Robert Newell Smith
PFC Robert N. Smith served with Fox Company, Second Battalion, 8th Marines.
He was killed in action at Betio, Tarawa atoll, on 22 November 1943.
Branch
Marine Corps Regular
Service Number 320418
Current Status
Remains Not Recovered
Pursuit Category
This case is under Active Pursuit by the DPAA.
Capsule History
Pre-War Life
Birth
November 10, 1923
at Fort Collins, CO
Parents
Newell Wilkin Smith
Florence (Reeve) Smith
Education
Details unknown
Occupation & Employer
Details unknown
Service Life
Entered Service
September 16, 1941
at Denver, CO
Home Of Record
1210 Pine Street
Boulder, CO
Next Of Kin
Mother, Mrs. Florence E. Smith
Military Specialty
—
Primary Unit
F/2/8th Marines
Campaigns Served
Guadalcanal
Tarawa
Individual Decorations
Purple Heart
Additional Service Details
—
Loss And Burial
Circumstances Of Loss
PFC Robert Smith served with Fox Company, 8th Marines during the Guadalcanal campaign and in the battle for Tarawa.
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 Smith survived two days of hell on Betio, but lost his life on 22 November 1943. No specifics of his death are known; the official cause was listed as “gunshot wounds.”
Three Marines from Boulder’s Pine Street were listed as non-recoverable after the war: Smith, Private Henry R. Watkins, and Sergeant Donald D. Stoddard. Watkins died in the Solomon Islands; Smith and Stoddard were killed at Tarawa.
Burial Information or Disposition
None recorded; no identifiable remains recovered.
A memorial marker was erected in Cemetery 11, Plot 5, Row 2, Grave 4.
Next Of Kin Address
Address of mother, Mrs. Florence E. Smith
Location Of Loss
Smith’s battalion landed on and fought in the vicinity of Beach Red 3.