Skip to content

Michael Leo Salerno

PFC Michael L. Salerno served with King Company, Third Battalion, 2nd Marines.
He was killed in action at the battle of Tarawa on 20 November 1943.

Created by potrace 1.16, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2019

Branch

Marine Corps Regular
Service Number 803681

Created by potrace 1.16, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2019

Current Status

Accounted For
as of 27 September 2018

Created by potrace 1.16, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2019

Recovery Organization

Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency
Read DPAA Press Release

History

Michael Salerno was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on 26 March 1924. He was raised along with his siblings by John and Mary Salerno and attended local schools. As a young adult, he made a daily commute from his home at 1901 Fuller Street to a factory on the corner of G and Lycoming Streets, where he worked for the Jacquard Knitting Machine Company. And, like a good citizen, he registered for the draft when he turned eighteen.

Michael Salerno's Selective Service registration.

The year was 1942 and, like the rest of the nation, Jacquard was on a wartime footing – so much so that its machinists and lathe operators were classified as war workers, and women were being hired not just for the steno pool, but in the machine shop itself. Although he was eighteen years old and well fit to serve, Salerno might have been given a temporary exemption from the draft due to the nature of his employment. However, the need for fighting men eventually outweighed the needs of the Jacquard factory, and Salerno was informed of his pending induction early in 1943. Rather than wait to be told where to go, he elected to join the Marine Corps and entered the service on 17 February 1943.

Private Salerno completed his boot training with the 6th Recruit Battalion at MCRD San Diego, and learned weapons and fieldcraft at the Infantry Battalion Training Center at nearby Camp Elliott, California. This training occupied the spring and summer of 1943. By early fall, Salerno earned a promotion to Private First Class, and was on his way across the Pacific with the 26th Replacement Battalion. He spent a brief time ashore at Noumea, New Caledonia before embarking aboard the USS Tyron for the final three-day leg to Wellington, New Zealand. On 10 October 1943, he officially became a member of the 2nd Marine Regiment, Second Marine Division.

Although initially assigned to the regiment’s headquarters company, PFC Salerno only spent two weeks in that capacity. He was one of a handful of replacement Marines assigned to the regiment’s Third Battalion, Company K on 25 October 1943. He had no time to acquaint himself with his new comrades: that very day, his battalion boarded the USS Arthur Middleton in preparation for a complex set of training maneuvers scheduled to take place within the next few days. On 1 November 1943, the ship departed for an unknown destination.

Salerno had been in New Zealand for only three weeks; he would spend almost three more aboard the Arthur Middleton, making whatever preparations he could in the cramped space of the transport’s crowded decks and troop compartments. The ship anchored at Efate for four days before setting a course for an island codenamed “HELEN.” PFC Salerno would have attended briefings about his battalion’s role in Operation GALVANIC, heard lectures about the enemy situation, listened to rumors about how the Navy would pulverize the tiny island before he even got ashore, and tried to pick up useful information from the Guadalcanal veterans in his platoon. None of it would be enough.

Private Michael Salerno, service record photograph, 1942.

On 20 November 1943, 3/2 disembarked from the Arthur Middleton and climbed into amphibious landing vehicles that would carry them to their designated landing zone on Betio, Beach Red One. They started taking fire while still thousands of yards from their objective, and the men crouched in the open-topped vehicles had plenty of time to think about what lay in store as the ponderous LVTs beetled towards shore in “a slow, ponderous turtle race.” At 0910, the first of the vehicles ground ashore and the carnage began. By nightfall, scores of men from Company K alone were wounded, and forty-nine were killed or missing in action.

Tarawa's "Red One" after the battle. Marine casualties line the beach while knocked out LVTs wallow in the surf. US Navy photo.
The violence that befell 3/2nd Marines is evident in this list of men who simply disappeared during the battle.

PFC Michael Salerno was one of those who disappeared during the day’s fighting. No eyewitnesses reported seeing him fall; those who did either failed to recognize the young replacement or quickly became casualties themselves. For a time, it was hoped that the missing men – Blanchette, Carbone, Cetrone, Johnson, Lukie, Madonia, Salerno, Stewart, and VanEngen – were only wounded and would eventually turn up at a hospital in the rear. These hopes proved to be in vain. PFC Robert C. Johnson’s remains were found buried in an isolated grave on Betio; PFCs Andrea J. Madonia, Robert V. Stewart and Louis J. VanEngen were identified among those remains recovered from the island after the war. The remaining men were deemed non-recoverable, and their cases were closed in 1949.

Unbeknownst to their families, the remains of Blanchette, Carbone, Lukie, and Salerno had been recovered after all. They were buried in the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific as unknowns.

In January 2017, a DPAA team exhumed the remains of Tarawa Unknown X-267 from Plot E, Grave 219. According to the history in his case file, this unknown man was originally buried in Cemetery 11 after the battle. The 604th QMGRC examined his remains in May of 1946, but found no identifying materials and were unable to make a tooth chart. X-267 was reinterred in Lone Palm Cemetery Plot 4, Row 3, Grave 13 – one of the last burials on the island. The following February, X-267 arrived at the Central Identification Lab in Hawaii. The lead anthropologist, Dr. Mildred Trotter, determined he had been “a short young man 21-23 years old, of slender build and average muscularity.” However, the condition of the remains was such that her team could not do much more. X-267 was declared unidentifiable, and given a military burial in 1949.

On 27 September 2018, X-267 was finally identified as PFC Michael Leo Salerno. His sister, Jean Roman, remembered seeing Michael leave “early in the morning” on a day in February, 1943. “And that was it, we didn’t see him any more.” Seventy-five years later, she finally learned how her brother died: blast injuries that destroyed most of his body.

“He was just a kid,” Jean said. “I’m proud of him, though – but I wish he was here.”


PFC Michael L. Salerno was buried in a family plot in Saint Dominic Church Cemetery, Philadelphia, on 27 April 2019.

Decorations

Purple Heart

For wounds resulting in his death, 20 November 1943.

Next Of Kin Address

Address of mother, Mrs. Mary Salerno.

Location Of Loss

PFC Salerno was last seen in the vicinity of Betio’s Red Beach One.

Betio Casualties From This Company

(Recently accounted for or still non-recovered)
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn

0 thoughts on “Michael L. Salerno”

  1. Such a terrible loss made even worse without any identifiable remains. At least now the family can lay him to rest and somehow find peace. May he nor any other hero of that war ever be forgotten.

  2. Kudos to our government for their persistence in identifying Michael Salerno’s remains and for their respect in honoring those remains. It brings peace & closure to his immediate & extended family. He is being laid to rest in a manor deserving of his service to his country!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *