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Seventh Generation
719. PFC Marshall
Shelton ACKLEY was born on 14 Feb 1920 in Millis, Norfolk , Massachusetts.153,237,267,338,408 He appeared in the census in
1930 in Massachusetts. He was living in Jul 2001 in Chicopee, Hamden
, Massachusetts.334 He
died on 11 Nov 2002 in Chicopee, Hamden , Massachusetts.129,153,237,338 His
Obituary appeared in the Springfield Union News on 12 Nov 2002 in Springfield,
Hampden , Massachusetts Marshall S. Ackley
1920 - 2002
CHICOPEE - Marshall S. Ackley, 82, of 91 Mayflower St., died Monday Nov. 11th
at home. He was born in Millis, MA and lived most of his life in Chicopee. He
was an electrician for the Savage Arms Company for over 37 years, and retired
1983 as an electrician from the National Blank Book Co. after working there for
10 years. He was a former First Lt. on the Chicopee Auxiliary Police Department.
He was also a former member of the American Legion Post 352. He was a WWII Marine
veteran and received a Purple Heart in the Battle at Sapian. He was the husband
of the late Cecile (Plouf) Ackley who died in January of 1994. He leaves a daughter,
Margaret Deitz and her husband Red of Chicopee; a daughter, Jeanne Robitaille
and her husband Rene of Chicopee; two brothers, Edward Ackley of Chicopee and
Calvin Ackley of West Springfield. He leaves his sister, Thelma Lecuyer of Westfield.
He also leaves 3 granddaughters and their husbands, Jill and Ken Senecal of Chicopee,
Valarie and Jeffery Patrick of Chicopee, and Amy and Ken Boyd of Chicopee. He
also leaves 2 grandsons, John and Steven McClure of Springfield; and he was best
friend fo 7 great-grandchildren. He also leaves several nieces and nephews. Funeral
and burial will be held at the convenience of the family. Grise Funeral Home,
280 Springfield St., is in charge of services.
Published in the Union-News and Sunday Republican on 11/12/2002. He lived at
91 Mayflower St in Chicopee, Hamden , Massachusetts in Nov 2002.129 He was buried in Springfield Cemetery, Springfield,
Hampden , Massachusetts.153
He was Electrician for the Savage Arms Company.129 His Social Security Number was 020-14-2948 MA.
He served in the military WW II in US Marines.129,153 BATTLE
of SAIPAN
Plans to launch an offensive against the Japanese in the islands of the Pacific
were initiated in 1943 at the Quadrant Conference held in Quebec. President Franklin
Roosevelt received the proposal that the Allied effort in the Pacific should
be directed first toward the Gilbert Islands, then the Marshalls, followed by
Wake, the Eastern Carolines, and finally the Marianas. It was at Saipan that
American military planners were presented with the problem of how to cope with
a dense civilian population, the first to be encountered in the Pacific war.
American forces were to be under the overall command of Admiral Chester Nimitz.
The American drive across the Pacific would be two-pronged. While Nimitz
fought his way across the central Pacific, General MacArthur would advance across
the southwest Pacific to the Philippines. The islands of the central Pacific
either succumbed one by one under the sheer weight of American forces or were
bombed, neutralized and bypassed. With their supply lines cut, the defenders
of by-passed islands were left to starve. After the fall of the Marshall islands,
no other island in the central Pacific would be invaded by American ground forces
until the American armada reached the waters off the Marianas and the island
of Saipan.
American war strategy in the western Pacific was developed around the premise
that Japan would never surrender and that the nation would fight to the last
man, woman, and child, particularly if the home islands were invaded. It was
anticipated that such an invasion, if it were to occur, would result in the loss
of one million American lives. In planning for this eventuality, air bases in
the Marianas were essential in order to accommodate the new B-29 Superfortress,
a U.S. bomber that was just beginning to be mass-produced in early 1944 and which
had a flying range equal to the distance from Saipan, Tinian and Guam to Japan
and back. The B-29's normal range was 2,850 miles at 358 m.p.h. with a 20,000
ton carrying capacity at 32,000 feet. The capture of the island of Saipan thus
became crucial in the preparations for this massive invasion.
