Enrolled June 26, 2019 Passed IN Senate May 06, 2019 Passed IN Assembly June 24, 2019 Amended IN Senate April 29, 2019 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20192020 REGULAR SESSION Senate Joint Resolution No. 7Introduced by Senator Glazer(Coauthors: Senators Grove, Hurtado, Nielsen, Roth, Umberg, and Wilk)March 20, 2019Relative to the Merrills Marauders Congressional Gold Medal Act. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSJR 7, Glazer. Military and veterans.This measure would urge the United States Congress to act favorably in regard to legislation to award the Congressional Gold Medal to the Merrills Marauders.Digest Key Fiscal Committee: NO Bill TextWHEREAS, In August 1943, President Franklin D. Roosevelt and other allied leaders proposed the creation of an American ground unit that would engage in a long range penetration mission in Japanese-occupied Burma to cut off Japanese communications and supply lines and capture the Japanese-held airfield and town of Myitkyina; andWHEREAS, President Roosevelt issued a call for volunteers for a dangerous and hazardous mission, that was answered by approximately 3,000 American soldiers representing 15 ethnic groups from every state, among them Bataan Death March survivors, Nisei interpreters, and Native American code talkers, forming a unit officially designated as the 5307th Composite Unit, code named Galahad, and later to become known as Merrills Marauders, after its leader, Brigadier General Frank Merrill; andWHEREAS, Future members of Merrills Marauders continued their training at Camp Stoneman, a United States Army military facility located in Pittsburg, California, that served as a major staging area for the United States Army in World War II for the Pacific Theater of Operations, and named after George Stoneman, a cavalry commander during the Civil War and a Governor of California; andWHEREAS, In February 1944 the Marauders began their approximately 1,000 mile trek through the dense Burmese jungle, with no artillery support and carrying their supplies on their backs or on the pack saddles of mules, as the first Americans to engage the Japanese on mainland Asia since the 1900 Boxer Rebellion; andWHEREAS, Over the course of their five-month trek to Myitkyina, the Marauders fought victoriously against larger and better equipped units of the Japanese 18th Division through 5 major and 30 minor engagements, experiencing more uninterrupted jungle fighting than any other World War II United States combat force, with the exception of the 1st Marine Division that took and held Guadalcanal for 4 months; and WHEREAS, During their march to Myitkyina, the Marauders faced hunger and disease that were exacerbated by inadequate aerial supply drops, while malaria, typhus, and dysentery inflicted more casualties on Merrills Marauders than the Japanese; andWHEREAS, By August 1944, Merrills Marauders accomplished their mission, successfully disrupting Japanese supply and communication lines and taking the town of Myitkyina and the Myitkyina airstrip, the only all-weather airstrip in northern Burma; andWHEREAS, After taking Myitkyina, only 130 Merrills Marauders were fit for duty, and all remaining Merrills Marauders still in action were evacuated to hospitals due to tropical diseases, exhaustion, and malnutrition; andWHEREAS, For their bravery and accomplishments, Merrills Marauders were awarded the Distinguished Unit Citation, later designated as the Presidential Unit Citation, and each of Merrills Marauders also earned a Bronze Star with a V or Valor device; andWHEREAS, Though Merrills Marauders were operational for only a few months, the legacy of their bravery is honored by the United States Army through the modern day 75th Ranger Regiment, which traces its lineage directly to the 5307 Composite Unit, and the Rangers wear the Merrills Marauders patch as their crest; andWHEREAS, On February 27, 2019, Gilbert Howland, one of the last 13 living members of Merrills Marauders and a triple Combat Infantryman Badge recipient, who served in World War II, Korea, and two tours in Vietnam, placed a wreath at the Camp Stoneman Memorial at the Pittsburg Historical Museum to commemorate 2019 as the 75th anniversary of the 1944 Merrills Marauders mission in the China Burma India Theater, called the forgotten theater of World War II, andWHEREAS, On January 30, 2019, United States Representative Peter T. King, introduced House Resolution 906 in the 116th Congress, the Merrills Marauders Congressional Gold Medal Act, with the Senate Companion bill from Senator Johnny Isakson is expected shortly, in a third and perhaps final attempt at this recognition with only 13 of the original 3,000 Merrills Marauders still living; now, therefore, be itResolved by the