in honor of those brave soldiers.[32]: 201 

Champagne Campaign edit

Following the tough battle through the Vosges Mountains, the 442nd was sent to the Maritime Alps and the French Riviera. It was an easy assignment compared to what they had experienced in October. Little to no action occurred in the next four months as they rested.[49] The 442nd guarded and patrolled a twelve to fourteen-mile front line segment of the French-Italian border. This part of the 442nd's journey gained the name "Champagne Campaign" because of the available wine, women, and merry times.[50] The 442nd experienced additional losses as patrols sometimes ran into enemy patrols, or sometimes soldiers stepped on enemy and allied land mines. Occasionally, soldiers of the 442nd captured spies and saboteurs.

The 442nd also captured an enemy submarine. A Nisei soldier noticed what looked like an animal in the water but upon closer look it was actually a one-man German midget submarine. The German and the submarine were captured and handed over to the U.S. Navy.[33] On 23 March 1945, the 442nd Regimental Combat Team sailed back to Italy and returned to the Gothic Line.[49]

522nd Field Artillery Battalion edit

From 20 to 22 March, the 442 and the 232 shipped off to Italy from France but the 522nd Field Artillery Battalion was sent to another part of Europe. They traveled northwards some 600 miles (970 km) through the Rhone Valley and stopped at Kleinblittersdorf on the east bank of the Saar River. The 522nd aided the 63rd Division on the Siegfried Line defenses south of St. Ingbert from 12 to 21 March.[23]: 99  The 522nd became a roving battalion, supporting nearly two dozen army units along the front traveling a total of 1,100 miles (1,800 km) across Germany and accomplishing every objective of their fifty-two assignments.[32]: 239  The 522nd was the only Nisei unit to fight in Germany. On 29 April scouts of the 522nd located a satellite camp of the infamous Dachau concentration camp next to the small Bavarian town of Lager Lechfeld, adjacent to Hurlach. Scouts from the 522nd were among the first Allied troops to release prisoners from the Kaufering IV Hurlach satellite camp, one of nearly 170 such camps, where more than 3,000 prisoners were held.[51]

As we came around the way, there were a lot of Jewish inmates coming out of the camp, and I heard that the gate was opened by our advanced scouts. They took a rifle and shot it. I think it was a fellow from Hawaii that did that. I think it was a Captain Taylor, Company B was one of them, but another person from Hawaii, he passed away. They opened the gate and all these German, I mean, Jewish victims were coming out of the camp.[52]

Then, when we finally opened the Dachau camp, got in, oh those people were so afraid of us, I guess. You could see the fear in their face. But eventually, they realized that we were there to liberate them and help them.[53]

They were all just skin and bones, sunken eyes. I think they were more dead than they were alive because they hadn't eaten so much because, I think, just before we got there the S.S. people had all pulled back up and they were gone. But, we went there, and outside of the camps there were a lot of railroad cars there that had bodies in them. I had the opportunity to go into the camp there, but you could smell the stench. The people were dead and piled up in the buildings, and it was just unbelievable that the Germans could do that to the Jewish people. I really didn't think it was possible at all actually.[54]

The only thing the Nisei could really do was give them clothing and keep them warm. Nisei soldiers began to give the Jewish inmates food from their rations but were ordered to stop because the food could overwhelm the digestive systems of the starved inmates and kill them.[55] As they continued past the subcamp, by 2 May they discovered the eastward path along which Jewish inmates were approaching Waakirchen,[56] as the concentration camp survivors had been driven on a death march to another camp from Dachau starting there on 24 April, headed south through Eurasburg, then eastwards for a total distance of nearly sixty kilometers (37 miles),[57] originally numbering some 15,000 prisoners.[58]

No, my first encounter was these lumps in snow, and then I didn't know what they were, and so I went and investigated them and discovered that they were people, you know. Most of them were skeletons or people who had been beaten to death or just died of starvation or overworked or whatever. Most of them I think died from exposure because it was cold.[59]

They discovered more subcamps and former inmates wandering the countryside. Following the German surrender, from May to November, the 522nd was assigned to security around Donauwörth, which consisted of setting up roadblocks and sentry posts to apprehend Nazis who were trying to disappear. The 522nd returned to the United States in November 1945.[23]: 99  A memorial to the rescue by the 522nd on 2 May 1945, exists at 47°46′6.15″N 11°38′55.30″E / 47.7683750°N 11.6486944°E / 47.7683750; 11.6486944, just under two kilometers west of the Waakirchen town centre.[60]

Gothic Line edit

On 23 March 1945 the 100/442 shipped out from Marseille and traveled to Leghorn, Italy, attached to the 92nd Division. The Fifth Army had been stalemated at the Gothic Line for the prior five months. The 442nd faced extremely tough terrain, where the saw-toothed Apennines rose up from the Ligurian Sea. Starting from the northeast, the peaks hugged the east coast of Italy and stretched diagonally southward across the Italian boot. To the west, on the other side of the mountains, was the wide flat Po River Valley that led to the Austrian Alps—the last barrier to Germany. For nine months German Field Marshal Albert Kesselring directed the construction of the Gothic Line along the top of the Apennines. The Todt Organization (known for its fortifications at Monte Cassino) used 15,000 Italian slave laborers. They drilled into solid rock to make gun pits and trenches, which they reinforced with concrete. They built 2,376 machine gun nests with interlocking fire.[34]: 105–7 

On the Italian Front, the 442nd had contact with the only segregated African-American active combat unit of the U.S. Army in Europe, the 92nd Infantry Division, as well as troops of the British and French colonial empires (West and East Africans, Moroccans, Algerians, Indians, Gurkhas, Jews from the Palestine mandate)[61] and the non-segregated Brazilian Expeditionary Force[62] which had in its ranks ethnic Japanese.

General Mark W. Clark welcomed the 442 and presented his plan to break the Gothic Line. General Clark had a disagreement with Supreme Commander Eisenhower. Clark had to negotiate for the return of the 100th and 442nd because Eisenhower wanted them for the Battle of the Bulge and General Devers, commander of the Sixth Army Group, needed fresh troops.[23]: 249–50  General Clark got his wish. The 442nd and 100th, minus the 522nd, along with the 92nd Division, mounted a surprise diversionary attack on the left flank. They intended to shift enemy attention to it from the interior, allowing the Eighth Army to cross the Senio River on the right flank and then the Fifth Army on the left.[34]: 107 [40]: 145 

In front of the 442nd lay mountains code-named Georgia, Florida, Ohio 1, Ohio 2, Ohio 3, Monte Cerreta, Monte Folgorito, Monte Belvedere, Monte Carchio, and Monte Altissimo. These objectives hinged on surprising the Germans. The 100th went after Georgia Hill and the 3rd Battalion attacked Mount Folgorita. On 3 April the 442nd moved into position under the cover of nightfall to hide from the Germans who had good sight lines from their location on the mountains. The next day the 442nd waited. At 0500 the following morning they were ready to strike. A little over 30 minutes later objectives Georgia and Mount Folgorita were taken, cracking the Gothic Line. They achieved surprise and forced the enemy to retreat. After counterattacking, the Germans were defeated. During this time, 2nd Battalion was moving into position at Mount Belvedere, which overlooked Massa and the Frigido River.[citation needed]

The 442nd made a continuous push against the German Army and objectives began to fall: Ohio 1, 2, and 3, Mount Belvedere on 6 April by 2nd Battalion, Montignoso 8 April by 3rd Battalion, Mount Brugiana on 11 April by 2nd Battalion, Carrara by 3rd Battalion on 11 April, and Ortonovo by the 100th on 15 April. The 442 turned a surprise diversionary attack into an all-out offensive. The advance came so quickly that supply units had a hard time keeping up.[citation needed]

The Nisei drove so hard that beginning on 17 April the Germans decided to destroy their fortifications and pull back to make a final stand at Aulla. The last German defense in Italy was Monte Nebbione, directly south of Aulla. San Terenzo lay East of Mount Nobbione and became the launching point for the Aulla assault. The final drive of the 442nd began on 19 April and lasted until 23 April, when the 3rd Battalion finally took Mount Nebbione and Mount Carbolo. Following the fall of San Terenzo, 2nd Battalion hooked right around the mountains and Task Force Fukuda (consisting of Companies B and F from 2nd Battalion) flanked left from Mount Carbolo creating a pincer move onto Aulla.[34]: 117  On 25 April Aulla fell and the German retreat was cut off. In the days that followed, Germans began to surrender in the hundreds and thousands to the Fifth and Eighth Armies. This was 442nd's final World War II action.[citation needed] On 2 May the war ended in Italy followed six days later by Victory in Europe.

Service decorations and legacy edit

 
The 442nd received the 7th Presidential Unit Citation for outstanding accomplishments in combat in the vicinity of Seravezza, Carrara, and Fosdinovo, Italy, from 5–14 April 1945.
 
President Truman and other dignitaries saluting the 442nd Regimental Combat Team

The 100th/442nd Regimental Combat Team is the most decorated unit for its size and length of service in the history of American warfare.[7][63] The 4,000 men who initially came in April 1943 had to be replaced nearly 2.5 times. In total, about 10,000 men served.[64] The unit was awarded eight Presidential Unit Citations (5 earned in one month).[14] Twenty-one of its members were awarded Medals of Honor.[4] Members of the 442nd received 18,143 awards in less than two years, including:

 
Sadao Munemori was the only Japanese American awarded the Medal of Honor around the time of World War II.

Some of the first memorials to the unit were created by 442nd and MIS veterans themselves, in the creation of the many Nisei American Legion, VFW, and independent memorial posts around the country, such as Nisei VFW Post 8985 in Sacramento, CA, founded in 1947.[67]

In 1962 Governor John Connally of Texas made the members of the 442nd RCT honorary Texans in appreciation of their rescue of the Lost Battalion of the Texas National Guard in the Vosges in 1944.[68]

 
President Obama signs S.1055, granting Nisei veterans the Congressional Gold Medal.

On 5 October 2010, Congress approved the granting of the Congressional Gold Medal to the 442nd Regimental Combat Team, the 100th Infantry Battalion, and Nisei serving in the Military Intelligence Service.[15] The Nisei Soldiers of World War II Congressional Gold Medal was collectively presented on 2 November 2011.[69]

In 2012, the surviving members of the 442nd RCT were made chevaliers of the French Légion d'Honneur for their actions contributing to the liberation of France during World War II and their heroic rescue of the Lost Battalion outside of Biffontaine.[16][70][71][72]

5 April is celebrated as National "Go For Broke Day", in honor of the 442nd's first Medal of Honor recipient, Pfc. Sadao Munemori, killed in action near Seravezza, Italy on 5 April 1945.[73]

The Japanese American Memorial to Patriotism During World War II in Washington, D.C. is a National Park Service site honoring Japanese American veterans who served in the Military Intelligence Service, 100th Infantry Battalion, 442nd RCT, and other units, as well as the patriotism and endurance of those held in Japanese American concentration camps and detention centers.[74]

The Go for Broke Monument in Little Tokyo, Los Angeles, commemorates the Japanese Americans who served in the United States Army during World War II.

Dedicated in 1998, the "Brothers In Valor" memorial at Fort DeRussy in Honolulu, HI, honors the Japanese American veterans who served in World War 2 with the 100BN/442RCT, 1399BN, and MIS.[75]

California has given four state highway segments honorary designations for Japanese American soldiers:

The USS Hornet Museum in Alameda, California, has a permanent special exhibit honoring the 442nd Infantry Regiment.[76]

On November 17, 2020, the United States Postal Service (USPS) announced they would release in 2021 a postage stamp honoring the contributions of Japanese American soldiers, 33,000 altogether, who served in the U.S. Army during World War II, following a multi-year nationwide campaign.[77] The "stamp our story" campaign started in 2006.[78]

Original fight song edit

Original fight song of the 442nd RCT Hawai'i Go For Broke Lyrics by Martin Kida -KIA, Score by T.Y.—[79][80]

REMEMBER PEARL HARBOR

History in every century
We recall an act that lives forevermore
We recall as into night they fall
The things that happened on Hawaii shore

Let's remember Pearl Harbor
As we go to meet the foe
Let's remember Pearl Harbor
As we did the Alamo
We will always remember
How they died for liberty
Let's remember Pearl Harbor
And go on to victory

GO FOR BROKE

Four Forty-Second Infantry
We are the boys of Hawaii Nei
We will fight for you
And the red white and blue
And will go the front
And back to Honolulu-lu-lu
Fighting for dear old Uncle Sam
Go for broke we don't give a damn
We will round up the Huns
At the point of a gun
And victory will be ours
Go for broke! Four Four Two!
Go for broke! Four Four Two!
And victory will be ours.

All hail our company.

After the war edit

 
President Truman walks past members of the 442nd Regimental Combat Team as they stand at attention on the Ellipse.

The record of the Japanese Americans serving in the 442nd and in the Military Intelligence Service (U.S. Pacific Theater forces in World War II) helped change the minds of anti-Japanese American critics in the continental U.S. and resulted in easing of restrictions and the eventual release of the 120,000-strong community well before the end of World War II. In Hawaii, the veterans were welcomed home as heroes by a grateful community that had supported them through those trying times.

However, the unit's exemplary service and many decorations did not change the attitudes of the general population in the continental U.S. towards people of Japanese ancestry after World War II. Veterans came home to signs that read "No Japs Allowed" and "No Japs Wanted", the denial of service in shops and restaurants, and the vandalism of their homes and property.

On 15 July 1946, the 442nd Regiment marched down Constitution Avenue to the Ellipse south of the White House. President Truman gave a speech and honored the regiment by awarding them the Presidential Unit Citation. Initially, many Veterans' organizations such as the VFW and the American Legion refused to allow Nisei veterans into existing posts and some even removed Japanese-American soldiers from their honor rolls. It is believed that white officers from the 442nd advocated on the behalf of the Nisei in Chicago to be allowed to form their own American Legion post 1183 in 1946, while Alva Fleming, a Navy veteran in Sacramento district leadership approved the charter for Nisei VFW Post 8985 in Sacramento in 1947. Fleming would go on to become the VFW State Commander for California and was instrumental in founding a total of 14 segregated Nisei VFW posts in the state. Veterans in the Pacific Northwest were unable to find any post willing to accept them, and eventually formed their own independent "Nisei Veterans Committee".[81][82][83]

Many Nisei veterans had difficulty finding houses in the continental United States. Their homes were occupied with new tenants. Due to the housing shortage, many Nisei veterans resorted to using federal housing programs. Many Nisei veterans used the G.I. Bill as an opportunity to attend university. Many Nisei became doctors, dentists, architects, scientists, engineers, and politicians in public office.[84]

Anti-Japanese sentiment remained strong into the 1960s, but faded along with other once-common prejudices, even while remaining strong in certain circles. Conversely, the story of the 442nd provided a leading example of what was to become the controversial model minority stereotype.[85]

According to author and historian Tom Coffman, men of the 100th/442nd/MIS dreaded returning home as second-class citizens. In Hawaii these men became involved in a peaceful movement. It has been described as the 100th/442nd returning from the battles in Europe to the battle at home. The non-violent revolution was successful and put veterans in public office in what became known as the Revolution of 1954.