The assault on Saipan began on June 15,1944, almost a week after the invasion
of Europe. An armada of 535 ships carrying 127,570 U. S. military personnel (two-thirds
of whom were Marines of the 2nd and 4th Divisions) converged on the island. The
ships of the invasion force carried 40,000 different items to support the assault
- everything from toilet paper to government-issue coffins. A single supply ship
carried enough food to feed 90,000 troops for one month. Navy tankers transported
the gigantic quantity of petroleum products required to support the invasion.
Aircraft alone consumed over 8 million gallons of aviation fuel during the battle,
while the aircraft carriers burned more than 4 million barrels of fuel.
Seven American battleships and 11 destroyers shelled Saipan and Tinian
for 2 days before the landings, firing 15,000 16-inch and 5-inch shells at the
islands along with 165,000 other shells of other caliber. To even begin to comprehend
the magnitude of this onslaught, one needs to realize that a single 16-inch
round weighs slightly more than a Volkswagen Beetle, besides being packed
with high explosives. On the second day of the bombardment, this force was joined
by 8 more battleships, 6 heavy cruisers and 5 light cruisers. The islands were
ringed by American warships with their guns blazing. Shells rained down on the
island, its villages, inhabitants, and defenders, gouging huge craters in the
sand and coral. The earth trembled under the tremendous explosions of naval bombardment
and simultaneous air attacks.
The main invasion force landed along 4 miles of beach at Chalan Kanoa.
Twenty-eight U. S. tanks were destroyed the first day alone. The Japanese positioned
colored flags in the lagoon to mark the range of the landing force and to register
their howitzers on the invaders from locations behind Mount Fina Susu, and their
shell fire rained down on the advancing American force every 15 seconds in a
deadly cauldron of exploding steel. By nightfall of the first day, the Second
Marine Division had sustained 2,000 casualties. The fighting continued until
July 9th, when organized resistance on Saipan ceased. When the fighting ended,
American losses on Saipan were double those suffered on Guadalcanal. Of the 71,034
U. S. troops landed on Saipan, 3,100 were killed, 13,100 wounded or missing in
action. Out of the 31,629 Japanese on Saipan, approximately 29,500 died as a
result of the fighting, and only 2,100 prisoners survived. Fighting between the
Japanese and the Americans was by no means completely mechanized; while ships,
aircraft, artillery, and tanks inflicted the largest amount of damage to the
combatants, a great deal of the fighting was hand-to-hand. Besides machine guns,
flame throwers, rifles, and pistols, deadly skirmishes were fought with bayonets,
swords, bamboo spears, clubs, stones and fists.
The ratio of battle dead was 9.5:1 during the 24 days of fighting. Place
names given the rugged Saipan terrain such as Death Valley, Purple Heart Ridge
and Harakiri Gulch testified to the bitter fighting. One of the most lamentable
events of the battle for Saipan involved the mass suicide of hundreds of families,
many of whom jumped to their deaths from the high cliffs at the island's northernmost
point. This tragic event could not be stopped, despite efforts by Americans and
indigenous Saipanese using loudspeakers to try to convince the Japanese that
surrender would be shameless and harmless.
Saipan provided the United States military with its first opportunity
to learn about military occupation of enemy territory with a Japanese civilian
population. Civilians encountered during the period of the battle and afterward,
while emergency conditions still prevailed, were placed in secure camps to keep
them out of the way of the fighting. Thus assembled, the U.S. military could
better meet their basic needs for food, clothing, shelter and medical care. Schools
were established as soon as conditions permitted. In September, 1945, the camps
housed 13,954 Japanese, 1,411 Koreans, 2,966 Chamorros and 1,025 Carolinians.
Contained within a two square mile area near Lake Susupe, the compounds were
primitive and only the bare necessities were available. Weathered boards, tattered
tents and battered tin sheets from the island's bombed-out sugar refinery provided
the only shelter from the weather. Each hut (han) accommodated from 20 to 55
people. After the fighting, families were released from Camp Susupe during the
day to cultivate vegetables, as food was scarce. Food production was increased
from 79,469 pounds of produce in September, 1944 to 286,029 pounds in September,
1945. The camp also had a makeshift Buddhist temple, where Shinto religious ceremonies
were held. Release from these camps is celebrated as "Liberation Day"
by inhabitants of Saipan to this day on the 4th of July. The Japanese on Saipan
had a high birth rate - about 300 babies per 1,000 women aged 15 to 45 - and
there were many orphans in the camps who were attended and raised by Japanese
nurses. Most of these were the children of Japanese parents who had killed themselves
during the mass suicide.
