Last Chaplain on Iwo Jima Dies

Last Chaplain on Iwo Jima Dies

In the bloodiest days of Iwo Jima , he spoke the last words over  fallen Marines and Navy corpsmen as they were buried in the  island’s black sand. On 20 May 2010, Marines, sailors and  soldiers returned the favor to the late Rev. E. Gage  Hotaling of Agawam MA, sending the old  Navy chaplain on to join his comrades with military  honors.

Hotaling was the last surviving  chaplain who served ashore with the Marines at Iwo . He  joined the Chaplain Corps at age 28 in 1944 because he didn't  feel he could preach to the WW II generation unless he knew  what they had endured, so he found himself with the 4th Marine  Division on Iwo Jima. Some of his experiences on Iwo Jima are included in the book,  “Flags of Our Fathers,” which tells the stories of the men who  raised the American flag during the battle of February  1945.

Rev. Hotaling's first sermon was  delivered at a Manton, Rhode Island church on  November 19, 1933. At that time the country was in the depths  of the Great Depression. Rev. Hotaling was 17 years old and  had promised his father, who was dying of cancer, that he  would carry on the work of  ministry.
 
Hotaling, 94, died Sunday 16 May  2010 in a Springfield hospital, 65  years after the iconic battle for the Pacific island. In a  2007 documentary, he talked about the grim task he faced as  Marines fell in bitter combat against the dug-in Japanese  enemy. Of the 6,821 Americans killed, Hotaling believed he  buried about 1,800.
 
“We would have four Marines with a  flag over each grave. And while they were kneeling with the  flag, I would stand up and I would give the committal words  for each one,” he told the  filmmakers.

 He said he took up smoking to overcome  the stench of decay.

 “I did it not as a Protestant,  Catholic or a Jew, but as a Marine,” the Baptist minister  said. “Every man was buried as a Marine. And so I gave the  same committal to each one.”

 A Marine Corps honor guard stood by as  family members and other veterans paid their respects  yesterday at Massachusetts Veterans’ Memorial Cemetery in Agawam  .

 “He was a man of God, a man who  comforted people and a shepard to his flock,” said son Kerry,  57, of Ludlow . “He brought comfort  to the fighting Marines who were on the  island.”
 
Thanks should go to Massachusetts  State Trooper Mike Cutone, an Army vet, who was on a prisoner  watch at Mercy Hospital when he learned  from an old Marine that Hotaling was dying down the hall.  Cutone made some calls and saw to it Hotaling was attended at  his bedside by Marines in dress blues in his last days, just  as he had tended to them in theirs in dirty, bloodstained  dungarees.
 
 "Some people  live an entire lifetime and wonder if they have made a difference in  the world. Marines don't have that problem." President Ronald Reagan  , 1985  

Semper Fidelis,
Gerald T.  Pothier
Capt. USMC  (Ret)
1951-1988
Mustang

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