World War II in the Pacific
Grant Phillipp, Kelvyn Park High School, Chicago
a nd Illinois State University
Focus
This lesson is part of a unit on World War II and follows lessons
about Pearl Harbor and the end of the war in Europe. Students will
interpret excerpts from a primary source document and organize information
about key battles in the Pacific in a graphic organizer. This lesson
also serves as a bridge to a discussion about the decision to use
atomic weapons against Japan.
Vital Theme and Narrative
Conflict and cooperation.
Habit of Mind
Perceive past events and issues as they were experienced by people
at the time, to develop historical empathy as opposed to present-mindedness.
Objectives
1) Read and interpret a first-hand account from an American soldier
fighting in the Pacific campaign.
2) Working cooperatively, create a graphic organizer with information
about key battles in the Pacific campaign.
3) Predict the likely outcome of an American invasion of Japan.
Procedure
Introduction
Have students read excerpt from With the Old Breed at Peleliu and
Okinawa by E.B. Sledge. Ask students what this excerpt tells them
about the war in the Pacific.
Activity
Direct students to make a chart in their notebooks with the title
War in the Pacific and five columns: Battle, Date(s), Victor, Casualties,
and Significance. Divide class into six groups for jigsaw activity.
Assign each group a major Pacific War battle (Coral Sea, Midway,
Guadalcanal, Leyte Gulf, Iwo Jima, Okinawa). Have each group use
their textbooks to find information about their battle, then jigsaw
the groups.
Assessment
Respond to the following writing prompt:
Based on your knowledge of the war in the Pacific, predict what
an American invasion of Japan would be like. Make your prediction
in the form of a letter to the new president, Harry Truman, describing
the war so far and explaining to him what an invasion of Japan would
be like.
Grant Phillipp
The War in the Pacific: One Soldier's Account
Under my first barrage since the fast-moving events of hitting
the beach, I learned a new sensation: utter and absolute helplessness.
The shelling lifted in about half an hour, although it seemed to
me to have crashed on for hours. Time had no meaning to me …Orders
then came to move out and I got up, covered by a layer of coral
dust. I felt like jelly and couldn't believe any of us had survived
that barrage (63).
The sun bore down unmercifully, and the heat was exhausting. Smoke
and dust from the barrage limited my vision. The ground seemed to
sway back and forth under the concussions. I felt as though I were
floating along in the vortex of some unreal thunderstorms. Japanese
bullets snapped and cracked, and tracers went by me on both sides
at waist height. This deadly small-arms fire seemed almost insignificant
amid the erupting shells. Explosions and the hum and the growl of
shell fragments shredded the air. Chunks of blasted coral stung
my face and hands while steel fragments spattered down on the hard
rock like hail on a city street. Everywhere shells flashed like
giant firecrackers (79).
Even the stoic Japanese couldn't suppress the agony of death by
fire and suffocation. But they were no more likely to surrender
to us than we would have been to them had we ever been confronted
with the possibility of surrender. In fighting the Japanese, surrender
was not one of our options (118).
Total American casualties were 7,613 killed and missing and 31,
807 wounded in action …Japanese casualty figures are hazy.
However, 107,539 enemy dead were counted on Okinawa. Approximately
10,000 enemy troops surrendered, and about 20,000 were either sealed
in caves or buried by the Japanese themselves. Even lacking an exact
accounting, in the final analysis the enemy garrison was, with rare
exceptions, annihilated (311-312).
Sledge, E.B. With the Old Breed at Peleliu and Okinawa. Oxford:
Oxford UP, 1981.
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