One notable effect of the service of the Japanese-American units was to help convince Congress to end its opposition towards Hawaii's statehood petition. Twice before 1959, residents of Hawaii asked to be admitted to the U.S. as the 49th state.[citation needed] The exemplary record of the Japanese Americans serving in these units and the loyalty showed by the rest of Hawaii's population during World War II allowed Hawaii to be admitted as the 50th state (Alaska was granted statehood just prior).

In post-war American popular slang, the phrase "going for broke" was adopted from the 442nd's unit motto "Go for Broke", which according to the 1951 film Go for Broke! was derived from the Hawaiian pidgin phrase used by craps shooters risking all their money on one roll of the dice.[86]

Demobilization and rebirth edit

 
Soldiers from the 100th Infantry Battalion gather in formation during an exercise in American Samoa in 1987.
 
Soldiers of E Company, 100th Battalion, 442nd Infantry train at Marine Corps Base Hawaii in 2011.

The 442nd RCT was inactivated in Honolulu in 1946, but reactivated in 1947 in the U.S. Army Reserve. It was mobilized in 1968 to refill the Strategic Reserve during the Vietnam War, and carries on the honors and traditions of the unit. Today, the 100th Battalion, 442nd Infantry, is the only ground combat unit of the Army Reserve.[87] The battalion headquarters is at Fort Shafter, Hawaii, with subordinate units based in Hilo, American Samoa,[88] Saipan, and Guam. The only military presence in American Samoa consists of the battalion's B and C companies.[4]

In August 2004, the battalion was mobilized for duty in Iraq.[89] Stationed at Logistics Support Area Anaconda in the city of Balad, which is located about 50 miles northwest of Baghdad.[90] Lt. Colonel Colbert Low assumed command of the battalion only a few weeks after the battalion arrived at Logistical Support Area Anaconda.[91] In early 2006, the 100th had returned home.[92] One soldier was killed by an improvised explosive device attack.[93] Four members of the battalion were killed in action, and several dozen injured, before the battalion returned home.[87][94] During the year-long deployment, one of Charlie Company's attached platoons, discovered over 50 weapons caches.[95] Unlike the soldiers of World War II who were predominantly Japanese Americans, these soldiers came from as far away as Miami, Florida, Tennessee, Alaska and included soldiers from Hawaii, Philippines, Samoa and Palau. For their actions in Iraq the unit received the Meritorious Unit Commendation.[96]

The unit was once again deployed in 2009.[95] The unit was called up alongside the 3rd brigade, 25th Infantry Division;[97] and was assigned as an element of the 29th Infantry Brigade Combat Team.[98] Nominally deployed to Kuwait, it conducted patrols into Iraq, leading to two fatalities;[99] those patrols consisted of more than a million miles of driving conducting convoy duty.[100] During the units deployment, several dozen of the unit's American Samoan servicemembers became naturalized U.S. citizens while in Kuwait.[101]

Notable members edit

 
Daniel Inouye lost his right arm to a grenade wound and received several military decorations, including the Medal of Honor.

In popular culture edit

  • Allegiance the Musical: This musical, about the challenges faced by a Japanese-American family, is set in the present day with flashbacks to the 1940s. It was inspired by the experiences of George Takei, who spent his childhood in concentration camps. It stars George Takei, Lea Salonga and Telly Leung.
  • American Pastime: This 2007 fictional film depicts life inside the concentration camps, where baseball was one of the major diversions from the reality of the internees' lives. Location scenes were filmed in bleak, desolate land, not far from the site of an actual camp. Lane Nomura, the oldest son enlists in the Army, as a member of the 442nd Regimental Combat Team. The unit motto, "Go for broke!", provides inspiration at a climactic moment, and reference is made to the losses taken by the 442nd during the rescue of the Lost Battalion.
  • Go for Broke!: This 1951 film dramatizes the lives and wartime heroics of the 442nd Regimental Combat Team. The film stars Van Johnson as a young officer, reluctant about his assignment to the 442nd. He comes to respect the Nisei troops, eventually refusing a transfer back to his original Texas unit. The movie starred a number of veterans of the 442nd. It can be found on iTunes.
  • The "One Puka Puka" episode of The Gallant Men television series featured the unit with guest stars Poncie Ponce and George Takei.
  • The James Michener novel Hawaii has a chapter detailing the 442nd's experiences, although its designation is changed to the 222nd and many of the members appear under fictionalized names.
  • Ed Sakamoto wrote a play about the 100th/442nd entitled Our Hearts Were Touched by Fire, which was performed in Honolulu and Los Angeles.
 
