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Theodore Pearson Meyer

Photo courtesy of Osbjorn Pearson.

Private Theodore P. “Ted” Meyer served with Queen Company, 4th Marine Raider Battalion.
He was killed in action at Vangunu Island, New Georgia, on 30 June – 1 July 1943.

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

Branch

Marine Corps Reserve
Service Number 466158

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

Current Status

Remains Not Recovered

Pursuit Category

This case is under Active Pursuit by the DPAA.

Capsule History

Pre-War Life

Birth

April 2, 1924
at Peoria, IL

Parents

Charles Theodore Meyer
Helen Elizabeth (Pearson) Meyer

Education

Prentice High School (1941)

Occupation & Employer

Bates-Rogers Construction Company

Service Life

Entered Service

September 21, 1942
at Chicago, IL

Home Of Record

Rural Route 1
Ogema, WI

Next Of Kin

Mother, Mrs. Helen Meyer

Military Specialty

Raider

Primary Unit

Q/4th Raider Battalion

Campaigns Served

New Georgia / Vangunu

Individual Decorations

Purple Heart

Additional Service Details

Loss And Burial

Circumstances Of Loss

Private Theodore Meyer served with Company Q, 4th Raider Battalion during the opening stages of the New Georgia campaign.

On 30 June 1943, two Raider companies (N and Q) landed at Olana Bay, Vangunu, under cover of darkness. Heavy seas and poor visibility fouled the operation; Raiders landed at scattered points along seven miles of coastline and had to race to catch up with 2/103rd Infantry, their partners for the operation. A tough march over rain-sodden trails and flooded streams brought the Americans to the banks of the Kaeruka River; here, they would pivot to the right and sweep towards the coast, trapping the resident Japanese garrison with their backs against the sea.

The attack jumped off at 1405 hours and met no opposition for about fifteen minutes. As Company Q reached a bend in the river, they began taking fire from Japanese soldiers hidden in trees and spider holes.

It was like a battle under water, with all the sounds muffled by the damp air, rotting trees, and squashy earth. In the green-colored light, objects were first dimmed, then bloated. Bullets whistled wetly through the air or buried themselves with hardly a sound in the porridge-like earth or in wood so rotten that men, clawing at it to pull themselves along, found it coming away in their hands like fungus. Explosions made plopping noises as the rain fell, sometimes dripping, sometimes pelting, with whispery sounds of water splashing into water. The only visible movement of animal life was the red-wattled, unwieldy carrion birds that came cautiously to the scene and fluttered away nervously from the burst of gunfire, but remained within sight of what they could claim as their harvest.

Soon, Company Q found its left flank threatened by positions on the far bank of the Kaeruka, and both Raider companies were ordered to cross over and deal with the stubborn defenders. Japanese fire increased as the Marines struggled down the slippery banks, and the two companies were soon separated from the Army and each other. Company Q sent out patrols into the jungle, hoping to regain contact with friendly forces while scouting the Japanese defenses.

Taking the point on a patrol through the jungle was an extraordinarily dangerous job – and on the afternoon of 30 June, Private Ted Meyer was in the lead. He was somewhere on the western bank of the Kaeruka River when a Japanese sniper shot him in the back. The bullet entered Meyer’s posterior thorax, causing fatal wounds.

Note: Most of the Marines who died at Vangunu were killed in action on the afternoon of 30 June 1943.
Their fates were officially recorded the following day, hence 1 July 1943 is their administrative date of death.
Burial Information or Disposition

The next morning, Marine and Army forces completed the capture of Kaeruka, Vura, and Wickham Anchorage. Taking this ground cost the lives of twelve Marine Raiders and ten soldiers of the 103rd Infantry. One hundred and twenty Japanese bodies were counted in the area.

With the enemy threat neutralized, the Americans turned their attention to burying the dead. Casualty records for the twelve fallen Marines include the same notation: “buried at Wickham Anchorage, Vangunu Island, Solomon Islands.” It is not clear if a temporary cemetery was established, or if men were buried in individual graves where they fell.

In early 1945, Graves Registration personnel visited Wickham Anchorage to look for field burials. At least six Marines and nine soldiers were relocated to the New Georgia Cemetery in March; later that year, they were moved again to Cemeteries #4 and #5 at Finschhafen, Papua New Guinea.


Private Meyer  may be among the dozens of Finschhafen remains still awaiting identification – or he may still lie on Vangunu in an isolated grave.

Next Of Kin Address

The Meyers lived on a rural route outside of Ogema.

Location Of Loss

Area of the 30 June – 1 July battle for Wickham Anchorage.

Related Profiles

Buried at Wickham Anchorage, but not accounted for.

Private Andrew H. Watson, 103rd Infantry, is also unaccounted for.

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