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Price: $34.95 Go For Broke "These are some of the best goddam fighters in the U.S. Army. If you have more, send them over." ceneral mark w. clark This is the battle story of the 100th Infantry Battalion and the 442d Regimental Combat Team in World War II as told by the veterans themselves. It includes over 240 photographs, 9 military maps, and a 40,000 word narrative. The 100/442d Regimental Combat Team was composed almost entirely of volunteers" who were Americans of Japanese ancestry? Xs~~part of the Allies' Southern Group o\ Armies under the command of General Jacob L. Devers, the Combat Team fought in seven campaigns in two countries. They made two beachhead assaults, captured a submarine and opened the gates of Dachau. They fought the toughest troops the Nazis could throw at them — battle-wise veterans of the Afrika Korps, SS Troops, Panzer brigades, and Soldaten from the Hermann Goering Division and the Machine Gun Battalion Kesselring. Fighting together with the great combat divisions of the 5th and 7th Armies, the 100/442d hammered the Nazis back — up the boot of Italy and through the Vosges Forest in France. At maximum strength, the 100/442d numbered 4.500 men, yet they earned over? 1^000 individual decorations, including Q4A6 PurplP HP*rK *pd U™ Bronze Starsu During 20 days of all-out fighting in France, the Combat Team earned five Presidential Unij: Citation,*; — an unparalleled achievement in military annals. It is little wonder that the 100/442d earned the distinction of being "the most decorated Hni* in United States military history^ • .". This is their magnificent and inspiring story in their own words and pictures. 'They were superb: the men of the 100/442d took terrific casualties. They showed rare courage and tremendous fighting spirit ... everybody wanted them." CEORGE C. MARSHALL, CENERAL OF THE ARMY About the Author Chester Tanaka was born in 1919 in St. Louis, Missouri, where his parents, Haru and Jean Tanaka, ran a small restaurant. In the fall of 1943 he volunteered for the Army, and served with Company K, 3d Battalion, 442d Regimental Combat Team. Tanaka was one of the few men in the Combat Team to make it through all five of their campaigns. He received the Presidential Unit Citation with Oak Leaf Cluster, the Bronze Star, and the Purple Heart with Oak Leaf Cluster. In October 1944, during the rescue of the "Lost Battalion," K Company dropped from 187 riflemen to 17 and suffered one of the heaviest casualty rates of any company in the war. With all officers killed or wounded, Sgt Tanaka assumed temporary command of K Company and was one of the first to contact the "Lost Battalion." He is one of the luckiest men I have known and is uniquely qualified to write this American regimental history. In Italy, when he wasn't on the line fighting, he helped produce the first history of the regiment, 442d Combat Team. Now, in retrospect, he tells how the 100th Infantry Battalion and the442d Regimental Combat Team originated, how they trained, how they fought, and today, what they have won. Chet Tanaka lives in Oakland, California, with his wife, Masako, and has three grown children. A book and magazine designer for 35 years, he is now the owner of Ed Art Studios in San Francisco and has produced many educational and technical publications. Chet Tanaka not only wrote and edited the manuscript of Go For Broke, but also designed, produced, and supervised the printing of this magnificent volume. This book is truly a labor of love and we are all the richer for the way he, as one of the combat veterans, has captured the thoughts, memories, and perceptions of the men of the 100th and the 442d. ERIC SAUL, CURATOR PRESIDIO ARMY MUSEUM SAN FRANCISCO
Object Description
Title | Go For Broke |
Date Created | Unknown |
Description | A collection of images and articles about Japenese Americans in World War II. |
Subjects | World War II -- Military service -- 442nd Regimental Combat Team |
Type | image |
Genre | Miscellaneous Documents |
Language | eng |
Source Description | 3 items |
Collection | Hirasuna Family Papers |
Project Name | California State University Japanese American Digitization Project |
