Analysis Of The Guadalcanal Diary By Richard Williams Tregaskis

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Guadalcanal Diary was written by Richard Williams Tregaskis in 1943, in extreme detail, after he first-hand experienced the struggle for survival at Guadalcanal in the Solomon Islands during World War II. Just a year prior for three months he was working as one of the only two combat correspondents representing the International News Service at the Solomon Islands. Richard Tregaskis obtained his education through very prestigious higher education seeking schools like the elementary Pingry School in Elizabeth, New Jersey and the college preparation Peddie High School in Hightstown, New Jersey before he obtained a bachelor degree at Harvard University. Despite Guadalcanal Diary being just that a diary of entries I feel the deep meaning it conveys …show more content…

This helmet of his is on display at the National Museum of the Marine Corps. The Guadalcanal Diary helped fully show me how hellish it is to fight in a war and especially be the first line to attack the enemy as well setup functioning bases for future troops. The book begins with the first chapter showing how nice the boats were and the excellent accommodations that were supplied to the marines on their way to make the first offensive push against the Japanese, but quickly the happiness and comfort slowly dies as they settle into the island then drastically changes into the extreme discomfort, constant worrying, and pain that the Marines experienced for three months. In which they endured until the army arrived so that the Marines could leave to rest and recover from the hell of …show more content…

All of this allows me to see why this book was and still is considered an essential reading by present-day U.S. military personnel due to it’s great representation of the struggles of war and great experience it can give someone just by reading it from the number of personal challenges that began as daunting and how they were overcome and now can be an easier experience for the future troops to learn from by reading his experience. It especially could be useful for the future troops who despite having inside knowledge of what they are coming into or if they possess a map of the enemy they still must face the great struggles of invading land already that is already occupied and set up by the enemy to gain to lead others by reflecting from the struggles that the Marines faced in the past brilliantly recorded and retold by Richard

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