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Frank Stephen Mercado

PFC Frank S. Mecado served with Charlie Company, 2nd Marine Raider Battalion.
He was killed in action at Guadalcanal, Solomon Islands, on 11 November 1942.

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

Branch

Marine Corps Regular
Service Number 350086

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

Current Status

Remains Not Recovered

Pursuit Category

The DPAA has not publicized this information.

Capsule History

Pre-War Life

Birth

December 26, 1921
at Los Angeles, CA

Parents

Names unknown

Education

Roosevelt High School

Occupation & Employer

Details unknown

Service Life

Entered Service

January 12, 1942
at Los Angeles, CA

Home Of Record

1847½ East 1st Street
Los Angeles, CA

Next Of Kin

Wife, Mrs. Delia G. Mercado

Military Specialty

Raider
BARman

Primary Unit

D/2nd Raider Battalion
(Carlson’s Raiders)

Campaigns Served

Guadalcanal

Individual Decorations

Purple Heart

Additional Service Details

Loss And Burial

Circumstances Of Loss

PFC Frank Mercado served as a Browning Automatic Rifleman in the Second (Carlson’s) Raider Battalion. His introduction to combat was the “Long Patrol” – an ambitious operation to harass and disrupt Japanese units during the Guadalcanal campaign. The Marines landed at Aola on 4 November 1942 and began working their way towards the main perimeter at Lunga Point, fighting small skirmishes and ambushes as they went. Company D, to which Mercado belonged, was reduced in size to about forty men due to transfers prior to landing; they often operated as an extension of the battalion headquarters company.

On 11 November 1942, as patrols advanced on the village of Asamana, a battalion-sized Japanese force opened fire and halted Charlie Company in an open field. Dog Company received orders to assist, and began moving down the east bank of the Metapona River towards the sound of the guns. The Japanese were waiting and ambushed Dog Company. Raider Lowell Bulger relates:

Capt. Charles P. McAuliffe led his 40 man patrol across another open grassy field and ran head-on into large units of the enemy well hidden in the heavy jungle. The Raiders found themselves caught in the open field with the enemy well concealed in the jungle to their front and both right and left flanks. Two leaders in the point were immediately killed and a third wounded. The slain Raiders were PFC LeRoy I. Fanslow and a big Indian BAR man named PFC Frank S. Mercado.

Captain McAuliffe’s headquarters group was cut off from the rest of the men; they managed to escape and reported the annihilation of the company to Lieutenant Colonel Evans Carlson. Fortunately, this proved not to be the case, and the surviving Dog Company Marines reached safety after a firefight lasting several hours.

Burial Information or Disposition

The Raiders returned to the ambush site the following day; they located and buried the body of PFC LeRoy I. Fanslow. For reasons unknown, they were unable to find Frank Mercado’s body. Mercado would lie unburied until 10 December 1942, when an Army patrol stumbled upon what was left of the BARman from Los Angeles.

Mercado was subsequently buried in the field, but the precise location was never found after the war.

Next Of Kin Address

Address of wife, Mrs. Delia Mercado.

Location Of Loss

PFC Mercado was killed in action near the village of Asamana.

Related Profiles

Non-recovered casualties of the Long Patrol, 4 November – 4 December 1942

Bloody Plains (Asamana)

Mount Austen

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