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Calvin LeMoin Selfridge

Private Calvin L. Selfridge served with Baker Company, First Marine Raider Battalion.
He was killed in action at Bairoko Harbor, New Georgia, on 21 July 1943.

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

Branch

Marine Corps Reserve
Service Number 463399

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

Current Status

Remains Not Recovered

Pursuit Category

This case is under Active Pursuit by the DPAA.

Capsule History

Pre-War Life

Birth

May 2, 1920
at Butler, PA

Parents

Gurn Ellsworth Selfridge
Rose Elizabeth (Gallagher) Selfridge

Education

Details unknown

Occupation & Employer

Manager
Isaly’s Dairy

Service Life

Entered Service

October 2, 1942
at Pittsburgh, PA

Home Of Record

288 East North Street
Butler, PA

Next Of Kin

Mother, Mrs. Rose Selfridge

Military Specialty

Raider

Primary Unit

B/1st Raider Battalion

Campaigns Served

New Georgia

Individual Decorations

Purple Heart

Additional Service Details

Loss And Burial

Circumstances Of Loss

On 20 July 1943, after fifteen days of traversing New Georgia’s Dragons Peninsula, struggling through mangrove swamps, skirmishing with Japanese forces, and fighting a pitched battle for a base at Enogai, elements of the 1st Marine Raider Regiment – the First and Fourth Raider Battalions – set out to attack the enemy garrison at Barioko Harbor. The Marines, advancing along the Enogai-Bairoko Trail, would form the northern wing of the assault, with 3/148th Infantry supporting along the Triri-Bairoko trail to the south. “Between the two trails was tangled jungle and vile swampland, which we all knew meant there would be no opportunity for fancy maneuvering,” recalled Raider Marlin Groft. “When we attacked Bairoko it would be a desperate, head-on frontal assault.”

Groft was correct – and, to make matters worse, the Japanese garrison used the ten days after Enogai to reinforce and fortify their positions. A planned airstrike never materialized, and the Army’s support was lackluster. At 1015, the Raiders hit the first Japanese outposts and pushed through with grenades and bayonets – only to run headlong into an impassible main line of resistance. “A wall of lead came at us from Nambus firmly placed in nests chiseled into the hard coral,” Groft continued. “Our advance was brought to a halt…. If combat men ever experienced a Hell on Earth, this was it.”

By 1700 hours, high casualties and fading daylight forced the Raiders to withdraw back to Enogai. The “screwed up affair” of Bairoko was the worst defeat ever suffered by any Raider unit, and nearly two hundred men wounded in action. Many of these could not walk, and any Marine capable of carrying a stretcher was pressed into duty. The column moved too slowly to cover the two miles to Enogai before night, so they set up a perimeter around the wounded men and anxiously awaited the Japanese.

At about 0200 on the morning of 21 July, a Japanese probe hit the Marine perimeter, touching off a short but sharp firefight with Baker and Dog Companies in near total darkness. The men from Kure withdrew back towards Bairoko, but the Raiders had nine additional wounded men to treat – and one more killed in action.

Private Calvin Selfridge of Baker Company suffered gunshot wounds in the groin and left hip during the Bairoko operation, and died before reaching Enogai. While no eyewitness accounts of his death are currently known, the location of his burial suggests that he was the Raider killed by the Japanese probe.

Burial Information or Disposition

While most of the Raiders killed in action at Bairoko were left in the field, a few were buried in graves closer to Enogai. Private Selfridge was laid to rest “1,000 yards on left of trail from Enogai Point to Bairoko.” This is the farthest grave from Enogai recorded in any degree of detail. Other Marines who died of wounds suffered at Bairoko were interred much closer to the Raider camp, suggesting that they lived long enough to be carried most of the distance.

With so many wounded men in need of urgent medical care, and stretcher bearers pushed past the point of exhaustion – the marching column paused for a rest every 200 yards – carrying a dead man was out of the question.* Thus, Selfridge was probably buried near the bivouac spot, with a marker beside the trail to attract search parties.

This is the last known burial data for Calvin Selfridge. More than a month would pass before patrols returned to recover the Bairoko dead. Photographs of this process show Marines carrying blanket-wrapped bundles, suggesting an advanced state of decomposition. Individually identifying the dead would have been challenging, but was accomplished in most cases before burial in the Enogai cemetery. Selfridge may be buried in a national cemetery as an unknown, or he may still lie somewhere on the Dragons Peninsula.

*An exception to the rule appears to be Marine Gunner Angus Goss, a much respected and highly-decorated Raider who led the demolitions platoon. Although killed outright on 20 July 1943, his body was carried back to Enogai for burial.

Next Of Kin Address

Address of mother, Mrs. Rose Selfridge.

Location Of Loss

Private Selfridge was killed in action near Bairoko (Mbaeroko), New Georgia.

Gallery

Related Profiles

Marine Raiders non-recovered or recently identified from Bairoko Harbor.
First Raider Battalion
Fourth Raider Battalion
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