


Ebon was abandoned by American forces on March 25, 1944. Ebon was declared secure after the Japanese radio station was destroyed and all Japanese civilians killed or captured. Marshallese natives brought the children to safety behind American lines. Seventeen Japanese, including one woman, were killed. 25 Japanese, including six civilians (two women and two children among them), put up a 20-minute fire-fight that left Miller and another Marine dead and eight others wounded. Chronological listing of ships visiting the Marshall Islands until 1885 -Ebon Atoll.
#EBON ATOLL LICENSE#
All structured data from the file namespace is available under the Creative Commons CC0 License all unstructured text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License additional terms may apply. Files are available under licenses specified on their description page. Historic Demographic Information for the Marshall Islands-Ebon Atoll. This page was last edited on 31 October 2021, at 12:08. Miller himself was killed during the invasion of Ebon Atoll a month later. Map of Ebon Atoll (1897) View an 1873 view of the pass into of Ebon Atoll Historic Data List of the Foreign property holdings during the German Colonial Period. All of Engebi's defenders were killed, except for nineteen prisoners taken. In the attack on Engebi American losses were 78 killed, 166 wounded, and 7 missing, totaling 251 casualties. Instead they prepared trenches covered with palm fronds and camouflage called "spider holes." Marines threw in smoke grenades, pinpointed the exits, and attacked with mortars, flamethrowers and explosives. Because they themselves landed only six weeks before the American onslaught, the Japanese did not have time to prepare the kind of defenses encountered at Tarawa and Iwo Jima. In addition to his men's rifles and sidearms, Yano had available two flame throwers, two 75mm mountain guns, three 20mm guns, two 120mm naval guns, two twin-mount 13mm AA machine guns, three light tanks and a variety of machine guns, mortars, and grenade dischargers. Opposing the landing force was Colonel Toshio Yano and the 3rd Battalion of the 1st Mobile Shipborne Brigade, which numbered 736 officers and men, including 44 personnel from the 61st Keibitai (garrison) detachment. In Operation "Fragile" the 1st and 2nd Battalions landed on February 18, 1944, with 3rd Battalion in reserve. Engebi was the first of the Eniwetok Atoll to be invaded by American forces. United States Marine Corps Private Theodore James Miller (FebruMarch 24, 1944) of Hennepin County, Minnesota assigned to Company K, 3rd Battalion, 22nd Marine Independent Regiment returns to Coast Guard-manned attack transport USS Arthur Middleton (APA-25) at 1400 Hours after two days of combat on Engebi.
