When they were attacking Guam from July 21 to August 10, 1944, U.S. forces were not only acquiring a fine harbor and a number of airfields to use during World War II (and beyond), but they were also liberating U.S. territory; ceded by Spain after the Spanish American War, Guam, the southernmost of the Mariana Islands, had been captured by the Japanese in 1941. As elsewhere, Guam’s Japanese garrison fought practically to the last man. American casualties included some 1,700 dead and 6,000 wounded; Japanese deaths totaled some 18,000.
The attack on Guam, codenamed Operation Stevedore, was intended originally to start only days after the landings on Saipan and Tinian, but it was postponed to the next month. The Americans used the delay well, however, to make the preliminary bombardment and air attacks extremely thorough and to ensure that offshore obstacles to landing craft were cleared efficiently. The landing force included both Marine and Army units from Major General Roy S. Geiger’s III Amphibious Corps, in all 55,000 strong; the presence of Coast Guard as well as Navy vessels meant that the operation was one of the few in which all branches of the U.S. armed forces at the time took part. Additionally, a large contingent of indigenous Chamorro guerrillas participated in the battle. General Takeshi Takashina commanded 19,000 Japanese defenders, who had built an elaborate network of bunkers, artillery emplacements, and other fortifications.
The landings began on 21 July on the west coast of the island. They were soon established solidly ashore despite a series of fierce night attacks and banzai charges by the Japanese over the first few days of the battle. It took a week for the Americans to link their two beachheads, but by then much of the Japanese strength had been dissipated and Takashina himself had been killed. The surviving Japanese units fought on for another two weeks, gradually retiring toward the north end of the island, before organized resistance largely ended, and General Geiger declared the battle over on August 10. Even then Guam’s particularly mountainous terrain helped a few diehards to hold out. Some small units fought on until after the end of the war, causing occasional U.S. casualties, and one solitary veteran, Shōichi Yokoi, emerged from the jungle to surrender and return to Japan only in 1972, eight years after his last two remaining comrades had died in a flash flood.