Mr. Miyagi
  • In the series of four Karate Kid movies, Mr. Miyagi is a main character portrayed as a World War II veteran who had fought in the 442nd and received the Medal of Honor. The fourth film, The Next Karate Kid, begins with a reunion of the 442nd, in which Sen. Daniel Inouye gives a speech and Mr. Miyagi wears his Medal of Honor for the only time in any of the four films.
  • The Nisei Project: In 2001, choreographer Marla Hirokawa premiered her "Nisei" ballet in Brooklyn, NY which was inspired by her late father, 100th Battalion veteran and gave honor to the men of the 100th/442nd. In 2003, Marla and sister Laurie Hamano produced a "Nisei" ballet tour across the Hawaiian Islands. (Lane Nishikawa toured and performed with the dance company.) In 2014, "Nisei" was re-staged and presented at the NY International Fringe Festival with a revised score that included songs about the Nisei veterans composed by ukulele virtuoso Jake Shimabukuro and singer/songwriter Harold Payne.[111]
  • In 2005, Lane Nishikawa directed and starred in the independent film Only the Brave, which is a fictional account of the rescue of the Lost Battalion.
  • "Family 8108", the 9 December 2007 episode of the CBS TV show Cold Case centers around the Japanese concentration camps and discusses the 442nd Regional Combat Team.
  • Ken Burns' 2007 PBS World War II documentary The War explores the stories of four American towns' experiences with the war. Burns' 15-hour documentary goes in depth in describing the many battles of World War II, including those of the 442nd Infantry Regiment.
  • Sgt. Rock: The Lost Battalion #1–6 (2008) graphic novel
  • 99 Years of Love 〜Japanese Americans〜: In 2010 TBS produced a five-part, 10-hour fictional Japanese-language miniseries featuring many of the major events in Japanese-American history. Episode 4 features a key character who serves in the 442nd and portrays the rescue of the Texas Battalion.
  • Captain America: The First Avenger (2011) features Kenneth Choi as the character of Jim Morita, a Nisei soldier separated from his unit that joins with Dum Dum Dugan and the Howling Commandos. Choi again reprised the role in an episode of Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D..[112]
  • Valor With Honor is an 85-minute independent documentary film on the last interviews of veterans of the 442nd Regimental Combat Team. Interviews, war footage, and photos are part of the un-narrated documentary.[113]
  • In Drunk History season 2 episode 15 "Hawaii", Phil Hendrie tells the story of Daniel Inouye of the 442nd Infantry Regiment enlisting after the Japanese-American ban is lifted and later losing his arm in the assault on Colle Musatello in Italy.
  • In Hawaii Five-0 season 4 episode 10, the brother of the suspect whose family was placed in an internment camp is shown as a member of the battalion. It gives some information about the battalion and states that his brother who was of age did not want to stay in the camp, so he joined the Army in that battalion as did many of the other boys who were of age.
  • The story of the 442nd Infantry Regiment appeared in an episode of the American Heroes Channel series What History Forget, entitled "Fighting for Freedom". The episode featured an interview with Susumu Ito that was shot shortly before his death in 2015.
  • In Bad Day at Black Rock (1955), a US Army veteran seeks the father of a 442nd colleague who died saving his life in order to give him his son's posthumous medals. The plot centers on the town's hatred for the Japanese-American community.
  • Go for Broke: An Origin Story (2018) follows a group of University of Hawaii ROTC students during the tumultuous year after the attack on Pearl Harbor, as they navigate wartime Hawaii and fight discrimination. Adaptation of the comic book by Stacey Hayashi.[114]
  • The experience of Nisei soldiers in Europe and the Pacific was fictionalized for the Japanese market in the novel "Futatsu no Sokoku (Two Homelands)" by Toyoko Yamasaki in 1983.[115] It was dramatized into a limited series of the same name by TV Tokyo in 2019.[116]
  • Repentance (2019) is an historical novel based on the history of the 442nd Regimental Combat Team by Andrew Lam.[117]
  • In 2017, the 442nd Infantry Regiment was the subject of the short documentary Nisei Soldiers: Japanese American G.I. Joes, directed by Alexander Zane Irwin and produced by Daniel L. Bernardi with the collaboration of El Dorado Films and the Veteran Documentary Corps.[118]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "100th Infantry Battalion | Densho Encyclopedia". Retrieved 5 March 2023.
  2. ^ "Colors and Insignia". 100th Infantry Battalion Veterans. Retrieved 4 March 2018.
  3. ^ "442nd Regimental Combat Team Legacy Website". www.the442.org.
  4. ^ a b c d "100th Battalion, 442nd Infantry". GlobalSecurity.org. 23 May 2005. from the original on 11 September 2008. Retrieved 27 September 2008.
  5. ^ a b c d "442nd Regimental Combat Team". National Veterans Network. 16 June 2020.
  6. ^ Cathey, Kyla (13 April 2019). "Lodians await news from front in early 1944". Lodi News-Sentinel. p. 1.
  7. ^ a b Shenkle, Kathryn (May 2006). . United States Department of Defense, Department of the Army, Center of Military History. Archived from the original on 23 June 2013. Retrieved 6 June 2014.
  8. ^ "第442連隊戦闘団 Archives". Rafu Shimpo. 21 January 2023.
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on 16 August 2022. Retrieved 5 March 2023.
  10. ^ "声明:真珠湾攻撃から80周年を迎えるにあたり、全米日系人博物館は、この日に亡くなった米軍に敬意を表し、またこの日以降に強制収容された12万人の日系人に思いを寄せます。 | Japanese American National Museum". www.janm.org.
  11. ^ "ハワイ日本文化センターで知る日系人の歴史(2世、第442連隊)―「ハワイと日本、人々の歴史」第12回". ハフポスト. 1 March 2014.
  12. ^ "Japanese American Veterans Association - Nisei Legacy".
  13. ^ "Presidential Unit Citations (ARMY) awarded to: 100th Battalion & the 442d Regimental Combat Team". United States Army Center of Military History. Retrieved 14 July 2021.
  14. ^ a b Asahina, Robert (2007). Just Americans: How Japanese Americans Won a War at Home and Abroad. Penguin Group USA. p. 201. ISBN 978-1-59240-300-4.
  15. ^ a b Steffen, Jordan (6 October 2010). . Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on 7 October 2010. Retrieved 9 October 2010.
  16. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 30 January 2015. Retrieved 30 January 2015.
  17. ^ Crost, Lyn (1994). Honor by Fire: Japanese Americans at War in Europe and the Pacific. Presidio Press. p. 147. ISBN 9780891415213.
  18. ^ Tafao, Melodie (7 August 2019). "Lt. Gen. Charles D. Luckey visits the 100th Battalion, 442nd Infantry Regiment in Hawaii". US Army.
  19. ^ Soucy, Jon (26 May 2017). "Asian-Pacific Heritage: Japanese-American WWII unit stands among Army's most decorated". US Army Chief of Public Affairs.
  20. ^ Okihiro, Gary (8 January 1992). Cane Fires: The Anti-Japanese Movement in Hawaii, 1865–1945 (1st ed.). Temple University Press. p. 117.
  21. ^ Chin, Aimee (2004). "Long-Run Labor Market Effects of Japanese American Internment During World War II on Working-Age Male Internees". Journal of Labor Economics. University of Houston: 10.
  22. ^ Wakamatsu, Peter. "Origins of the 442nd Regimental Combat Team". the442.org. Retrieved 4 March 2018.
  23. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Shirey, Orville (1946). Americans: The Story of The 442d Combat Team. Washington Infantry Journal Press. ISBN 978-1258423360.
  24. ^ Crost, Lyn (1994). Honor by Fire: Japanese Americans at War in Europe and the Pacific. Presidio Press. ISBN 9780891415213.
  25. ^ Bangarth, Stephanie Danielle (2008). Voices Raised in Protest: Defending Citizens of Japanese Ancestry in North America, 1942-49. UBC Press. p. 29. ISBN 978-0-7748-5824-3.
  26. ^ Ruminski, Laura (11 November 2019). "Against all odds: Impact of famed, elite Nisei soldiers lives on at home and abroad". Hawaii Tribune Herald.
  27. ^ "442nd Regimental Combat Team". Densho Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2 December 2018.
  28. ^ "Military Intelligence Service". Densho Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2 December 2018.
  29. ^ Williams, Rudi (25 May 2000). . American Forces Press Service. Archived from the original on 14 July 2012.
  30. ^ "Goichi Richard Suehiro | Sons and Daughters of the 442nd Regimental Combat Team".
  31. ^ Duus, Masayo Umezawa (2006). Unlikely Liberators: The Men of the 100th And 442nd. University of Hawaii Press. p. 156. ISBN 978-0-8248-3140-0.
  32. ^ a b c d e f Crost, Lyn (1994). Honor by Fire: Japanese Americans at War in Europe and the Pacific. Presidio Press. p. 149. ISBN 9780891415213.
  33. ^ a b McCaffrey, James M. (2013). Going for Broke: Japanese American Soldiers in the War against Nazi Germany. University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0-8061-8908-6.
  34. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Sterner, C. Douglas (2007). Go for Broke: The Nisei Warriors of World War II who Conquered Germany, Japan, and American Bigotry. American Legacy Media. ISBN 978-0-9796896-1-1.
  35. ^ Go For Broke National Education Center video archive. Harry Abe, Film #348, Tape 2, 28:00 min.
  36. ^ a b . Goforbroke.org. Archived from the original on 13 August 2012. Retrieved 17 August 2012.
  37. ^ . Go For Broke National Education Center. Archived from the original on 22 October 2012. Retrieved 17 August 2012.
  38. ^ Video: Armistice Day In France Etc. (1944). Universal Newsreel. 1944. Retrieved 21 February 2012.
  39. ^ Steidl, Franz (30 December 2008). Lost Battalions: Going for Broke in the Vosges, Autumn 1944. Novato: Presidio. p. 43. ISBN 978-0-307-53790-4.
  40. ^ a b c Remembrances: 100th Infantry Battalion 50th Anniversary Celebration 1942-1992. 100th Infantry Battalion Publication Committee. 1992.
  41. ^ Steidl, Franz (30 December 2008). Lost Battalions: Going for Broke in the Vosges, Autumn 1944. Novato: Presidio. pp. 61-62. ISBN 978-0-307-53790-4.
  42. ^ Steidl, Franz (30 December 2008). Lost Battalions: Going for Broke in the Vosges, Autumn 1944. Novato: Presidio. p. 66. ISBN 978-0-307-53790-4.
  43. ^ Steidl, Franz (30 December 2008). Lost Battalions: Going for Broke in the Vosges, Autumn 1944. Novato: Presidio. p. 80. ISBN 978-0-307-53790-4.
  44. ^ Steidl, Franz (30 December 2008). Lost Battalions: Going for Broke in the Vosges, Autumn 1944. Novato: Presidio. p. 83. ISBN 978-0-307-53790-4.
  45. ^ Steidl, Franz (30 December 2008). Lost Battalions: Going for Broke in the Vosges, Autumn 1944. Novato: Presidio. p. 72. ISBN 978-0-307-53790-4.
  46. ^ Steidl, Franz (30 December 2008). Lost Battalions: Going for Broke in the Vosges, Autumn 1944. Novato: Presidio. p. 89. ISBN 978-0-307-53790-4.
  47. ^ "Keynote Address by Young O. Kim". 100th Infantry Battalion Veterans. 3 July 1982. Retrieved 17 August 2012.
  48. ^ "France". 100th Infantry Battalion Veterans. 23 March 1945. Retrieved 17 August 2012.
  49. ^ a b . www.goforbroke.org. Archived from the original on 12 June 2018. Retrieved 12 June 2018.
  50. ^ "Southern France". history.army.mil. Retrieved 12 June 2018.
  51. ^ Axelrod, Alan (2007). Encyclopedia of World War II. H W Fowler. p. 476. ISBN 978-0-8160-6022-1.
  52. ^ Joseph Ichiuji testimonial at Museum of Tolerance–Go For Broke Foundation.
  53. ^ Tom Kono testimonial at Museum of Tolerance–Go For Broke Foundation.
  54. ^ Minoru Tsubota testimonial at Museum of Tolerance–Go For Broke Foundation.
  55. ^ . Archived from the original on 3 February 2015. Retrieved 12 January 2015.
  56. ^ "Search Results: Waakirchen". U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum.
  57. ^ . gz-tm-dachau.de (in German). 3 October 2016. Archived from the original on 3 October 2016.
  58. ^ . Go For Broke NEC. Archived from the original on 20 March 2016. Retrieved 12 January 2015.
  59. ^ George Oiye testimonial at Museum of Tolerance–Go For Broke Foundation.
  60. ^ [As found on Google Earth at https://lh5.googleusercontent.com/p/AF1QipNWPUhYWq785H_gux8qw1uAr7axokLXjXaaR44n=w720-h720-pd , with two photos of it taken by Ellen Haider]
  61. ^ Ready, J. Lee. (1985). Forgotten Allies: The Military Contribution of the Colonies, Exiled Governments and Lesser Powers to the Allied Victory in World War II. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company. ISBN 978-0-89950-117-8.
  62. ^ Ready, J. Lee (1985). Forgotten Allies: The European Theatre. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company. ISBN 978-0-89950-129-1.
  63. ^ Starr, Kevin (2005). California : a history (1st ed.). New York: Modern Library. ISBN 0-679-64240-4. OCLC 59360288.
  64. ^ "Japanese Americans in military during World War II | Densho Encyclopedia". Retrieved 5 March 2023.
  65. ^ a b Teraoka, Joy. (PDF). Military History Network. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 10 May 2014.
  66. ^ Williams, Rudi. . American Forces Press Service. Archived from the original on 24 December 2015. Retrieved 23 December 2015.
  67. ^ "Nisei VFW Post Designated as Historic Landmark". Rafu Shimpo. 27 April 2021.
  68. ^ Strong, W.F. (29 May 2019). "How The Japanese Americans Who Saved 'The Lost Battalion' of World War II Became Honorary Texans". Texas Standard.
  69. ^ "Congressional Gold Medal Presented to Nisei Soldiers of World War II". United States Mint. 2 November 2011. Retrieved 30 May 2020.
  70. ^ . Consulate General of France in Los Angeles. 27 June 2014. Archived from the original on 30 January 2015. Retrieved 30 January 2015.
  71. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 December 2016. Retrieved 26 December 2016.
  72. ^ "Go For Broke". Go For Broke. Retrieved 11 January 2018.
  73. ^ "Go For Broke: Army Unit's Motto Now a National Day". defense.gov. US Department of Defense. 4 April 2019.
  74. ^ "National Japanese American Memorial, (sculpture)". Smithsonian. 2001. Retrieved 14 February 2011.
  75. ^ Ashworth, Calvin (8 July 2018). ""Brothers In Valor" Memorial". Clio: Your Guide to History.
  76. ^ "USS Hornet Museum Hosts One-of-a-Kind Exhibit Honoring Nisei Veterans". Marketwired. 20 October 2011. Retrieved 22 September 2019.
  77. ^ "Hello 2021: U.S. Postal Service announces upcoming stamps". USPS. 17 November 2020.
  78. ^ Watanabe, Teresa (21 December 2007). "Seeking stamp of approval". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 23 June 2016.
  79. ^ "Go For Broke Song". YouTube. 31 July 2007. Archived from the original on 12 December 2021.
  80. ^ "Go For Broke Song". goforbroke.freeservers.com.
  81. ^ Hallman, Tom (11 November 2022). "American Legion post apologizes to Nisei veterans, acknowledges role in Hood River's 'ugly history'". The Oregonian.
  82. ^ "VFW commanders remembered" (PDF). Pacific Citizen. 8 August 1986.
  83. ^ "Our Mission, Vision, & Principles". Nisei Veterans Committee. Retrieved 22 July 2023.
  84. ^ Yenne, Bill (2007). Rising Sons: The Japanese American GIs who fought for the United States in World War II. New York, N.Y: Thomas Dunne Books. pp. 247–252. ISBN 978-0312354640.
  85. ^ Tang, Edward. "From Internment to Containment: Cold War imaginings of Japanese Americans in Go for Broke". Columbia University. Retrieved 12 June 2018.
  86. ^ Asahina, Robert (2007). Just Americans: How Japanese Americans Won a War at Home and Abroad. Penguin Group USA. p. 69. ISBN 978-1-59240-300-4.
  87. ^ a b Pullen, Colonel Randy (22 April 2008). "Army Reserve Marks First 100 Years". U.S. Army Reserve 100th Anniversary website. United States Army. Retrieved 28 February 2018.
  88. ^ Overson, David (28 April 2019). "American Samoa's expansion of the Army Reserve establishes a Pacific stronghold". Army Chief of Public Affairs.
  89. ^ Doubler, Michael Dale (2008). The National Guard and Reserve: A Reference Handbook. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 133. ISBN 978-0-275-99325-2.
    Adams, Paul (20 August 2004). "Samoan Reservists answer the call to duty". Army News Service. Pago Pago, American Samoa. Retrieved 28 February 2018.
  90. ^ Kakesako, Gregg K. (29 May 2005). "'Go For Broke' on daily combat missions". Honolulu Star-Bulletin. Retrieved 28 February 2018.
  91. ^ Kakesako, Gregg (17 March 2005). "Isle battalion commander fired after altercation in Iraq". Honolulu Star-Bulletin. Retrieved 28 February 2018.
  92. ^ Kakesako, Gregg K. (4 January 2006). "Attack in Iraq targets 100th Battalion camp". Honolulu Star-Bulletin. Retrieved 28 February 2018.
  93. ^ "Army Staff Sgt. Frank Tiai". Military Times. Vienna, Virginia. Associated Press. 17 July 2005. Retrieved 28 February 2018.
  94. ^ "Island Military Heroes". Office of Insualr Affairs. United States Department of the Interior. 12 June 2015. Retrieved 1 March 2018.
  95. ^ a b "100th/442nd Reserve Unit". 100th Infantry Battalion Veterans Education Center. 100th Infantry Battalion Veterans. Retrieved 28 February 2018.
    Cole, William (14 July 2005). "Isle troops track down suspects, arms cache". Honolulu Advertiser. Retrieved 28 February 2018.
  96. ^ "100th Battalion on alert for possible Kuwait deployment". Honolulu Advertiser. 21 December 2007. Retrieved 28 February 2018.
    Stewart, Richard W. (26 August 2015). "Lineage and Honors". Center of Military History. United States Army. Retrieved 1 March 2018.
  97. ^ Kakesako, Gregg K. (19 May 2008). "7,200 more Hawaii-based troops heading out". Honolulu Star-Bulletin. Retrieved 28 February 2018.
  98. ^ Carpenito, Sergeant Crystal (January 2009). (PDF). Lava Flow. Hawaii Army National Guard. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 December 2016. Retrieved 28 February 2018.
  99. ^ "100th Battalion, 442nd Infantry Regiment Soldier Honored in Memorial Ceremony at Camp Virginia". Defense Visual Information Distribution Service. Defense Media Activity. 29 June 2009. Retrieved 28 February 2018.
    Congressional Record. St. Martin's Press. 2004. p. 13120.
    Lee, Major General Robert G.F. (2009). "Annual Report Fiscal Year 2009" (PDF). Department of Defense. State of Hawaii. Retrieved 28 February 2018.
  100. ^ Zeisset, Capt. Timothy (June 2009). (PDF). Lava Flow. Hawaii Army National Guard. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 January 2017. Retrieved 1 March 2018.
  101. ^ Livesay, James (1 July 2009). . Livesay & Myers. Archived from the original on 2 March 2018. Retrieved 1 March 2018.
    (PDF). Global Law Centers. 29 June 2009. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 March 2018. Retrieved 1 March 2009.
  102. ^ a b "Takashi "Halo" Hirose". ISHOF.org. Retrieved 5 July 2018.
  103. ^ "Champion swimmer Takashi 'Halo' Hirose dead at 79". The Honolulu Advertiser. 4 September 2002. Retrieved 5 July 2018.
  104. ^ Brien, Taylor (22 February 2017). "Swimmer Takashi "Halo" Hirose Inducted into ISHOF; First Japanese-American to Swim for the USA". Swimming World News. Retrieved 19 February 2020.
  105. ^ Williams, Rudi. . American Forces Press Service. Archived from the original on 28 October 2012. Retrieved 1 September 2012.
  106. ^ "Keynoter Knows Sting of Bias, Poverty". St. Petersburg Times. Associated Press (Chicago). 27 August 1968.
  107. ^ Scott, John L. (3 October 1967). "Japanese Actor No Longer Villain". Los Angeles Times. p. C1.
  108. ^ Chang, Thelma (November 1985). I Can Never Forget: Men of the 100th/442nd. Honolulu, HI: Sigi Productions. ISBN 0-9630228-0-6.
  109. ^ Ingram, Scott (2006). Korean Americans. World Almanac Library. p. 27. ISBN 978-0-8368-7315-3.
  110. ^ . Archived from the original on 9 July 2008. Retrieved 23 September 2008.
  111. ^ "The Nisei Project". niseiproject.
  112. ^ Aoki, Huy (28 July 2011). . Rafu Shimpo. Archived from the original on 26 February 2018. Retrieved 25 February 2018.
  113. ^ . Archived from the original on 12 March 2013. Retrieved 1 September 2012.
  114. ^ Go For Broke at IMDb  
  115. ^ Niiya, Brian. "Two Homelands (book)". Densho. Retrieved 11 March 2020.
  116. ^ "Two Homelands". Rafu Shimpo. 21 July 2019. Retrieved 12 March 2020.
  117. ^ Urban, Cori (25 April 2019). "Heroism of Japanese-American soldiers in World War II subject of new novel". Republican.
  118. ^ "Nisei Soldiers (Short 2017)". IMDb. They were Americans removed from their homes, mistrusted by their country, and served it with the greatest honor.

External links edit

Resources edit

  • Japanese American War Hero Recalls Life During World War II
  • Asian-Nation: 442nd RCT Rescue of the Lost Battalion
  • Hawaii Star Bulletin article on Hawaii Statehood passage 13 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  • "U.S. Samurais in Bruyeres" by Pierre Moulin
  • The Story of the 442nd Combat Team compiled by members of the 442nd Combat Team, Mitsuye Yamada papers, Special Collections and Archives, The UC Irvine Libraries, via Calisphere.
  • "From a Quiet American, a Story of War and Remembrance". The New York Times. 16 August 2008.
  • Medal of Honor recipient George Joe Sakato on Veterans Chronicles 6 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine produced by the
  • , Archives & Manuscripts Department, University of Hawaii at Manoa Library
  • "442nd Regimental Combat Team" by Franklin Odo, Densho Encyclopedia
  • 442nd Regimental Combat Team Legacy Website

Media edit

  • Only the Brave official movie site
  • A Path to Lunch Liberation Day and the Liberation of America, the 442nd in Lunigiana and Versilia.
  • A film clip "Christmas Brings Joy To Everyone, 1945/12/10 (1945)" is available for viewing at the Internet Archive
  • A film clip "Heroes Comes Home, 1946/07/03 (1946)" is available for viewing at the Internet Archive
  • A film clip "Pres. Truman Honors Nisei Combat Group, 1946/07/18 (1946)" is available for viewing at the Internet Archive
  • George Takei: Why I love a country that once betrayed me TEDxKyoto 2014
  • Four-Four-Two, F Company At War: 2014 Documentary Film

Organizations edit

  • . Archived from the original on 16 May 2007. Retrieved 5 September 2007.