After the capture of Saipan, the fighting continued elsewhere in the Pacific
for another 13 months. Camps on Tinian were constructed to house 50,000 U.S.
troops and 1.2 million pounds of crops were produced, all of which were consumed
on the island. On August 6, 1945, an American Superfortress flying from Tinian
dropped the first atomic bomb on Hiroshima, hastening Japan's capitulation. The
war formally ended with Japan's surrender on August 15, 1945. The final surrender
on the island of Saipan did not take place, however, until December 1, 1945,
when Japanese Army Captain Sakeo Oba, who had continued to hold out in the mountains
with 46 men as a guerrilla force, surrendered his Samurai sword to Major Herman
Lewis and Colonel Scott, USMC.
About 90 percent of the civilian population on Saipan survived the war.
These included Koreans, Okinawans, and Japanese who were subsequently repatriated
to their respective homelands. As recorded on December 31, 1949, the indigenous
population of Saipan was 6,225. In 1937 23,658 persons had inhabited Saipan (4,145
were indigenous).
Today, what little World War Two equipment remains after being collected
and sold for scrap after the war is protected by law because of its historical
value. Lying below the surface of a lagoon once congested with landing craft
and ships of all type are the coral encrusted tools of war. Rifles, helmets,
bullets, tanks, ships and landing craft litter the sandy lagoon floor as if in
an underwater time capsule in silent testimony to one of the last battles fought
in a pre-nuclear age. More than fifty years after the invasion, unexploded live
ordnance still poses a very real danger to the unwary diver or souvenir hunter.
Four Marines received the Medal of Honor for heroism during the Battle
of Saipan. Each lost his life in the action for which he was honored. The four
were: Gunnery Sergeant Robert H. McCard, 4th Tank Battalion; Sergeant Grant F.
Timmerman, 2nd Tank Battalion; Private First Class Harold G. Agerholm, 4th Battalion,
10th Marines, 2nd Marine Division; Private First Class Harold G. Epperson, 1st
Battalion, 6th Marines, 2nd Marine Division. Gunnery Sergeant McCard, a native
of Syracuse, NY, single-handedly covered the escape of his crew from a disabled
tank. He faced the fire of a battery of anti-tank guns with hand grenades and
a machine gun. Sergeant Timmerman, who came to the Marine Corps from Americus,
KS, threw himself across an open tank hatch to protect his crew from an enemy
grenade. PFC Agerholm disregarded heavy enemy fire and personally evacuated 45
wounded Marines during an enemy attack on an artillery position. Agerholm, a
native of Racine, WI, was killed by a sniper as he tried to help two other wounded
men. PFC Epperson of Akron, OH, threw himself on a hand grenade, which landed
in his machine gun position during an enemy attack. His action saved the rest
of his gun crew.
Awarded the Purple Heart for wounds recieved466 PFC Marshall Shelton ACKLEY and Cecile Yvonne PLOUF
were married on 30 Nov 1939.408
Cecile Yvonne PLOUF (daughter of George Archibald
PLOUF and Anna CHAMPANGE) was born on 13 Nov 1920 in Holyoke, Hampden , Massachusetts.237,338,408,480
She was living in Jan 1994 in Chicopee, Hamden , Massachusetts.237 She has Death Cert # 8233480 She died on 18 Jan 1994 in Pasco , Florida.237,338,480 Her Social Security Number
was 028-30-4349 MA.237
PFC Marshall Shelton ACKLEY and Cecile Yvonne PLOUF had the following children:
949 | i. | Marshall Shelton ACKLEY was born on
11 Dec 1941.408 He died
on 11 Dec 1941.408 | +950 | ii. | Living. | +951 | iii. | Living. | 952 | iv. | ACKLEY was
stillborn on 6 Dec 1948.408 | 953 | v. | Virginia Cecile
ACKLEY was born on 16 Dec 1954.408
She died on 16 Dec 1954.408 |
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