Rights | Rights not yet transferred |
Description
Local ID | csufr_hfp_0330 |
Project ID | csufr_hfp_0330 |
Title | Go For Broke / About The Author |
Creator | Marshall,George C. / Saul, Eric: authors |
Date Created | Unknown |
Subjects | World War II -- Military service -- 442nd Regimental Combat Team |
Type | image |
Genre | Miscellaneous Documents |
Language | eng |
Source Description | 8.42 x 10.88in |
Collection | Hirasuna Family Papers |
Rights | Rights not yet transferred |
Transcript | Price: $34.95 Go For Broke "These are some of the best goddam fighters in the U.S. Army. If you have more, send them over." ceneral mark w. clark This is the battle story of the 100th Infantry Battalion and the 442d Regimental Combat Team in World War II as told by the veterans themselves. It includes over 240 photographs, 9 military maps, and a 40,000 word narrative. The 100/442d Regimental Combat Team was composed almost entirely of volunteers" who were Americans of Japanese ancestry? Xs~~part of the Allies' Southern Group o\ Armies under the command of General Jacob L. Devers, the Combat Team fought in seven campaigns in two countries. They made two beachhead assaults, captured a submarine and opened the gates of Dachau. They fought the toughest troops the Nazis could throw at them — battle-wise veterans of the Afrika Korps, SS Troops, Panzer brigades, and Soldaten from the Hermann Goering Division and the Machine Gun Battalion Kesselring. Fighting together with the great combat divisions of the 5th and 7th Armies, the 100/442d hammered the Nazis back — up the boot of Italy and through the Vosges Forest in France. At maximum strength, the 100/442d numbered 4.500 men, yet they earned over? 1^000 individual decorations, including Q4A6 PurplP HP*rK *pd U™ Bronze Starsu During 20 days of all-out fighting in France, the Combat Team earned five Presidential Unij: Citation,*; — an unparalleled achievement in military annals. It is little wonder that the 100/442d earned the distinction of being "the most decorated Hni* in United States military history^ • .". This is their magnificent and inspiring story in their own words and pictures. 'They were superb: the men of the 100/442d took terrific casualties. They showed rare courage and tremendous fighting spirit ... everybody wanted them." CEORGE C. MARSHALL, CENERAL OF THE ARMY About the Author Chester Tanaka was born in 1919 in St. Louis, Missouri, where his parents, Haru and Jean Tanaka, ran a small restaurant. In the fall of 1943 he volunteered for the Army, and served with Company K, 3d Battalion, 442d Regimental Combat Team. Tanaka was one of the few men in the Combat Team to make it through all five of their campaigns. He received the Presidential Unit Citation with Oak Leaf Cluster, the Bronze Star, and the Purple Heart with Oak Leaf Cluster. In October 1944, during the rescue of the "Lost Battalion," K Company dropped from 187 riflemen to 17 and suffered one of the heaviest casualty rates of any company in the war. With all officers killed or wounded, Sgt Tanaka assumed temporary command of K Company and was one of the first to contact the "Lost Battalion." He is one of the luckiest men I have known and is uniquely qualified to write this American regimental history. In Italy, when he wasn't on the line fighting, he helped produce the first history of the regiment, 442d Combat Team. Now, in retrospect, he tells how the 100th Infantry Battalion and the442d Regimental Combat Team originated, how they trained, how they fought, and today, what they have won. Chet Tanaka lives in Oakland, California, with his wife, Masako, and has three grown children. A book and magazine designer for 35 years, he is now the owner of Ed Art Studios in San Francisco and has produced many educational and technical publications. Chet Tanaka not only wrote and edited the manuscript of Go For Broke, but also designed, produced, and supervised the printing of this magnificent volume. This book is truly a labor of love and we are all the richer for the way he, as one of the combat veterans, has captured the thoughts, memories, and perceptions of the men of the 100th and the 442d. ERIC SAUL, CURATOR PRESIDIO ARMY MUSEUM SAN FRANCISCO |