442nd, infantry, regiment, united, states, this, article, about, 442nd, regimental, combat, team, during, current, 100th, 442nd, infantry, battalion, 100th, infantry, battalion, united, states, 442nd, infantry, regiment, japanese, 第442歩兵連隊, infantry, regiment,. This article is about the 442nd Regimental Combat Team during WW2 For the current 100th 442nd Infantry Battalion see 100th Infantry Battalion United States The 442nd Infantry Regiment Japanese 第442歩兵連隊 was an infantry regiment of the United States Army The regiment is best known as the most decorated in U S military history and as a fighting unit composed almost entirely of second generation American soldiers of Japanese ancestry Nisei who fought in World War II Beginning in 1944 the regiment fought primarily in the European Theatre 4 in particular Italy southern France and Germany The 442nd Regimental Combat Team RCT was organized on March 23 1943 in response to the War Department s call for volunteers to form the segregated Japanese American army combat unit More than 12 000 Nisei second generation Japanese American volunteers answered the call Ultimately 2 686 from Hawaii and 1 500 from mainland U S internment camps assembled at Camp Shelby Mississippi in April 1943 for a year of infantry training 5 Many of the soldiers from the continental U S had families in internment camps while they fought abroad 6 The unit s motto was Go for Broke 442nd Regimental Combat TeamHistoric Distinctive unit insignia of the 442d RCTActive1944 1946Country United StatesBranchUnited States ArmyTypeRegimental combat team historical RoleInfantrySize 4000Nickname s Purple Heart Battalion belongs to the 100th Infantry Battalion Separate 1 Motto s Go for Broke ColorsBlue and WhiteEngagementsWorld War II Naples Foggia Rome Arno Southern France Rhineland Northern Apennines Central Europe Po ValleyCommandersNotablecommandersCol Charles W PenceCol Virgil R MillerInsigniaShoulder sleeve insignia 2 The 442nd Regiment is the most decorated unit in U S military history 7 Created as the 442nd Regimental Combat Team Japanese 第442連隊戦闘団 8 9 10 11 Dai Yonhyakuyonjuni Rentai Sentōdan when it was activated 1 February 1943 the unit quickly grew to its fighting complement of about 4 000 men by April 1943 and an eventual total of about 10 000 men 12 served in the combined 100th Infantry Battalion and 442nd RCT The combined units 5 earned in less than two years more than 4 000 5 Purple Hearts and 4 000 Bronze Star Medals The unit was awarded seven Presidential Unit Citations seven between 1944 and 1946 13 five earned in one month 14 Twenty one of its members were awarded the Medal of Honor 4 In 2010 Congress approved the granting of the Congressional Gold Medal to the 442nd Regimental Combat Team and associated units who served during World War II 15 and in 2012 all surviving members were made chevaliers of the French Legion d Honneur for their actions contributing to the liberation of France and their heroic rescue of the Lost Battalion 16 Arriving in the European Theatre the 442nd Regimental Combat Team with its second and third infantry battalions one artillery battalion and associated HQ and service companies was attached to the 34th Infantry Division On 11 June 1944 near Civitavecchia Italy the 100th Infantry Battalion another all Nisei fighting unit which had already been in combat since September 1943 was transferred from the 133rd Infantry Regiment to the 442nd Regimental Combat Team Because of its combat record the 100th was allowed to keep their original designation as the 100th Infantry Battalion 17 The related 522nd Field Artillery Battalion liberated at least one of the satellite labor camps of Dachau concentration camp and saved survivors of a death march near Waakirchen The 442nd RCT was inactivated in 1946 and reactivated as a reserve battalion in 1947 garrisoned at Fort Shafter Hawaii The 442nd lives on through the 100th Battalion 442nd Infantry Regiment and is the only current infantry formation in the Army Reserve More information about the current 100th Battalion 442nd Infantry Regiment and its current alignment with the active 25th Infantry Division the reserve 9th Mission Support Command and its combat duty in the Vietnam War and the Iraq War can be found at 100th Infantry Battalion United States The 100th 442nd s current members carry on the honors and traditions of the historical unit In recognition of its storied combat record the 100th 442nd was also one of the last units allowed to use its individual shoulder sleeve insignia 18 Contents 1 Background 2 Training and organization 3 Reunion with the 100th 4 First contact 5 Hill 140 and Castellina 6 Antitank Company 7 Vosges Mountains 7 1 Bruyeres 7 2 Biffontaine 8 Lost Battalion 9 General Dahlquist s legacy 10 Champagne Campaign 11 522nd Field Artillery Battalion 12 Gothic Line 13 Service decorations and legacy 14 Original fight song 15 After the war 16 Demobilization and rebirth 17 Notable members 18 In popular culture 19 See also 20 References 21 External links 21 1 Resources 21 2 Media 21 3 OrganizationsBackground editMost Japanese Americans who fought in World War II were Nisei born in the United States to immigrant parents Shortly after the Imperial Japanese Navy s attack on Pearl Harbor on 7 December 1941 Japanese American men were initially categorized as 4C enemy alien and therefore not subject to the draft On 19 February 1942 President Franklin D Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066 which authorized the Secretary of War to prescribe military areas in such places and of such extent as he or the appropriate Military Commander may determine from which any or all persons may be excluded and with respect to which the right of any person to enter remain in or leave shall be subject to whatever restrictions the Secretary of War or the appropriate Military Commander may impose in his discretion Although the order did not refer specifically to people of Japanese ancestry it was targeted largely for the internment of people of Japanese ancestry from the West Coast In March 1942 Lieutenant General John L DeWitt head of the Western Defense Command and Fourth Army issued the first of 108 military proclamations that resulted in the forced relocation from their residences to guarded concentration camps of more than 110 000 people of Japanese ancestry from the West Coast the great majority of the ethnic community Two thirds were born in the United States 19 In Hawaii the military imposed martial law complete with curfews and blackouts As a large portion of the population was of Japanese ancestry 150 000 out of 400 000 people in 1937 internment was deemed not practical it was strongly opposed by the island s business community which was heavily dependent on the labor force of those of Japanese ancestry this contrasts with the business communities on the mainland that competed with Japanese American businesses and which exploited the opportunity to buy up Japanese American properties that had to be surrendered It was accurately believed that an internment of Japanese Americans and Japanese immigrants in Hawaii would have had catastrophic results for the Hawaiian economy intelligence reports at the time noted that the Japanese through a concentration of effort in select industries had achieved essential roles in several key sectors of the economy in Hawaii 20 In addition other reports indicated that those of Japanese descent in Hawaii had access to virtually all jobs in the economy including high status high paying jobs e g professional and managerial jobs suggesting that a mass internment of people of Japanese descent in Hawaii would have negatively impacted every sector of the Hawaiian economy 21 When the War Department called for the removal of all soldiers of Japanese ancestry from active service in early 1942 General Delos C Emmons commander of the U S Army in Hawaii decided to discharge those in the Hawaii Territorial Guard which was composed mainly of ROTC students from the University of Hawaii However he permitted the more than 1 300 Japanese American soldiers of the 298th and 299th Infantry Regiment regiments of the Hawaii National Guard to remain in service The discharged members of the Hawaii Territorial Guard petitioned General Emmons to allow them to assist in the war effort The petition was granted and they formed a group called the Varsity Victory Volunteers which performed various military construction jobs General Emmons worried about the loyalty of Japanese American soldiers in the event of a Japanese invasion recommended to the War Department that those in the 298th and 299th regiments be organized into a Hawaiian Provisional Battalion and sent to the mainland The move was authorized and on 5 June 1942 the Hawaiian Provisional Battalion set sail for training They landed at Oakland California on 10 June 1942 and two days later were sent to Camp McCoy Wisconsin On 15 June 1942 the battalion was designated the 100th Infantry Battalion Separate the One Puka Puka nbsp 100th Infantry soldiers receiving grenade training in 1943Mainly because of the actions of the 100th and the Varsity Victory Volunteers the War Department directed that a Japanese American Combat Team should be activated comprising the 442d Infantry Regiment the 522d Field Artillery Battalion Japanese 第522野戦砲兵大隊 and the 232d Engineer Combat Company Japanese 第232戦闘工兵中隊 The order dated 22 January 1943 directed All cadre men must be American citizens of Japanese ancestry who have resided in the United States since birth and Officers of field grade and captains furnished under the provisions of subparagraphs a b and c above will be white American citizens Other officers will be of Japanese ancestry insofar as practicable 22 In accordance with those orders the 442d Combat Team was activated 1 February 1943 by General Orders Headquarters Third Army Colonel Charles W Pence took command with Lieutenant Colonel Merritt B Booth as executive officer Lieutenant Colonel Keith K Tatom commanded the 1st Battalion Lieutenant Colonel James M Hanley the 2d Battalion and Lieutenant Colonel Sherwood Dixon the 3d Battalion Lieutenant Colonel Baya M Harrison commanded the 522d Field Artillery and Captain Pershing Nakada commanded the 232d Engineers 23 Colonel Charles W Pence a World War I veteran and military science professor commanded the regiment until he was wounded during the rescue of the Lost Battalion in October 1944 He was then replaced by Lieutenant Colonel Virgil R Miller 24 The US government required that all internees answer a loyalty questionnaire which was used to register the Nisei for the draft Question 27 of the questionnaire asked eligible males Are you willing to serve in the armed forces of the United States on combat duty wherever ordered and question 28 asked Will you swear unqualified allegiance to the United States of America and faithfully defend the United States from any or all attack by foreign or domestic forces and forswear any form of allegiance or obedience to the Japanese emperor or any other foreign government power or organization Nearly a quarter of the Nisei males answered with a no or a qualified answer to both questions in protest resenting the implication they ever had allegiance to Japan some left them blank Qualified answers included those who said yes but criticized the internment of the Japanese or racism Many who responded that way were imprisoned for evading the draft Such refusal is the subject of the postwar novel No No Boy But more than 75 indicated that they were willing to enlist and swear allegiance to the U S The U S Army called for 1 500 volunteers from Hawaii and 3 000 from the mainland An overwhelming 10 000 men from Hawaii volunteered The announcement was met with less enthusiasm on the mainland where most draft age men of Japanese ancestry and their families were held in concentration camps The Army revised the quota calling for 2 900 men from Hawaii and 1 500 from the mainland Only 1 256 volunteered from the mainland during this initial call for volunteers As a result around 3 000 men from Hawaii and 800 men from the mainland were inducted Roosevelt announced the formation of the 442nd Infantry Regimental Combat Team saying Americanism is not and never was a matter of race or ancestry 25 Ultimately the draft was reinstated to obtain more Japanese Americans from the mainland to become part of the 10 000 men who eventually served in the 100th Infantry Battalion and 442nd Regiment 26 Training and organization edit nbsp 442nd recruits building then attacking across a pontoon bridge at Camp ShelbyThe 100th Infantry Battalion relocated to Camp Shelby in Mississippi Eventually the 100th was joined by 3 000 volunteers from Hawaii and 800 from the mainland internment camps As a regimental combat team RCT the 442nd RCT was a self sufficient fighting formation of three infantry battalions originally 1st 2nd and 3rd Battalions 442nd Infantry and later the 100th Infantry Battalion in place of the 1st the 522nd Field Artillery Battalion the 232nd Engineer Company an anti tank company cannon company service company medical detachment headquarters companies and the 206th Army Band 27 Although they were permitted to volunteer to fight Americans of Japanese ancestry were generally forbidden to fight in combat in the Pacific Theater No such limitations were placed on Americans of German or Italian ancestry who were assigned to units fighting against the Axis Powers in the European Theater There were many more German and Italian Americans than Japanese Americans and their political and economic power reduced the restrictions against them Many men deemed proficient enough in the Japanese language were approached or sometimes ordered to join the Military Intelligence Service MIS to serve as translators interpreters and spies in the Pacific as well as in the China Burma India Theater These men were sent to the MIS Language School at Camp Savage Minnesota to develop their language skills and receive training in military intelligence While the 442nd trained in Mississippi the 100th departed for Oran in North Africa to join the forces destined to invade Italy 28 Reunion with the 100th edit nbsp Organization chart of the 442nd RCT after its reunion with the 100th Battalion in 1944The 442nd Combat Team less its 1st Battalion which had remained in the U S to train Nisei replacements after many of its members were levied as replacements for the 100th sailed from Hampton Roads Virginia on 1 May 1944 and landed at Anzio on 28 May The 442nd would join the 100th Battalion in Civitavecchia north of Rome on 11 June 1944 attached to the 34th Infantry Division The 100th was placed under the command of the 442nd on 15 June 1944 but on 14 August 1944 the 100th Battalion was officially assigned to the 442nd as its 1st battalion but was allowed to keep its unit designation in recognition of its distinguished fighting record The 1st Battalion 442nd Infantry at Camp Shelby was then redesignated the 171st Infantry Battalion Separate on 5 September 1944 The 100th Battalion s high casualty rate at Anzio and Monte Cassino earned it the unofficial nickname Purple Heart Battalion 29 First contact edit nbsp A 442nd RCT squad leader Sergeant Goichi Suehiro 30 checks for German units in France in November 1944 The newly formed Nisei unit went into battle together on 26 June 1944 at the village of Belvedere in Suvereto Tuscany Although the 100th was attached to the 442nd its actions earned it a separate Presidential Unit Citation Second and Third Battalions were the first to engage the enemy in a fierce firefight F Company bore the worst fighting A B and C Companies of the 100th were called into combat and advanced east using a covered route to reach the high ground northeast of Belvedere 23 34 The enemy did not know that the 100th was flanking the German exit trapping them in Belvedere C Company blocked the town s entrance while A Company blocked the exit Meanwhile the 442nd s 2nd Battalion was receiving a heavy barrage by the Germans from inside Belvedere and the Germans remained unaware of their situation B Company stayed on the high ground and conducted a surprise attack on the German battalion s exposed east flank forcing the Germans to flee and run