The Buckners of
Kentucky
by LtCol
H. Thomas Hayden, USMC(Ret)
Leading from the front results in the untimely death of the
Tenth Army commander on Okinawa.
The Buckner family has a long history and military tradition that predates
the Revolutionary War. The Buckner farm, known as Glen Lily,
is just outside Munfordville, KY. West Point graduate Simon Bolivar
Buckner, Sr. served in the Mexican War and later became the adjutant
general of the Kentucky state guard. After declining a commission of
brigadier in the Union Army he was appointed brigadier general in the
Confederate Army. He was left by two senior generals to surrender to
BG Ulysses S. Grant, Union Army, at Fort Donelson but was later exchanged
for a Union general. He led a division in Braxton Braggs invasion
of Kentucky and fought with distinction at Perryville. He commanded
a corps at Chickamauga, but due to Braggs incompetence, the Confederates
were forced to give up early gains and withdraw from the battlefield.
Had Buckner or Nathan Bedford Forrest been in command in the west, the
War Between the States might have been extended or have had a different
ending. He later became the governor of Kentucky and was an unsuccessful
candidate for Vice President on the Gold Democrats ticket.
LTG Simon Bolivar Buckner, Jr., USA, also graduated from West Point
and was a distinguished student from the Army Command and
General Staff College in 1925. He later served as Commandant of the
U.S. Military Academy at West Point. In the early days of World War
II, Buckner, Jr. directed operations against the Japanese forces on
the Aleutian Islands, Alaska. In 1945 LTG Buckner, Jr. was given command
of the newly formed Tenth Army with the task of invading Okinawaofficially
called Operation ICEBERG. During the fighting
he repeatedly exposed himself to danger by touring the frontlines and
encouraging his men. His dogged determination prompted his soldiers
to nickname him The Bull.
The invasion forces of Okinawa included the Northern Landing Force of
III Amphibious Corps, commanded by MajGen Roy Geiger, with 1st and 6th
Marine Divisions (1st and 6th MarDivs). The Southern Landing Force was
the XXIV U.S. Army Corps, under MG John Hodge, with the 7th, 77th, and
96th Divisions. The 2d MarDiv made a demonstration against the island.
The official count for the invasion was 1,600 ships, 182,112 men (of
whom 81,165 were Marines), and 12,000 aircraft in the Tenth Army. L-Day
was 1 April 1945, which was both April Fools Day and Easter.
On 4 June the 1st MarDiv, under MajGen Pedro del Valle, with the 22d
Marines (22d Mar) attacking up the Oroku Peninsula and the 4th Mar making
a shore-to-shore landing, followed by the 29th Mar, formed a vise against
the final remnants of organized Japanese resistance. The 8th Mar was
later brought ashore to join the fight.
On 18 June 1945, LTG Simon Bolivar Buckner, Jr. came to the front to
visit the 8th Mar command post (CP), which was located on the reverse
slope of a ridge overlooking the Japanese forces. LTG Buckner talked
with those present at the regimental CP. The presence of the Tenth Army
commander at the front had to be a boost to morale. Buckner wanted to
visit the regimental forward observation post. Col William J. Wallace,
the 8th Mar commanding officer, and members of his staff were already
at the position when LTG Buckners party arrived. Marines on the
frontlines radioed back that they could see the three stars on the helmet
of the distinguished visitor on the ridge. Without any warning of incoming,
a Japanese artillery shell landed on a coral rock outcropping next to
LTG Buckner. The general took the full brunt of the explosion with shell
and coral fragments in his chest. Col Wallace and two others were knocked
down but uninjured.
Just 4 days prior to the final victory on Okinawa, LTG Simon Bolivar
Buckner, Jr. became the most senior general officer to die in the Pacific
theater. There were 12,520 Americans killed at Okinawa, and 33,000 more
were wounded. The battle brought the greatest losses in the history
of the U.S. Navy36 ships sunk, 368 hit, and over 5,000 sailors
killed. During this time the Nation also lost its Commander in Chief,
President Franklin D. Roosevelt, who died in Georgia on 12 April 1945.
Driving past Naha toward the southern tip of Okinawa, one finds a small
dirt trail that leads to the top of Mezado Ridge. The Japanese have
erected a tombstone-like marker that is mostly in Japanese, but one
can unmistakably read the word Buckner. In 1954 Congress posthumously
promoted Buckner to the rank of general.
>LtCol Hayden is a frequent contributor to MCG. He is
a relative of the Buckner clan, and his mothers maiden name is
Buckner.
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