World
War II 1941-1945
Medal of Honor Recipient
SERGEANT
DARRELL SAMUEL COLE, USMCR
(DECEASED)
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Marine
Sergeant Darrell Samuel Cole, son of Samuel R. and
Magdalena Williams Cole, was born on July 20, 1920
in Flat River, Missouri. Until he was graduated
from high school in Esther, Missouri, in 1938, his
main interests in life were playing basketball,
hunting and photography. During his youth he learned
to play the French Horn, an accomplishment that
was later to help shape his destiny.
Soon
after his graduation from high school, Cole joined
the Civilian Conservation Corps, where he became
an assistant forestry clerk and assistant educational
advisor for his company. Leaving the CCC after one
year, he went to Detroit, where he found employment
as a skiver machine operator for a firm which specialized
in the manufacture of engine gaskets.
On
August 25, 1941 he enlisted in the Marine Corps
Reserve for the duration of the national emergency.
He was sent to Parris Island, South Carolina, for
training, where his proficiency with the French
Horn marked him as a logical candidate for Field
Music School - a field music being the Marine Corps
equivalent of a bugler.
Completing
field music school, he was transferred to the 1st
Marines, 1st Marine Division. On August 7, 1942
he found himself wading ashore with his buddies
of Company H of the 2d Battalion on the beaches
of Guadalcanal, in the first American offensive
of World War II.
Cole
had not been very happy about being assigned as
a field music. His buddies had often heard him complain
that he had joined a fighting outfit to fight, not
blow a horn. Consequently, when a regular machine
gunner of his unit fell wounded, Cole assumed the
role of gunner, and acquitted himself in such a
manner as to win the praise of his commanding officer.
Immediately after the Guadalcanal campaign Cole
submitted a request to have his rating be changed
from field music, and that he be allowed to perform
the regular duties of private first class in the
weapons company to which he was assigned. His request
was disapproved, "due to a shortage of field musics."
He returned to the United States on February 2,
1943, to complete his first tour of duty overseas,
still saddled with his bugle.
In
March 1943, he joined the 1st Battalion, 23d Marines,
which were then forming at Camp Lejeune, North Carolina,
as part of the 4th Marine Division. Waiting until
the unit moved to California, Cole submitted another
request to be relieved of his duties as a field
music and permission to perform "line" duties. Again
his request was disapproved for the same reason
as before, as the Marine Corps was still short of
field musics.
On
Christmas Eve, 1944, Field Music Cole married Margaret
Belle Willett in San Diego. Less than a month after
their marriage, he was on his way overseas for the
second time with the 4th Marine Division.
During
the first engagement of the division, at Roi-Namur
in the Kwajalein Atoll, Cole, again forsaking his
bugle, went into action as a machine gunner.
Four
months later the 4th Marine Division stormed ashore
at Saipan, and somehow Cole had managed to get himself
assigned to his beloved machine guns. Because of
his proven ability in combat he was designated as
a machine gun section leader. During the battle
when his squad leader was killed, Cole, although
wounded himself, assumed command of the entire squad
and acquitted himself in such a manner to be awarded
the Bronze Star Medal for "…his resolute leadership,
indomitable fighting spirit and tenacious determination
in the face of terrific opposition…"
A
few days after the battle of Saipan, Cole led his
squad ashore in the invasion of the neighboring
island of Tinian and continued to live up to his
fast growing reputation as "The Fighting Field Music"
throughout the campaign.
After
the Marianas campaigns, Cole requested a change
of warrant for the third time. Pointing out his
experience and combat record, he stated that he
felt he would be of more benefit to the Marine Corps
performing line duties than those of field music.
This time his request was approved, and he was redesignated
as Corporal "line."
In
January of 1945 Sergeant Cole, who had been promoted
the previous November, sailed with his company for
an unknown island that was to become one of the
most famous battlefields of American history-Iwo
Jima.
On
D-Day, February 19, Sergeant Cole led his machine
gun section ashore in the assault on Iwo's shifting
beaches. One of his squads had hardly reached dry
land before their advance was halted by a deadly
hail of fire from two enemy positions. Taking stock
of the situation, Cole crawled forward and wiped
out the two positions with hand grenades. His unit
continued the advance until they were again halted
by fire from three Japanese pillboxes. One of Cole's
machine guns silenced the most threatening position,
and then jammed.
Armed
only with a pistol and one hand grenade, Sergeant
Cole made a one-man attack against the two remaining
positions. Twice be returned to his own lines for
additional grenades and continued the attack under
the fierce enemy fire until he had succeeded in
destroying the Japanese strong point. Returning
to his own squad, he was instantly killed by an
enemy grenade. By his one-man attack and heroic
self-sacrifice, Sergeant Cole enabled his company
to move forward against the remaining fortifications
and attain their ultimate objective.
For
his unselfish act of heroism, the Nation's highest
military award, the Medal of Honor, was posthumously
awarded to Sergeant Cole. In the words of the citation
that accompanied it "…By his dauntless initiative,
unfaltering courage and indomitable determination
during a critical period of action, Sergeant Cole
served as an inspiration to his comrades, and his
stouthearted leadership in the face of almost certain
death sustained and enhanced the highest traditions
of the United States Naval Service."
The
Field Music who had desperately wanted to be a great
fighting man had at last achieved his ambition.
In
addition to the Medal of Honor and Bronze Star Medal,
Sergeant Cole was awarded the Purple Heart, Gold
Star in lieu of a second Purple Heart, Presidential
Unit Citation, American Defense Service Medal, Asiatic-Pacific
Campaign Medal, and the World War II Victory Medal.
The Medal of Honor was presented to his wife on
April 17, 1947.
Sergeant
Cole was buried in the 4th Marine Division Cemetery
on Iwo Jima. At the request of his father, his remains
were returned to the United States and were reinterred
in the Park View Cemetery near Farmington, Missouri.