into C Company which then drove the Germans to A Company 31 All three companies went into action boldly facing murderous fire from all types of weapons and tanks and at times fighting without artillery support The stubborn desire of the men to close with a numerically superior enemy and the rapidity with which they fought enabled the 100th Infantry Battalion to destroy completely the right flank positions of a German Army The fortitude and intrepidity displayed by the officers and men of the 100th Infantry Battalion reflects the finest traditions of the Army of the United States 32 Presidential Unit Citation Review The 442nd along with its first battalion the 100th kept driving the enemy north engaging in multiple skirmishes until they had passed Sassetta The battle of Belvedere showed that the 442nd could hold their own and showed them the kind of fighting the 100th Battalion had gone through in the prior months After only a few days of rest the united 442nd again entered into combat on 1 July taking Cecina and moving towards the Arno River On 2 July as the 442nd approached the Arno 5th Battalion engaged in a hard fought battle to take Hill 140 while on 7 July the 100th fought for the town of Castellina Marittima 33 Hill 140 and Castellina editFor the first three weeks of July the 442nd and its 1st Battalion the 100th were constantly attacking German forces leading to 1 100 enemy killed and 331 captured 34 51 Hill 140 was the main line of enemy resistance A single German battalion held the hill and along with the help of artillery had completely wiped out a machine gun squad of L Company of the 3rd Battalion and G Company of 2nd Battalion except for its commander 23 36 A constant artillery barrage was launched against the 2nd and 3rd Battalions as they dug in at the hill s base The 442nd gained very little ground in the coming days only improving their position slightly The 232nd Engineers aided the 442nd by defusing landmines that lay in the 442nd s path The entire 34th Division front encountered heavy resistance All along the 34th Infantry Division Front the Germans held more doggedly than at any time since the breakthrough at Cassino and Anzio 23 37 Hill 140 had been dubbed Little Cassino as the resistance by the Germans was so fierce Hill 140 when the medics were just overrun with all the casualties casualties you couldn t think to talk about 35 The 2nd Battalion moved to the eastern front of Hill 140 and 3rd Battalion moved to the western front both converging on the German flanks It wasn t until 7 July when the last German resistance was overcome that the hill came under the 34th Division s control On the day Hill 140 fell the battle for the town of Castellina Marittima began The 100th began its assault on the northwestern side of the town taking the high ground Just before dawn 2nd Platoon C Company moved into town encountering heavy resistance and multiple counterattacks by German forces but held them off In the meantime Company B moved north into Castellina encountering heavy resistance as well First they helped defend 2nd and 3rd Battalions in the taking of Hill 140 Then with the help of the 522nd Field Artillery they lay down a heavy barrage and forced the Germans to retreat by 1800 hours on 7 July 23 38 The 100th dug in and waited for relief to arrive after spending an entire day securing the town Until 25 July the 442nd encountered heavy resistance from each town when they reached the Arno River ending the Rome Arno Campaign The 100 442 suffered casualties of 1 272 men 17 missing 44 non combat injuries 972 wounded and 239 killed in the process a distance of only 40 miles 64 km 36 They rested from 25 July to 15 August when the 442nd moved to patrol the Arno Crossing the Arno on 31 August was relatively uneventful as they were guarding the north side of the river in order for bridges to be built On 11 September the 442nd was detached from the Fifth Army and then attached to the 36th Infantry Division of the Seventh Army citation needed Antitank Company edit nbsp The 442nd Regimental Combat Team hiking up a muddy road in the Chambois Sector France in late 1944On 15 July the Antitank Company was pulled from the frontlines and placed with the 517th Parachute Infantry Regiment 1st Airborne Task Force They had trained at an airfield south of Rome to prepare for the invasion of Southern France which took place on 15 August landing near Le Muy France They trained for a few weeks to get used to prepare properly load and fly gliders These gliders were 48 feet 15 m long and 15 feet 4 6 m high and could hold a jeep and a trailer filled with ammunition or a British six pounder antitank gun 36 dead link The Southern France Campaign 15 August to 14 September led the 442nd to its second Presidential Unit Citation for invading in gliders and the Combat Infantryman Badge for fighting with the infantrymen of the 7th Army The soldiers of Antitank Company received the Glider Badge 34 56 57 After many rough landings by the gliders hitting trees or enemy flak they held their positions for a few days until relieved by Allied troops coming in by sea For the next two months the Antitank Company guarded the exposed right flank of the Seventh Army and protected the 517th Parachute Infantry The unit also cleared mines captured Germans and guarded roads and tunnels 37 In mid to late October the Antitank Company rejoined the 442nd during the battle to find the Lost Battalion 38 Vosges Mountains editAfter leaving Naples the 442nd landed in Marseille on 30 September and for the next few weeks they traveled 500 miles 800 km through the Rhone Valley by walking and by boxcar until 13 October On 14 October 1944 the 442nd began moving into position in the late afternoon preparing the assault on Hills A B C and D of Bruyeres Each hill was heavily guarded as each hill was key in order to take and secure the city Hill A was located Northwest of Bruyeres Hill B to the North Hill C Northeast and Hill D to the East The 442nd had experienced mainly prairie in Italy but the Vosges Mountains provided a very different terrain The unit faced dense fog mud heavy rain large trees hills and heavy enemy gunfire and artillery while moving through the Vosges Hitler had ordered the German frontline to fight at all costs as this was the last barrier between the Allied forces and Germany On 15 October 1944 the 442nd began its attack on Bruyeres The 100th Battalion moved on Hill A which was held by the SS Polizei Regiment 19 as 2nd Battalion moved in on Hill B Third Battalion was left to take Bruyeres citation needed Bruyeres edit nbsp The 522nd Field Artillery Battalion fire 105mm shells in support of an infantry attack in Bruyeres France After heavy fighting dealing with enemy machine guns and snipers and a continuous artillery barrage placed onto the Germans the 100th Battalion was eventually able to take Hill A by 3 a m on 18 October 2nd Battalion took Hill B in a similar fashion only hours later Once Hill A and B were secured 3rd Battalion along with the 36th Infantry s 142nd Regiment began its assault from the south After the 232nd broke through the concrete barriers around town hall of Bruyeres the 442nd captured 134 Wehrmacht members including Poles Yugoslavs Somalis East Indians of the Regiment Freies Indien 2nd and 3rd Company of Fusilier Battalion 198 Grenadier Regiment 736 and Panzer Grenadier Regiment 192 39 After three days of fighting Bruyeres fell but was not yet secured Germans on Hill C and D used that high ground to launch artillery barrages on the town Hills C and D needed to be taken to secure Bruyeres 34 60 The 442nd initially took Hills C and D but did not secure them and they fell back into German hands By noon of 19 October Hill D was taken by 2nd and 3rd Battalions who then were ordered to take a railroad embankment leaving Hill D unsecure As the 100th began moving on Hill C on 20 October German forces retook Hill D during the night 23 57 The 100th Battalion was ordered back to Bruyeres into reserve allowing a German force onto Hill C surprising another American division arriving into position Retaking Hill C cost another 100 casualties 34 62 Hill D fell back into Allied hands after a short time finally securing the town The 232nd Engineers had to dismantle roadblocks clear away trees and clear mine fields all in the midst of the battle 23 51 54 The 100th rested then was called to the battle for Biffontaine Biffontaine edit The 100th was ordered to take the high ground but was eventually ordered to move into the town leading to a bitter fight after the 100th were encircled by German forces cut off from the 442nd outside radio contact and outside artillery support The 100th were in constant battle from 22 October until dusk of 23 October engaging in house to house fighting and defending against multiple counterattacks 3rd Battalion of the 442nd reached the 100th and helped drive out the remaining German forces handing Biffontaine to the 36th 32 182 183 On 24 October the 143rd Infantry of the 36th Division relieved the 100th and 3rd Battalion who were sent to Belmont another small town to the north for some short lived rest 40 139 Nine days of constant fighting continued as they were then ordered to save T Patchers the 141st Regiment of the 36th Infantry the Lost Battalion Lost Battalion editMain article Lost Battalion Europe World War II After less than two days in reserve the 442nd was ordered to attempt the rescue of the Lost Battalion two miles east of Biffontaine 40 139 On 23 October Colonel Lundquist s 141st Regiment soon to be known as the Alamo Regiment began its attack on the German line that ran from Rambervillers to Biffontaine Tuesday morning 24 October the left flank of the 141st commanded by Technical Sergeant Charles H Coolidge ran into heavy action fending off numerous German attacks throughout the days of 25 and 26 October The right flank command post was overrun and 275 men of Lieutenant Colonel William Bird s 1st Battalion Companies A B C and a platoon from Company D were cut off 2 kilometres 1 2 mi behind enemy lines 41 The Lost Battalion was cut off by German troops and was forced to dig in until help arrived It was nearly a week before they saw friendly soldiers At 4 a m on Friday 27 October General John E Dahlquist ordered the 442nd to move out and rescue the cut off battalion The 442nd had the support of the 522nd and 133rd Field Artillery units but at first made little headway against German General Richter s infantry and artillery front line 42 For the next few days the 442nd engaged in the heaviest fighting it had seen in the war as the elements combined with the Germans to slow their advance Dense fog and very dark nights prevented the men from seeing even twenty feet Many men had to hang onto the man in front of him just to know where to go Rainfall snow cold mud fatigue trench foot and even exploding trees plagued them as they moved deeper into the Vosges and closer to the German frontlines 32 185 187 The 141st continued fighting in all directions When we realized we were cut off we dug a circle at the top of the ridge I had two heavy water cooled machine guns with us at this time and about nine or ten men to handle them I put one gun on the right front with about half of my men and the other gun to the left We cut down small trees to cover our holes and then piled as much dirt on top as we could We were real low on supplies so we pooled all of our food SSgt Jack Wilson of Newburgh IN 43 Airdrops with ammo and food for the 141st were called off by dense fog or landed in German hands Many Germans did not know that they had cut off an American unit We didn t know that we had surrounded the Americans until they were being supplied by air One of the supply containers dropped by parachute landed near us The packages were divided up amongst us 44 Only on 29 October was the 442nd told why they were being forced to attack the German front lines so intensely The fighting was intense for the Germans as well Gebirgsjager Battalion 202 from Salzburg was cut off from Gebirgsjager Battalion 201 from Garmisch 45 Both sides eventually rescued their cut off battalions As the men of the 442nd went deeper and deeper they became more hesitant until reaching the point where they would not move from behind a tree or come out of a foxhole However this all changed in an instant The men of Companies I and K of 3rd Battalion had their backs against the wall but as each one saw another rise to attack then another also rose Then every Nisei charged the Germans screaming and many screaming Banzai 34 83 Through gunfire artillery shells and fragments from trees and Nisei going down one after another they charged Colonel Rolin s grenadiers put up a desperate fight but nothing could stop the Nisei rushing up the steep slopes shouting firing from the hip and lobbing hand grenades into dugouts Finally the German defenses broke and the surviving grenadiers fled in disarray That afternoon the American aid stations were crowded with casualties The 2nd platoon of Company I had only two men left and the 1st platoon was down to twenty 46 On the afternoon of 30 October 3rd Battalion broke through and reached the 141st rescuing 211 T Patchers at the cost of 800 men in five days However the fighting continued for the 442nd as they moved past the 141st The drive continued until they reached Saint Die on 17 November when they were finally pulled back The 100th fielded 1 432 men a year earlier but was now down to 239 infantrymen and 21 officers Second Battalion was down to 316 riflemen and 17 officers while not a single company in 3rd Battalion had over 100 riflemen the entire 100th 442nd Regimental Combat Team was down to less than 800 soldiers Earlier on 13 October when attached to the 36th Infantry the unit was at 2 943 riflemen and officers thus in only three weeks 140 were killed and a further 1 800 had been wounded while 43 were missing 34 83 85 General Dahlquist s legacy edit nbsp A Japanese American unit moves out of its old command post The unit Company F 2nd Battalion 442nd Regimental Combat Team is holding a section of the front lines near St Die Area France 13 November 1944 nbsp Go for Broke at the US Army Center of Military HistoryAs the division commander General Dahlquist s utilization of the 442nd received mixed reviews chiefly from the unit s officers who believed that Dahlquist considered their Nisei soldiers to be expendable cannon fodder Despite examples of ostensibly courageous behavior his decisions were undermined by the failure to tally victories without considerable costs A particular example was when his aide Lieutenant Wells Lewis the eldest son of novelist Sinclair Lewis was killed while Dahlquist was issuing orders standing in the open during a battle 34 82 When Dahlquist ordered the 442nd to take Biffontaine it was despite the sparsely populated farming town being militarily insignificant out of the range of artillery and radio contact In another example Lieutenant Allan M Ohata was ordered to charge with his men up a hill toward the enemy who were dug in and well supplied Ohata considered the order a certain suicide mission Despite the threat of court martial and demotion he refused insisting that the men would be better off attacking the position their own way 32 190 Lt Ohata s Distinguished Service Cross for his actions in Italy as a staff sergeant was ultimately upgraded to the Medal of Honor On 12 November General Dahlquist ordered the entire 442nd to stand in formation for a recognition and award ceremony Of the 400 men originally assigned only eighteen surviving members of K Company and eight of I Company turned out Upon reviewing the meager assemblage Dahlquist became irritated ignorant of the sacrifices that the unit had made in serving his orders He demanded of Colonel Virgil R Miller I want all your men to stand for this formation Miller responded simply That s all of K company left sir 34 95 Some time later while the former commander of the 1st Battalion Lieutenant Colonel Gordon Singles was filling the role of brigadier general at Fort Bragg North Carolina General Dahlquist arrived as part of a review When he recognized Colonel Singles he approached him and offered the colonel his hand saying Let bygones be bygones