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Leaving Sugar Loaf Hill

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5 replies
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  • Member since
    November 2009
  • From: SW Virginia
Posted by Gamera on Monday, August 3, 2015 11:24 AM

Very cool Mac, I wish I could figure out how to do something with this much feeling attached to it.

"I dream in fire but work in clay." -Arthur Machen

 

MAC
  • Member since
    July 2009
  • From: Keyport, New Jersey
Posted by MAC on Sunday, August 2, 2015 4:12 PM

Gents  Thank for looking and commenting on my work

Thanks again

Mac

  

  • Member since
    September 2012
Posted by GMorrison on Friday, July 31, 2015 11:08 PM

James Jones, one of my favorite authors. I could learn to like you.

That is a very nice dio and I like the effort you took to enhance it with your photos.

Marines achieve more with less.

I read where the Marines are finally giving up on the M-16 and getting the M4. My friend George was a Marine in Vietnam, he was issued an M1 Garand.

 Modeling is an excuse to buy books.

 

  • Member since
    July 2004
  • From: Sonora Desert
Posted by stikpusher on Friday, July 31, 2015 10:37 PM

Over 9000 casualties for one small piece of ground... As James Jones wrote in fiction of another battle in which he partook, "... for property, all for property..."

MAC, your dioramas are always compelling.

 

F is for FIRE, That burns down the whole town!

U is for URANIUM... BOMBS!

N is for NO SURVIVORS...

       - Plankton

LSM

 

  • Member since
    June 2003
  • From: Cavite, Philippines
Posted by allan on Friday, July 31, 2015 10:19 PM

Beautiful, if not sobering, build. I watched the documentary on Sugar Loaf just a few weeks ago.

No bucks, no Buck Rogers

MAC
  • Member since
    July 2009
  • From: Keyport, New Jersey
Leaving Sugar Loaf Hill
Posted by MAC on Friday, July 31, 2015 9:26 PM

Sugar Loaf Hill was a small, insignificant-looking mound, barely 50 feet high and about 300 yards long, situated on the southern end of Okinawa. It was part of a triangle of strongpoints set up by the Japanese defenders designed to delay and damage the attacking American forces. The other two points of the triangle were the higher terrain of Shuri Heights and an irregular-shaped set of hills that Marines called the Half Moon.

The Sixth Marine Division was given the task of taking the mound called Sugar Loaf, and it would prove costly. By the time the area was considered secure, 1,656 Marines would be dead and another 7,429 wounded. Regiments were reduced to com­pany strength, and companies to platoon size. Platoons and squads simply ceased to exist in some cases. It took 11 tries during a 12-day period and ate up most of three regiments before the hill was taken. 

Thanks for looking

Mac

  

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