Thomas Holcomb and the Advent of the Marine Corps Defense Battalion: 1936-1941 - Albert Thayer Mahan, Marine Corps Base Defense Mission, The ORANGE Plan and the Japanese Threat

Nonfiction, History, Military, United States
Cover of the book Thomas Holcomb and the Advent of the Marine Corps Defense Battalion: 1936-1941 - Albert Thayer Mahan, Marine Corps Base Defense Mission, The ORANGE Plan and the Japanese Threat by Progressive Management, Progressive Management
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Progressive Management ISBN: 9781301340446
Publisher: Progressive Management Publication: January 4, 2013
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Progressive Management
ISBN: 9781301340446
Publisher: Progressive Management
Publication: January 4, 2013
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

Often historical events are recorded with the benefit of perfect hindsight. That is, the way events end are often considered to have been the way they begun. David J. Ulbrich examined a portion of the Commandancy of Lieutenant General Thomas Holcomb from 1936 to 1943 to illustrate this. When Holcomb took over the Marine Corps it numbered 17,239 officers and men. The Fleet Marine Force consisted of two brigades of 1,500 men, with no heavy artillery or armor, and about nine squadrons of aircraft. When Holcomb left, the Corps had expanded to 309,559 men and women, with four amphibious divisions, 15 independent battalions, and four aircraft wings. When the war ended in 1945, 485,053 Marines staffed six divisions and five aircraft wings. This exceeded the vision and planning that started the conflict and provided the foundation for today's Marine Corps and its place in the defense establishment.

Thomas Holcomb and the Advent of the Marine Corps Defense Battalions, 1936-1941 examines what General Holcomb had to begin with in this expansion and how he administered and managed the largest Marine Corps increase. Defense Battalions serve as the case study for this examination as they occupied a significant place in the strategic priorities of Holcomb and the Marine Corps during the pre-war era. It is Mr. Ulbrich's contention that Holcomb, more than any other Marine, guided the Corps' World War II mobilization and then directed its participation during that conflict. He functioned as a leader, manager, pub heist, and strategist Holcomb, Ulbrich notes, deserves much credit for forging the modern seaborne service that helped defeat Japan in the Pacific and later distinguished itself during the Cold War.

Introduction * Chapter 1 * Advanced Base Theory To Reality, 1898-1939 * Introduction * Selling Base Defense Theory To The Corps And The Navy * Advanced Base Defense Theory Takes Shape * World War I Impact On The Corps And Base Defense * Strategic And Fiscal Ramifications Of World War I * The "Orange" Plan And Its Significance For The Corps * The Great Depression * Effects Of The 1932 Election On The Corps * Formation Of The Fleet Marine Force * Holcomb's Appointment As Major General Commandant * Relations With The Public And Congress * Culmination Of Base Defense Theory: The Defense Battalion * Conclusion * Chapter 2 * The Turning Point, 1939-1940 * Introduction * Frugality In The Corps During The 1930s * International Tensions And Creation Of The Rainbow Plans * Bureaucratic And Fiscal Problems * Expansion Fostered By Outbreak Of World War Ii * Marine Reactions To War * More Expansion * Holcomb's Management Style * Growing Pains * War In Europe Worsens * Ramifications For Defense Battalions * The 1940 Election And The Shift In Public Opinion * Conclusion * Chapter 3 * The Race For Preparedness, 1941 * Introduction * New War Plans Affect The Corps * Equipment And Personnel Inadequacies * Meeting The Challenges * Publicity And Recruitment * Development Of Defense Battalions, January To July 1941 * Barbarossa's Ramifications For The Corps * "Are We Ready"-Iii * Evidence Of The Defense Battalion's Significance * Lack Of Readiness In November And December, 1941 * Conclusion * Conclusion And Epilogue * Appendix 1 * Commandants Of The Marine Corps 1891-1947 * Appendix 2 * Strength Of The Marine Corps 1895-1945 * Appendix 3 * Expenditures By The Marine Corps, 1933-1943 * Appendix 4 * Rainbow Plans * Appendix 5 * Marine Distribution Effective 30 November 1941 * Bibliography * Primary Sources * Secondary Sources * Notes

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Often historical events are recorded with the benefit of perfect hindsight. That is, the way events end are often considered to have been the way they begun. David J. Ulbrich examined a portion of the Commandancy of Lieutenant General Thomas Holcomb from 1936 to 1943 to illustrate this. When Holcomb took over the Marine Corps it numbered 17,239 officers and men. The Fleet Marine Force consisted of two brigades of 1,500 men, with no heavy artillery or armor, and about nine squadrons of aircraft. When Holcomb left, the Corps had expanded to 309,559 men and women, with four amphibious divisions, 15 independent battalions, and four aircraft wings. When the war ended in 1945, 485,053 Marines staffed six divisions and five aircraft wings. This exceeded the vision and planning that started the conflict and provided the foundation for today's Marine Corps and its place in the defense establishment.

Thomas Holcomb and the Advent of the Marine Corps Defense Battalions, 1936-1941 examines what General Holcomb had to begin with in this expansion and how he administered and managed the largest Marine Corps increase. Defense Battalions serve as the case study for this examination as they occupied a significant place in the strategic priorities of Holcomb and the Marine Corps during the pre-war era. It is Mr. Ulbrich's contention that Holcomb, more than any other Marine, guided the Corps' World War II mobilization and then directed its participation during that conflict. He functioned as a leader, manager, pub heist, and strategist Holcomb, Ulbrich notes, deserves much credit for forging the modern seaborne service that helped defeat Japan in the Pacific and later distinguished itself during the Cold War.