It s all water under the bridge isn t it In the presence of the entire III Corps Colonel Singles continued to salute General Dahlquist but refused to take Dahlquist s hand 34 91 47 48 During and after the war the 442nd was repeatedly commemorated for their efforts in the Vosges Mountains A commissioned painting now hangs in The Pentagon depicting their fight to reach the Lost Battalion 34 89 A memorial was erected in Biffontaine by Gerard Henry later the town s mayor A monument was established in Bruyeres to mark the liberation of that city At first a narrow road led to the monument but the road was later widened to accommodate four tour buses and is now named The Avenue of the 442nd Infantry Regiment in honor of those brave soldiers 32 201 Champagne Campaign editFollowing the tough battle through the Vosges Mountains the 442nd was sent to the Maritime Alps and the French Riviera It was an easy assignment compared to what they had experienced in October Little to no action occurred in the next four months as they rested 49 The 442nd guarded and patrolled a twelve to fourteen mile front line segment of the French Italian border This part of the 442nd s journey gained the name Champagne Campaign because of the available wine women and merry times 50 The 442nd experienced additional losses as patrols sometimes ran into enemy patrols or sometimes soldiers stepped on enemy and allied land mines Occasionally soldiers of the 442nd captured spies and saboteurs The 442nd also captured an enemy submarine A Nisei soldier noticed what looked like an animal in the water but upon closer look it was actually a one man German midget submarine The German and the submarine were captured and handed over to the U S Navy 33 On 23 March 1945 the 442nd Regimental Combat Team sailed back to Italy and returned to the Gothic Line 49 522nd Field Artillery Battalion editFrom 20 to 22 March the 442 and the 232 shipped off to Italy from France but the 522nd Field Artillery Battalion was sent to another part of Europe They traveled northwards some 600 miles 970 km through the Rhone Valley and stopped at Kleinblittersdorf on the east bank of the Saar River The 522nd aided the 63rd Division on the Siegfried Line defenses south of St Ingbert from 12 to 21 March 23 99 The 522nd became a roving battalion supporting nearly two dozen army units along the front traveling a total of 1 100 miles 1 800 km across Germany and accomplishing every objective of their fifty two assignments 32 239 The 522nd was the only Nisei unit to fight in Germany On 29 April scouts of the 522nd located a satellite camp of the infamous Dachau concentration camp next to the small Bavarian town of Lager Lechfeld adjacent to Hurlach Scouts from the 522nd were among the first Allied troops to release prisoners from the Kaufering IV Hurlach satellite camp one of nearly 170 such camps where more than 3 000 prisoners were held 51 As we came around the way there were a lot of Jewish inmates coming out of the camp and I heard that the gate was opened by our advanced scouts They took a rifle and shot it I think it was a fellow from Hawaii that did that I think it was a Captain Taylor Company B was one of them but another person from Hawaii he passed away They opened the gate and all these German I mean Jewish victims were coming out of the camp 52 Then when we finally opened the Dachau camp got in oh those people were so afraid of us I guess You could see the fear in their face But eventually they realized that we were there to liberate them and help them 53 They were all just skin and bones sunken eyes I think they were more dead than they were alive because they hadn t eaten so much because I think just before we got there the S S people had all pulled back up and they were gone But we went there and outside of the camps there were a lot of railroad cars there that had bodies in them I had the opportunity to go into the camp there but you could smell the stench The people were dead and piled up in the buildings and it was just unbelievable that the Germans could do that to the Jewish people I really didn t think it was possible at all actually 54 The only thing the Nisei could really do was give them clothing and keep them warm Nisei soldiers began to give the Jewish inmates food from their rations but were ordered to stop because the food could overwhelm the digestive systems of the starved inmates and kill them 55 As they continued past the subcamp by 2 May they discovered the eastward path along which Jewish inmates were approaching Waakirchen 56 as the concentration camp survivors had been driven on a death march to another camp from Dachau starting there on 24 April headed south through Eurasburg then eastwards for a total distance of nearly sixty kilometers 37 miles 57 originally numbering some 15 000 prisoners 58 No my first encounter was these lumps in snow and then I didn t know what they were and so I went and investigated them and discovered that they were people you know Most of them were skeletons or people who had been beaten to death or just died of starvation or overworked or whatever Most of them I think died from exposure because it was cold 59 They discovered more subcamps and former inmates wandering the countryside Following the German surrender from May to November the 522nd was assigned to security around Donauworth which consisted of setting up roadblocks and sentry posts to apprehend Nazis who were trying to disappear The 522nd returned to the United States in November 1945 23 99 A memorial to the rescue by the 522nd on 2 May 1945 exists at 47 46 6 15 N 11 38 55 30 E 47 7683750 N 11 6486944 E 47 7683750 11 6486944 just under two kilometers west of the Waakirchen town centre 60 Gothic Line editOn 23 March 1945 the 100 442 shipped out from Marseille and traveled to Leghorn Italy attached to the 92nd Division The Fifth Army had been stalemated at the Gothic Line for the prior five months The 442nd faced extremely tough terrain where the saw toothed Apennines rose up from the Ligurian Sea Starting from the northeast the peaks hugged the east coast of Italy and stretched diagonally southward across the Italian boot To the west on the other side of the mountains was the wide flat Po River Valley that led to the Austrian Alps the last barrier to Germany For nine months German Field Marshal Albert Kesselring directed the construction of the Gothic Line along the top of the Apennines The Todt Organization known for its fortifications at Monte Cassino used 15 000 Italian slave laborers They drilled into solid rock to make gun pits and trenches which they reinforced with concrete They built 2 376 machine gun nests with interlocking fire 34 105 7 On the Italian Front the 442nd had contact with the only segregated African American active combat unit of the U S Army in Europe the 92nd Infantry Division as well as troops of the British and French colonial empires West and East Africans Moroccans Algerians Indians Gurkhas Jews from the Palestine mandate 61 and the non segregated Brazilian Expeditionary Force 62 which had in its ranks ethnic Japanese General Mark W Clark welcomed the 442 and presented his plan to break the Gothic Line General Clark had a disagreement with Supreme Commander Eisenhower Clark had to negotiate for the return of the 100th and 442nd because Eisenhower wanted them for the Battle of the Bulge and General Devers commander of the Sixth Army Group needed fresh troops 23 249 50 General Clark got his wish The 442nd and 100th minus the 522nd along with the 92nd Division mounted a surprise diversionary attack on the left flank They intended to shift enemy attention to it from the interior allowing the Eighth Army to cross the Senio River on the right flank and then the Fifth Army on the left 34 107 40 145 In front of the 442nd lay mountains code named Georgia Florida Ohio 1 Ohio 2 Ohio 3 Monte Cerreta Monte Folgorito Monte Belvedere Monte Carchio and Monte Altissimo These objectives hinged on surprising the Germans The 100th went after Georgia Hill and the 3rd Battalion attacked Mount Folgorita On 3 April the 442nd moved into position under the cover of nightfall to hide from the Germans who had good sight lines from their location on the mountains The next day the 442nd waited At 0500 the following morning they were ready to strike A little over 30 minutes later objectives Georgia and Mount Folgorita were taken cracking the Gothic Line They achieved surprise and forced the enemy to retreat After counterattacking the Germans were defeated During this time 2nd Battalion was moving into position at Mount Belvedere which overlooked Massa and the Frigido River citation needed The 442nd made a continuous push against the German Army and objectives began to fall Ohio 1 2 and 3 Mount Belvedere on 6 April by 2nd Battalion Montignoso 8 April by 3rd Battalion Mount Brugiana on 11 April by 2nd Battalion Carrara by 3rd Battalion on 11 April and Ortonovo by the 100th on 15 April The 442 turned a surprise diversionary attack into an all out offensive The advance came so quickly that supply units had a hard time keeping up citation needed The Nisei drove so hard that beginning on 17 April the Germans decided to destroy their fortifications and pull back to make a final stand at Aulla The last German defense in Italy was Monte Nebbione directly south of Aulla San Terenzo lay East of Mount Nobbione and became the launching point for the Aulla assault The final drive of the 442nd began on 19 April and lasted until 23 April when the 3rd Battalion finally took Mount Nebbione and Mount Carbolo Following the fall of San Terenzo 2nd Battalion hooked right around the mountains and Task Force Fukuda consisting of Companies B and F from 2nd Battalion flanked left from Mount Carbolo creating a pincer move onto Aulla 34 117 On 25 April Aulla fell and the German retreat was cut off In the days that followed Germans began to surrender in the hundreds and thousands to the Fifth and Eighth Armies This was 442nd s final World War II action citation needed On 2 May the war ended in Italy followed six days later by Victory in Europe Service decorations and legacy edit nbsp The 442nd received the 7th Presidential Unit Citation for outstanding accomplishments in combat in the vicinity of Seravezza Carrara and Fosdinovo Italy from 5 14 April 1945 nbsp President Truman and other dignitaries saluting the 442nd Regimental Combat TeamThe 100th 442nd Regimental Combat Team is the most decorated unit for its size and length of service in the history of American warfare 7 63 The 4 000 men who initially came in April 1943 had to be replaced nearly 2 5 times In total about 10 000 men served 64 The unit was awarded eight Presidential Unit Citations 5 earned in one month 14 Twenty one of its members were awarded Medals of Honor 4 Members of the 442nd received 18 143 awards in less than two years including nbsp Sadao Munemori was the only Japanese American awarded the Medal of Honor around the time of World War II 21 Medals of Honor the first awarded posthumously to Private First Class Sadao Munemori Company A 100th Battalion for action near Seravezza Italy on 5 April 1945 19 upgraded from other awards in June 2000 65 Recipients include Barney F Hajiro Mikio Hasemoto Joe Hayashi Shizuya Hayashi Daniel K Inouye Yeiki Kobashigawa Robert T Kuroda Kaoru Moto Sadao Munemori Kiyoshi K Muranaga Masato Nakae Shinyei Nakamine William K Nakamura Joe M Nishimoto Allan M Ohata James K Okubo Yukio Okutsu Frank H Ono Kazuo Otani George T Sakato Ted T Tanouye 52 Distinguished Service Cross including 19 Distinguished Service Crosses which were upgraded to Medals of Honor in June 2000 66 1 Distinguished Service Medal 560 Silver Stars plus 28 Oak Leaf Clusters for a second award 65 22 Legion of Merit Medals 15 Soldier s Medals 4 000 Bronze Stars plus 1 200 Oak Leaf Clusters for a second award one Bronze Star was upgraded to a Medal of Honor in June 2000 One Bronze Star was upgraded to a Silver Star in September 2009 More than 4 000 Purple Hearts 5 Some of the first memorials to the unit were created by 442nd and MIS veterans themselves in the creation of the many Nisei American Legion VFW and independent memorial posts around the country such as Nisei VFW Post 8985 in Sacramento CA founded in 1947 67 In 1962 Governor John Connally of Texas made the members of the 442nd RCT honorary Texans in appreciation of their rescue of the Lost Battalion of the Texas National Guard in the Vosges in 1944 68 nbsp President Obama signs S 1055 granting Nisei veterans the Congressional Gold Medal On 5 October 2010 Congress approved the granting of the Congressional Gold Medal to the 442nd Regimental Combat Team the 100th Infantry Battalion and Nisei serving in the Military Intelligence Service 15 The Nisei Soldiers of World War II Congressional Gold Medal was collectively presented on 2 November 2011 69 In 2012 the surviving members of the 442nd RCT were made chevaliers of the French Legion d Honneur for their actions contributing to the liberation of France during World War II and their heroic rescue of the Lost Battalion outside of Biffontaine 16 70 71 72 5 April is celebrated as National Go For Broke Day in honor of the 442nd s first Medal of Honor recipient Pfc Sadao Munemori killed in action near Seravezza Italy on 5 April 1945 73 The Japanese American Memorial to Patriotism During World War II in Washington D C is a National Park Service site honoring Japanese American veterans who served in the Military Intelligence Service 100th Infantry Battalion 442nd RCT and other units as well as the patriotism and endurance of those held in Japanese American concentration camps and detention centers 74 The Go for Broke Monument in Little Tokyo Los Angeles commemorates the Japanese Americans who served in the United States Army during World War II Dedicated in 1998 the Brothers In Valor memorial at Fort DeRussy in Honolulu HI honors the Japanese American veterans who served in World War 2 with the 100BN 442RCT 1399BN and MIS 75 California has given four state highway segments honorary designations for Japanese American soldiers State Route 23 between U S Route 101 and State Route 118 is named the Military Intelligence Memorial Freeway State Route 99 between Fresno and Madera is named the 100th Infantry Battalion Memorial Highway State Route 99 between Salida and Manteca is named the 442nd Regimental Combat Team Memorial Highway The interchange between the I 105 and I 405 freeways in Los Angeles is labeled the Sadao S Munemori Memorial Interchange The USS Hornet Museum in Alameda California has a permanent special exhibit honoring the 442nd Infantry Regiment 76 On November 17 2020 the United States Postal Service USPS announced they would release in 2021 a postage stamp honoring the contributions of Japanese American soldiers 33 000 altogether who served in the U S Army during World War II following a multi year nationwide campaign 77 The stamp our story campaign started in 2006 78 nbsp Members of the 442nd RCT fire a salute to honor their fallen comrades at a memorial ceremony nbsp First Sergeant Thomas S Harimoto displaying the 442nd s colors carrying the unit s Presidential Unit Citation nbsp Monument to the 100th Battalion 442nd Regimental Combat Team Rohwer Memorial Cemetery nbsp Brig Gen Francis Shigeo Takemoto first Japanese American general officer 1964 and veteran of both the 100th Infantry Battalion and the 442nd RCT nbsp Pearl Harbor 2 July 2014 Adm Harry Harris Jr COMPACFLT thanks Ralph Tomei a 442nd veteran Tomei represented his friend Shiro Aoki as French RADM Anne Cullere presents him with the Legion of Honor nbsp The Brothers In Valor memorial at Ft DeRussy recognizes the sacrifices of the 100BN 442RCT 1399BN and MIS nbsp The American monument in Bruyeres honoring the Japanese Americans serving in the 442nd nbsp The Congressional Gold Medal awarded to the 100th Infantry Battalion the 442nd RCT as well as the Military Intelligence ServiceOriginal fight song editOriginal fight song of the 442nd RCT Hawai i Go For Broke Lyrics by Martin Kida KIA Score by T Y 79 80 REMEMBER PEARL HARBOR History in every century We recall an act that lives forevermore We recall as into night they fall The things that happened on Hawaii shore Let s