Lawrence Earl Garrison

PFC Lawrence E. “Brownie” Garrison served with How Company, Second Battalion, 8th Marines.
He was killed in action at Betio, Tarawa atoll, on 20 November 1943.
Branch
Marine Corps Regular
Service Number 311519
Current Status
ACCOUNTED FOR
as of 23 August 2022
Recovery Organization
Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency
Read DPAA press release
Capsule History
Pre-War Life
Birth
March 18, 1920
at Adamson, OK
Parents
Isaac Samuel Garrison
Annie E. (Boling) Garrison (d. 1930)
Education
Ryan High School (1940)
Occupation & Employer
Civilian Conservation Corps
Service Life
Entered Service
June 14, 1941
at Denver, CO
Home Of Record
Ryan, OK
Next Of Kin
Father, Mr. Isaac Garrison
Military Specialty
—
Primary Unit
H/2/8th Marines
Campaigns Served
Guadalcanal
Tarawa
Individual Decorations
Purple Heart
Additional Service Details
—
Loss And Burial
Circumstances Of Loss
PFC Lawrence E. Garrison served with How Company, 8th Marines during the Guadalcanal campaign and the battle of Tarawa. As a member of the Second Battalion’s weapons company, he likely served as a crewman for a water-cooled machine gun or 81mm mortar.
The amphibious assault on Betio, Tarawa atoll – Operation GALVANIC – commenced on 20 November 1943. The Second Battalion 8th Marines was given the job of assaulting the easternmost of three landing beaches – “Red 3” – and, once ashore, moving inland to quickly secure the airfield that covered much of the tiny island’s surface. A heavy and morale-boosting naval bombardment convinced many Marines that the task would be a simple one, and spirits were high at 0900 when their amphibious tractors started paddling for the beach.
The Japanese were quick to recover. Shells began bursting over the LVTs. “As the tractors neared the shore the air filled with the smoke and fragments of shells fired from 3-inch guns,” notes A Brief History of the 8th Marines. “Fortunately, casualties had been light on the way to the beach, but once the men dismounted and struggled to get beyond the beach, battle losses increased dramatically.” Most of the beach defenses were still intact, and these were supported by row after row of pillboxes, rifle pits, and machine gun nests.
PFC “Brownie” Garrison was one of hundreds of Marines to lose his life on the first day of the battle. He was reportedly killed in action by gunshot wounds – no further specifics of his death or burial are known.

Burial Information or Disposition
“Division Cemetery, Tarawa.” No specific location recorded.
A memorial marker was erected in Cemetery 33, Plot 16, Row 1, Grave 9.
Lawrence Garrison was buried as an unknown after the battle and recovered by the 604th Quartermaster Graves Registration Company in 1946.
In 2016, his remains were exhumed from the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific, Honolulu, by the DPAA.
“Laboratory analysis ant the totality of circumstantial evidence available” led to his identification on 23 August 2022.
Next Of Kin Address
Address of father, Mr. Isaac Garrison.
Location Of Loss
Garrison’s battalion landed on and fought in the vicinity of Beach Red 3.
He has since been buried at Arlington National Cemetery.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/history/2023/10/05/unidentified-marine-arlington-dna/