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Glenn Marvin Gibb

PFC Glenn M. Gibb served with Charlie Company, First Battalion, 1st Marine Parachute Regiment (Paramarines).
He was killed in action at Bougainville on 1 January 1944.

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

Branch

Marine Corps Regular
Service Number 816961

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

May 3, 1924
at Twin Falls, ID

Parents

John Samuel “Sam” Gibb
Mabel (Jensen) Gibb

Education

Twin Falls High School (1942)
University of Idaho (ex-1946)

Occupation & Employer

College student

Service Life

Entered Service

January 30, 1943
at Salt Lake City, UT

Home Of Record

443 Walnut Street
Twin Falls, ID

Next Of Kin

Mother, Mrs. Mabel J. Gibb

Military Specialty

Parachutist

Primary Unit

C/1st Paramarines

Campaigns Served

Bougainville

Individual Decorations

Purple Heart

Additional Service Details

Loss And Burial

Circumstances Of Loss

Glenn Gibb, a former high school athletic hero, participated in the Bougainville campaign as a member of the elite “Paramarines.” He deployed to the island in early November 1943; by the end of the year, only a few Marine units remained on Bougainville and fewer still were engaged in active combat. In Silk Chutes and Hard Fighting: U.S. Marine Corps Parachute Units in WWII, historian Jon T. Hoffman notes that “the 1st [Parachute] Battalion conducted aggressive patrols” against Japanese positions near the Torokina River during this time. Hoffman’s work states that the “only serious contact” occurred on 28 December 1943, as Company A attacked and destroyed a series of 8 pillboxes in quick succession. However, this was not the battalion’s last engagement along the Torokina.

On New Year’s Day 1944, Company C, First Marine Parachute Regiment became embroiled in a heavy firefight along the Torokina River near “coordinates 134.22 – 210.11, IMAC Hasty Terrain Map Sheet #180, Second Edition.” Their foes, once again, were Japanese troops in heavily fortified positions – and while the defenders were ultimately overwhelmed, they extracted a heavy toll from the Paramarines. Among the Americans who lost their lives in this action was PFC Gibb; he was shot in the forehead and killed at 1500 hours.

Burial Information or Disposition

Charlie Company suffered over twenty casualties in this engagement, including a chief pharmacist’s mate. Evacuating the wounded was the top priority; by necessity, the bodies of the dead – PFC Gibb, Corporal Dudley J. Sommerkamp, PFC Joseph M. Maciejewski, PFC Harry E. Neeshan, and Corporal William Y. Wishart – were left on the field of battle. Even so, one of the wounded – PFC Emile J. R. Cote – later died of his injuries at an Army hospital.

American units revisited the battlefield at an unknown date, and recovered at least one set of remains – unidentifiable at the time, but duly interred in a military cemetery. In 1949, this body was identified as Corporal “Billie” Wishart. It is not clear if any other remains were found at the battlefield; the four other Marines killed in action have never been accounted for.

Next Of Kin Address

Address of mother, Mrs. Mabel Gibb.

Location Of Loss

Gibb was killed in the vicinity of the Torokina River, Bougainville.

Related Profiles

Charlie Company Paramarines non-recovered from the skirmish of 1 January 1944.
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