remember Pearl Harbor As we go to meet the foe Let s remember Pearl Harbor As we did the Alamo We will always remember How they died for liberty Let s remember Pearl Harbor And go on to victory GO FOR BROKE Four Forty Second Infantry We are the boys of Hawaii Nei We will fight for you And the red white and blue And will go the front And back to Honolulu lu lu Fighting for dear old Uncle Sam Go for broke we don t give a damn We will round up the Huns At the point of a gun And victory will be ours Go for broke Four Four Two Go for broke Four Four Two And victory will be ours All hail our company After the war editSee also Japanese American life after World War II nbsp President Truman walks past members of the 442nd Regimental Combat Team as they stand at attention on the Ellipse The record of the Japanese Americans serving in the 442nd and in the Military Intelligence Service U S Pacific Theater forces in World War II helped change the minds of anti Japanese American critics in the continental U S and resulted in easing of restrictions and the eventual release of the 120 000 strong community well before the end of World War II In Hawaii the veterans were welcomed home as heroes by a grateful community that had supported them through those trying times However the unit s exemplary service and many decorations did not change the attitudes of the general population in the continental U S towards people of Japanese ancestry after World War II Veterans came home to signs that read No Japs Allowed and No Japs Wanted the denial of service in shops and restaurants and the vandalism of their homes and property On 15 July 1946 the 442nd Regiment marched down Constitution Avenue to the Ellipse south of the White House President Truman gave a speech and honored the regiment by awarding them the Presidential Unit Citation Initially many Veterans organizations such as the VFW and the American Legion refused to allow Nisei veterans into existing posts and some even removed Japanese American soldiers from their honor rolls It is believed that white officers from the 442nd advocated on the behalf of the Nisei in Chicago to be allowed to form their own American Legion post 1183 in 1946 while Alva Fleming a Navy veteran in Sacramento district leadership approved the charter for Nisei VFW Post 8985 in Sacramento in 1947 Fleming would go on to become the VFW State Commander for California and was instrumental in founding a total of 14 segregated Nisei VFW posts in the state Veterans in the Pacific Northwest were unable to find any post willing to accept them and eventually formed their own independent Nisei Veterans Committee 81 82 83 Many Nisei veterans had difficulty finding houses in the continental United States Their homes were occupied with new tenants Due to the housing shortage many Nisei veterans resorted to using federal housing programs Many Nisei veterans used the G I Bill as an opportunity to attend university Many Nisei became doctors dentists architects scientists engineers and politicians in public office 84 Anti Japanese sentiment remained strong into the 1960s but faded along with other once common prejudices even while remaining strong in certain circles Conversely the story of the 442nd provided a leading example of what was to become the controversial model minority stereotype 85 According to author and historian Tom Coffman men of the 100th 442nd MIS dreaded returning home as second class citizens In Hawaii these men became involved in a peaceful movement It has been described as the 100th 442nd returning from the battles in Europe to the battle at home The non violent revolution was successful and put veterans in public office in what became known as the Revolution of 1954 One notable effect of the service of the Japanese American units was to help convince Congress to end its opposition towards Hawaii s statehood petition Twice before 1959 residents of Hawaii asked to be admitted to the U S as the 49th state citation needed The exemplary record of the Japanese Americans serving in these units and the loyalty showed by the rest of Hawaii s population during World War II allowed Hawaii to be admitted as the 50th state Alaska was granted statehood just prior In post war American popular slang the phrase going for broke was adopted from the 442nd s unit motto Go for Broke which according to the 1951 film Go for Broke was derived from the Hawaiian pidgin phrase used by craps shooters risking all their money on one roll of the dice 86 Demobilization and rebirth edit nbsp Soldiers from the 100th Infantry Battalion gather in formation during an exercise in American Samoa in 1987 nbsp Soldiers of E Company 100th Battalion 442nd Infantry train at Marine Corps Base Hawaii in 2011 See also 100th Infantry Battalion United States The 442nd RCT was inactivated in Honolulu in 1946 but reactivated in 1947 in the U S Army Reserve It was mobilized in 1968 to refill the Strategic Reserve during the Vietnam War and carries on the honors and traditions of the unit Today the 100th Battalion 442nd Infantry is the only ground combat unit of the Army Reserve 87 The battalion headquarters is at Fort Shafter Hawaii with subordinate units based in Hilo American Samoa 88 Saipan and Guam The only military presence in American Samoa consists of the battalion s B and C companies 4 In August 2004 the battalion was mobilized for duty in Iraq 89 Stationed at Logistics Support Area Anaconda in the city of Balad which is located about 50 miles northwest of Baghdad 90 Lt Colonel Colbert Low assumed command of the battalion only a few weeks after the battalion arrived at Logistical Support Area Anaconda 91 In early 2006 the 100th had returned home 92 One soldier was killed by an improvised explosive device attack 93 Four members of the battalion were killed in action and several dozen injured before the battalion returned home 87 94 During the year long deployment one of Charlie Company s attached platoons discovered over 50 weapons caches 95 Unlike the soldiers of World War II who were predominantly Japanese Americans these soldiers came from as far away as Miami Florida Tennessee Alaska and included soldiers from Hawaii Philippines Samoa and Palau For their actions in Iraq the unit received the Meritorious Unit Commendation 96 The unit was once again deployed in 2009 95 The unit was called up alongside the 3rd brigade 25th Infantry Division 97 and was assigned as an element of the 29th Infantry Brigade Combat Team 98 Nominally deployed to Kuwait it conducted patrols into Iraq leading to two fatalities 99 those patrols consisted of more than a million miles of driving conducting convoy duty 100 During the units deployment several dozen of the unit s American Samoan servicemembers became naturalized U S citizens while in Kuwait 101 Notable members editSee also List of Japanese American servicemen and servicewomen in World War II This list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items May 2019 S Neil Fujita graphic designer Designed many book and album covers Head of Columbia Records Art Dept designing jazz album covers after WWII Among his book covers are The Godfather logo and typeset for the 1969 novel and later used for the film s advertising Designed The Today Show sunrise logo used from the 70 s to the present day Takashi Halo Hirose first Japanese American to represent the United States in any international swimming competition and the first to set a swimming world record 102 103 awarded five battle stars the Combat Infantryman Badge and a Presidential Unit Citation 104 Inducted into Ohio State University s Sports Hall of Fame and the International Swimming Hall of Fame 102 nbsp Daniel Inouye lost his right arm to a grenade wound and received several military decorations including the Medal of Honor Daniel Inouye U S Representative from Hawaii 1959 62 U S Senator from Hawaii 1962 2012 President pro tempore of the Senate 2010 12 awarded the Medal of Honor and Purple Heart 105 Inouye had wanted to become a surgeon before he lost his right arm in the combat action for which he was later awarded the Medal of Honor 106 Dale Ishimoto actor in many films TV shows and commercials 107 Susumu Ito Emeritus Professor of Cell Biology and Anatomy Harvard Medical School 1960 90 108 Isao Kikuchi graphic designer illustrator carver and painter Illustrated Welcome Home Swallows and Blue Jay in the Desert Colonel Young Oak Kim the only Korean American officer during his service in 442nd Infantry First officer from an ethnic minority to command a U S Army combat battalion 109 Spark Matsunaga U S Representative from Hawaii 1962 76 U S Senator from Hawaii 1977 90 110 Sadao Munemori the only Japanese American to be awarded the Medal of Honor during or immediately after World War II Lane Nakano actor featured in the 1951 film Go for Broke father of writer and director Desmond Nakano Shinkichi Tajiri sculptor member of the COBRA art movement 1955 Golden Palm Winner at Cannes Purple Heart James Takemori judoka and recipient of the Order of the Rising SunIn popular culture editThis section appears to contain trivial minor or unrelated references to popular culture Please reorganize this content to explain the subject s impact on popular culture providing citations to reliable secondary sources rather than simply listing appearances Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2017 This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Allegiance the Musical This musical about the challenges faced by a Japanese American family is set in the present day with flashbacks to the 1940s It was inspired by the experiences of George Takei who spent his childhood in concentration camps It stars George Takei Lea Salonga and Telly Leung American Pastime This 2007 fictional film depicts life inside the concentration camps where baseball was one of the major diversions from the reality of the internees lives Location scenes were filmed in bleak desolate land not far from the site of an actual camp Lane Nomura the oldest son enlists in the Army as a member of the 442nd Regimental Combat Team The unit motto Go for broke provides inspiration at a climactic moment and reference is made to the losses taken by the 442nd during the rescue of the Lost Battalion Go for Broke This 1951 film dramatizes the lives and wartime heroics of the 442nd Regimental Combat Team The film stars Van Johnson as a young officer reluctant about his assignment to the 442nd He comes to respect the Nisei troops eventually refusing a transfer back to his original Texas unit The movie starred a number of veterans of the 442nd It can be found on iTunes The One Puka Puka episode of The Gallant Men television series featured the unit with guest stars Poncie Ponce and George Takei The James Michener novel Hawaii has a chapter detailing the 442nd s experiences although its designation is changed to the 222nd and many of the members appear under fictionalized names Ed Sakamoto wrote a play about the 100th 442nd entitled Our Hearts Were Touched by Fire which was performed in Honolulu and Los Angeles nbsp Mr MiyagiIn the series of four Karate Kid movies Mr Miyagi is a main character portrayed as a World War II veteran who had fought in the 442nd and received the Medal of Honor The fourth film The Next Karate Kid begins with a reunion of the 442nd in which Sen Daniel Inouye gives a speech and Mr Miyagi wears his Medal of Honor for the only time in any of the four films The Nisei Project In 2001 choreographer Marla Hirokawa premiered her Nisei ballet in Brooklyn NY which was inspired by her late father 100th Battalion veteran and gave honor to the men of the 100th 442nd In 2003 Marla and sister Laurie Hamano produced a Nisei ballet tour across the Hawaiian Islands Lane Nishikawa toured and performed with the dance company In 2014 Nisei was re staged and presented at the NY International Fringe Festival with a revised score that included songs about the Nisei veterans composed by ukulele virtuoso Jake Shimabukuro and singer songwriter Harold Payne 111 In 2005 Lane Nishikawa directed and starred in the independent film Only the Brave which is a fictional account of the rescue of the Lost Battalion Family 8108 the 9 December 2007 episode of the CBS TV show Cold Case centers around the Japanese concentration camps and discusses the 442nd Regional Combat Team Ken Burns 2007 PBS World War II documentary The War explores the stories of four American towns experiences with the war Burns 15 hour documentary goes in depth in describing the many battles of World War II including those of the 442nd Infantry Regiment Sgt Rock The Lost Battalion 1 6 2008 graphic novel 99 Years of Love Japanese Americans In 2010 TBS produced a five part 10 hour fictional Japanese language miniseries featuring many of the major events in Japanese American history Episode 4 features a key character who serves in the 442nd and portrays the rescue of the Texas Battalion Captain America The First Avenger 2011 features Kenneth Choi as the character of Jim Morita a Nisei soldier separated from his unit that joins with Dum Dum Dugan and the Howling Commandos Choi again reprised the role in an episode of Agents of S H I E L D 112 Valor With Honor is an 85 minute independent documentary film on the last interviews of veterans of the 442nd Regimental Combat Team Interviews war footage and photos are part of the un narrated documentary 113 In Drunk History season 2 episode 15 Hawaii Phil Hendrie tells the story of Daniel Inouye of the 442nd Infantry Regiment enlisting after the Japanese American ban is lifted and later losing his arm in the assault on Colle Musatello in Italy In Hawaii Five 0 season 4 episode 10 the brother of the suspect whose family was placed in an internment camp is shown as a member of the battalion It gives some information about the battalion and states that his brother who was of age did not want to stay in the camp so he joined the Army in that battalion as did many of the other boys who were of age The story of the 442nd Infantry Regiment appeared in an episode of the American Heroes Channel series What History Forget entitled Fighting for Freedom The episode featured an interview with Susumu Ito that was shot shortly before his death in 2015 In Bad Day at Black Rock 1955 a US Army veteran seeks the father of a 442nd colleague who died saving his life in order to give him his son s posthumous medals The plot centers on the town s hatred for the Japanese American community Go for Broke An Origin Story 2018 follows a group of University of Hawaii ROTC students during the tumultuous year after the attack on Pearl Harbor as they navigate wartime Hawaii and fight discrimination Adaptation of the comic book by Stacey Hayashi 114 The experience of Nisei soldiers in Europe and the Pacific was fictionalized for the Japanese market in the novel Futatsu no Sokoku Two Homelands by Toyoko Yamasaki in 1983 115 It was dramatized into a limited series of the same name by TV Tokyo in 2019 116 Repentance 2019 is an historical novel based on the history of the 442nd Regimental Combat Team by Andrew Lam 117 In 2017 the 442nd Infantry Regiment was the subject of the short documentary Nisei Soldiers Japanese American G I Joes directed by Alexander Zane Irwin and produced by Daniel L Bernardi with the collaboration of El Dorado Films and the Veteran Documentary Corps 118 See also editWhy I love a country that once betrayed me Hawaii Admission Act Japanese American service in World War II List of films about the Japanese American internment List of internment camps Military history of Asian Americans World War II Military Intelligence Service United States References edit 100th Infantry Battalion Densho Encyclopedia Retrieved 5 March 2023 Colors and Insignia 100th Infantry Battalion Veterans Retrieved 4 March 2018 442nd Regimental Combat Team Legacy Website www the442 org a b c d 100th Battalion 442nd Infantry GlobalSecurity org 23 May 2005 Archived from the original on 11 September 2008 Retrieved 27 September 2008 a b c d 442nd Regimental Combat Team National Veterans Network 16 June 2020 Cathey Kyla 13 April 2019 Lodians await news from front in early 1944 Lodi News Sentinel p 1 a b Shenkle Kathryn May 2006 Patriots under Fire Japanese Americans in