Paul Owen Gunter
Private Paul O. Gunter served with King Company, Third Battalion, 5th Marines.
He was killed in action near Point Cruz, Guadalcanal, on 3 November 1942.
Branch
Marine Corps Regular
Service Number 354019
Current Status
Remains Not Recovered.
Pursuit Category
The DPAA has not publicized this information.
Capsule History
Pre-War Life
Birth
September 22, 1919
at Judson, NC
Parents
Commodore Columbus Gunter
Parma (Crisp) Gunter (d. 1920)
Education
Grammar school
Occupation & Employer
Farm worker
Charles Miller farm, Madisonville, TN
Service Life
Entered Service
February 9, 1942
at Nashville, TN
Home Of Record
Etowah, TN
Next Of Kin
Brother, Mr. Noel R.Gunter
Military Specialty
—
Primary Unit
K/3/5th Marines
Campaigns Served
Solomon Islands / Guadalcanal
Individual Decorations
Purple Heart
Additional Service Details
—
Loss And Burial
Circumstances Of Loss
The third day of November 1942 marked the third day of a combined Marine-Army push to the west along Guadalcanal’s northern coast. Ambitious planners hoped to seize the Japanese base at Kokumbona, but an unexpectedly fierce defense by the Imperial Army’s 4th and 124 Infantry Regiments inflicted heavy casualties and stunted progress. The 5th Marines faced an especially tough challenge from Colonel Nomasu Nakaguma’s 4th Infantry entrenched around the base of Point Cruz. Two days of fierce fighting, including an unusual American bayonet charge, finally trapped the surviving Japanese infantry in a constricted pocket west of the Point.
The task of eliminating the final resistance fell to the Second Battalion, 5th Marines, with support from the Third Battalion. Item and King Companies weathered a Japanese bayonet charge at 0630 hours. Between 0800 and noon, the Americans inexorably advanced, compressing the defenders in an ever-shrinking perimeter. The fighting grew desperate and personal at close quarters, with both sides using bayonets as well as bullets. Second Lieutenant Paul Moore (F/2/5) recalled that “The skirmishers went on down to the beach and wound up in a bayonet fight with the Japanese, whom they finally pushed back into the sea. Others were killed. There was a terrible slaughter of Japanese and the battle was finally concluded.”
In his memoir Hell In The Pacific: A Marine Rifleman’s Journey from Guadalcanal to Peleliu, Sergeant Jim McEnery (K/3/5) related a hand-to-hand fight at the climax of the action. “Right before we jumped off, I heard [Bill] Landrum tell the Marine next to him, ‘Just give your soul to the Lord, and let’s go!’ We went right through the ditch where the main Jap line had been, but it had already fallen to pieces….I saw Japs blowing themselves up with grenades and others running like so many scared rabbits.”
The killing was not all one way.
I saw two or three Marines I knew get hit and fall, but that wasn't nearly enough to slow down the momentum of the charge. I recognized one of them as Bill Landrum, and I tried to block it out of my mind. Another guy I knew, Private Paul Gunter, was killed about the same time, although I didn't see it happen. Gunter was another one of those kid Marines, maybe 18 years old.
Paul Moore, Jr. F/2/5, Pacific War Remembered, An Oral History Collection ed. John T. Mason, Jr.
Private Paul Gunter was stabbed through the chest by a Japanese bayonet while clearing out the last few defenders of the ravine. Shortly after the fight, the 5th Marines were recalled to the east bank of the Mananikau River – evidently before they could recover their dead. Gunter was one of four King Company Marines killed in action on 3 November; only Bill Landrum, who died of wounds at the Division field hospital, was ever identified.
Note: Item and King Companies executed a bayonet attack against Point Cruz on 2 November 1942, led by Lieutenant Charles J. Kimmel and Captain Erskine Wells. This is regarded as “the only authenticated US bayonet charge of the operation” by historian John Zimmerman’s official Marine Corps monograph of Guadalcanal. King Company veteran’s accounts (like McEnery’s) appear to combine this event with the hand-to-hand fighting on 3 November. The casualties McEnery mentions by name – Landrum, Gunter, and DeLong – all lost their lives on the latter date.
Burial Information or Disposition
Gunter’s Marine Corps casualty card notes that he was “buried on field of action,” but no further specifics are known.
Memorials
Next Of Kin Address
Address of brother, Mr. Noel Gunter.
Location Of Loss
Gunter was killed in action near Point Cruz, Guadalcanal.