Lynn Hughes Osborn

Sergeant Lynn H. Osborn served with Able Company, First Battalion, 8th Marines.
He was reported missing in action at Betio, Tarawa atoll, on 21 November 1943.
Branch
Marine Corps Regular
Service Number 311218
Current Status
Remains Not Recovered
Pursuit Category
This case is under Active Pursuit by the DPAA.
Capsule History
Pre-War Life
Birth
October 15, 1922
at Eureka, UT
On USMC records. May have been born 1923 (family cenotaph) or 1924 (contemporary newspapers).
Parents
John Hughes Osborn (d. 1932)
Daisy Matilda (Pinterella) Osborn
Education
Tintic High School (1941)
Occupation & Employer
Enlisted immediately after graduating high school.
Service Life
Entered Service
June 19, 1941
at Salt Lake City, UT
Home Of Record
Eureka, UT
Next Of Kin
Mother, Mrs. Daisy Osborn
Military Specialty
—
Primary Unit
A/1/8th Marines
Campaigns Served
Guadalcanal
Tarawa
Individual Decorations
Purple Heart
Additional Service Details
—
Loss And Burial
Circumstances Of Loss
Sergeant Lynn Osborn served with Company A, First Battalion, 8th Marines in the Solomon Islands campaign and in the battle for Tarawa.
At midday on 20 November 1943, BLT 1-8 climbed over the sides of their transport ships and boarded LCVPs in Tarawa lagoon. They anticipated imminent landing orders, but due to the desperate situation on the beach were held offshore in their little boats, bobbing in the waves for the rest of the day and a very long night. Early on 21 November, the battalion was ordered to land on Betio’s Beach Red 2.
At 0615, the first waves of 1-8 rushed down the ramps and into the breaking surf on a coral reef some 500 yards from shore. Although friendly troops held the water’s edge, they “immediately came under heavy machine gun fire from both flanks.” The battalion was decimated on the long walk to shore. An action report penned by the 8th Marines noted that “many of the casualties resulted from drowning, due to the heavy packs and equipment men attempted to take across the submerged fringing reef.”
Sergeant Osborn was last seen alive during the landing operation. He was initially reported as wounded and evacuated; this error was quickly caught, but not before his mother received a telegram to that effect. Daisy Osborn would receive two more official notifications – first that Lynn was missing, and then finally that he had been killed in action – within the span of three months.
Burial Information or Disposition
None recorded; reported as missing in action.
A memorial marker was erected in Cemetery 33, Plot 14, Row 2, Grave 10.
Next Of Kin Address
Wartime address of mother, Mrs. Daisy Osborn.
Location Of Loss
Sergeant Osborn’s battalion landed in the vicinity of Beach Red 2, Betio.