World War II United States Department of Defense Department of the Army Center of Military History Archived from the original on 23 June 2013 Retrieved 6 June 2014 第442連隊戦闘団 Archives Rafu Shimpo 21 January 2023 NVL Nisei Veterans Legacy Archived from the original on 16 August 2022 Retrieved 5 March 2023 声明 真珠湾攻撃から80周年を迎えるにあたり 全米日系人博物館は この日に亡くなった米軍に敬意を表し またこの日以降に強制収容された12万人の日系人に思いを寄せます Japanese American National Museum www janm org ハワイ日本文化センターで知る日系人の歴史 2世 第442連隊 ハワイと日本 人々の歴史 第12回 ハフポスト 1 March 2014 Japanese American Veterans Association Nisei Legacy Presidential Unit Citations ARMY awarded to 100th Battalion amp the 442d Regimental Combat Team United States Army Center of Military History Retrieved 14 July 2021 a b Asahina Robert 2007 Just Americans How Japanese Americans Won a War at Home and Abroad Penguin Group USA p 201 ISBN 978 1 59240 300 4 a b Steffen Jordan 6 October 2010 White House honors Japanese American WWII veterans Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on 7 October 2010 Retrieved 9 October 2010 a b The French Legion of Honor Awarded to the 442nd Regimental Combat Team Archived from the original on 30 January 2015 Retrieved 30 January 2015 Crost Lyn 1994 Honor by Fire Japanese Americans at War in Europe and the Pacific Presidio Press p 147 ISBN 9780891415213 Tafao Melodie 7 August 2019 Lt Gen Charles D Luckey visits the 100th Battalion 442nd Infantry Regiment in Hawaii US Army Soucy Jon 26 May 2017 Asian Pacific Heritage Japanese American WWII unit stands among Army s most decorated US Army Chief of Public Affairs Okihiro Gary 8 January 1992 Cane Fires The Anti Japanese Movement in Hawaii 1865 1945 1st ed Temple University Press p 117 Chin Aimee 2004 Long Run Labor Market Effects of Japanese American Internment During World War II on Working Age Male Internees Journal of Labor Economics University of Houston 10 Wakamatsu Peter Origins of the 442nd Regimental Combat Team the442 org Retrieved 4 March 2018 a b c d e f g h i j Shirey Orville 1946 Americans The Story of The 442d Combat Team Washington Infantry Journal Press ISBN 978 1258423360 Crost Lyn 1994 Honor by Fire Japanese Americans at War in Europe and the Pacific Presidio Press ISBN 9780891415213 Bangarth Stephanie Danielle 2008 Voices Raised in Protest Defending Citizens of Japanese Ancestry in North America 1942 49 UBC Press p 29 ISBN 978 0 7748 5824 3 Ruminski Laura 11 November 2019 Against all odds Impact of famed elite Nisei soldiers lives on at home and abroad Hawaii Tribune Herald 442nd Regimental Combat Team Densho Encyclopedia Retrieved 2 December 2018 Military Intelligence Service Densho Encyclopedia Retrieved 2 December 2018 Williams Rudi 25 May 2000 The Go for Broke Regiment Lives Duty Honor Country American Forces Press Service Archived from the original on 14 July 2012 Goichi Richard Suehiro Sons and Daughters of the 442nd Regimental Combat Team Duus Masayo Umezawa 2006 Unlikely Liberators The Men of the 100th And 442nd University of Hawaii Press p 156 ISBN 978 0 8248 3140 0 a b c d e f Crost Lyn 1994 Honor by Fire Japanese Americans at War in Europe and the Pacific Presidio Press p 149 ISBN 9780891415213 a b McCaffrey James M 2013 Going for Broke Japanese American Soldiers in the War against Nazi Germany University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0 8061 8908 6 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Sterner C Douglas 2007 Go for Broke The Nisei Warriors of World War II who Conquered Germany Japan and American Bigotry American Legacy Media ISBN 978 0 9796896 1 1 Go For Broke National Education Center video archive Harry Abe Film 348 Tape 2 28 00 min a b Go For Broke National Education Center Preserving the Legacy of the Japanese American Veterans of World War II Goforbroke org Archived from the original on 13 August 2012 Retrieved 17 August 2012 Southern France Campaign Go For Broke National Education Center Archived from the original on 22 October 2012 Retrieved 17 August 2012 Video Armistice Day In France Etc 1944 Universal Newsreel 1944 Retrieved 21 February 2012 Steidl Franz 30 December 2008 Lost Battalions Going for Broke in the Vosges Autumn 1944 Novato Presidio p 43 ISBN 978 0 307 53790 4 a b c Remembrances 100th Infantry Battalion 50th Anniversary Celebration 1942 1992 100th Infantry Battalion Publication Committee 1992 Steidl Franz 30 December 2008 Lost Battalions Going for Broke in the Vosges Autumn 1944 Novato Presidio pp 61 62 ISBN 978 0 307 53790 4 Steidl Franz 30 December 2008 Lost Battalions Going for Broke in the Vosges Autumn 1944 Novato Presidio p 66 ISBN 978 0 307 53790 4 Steidl Franz 30 December 2008 Lost Battalions Going for Broke in the Vosges Autumn 1944 Novato Presidio p 80 ISBN 978 0 307 53790 4 Steidl Franz 30 December 2008 Lost Battalions Going for Broke in the Vosges Autumn 1944 Novato Presidio p 83 ISBN 978 0 307 53790 4 Steidl Franz 30 December 2008 Lost Battalions Going for Broke in the Vosges Autumn 1944 Novato Presidio p 72 ISBN 978 0 307 53790 4 Steidl Franz 30 December 2008 Lost Battalions Going for Broke in the Vosges Autumn 1944 Novato Presidio p 89 ISBN 978 0 307 53790 4 Keynote Address by Young O Kim 100th Infantry Battalion Veterans 3 July 1982 Retrieved 17 August 2012 France 100th Infantry Battalion Veterans 23 March 1945 Retrieved 17 August 2012 a b The 100th 442nd The Champagne Campaign www goforbroke org Archived from the original on 12 June 2018 Retrieved 12 June 2018 Southern France history army mil Retrieved 12 June 2018 Axelrod Alan 2007 Encyclopedia of World War II H W Fowler p 476 ISBN 978 0 8160 6022 1 Joseph Ichiuji testimonial at Museum of Tolerance Go For Broke Foundation Tom Kono testimonial at Museum of Tolerance Go For Broke Foundation Minoru Tsubota testimonial at Museum of Tolerance Go For Broke Foundation Central Europe Campaign 522nd Field Artillery Battalion Archived from the original on 3 February 2015 Retrieved 12 January 2015 Search Results Waakirchen U S Holocaust Memorial Museum KZ Dachau Overview gz tm dachau de in German 3 October 2016 Archived from the original on 3 October 2016 The 522nd Field Artillery Battalion and the Dachau Subcamps Go For Broke NEC Archived from the original on 20 March 2016 Retrieved 12 January 2015 George Oiye testimonial at Museum of Tolerance Go For Broke Foundation As found on Google Earth at https lh5 googleusercontent com p AF1QipNWPUhYWq785H gux8qw1uAr7axokLXjXaaR44n w720 h720 pd with two photos of it taken by Ellen Haider Ready J Lee 1985 Forgotten Allies The Military Contribution of the Colonies Exiled Governments and Lesser Powers to the Allied Victory in World War II Jefferson North Carolina McFarland amp Company ISBN 978 0 89950 117 8 Ready J Lee 1985 Forgotten Allies The European Theatre Jefferson North Carolina McFarland amp Company ISBN 978 0 89950 129 1 Starr Kevin 2005 California a history 1st ed New York Modern Library ISBN 0 679 64240 4 OCLC 59360288 Japanese Americans in military during World War II Densho Encyclopedia Retrieved 5 March 2023 a b Teraoka Joy A Remembrance of Col Virgil R Miller 442nd Regimental Combat Team PDF Military History Network Archived from the original PDF on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 10 May 2014 Williams Rudi 22 Asian Americans Inducted into Hall of Heroes American Forces Press Service Archived from the original on 24 December 2015 Retrieved 23 December 2015 Nisei VFW Post Designated as Historic Landmark Rafu Shimpo 27 April 2021 Strong W F 29 May 2019 How The Japanese Americans Who Saved The Lost Battalion of World War II Became Honorary Texans Texas Standard Congressional Gold Medal Presented to Nisei Soldiers of World War II United States Mint 2 November 2011 Retrieved 30 May 2020 Legion d honneur recipients Consulate General of France in Los Angeles 27 June 2014 Archived from the original on 30 January 2015 Retrieved 30 January 2015 Nisei Veterans French Legion d Honneur Award Ceremony PDF Archived from the original PDF on 25 December 2016 Retrieved 26 December 2016 Go For Broke Go For Broke Retrieved 11 January 2018 Go For Broke Army Unit s Motto Now a National Day defense gov US Department of Defense 4 April 2019 National Japanese American Memorial sculpture Smithsonian 2001 Retrieved 14 February 2011 Ashworth Calvin 8 July 2018 Brothers In Valor Memorial Clio Your Guide to History USS Hornet Museum Hosts One of a Kind Exhibit Honoring Nisei Veterans Marketwired 20 October 2011 Retrieved 22 September 2019 Hello 2021 U S Postal Service announces upcoming stamps USPS 17 November 2020 Watanabe Teresa 21 December 2007 Seeking stamp of approval Los Angeles Times Retrieved 23 June 2016 Go For Broke Song YouTube 31 July 2007 Archived from the original on 12 December 2021 Go For Broke Song goforbroke freeservers com Hallman Tom 11 November 2022 American Legion post apologizes to Nisei veterans acknowledges role in Hood River s ugly history The Oregonian VFW commanders remembered PDF Pacific Citizen 8 August 1986 Our Mission Vision amp Principles Nisei Veterans Committee Retrieved 22 July 2023 Yenne Bill 2007 Rising Sons The Japanese American GIs who fought for the United States in World War II New York N Y Thomas Dunne Books pp 247 252 ISBN 978 0312354640 Tang Edward From Internment to Containment Cold War imaginings of Japanese Americans in Go for Broke Columbia University Retrieved 12 June 2018 Asahina Robert 2007 Just Americans How Japanese Americans Won a War at Home and Abroad Penguin Group USA p 69 ISBN 978 1 59240 300 4 a b Pullen Colonel Randy 22 April 2008 Army Reserve Marks First 100 Years U S Army Reserve 100th Anniversary website United States Army Retrieved 28 February 2018 Overson David 28 April 2019 American Samoa s expansion of the Army Reserve establishes a Pacific stronghold Army Chief of Public Affairs Doubler Michael Dale 2008 The National Guard and Reserve A Reference Handbook Greenwood Publishing Group p 133 ISBN 978 0 275 99325 2 Adams Paul 20 August 2004 Samoan Reservists answer the call to duty Army News Service Pago Pago American Samoa Retrieved 28 February 2018 Kakesako Gregg K 29 May 2005 Go For Broke on daily combat missions Honolulu Star Bulletin Retrieved 28 February 2018 Kakesako Gregg 17 March 2005 Isle battalion commander fired after altercation in Iraq Honolulu Star Bulletin Retrieved 28 February 2018 Kakesako Gregg K 4 January 2006 Attack in Iraq targets 100th Battalion camp Honolulu Star Bulletin Retrieved 28 February 2018 Army Staff Sgt Frank Tiai Military Times Vienna Virginia Associated Press 17 July 2005 Retrieved 28 February 2018 Island Military Heroes Office of Insualr Affairs United States Department of the Interior 12 June 2015 Retrieved 1 March 2018 a b 100th 442nd Reserve Unit 100th Infantry Battalion Veterans Education Center 100th Infantry Battalion Veterans Retrieved 28 February 2018 Cole William 14 July 2005 Isle troops track down suspects arms cache Honolulu Advertiser Retrieved 28 February 2018 100th Battalion on alert for possible Kuwait deployment Honolulu Advertiser 21 December 2007 Retrieved 28 February 2018 Stewart Richard W 26 August 2015 Lineage and Honors Center of Military History United States Army Retrieved 1 March 2018 Kakesako Gregg K 19 May 2008 7 200 more Hawaii based troops heading out Honolulu Star Bulletin Retrieved 28 February 2018 Carpenito Sergeant Crystal January 2009 29th Infantry Brigade Combat Team uncases their colors PDF Lava Flow Hawaii Army National Guard Archived from the original PDF on 27 December 2016 Retrieved 28 February 2018 100th Battalion 442nd Infantry Regiment Soldier Honored in Memorial Ceremony at Camp Virginia Defense Visual Information Distribution Service Defense Media Activity 29 June 2009 Retrieved 28 February 2018 Congressional Record St Martin s Press 2004 p 13120 Lee Major General Robert G F 2009 Annual Report Fiscal Year 2009 PDF Department of Defense State of Hawaii Retrieved 28 February 2018 Zeisset Capt Timothy June 2009 100 442nd IN Soldiers drive one million miles PDF Lava Flow Hawaii Army National Guard Archived from the original PDF on 26 January 2017 Retrieved 1 March 2018 Livesay James 1 July 2009 USCIS Naturalizes 84 Members of U S Military in Kuwait Ceremony Livesay amp Myers Archived from the original on 2 March 2018 Retrieved 1 March 2018 USCIS Naturalizes 84 Members of U S Military in Kuwait Ceremony PDF Global Law Centers 29 June 2009 Archived from the original PDF on 2 March 2018 Retrieved 1 March 2009 a b Takashi Halo Hirose ISHOF org Retrieved 5 July 2018 Champion swimmer Takashi Halo Hirose dead at 79 The Honolulu Advertiser 4 September 2002 Retrieved 5 July 2018 Brien Taylor 22 February 2017 Swimmer Takashi Halo Hirose Inducted into ISHOF First Japanese American to Swim for the USA Swimming World News Retrieved 19 February 2020 Williams Rudi Army Secretary Lionizes 22 World War II Heroes American Forces Press Service Archived from the original on 28 October 2012 Retrieved 1 September 2012 Keynoter Knows Sting of Bias Poverty St Petersburg Times Associated Press Chicago 27 August 1968 Scott John L 3 October 1967 Japanese Actor No Longer Villain Los Angeles Times p C1 Chang Thelma November 1985 I Can Never Forget Men of the 100th 442nd Honolulu HI Sigi Productions ISBN 0 9630228 0 6 Ingram Scott 2006 Korean Americans World Almanac Library p 27 ISBN 978 0 8368 7315 3 About USIP History Selected Biographies United States Institute of Peace Archived from the original on 9 July 2008 Retrieved 23 September 2008 The Nisei Project niseiproject Aoki Huy 28 July 2011 Into the next stage The 100TH 442ND acknowledged in Captain America Rafu Shimpo Archived from the original on 26 February 2018 Retrieved 25 February 2018 Valor With Honor Archived from the original on 12 March 2013 Retrieved 1 September 2012 Go For Broke at IMDb nbsp Niiya Brian Two Homelands book Densho Retrieved 11 March 2020 Two Homelands Rafu Shimpo 21 July 2019 Retrieved 12 March 2020 Urban Cori 25 April 2019 Heroism of Japanese American soldiers in World War II subject of new novel Republican Nisei Soldiers Short 2017 IMDb They were Americans removed from their homes mistrusted by their country and served it with the greatest honor External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to 442nd Infantry Regiment United States Resources edit Japanese American War Hero Recalls Life During World War II Asian Nation 442nd RCT Rescue of the Lost Battalion The 442nd Regimental Combat Team Hawaii Star Bulletin article on Hawaii Statehood passage Archived 13 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine U S Samurais in Bruyeres by Pierre Moulin The Story of the 442nd Combat Team compiled by members of the 442nd Combat Team Mitsuye Yamada papers Special Collections and Archives The UC Irvine Libraries via Calisphere From a Quiet American a Story of War and Remembrance The New York Times 16 August 2008 Medal of Honor recipient George Joe Sakato on Veterans Chronicles Archived 6 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine produced by the Japanese American Veterans Collection Archives amp Manuscripts Department University of Hawaii at Manoa Library 442nd Regimental Combat Team by Franklin Odo Densho Encyclopedia 442nd Regimental Combat Team Legacy WebsiteMedia edit 442 Live with Honor Die with Dignity Documentary Film 2010 Only the Brave official movie site The official website for upcoming movie Little Iron Men about the 442nd s rescue of the Lost Battalion A Path to Lunch Liberation Day and the Liberation of America the 442nd in Lunigiana and Versilia A film clip Christmas Brings Joy To Everyone 1945 12 10 1945 is available for viewing at the Internet Archive A film clip Heroes Comes Home 1946 07 03 1946 is available for viewing at the Internet Archive A film clip Pres Truman Honors Nisei Combat Group 1946 07 18 1946 is available for viewing at the Internet Archive George Takei Why I love a country that once betrayed me TEDxKyoto 2014 Four Four Two F Company At War 2014 Documentary FilmOrganizations edit Americans of Japanese Ancestry World War II Memorial Alliance Archived from the original on 16 May 2007 Retrieved 5 September 2007 442nd World War II Reenactors Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 442nd Infantry Regiment United States amp oldid 1176479881, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.