Introduction * Chapter 1 * Advanced Base Theory To Reality, 1898-1939 * Introduction * Selling Base Defense Theory To The Corps And The Navy * Advanced Base Defense Theory Takes Shape * World War I Impact On The Corps And Base Defense * Strategic And Fiscal Ramifications Of World War I * The "Orange" Plan And Its Significance For The Corps * The Great Depression * Effects Of The 1932 Election On The Corps * Formation Of The Fleet Marine Force * Holcomb's Appointment As Major General Commandant * Relations With The Public And Congress * Culmination Of Base Defense Theory: The Defense Battalion * Conclusion * Chapter 2 * The Turning Point, 1939-1940 * Introduction * Frugality In The Corps During The 1930s * International Tensions And Creation Of The Rainbow Plans * Bureaucratic And Fiscal Problems * Expansion Fostered By Outbreak Of World War Ii * Marine Reactions To War * More Expansion * Holcomb's Management Style * Growing Pains * War In Europe Worsens * Ramifications For Defense Battalions * The 1940 Election And The Shift In Public Opinion * Conclusion * Chapter 3 * The Race For Preparedness, 1941 * Introduction * New War Plans Affect The Corps * Equipment And Personnel Inadequacies * Meeting The Challenges * Publicity And Recruitment * Development Of Defense Battalions, January To July 1941 * Barbarossa's Ramifications For The Corps * "Are We Ready"-Iii * Evidence Of The Defense Battalion's Significance * Lack Of Readiness In November And December, 1941 * Conclusion * Conclusion And Epilogue * Appendix 1 * Commandants Of The Marine Corps 1891-1947 * Appendix 2 * Strength Of The Marine Corps 1895-1945 * Appendix 3 * Expenditures By The Marine Corps, 1933-1943 * Appendix 4 * Rainbow Plans * Appendix 5 * Marine Distribution Effective 30 November 1941 * Bibliography * Primary Sources * Secondary Sources * Notes

More books from Progressive Management

Cover of the book National Security Crisis Decision-Making: The Role of the Regional Combatant Commander - Cuban Missile Crisis, Schwarzkopf Desert Storm, Wesley Clark Allied Force, Tommy Franks Enduring Freedom by Progressive Management
Cover of the book 21st Century U.S. Military Manuals: Operations in a Low-Intensity Conflict Field Manual - FM 7-98 (Value-Added Professional Format Series) by Progressive Management
Cover of the book Confronting the Ghost of Stalin: Euro-Atlantic Efforts to Secure Georgia - NATO Enlargement, Russia and Putin, Caucasian Legacy, Transcaucasus, Abkhazia, South Ossetia, Pankisi Gorge, Tsitelubani by Progressive Management
Cover of the book United States Postal Service: A Sustainable Path Forward - 2018 Task Force on the USPS Report: Universal Service Obligation, International Models, Mail and Package Markets, Long-term Liabilities by Progressive Management
Cover of the book U.S. Special Operations Command Factbook 2012 (USSOCOM) - Aircraft, Weapons, Maritime and Ground Inventory, SOF Truths, Acronyms by Progressive Management
Cover of the book Military Housing and Facilities for American Servicewomen: The Built Environment of Cold War Era Servicewomen - Oveta Culp Hobby, Director of the Women's Army Auxiliary Corps by Progressive Management
Cover of the book The U.S. Air Force's First War: Korea 1950-1953 Significant Events - The Korean War, First All-Jet Air Battle, New Weapons Systems, New Tactics by Progressive Management
Cover of the book Village Stability Operations (VSO) in Afghanistan: Comparing Past Counterinsurgencies for Future Applications - Special Operations COIN, Philippine War, Malayan Emergency, Taliban, Karzai by Progressive Management
Cover of the book Southeast Asia: ISIS's Next Front - Islamic State Foreign Terrorist Fighters (FTFs) Establishing Networks in Philippines, Indonesia, and Malaysia, Ways to Detect and Improve Key Vulnerabilities by Progressive Management
Cover of the book Combating Daesh: A Socially Unconventional Strategy - Alternative Perspective on the Islamic State, ISIS, ISIL, Unconventional Warfare, Human Domain Mapping, Iraqi Baath Party and Republican Guard by Progressive Management
Cover of the book The Group That Calls Itself a State: Understanding the Evolution and Challenges of the Islamic State - ISIS, ISIL, Islamic Terrorism, Parting Ways with al-Qaida, Military, Foreign Fighter Threat by Progressive Management
Cover of the book 2014 U.S. Intelligence Community Worldwide Threat Assessment: Clapper Testimony: Cyber Threats, Iran, Nuclear Weapons, Terrorism, al-Qaida, Jihad, WMD, North Korea, Syria, Afghanistan by Progressive Management
Cover of the book Unmanned Systems Integrated Roadmap FY 2011-2036: Updated Multi-Service Vision for Development, Fielding, Employment of Unmanned Aerial and Ground Systems, UAS, UAV, Drones, Autonomy, Airspace by Progressive Management
Cover of the book United States' Grand Strategy Through the Lens of Lebanon in 1983 and Iraq in 2003: von Clausewitz, Walter Russell Mead, Eliot Cohen, Case Studies, Sabra and Shatila, Neocons, Rumsfeld, Powell by Progressive Management
Cover of the book Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) and Joseph Kony: American Efforts to Counter the LRA in Central Africa, Uganda, Central African Republic (CAR), Congo, and South Sudan by Progressive Management
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy