By Thomas W. Butler

What we in the USA refer to as a hurricane is known as a typhoon in the far east. In the Volcano Is­lands (Kazan Retto), of which Iwo Jima is a part. Oc­tober is the month of the most frequent occurrence of these major storms. 1945 was an exception.

Sometime in June, weather forecasts came to us at Fleet Radio Unit Pacific (FRUPAC) Iwo Jima, warn­ing of an impending “…force 10-11 typhoon with waves 20 to 30 feet high”. Early the next day signs of the coming blow were unmistakable. Several hours later we were in the throes of a very serious storm.

All of the SUN patrol ships and support vessels which had been anchored offshore of our beach on the southwest, windward side of the island had either put to sea or moved to the northeast, leeward side. The storm came out of the southwest from the South China Sea.

Our 16′ x 16′ pyramidal tent billeted four radiomen who were J.J. Killion, M.L. Leonard, R.P. (?) McGuinness and T.W. Butler.

During the height of the storm we struggled con­stantly to keep our tent from collapsing. The effort re­quired almost continuous pressure on the bowing cen­terpole to keep it supported in a vertical position. Those not holding the centerpole made frequent trips outside the tent to check on the sandbag windbreak which we had constructed…and to rehammer loosened tent pegs into the black beach sand. We had early on realized that standard issue 18 inch wooden tent pegs were not going to do the job in the kind of a storm we were experiencing. We had reinforced the anchoring of the tent with three foot long 2×4’s, sledgehammered deeply into the beach. We managed to keep things un­der tenuous control for a few hours, which wasn’t easy with gusting 60 mph winds hurling abrasive volcanic ash at us like the business end of a sandblaster. Eventually however we lost the battle and damned near lost the tent and its  entire contents.When the tent finally rose up and started to fly, ev­erything else went as well. Cots, clothes, seabags, lose floorboards, the crates we used a footlockers, every­thing. We ran after our things and salvaged what we could. We saved the collapsed tent by covering it with sand and weighting it with sandbags. Drenched to the skin, we retired to the Operations Quonset hut. Mother Nature had won another battle.

By the next day, the weather had quieted down. We looked around at the damage and only then realized what a major storm we had experienced. During the latter part of the invasion of Iwo Jima, the U.S. Navy had towed and deliberately sunk several concrete barges just offshore of the southwestern beach…about midway between our DAB-3 D/F and Mount Suribachi. These barges were strategically placed to make a small harbor, of sorts, to facilitate and protect the beaching and discharge of amphibious DUWK vehicles taking cargo from ocean transport vessels up onto the beach. Wave action and a pounding surf had taken sev­eral of these huge concrete barges and smashed them to pieces. Actually, we at FRUPAC were lucky the storm never quite reached the level of intensity that had been predicted. Aside from  Officer in Charge Bobeck’s pru­dent decision to temporarily shut town and practically dismantle the DAB-3 and DF-15 direction finders, our operation was uninterrupted.

It really was amazing we did not incur more damage, considering our extremely exposed position on the southwest beach. In hindsight, the choice of site for our FRUPAC station was a poor one, dictated, I as­sume by limitations of choice. The site had good signal reception but there wasn’t one structure on our station more than 15 feet above sea level and the DAB-3 D/F was closest to the sea and even lower than everything else! In that part of the Pacific, most bad weather comes out of the southwest. A very high tide, coupled with a strong southwesterly wind could have put the station in jeopardy at any time. Even considering the protection afforded by the substantial offshore reef, any kind of tidal wave from the west likely would have wiped out the station and qualified us as posthumous elements in some postwar archive of FRUPAC.

However, negative thoughts of that kind never en­tered our minds. Most of us were in our early 20s and, like all of that age, we were confident of our immor­tality.