Senate and the Assembly of the State of California, jointly, That the Legislature urges the Congress of the United States to act favorably in regard to legislation to award the Congressional Gold Medal, the highest honor Congress can bestow, to Merrills Marauders; and be it furtherResolved, That the Secretary of the Senate transmit copies of this resolution to the President and Vice President of the United States, to the Speaker of the House of Representatives, to the Majority Leader of the Senate, and to each Senator and Representative from California in the Congress of the United States. Enrolled June 26, 2019 Passed IN Senate May 06, 2019 Passed IN Assembly June 24, 2019 Amended IN Senate April 29, 2019 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20192020 REGULAR SESSION Senate Joint Resolution No. 7Introduced by Senator Glazer(Coauthors: Senators Grove, Hurtado, Nielsen, Roth, Umberg, and Wilk)March 20, 2019Relative to the Merrills Marauders Congressional Gold Medal Act. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSJR 7, Glazer. Military and veterans.This measure would urge the United States Congress to act favorably in regard to legislation to award the Congressional Gold Medal to the Merrills Marauders.Digest Key Fiscal Committee: NO Enrolled June 26, 2019 Passed IN Senate May 06, 2019 Passed IN Assembly June 24, 2019 Amended IN Senate April 29, 2019 Enrolled June 26, 2019 Passed IN Senate May 06, 2019 Passed IN Assembly June 24, 2019 Amended IN Senate April 29, 2019 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20192020 REGULAR SESSION Senate Joint Resolution No. 7 Introduced by Senator Glazer(Coauthors: Senators Grove, Hurtado, Nielsen, Roth, Umberg, and Wilk)March 20, 2019 Introduced by Senator Glazer(Coauthors: Senators Grove, Hurtado, Nielsen, Roth, Umberg, and Wilk) March 20, 2019 Relative to the Merrills Marauders Congressional Gold Medal Act. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST SJR 7, Glazer. Military and veterans. This measure would urge the United States Congress to act favorably in regard to legislation to award the Congressional Gold Medal to the Merrills Marauders. This measure would urge the United States Congress to act favorably in regard to legislation to award the Congressional Gold Medal to the Merrills Marauders. ## Digest Key ## Bill Text WHEREAS, In August 1943, President Franklin D. Roosevelt and other allied leaders proposed the creation of an American ground unit that would engage in a long range penetration mission in Japanese-occupied Burma to cut off Japanese communications and supply lines and capture the Japanese-held airfield and town of Myitkyina; and WHEREAS, President Roosevelt issued a call for volunteers for a dangerous and hazardous mission, that was answered by approximately 3,000 American soldiers representing 15 ethnic groups from every state, among them Bataan Death March survivors, Nisei interpreters, and Native American code talkers, forming a unit officially designated as the 5307th Composite Unit, code named Galahad, and later to become known as Merrills Marauders, after its leader, Brigadier General Frank Merrill; and WHEREAS, Future members of Merrills Marauders continued their training at Camp Stoneman, a United States Army military facility located in Pittsburg, California, that served as a major staging area for the United States Army in World War II for the Pacific Theater of Operations, and named after George Stoneman, a cavalry commander during the Civil War and a Governor of California; and WHEREAS, In February 1944 the Marauders began their approximately 1,000 mile trek through the dense Burmese jungle, with no artillery support and carrying their supplies on their backs or on the pack saddles of mules, as the first Americans to engage the Japanese on mainland Asia since the 1900 Boxer Rebellion; and WHEREAS, Over the course of their five-month trek to Myitkyina, the Marauders fought victoriously against larger and better equipped units of the Japanese 18th Division through 5 major and 30 minor engagements, experiencing more uninterrupted jungle fighting than any other World War II United States combat force, with the exception of the 1st Marine Division that took and held Guadalcanal for 4 months; and WHEREAS, During their march to Myitkyina, the Marauders faced hunger and disease that were exacerbated by inadequate aerial supply drops, while malaria, typhus, and dysentery inflicted more casualties on Merrills Marauders than the Japanese; and WHEREAS, By August 1944, Merrills Marauders accomplished their mission, successfully disrupting Japanese supply and communication lines and taking the town of Myitkyina and the Myitkyina airstrip, the only all-weather airstrip in northern Burma; and WHEREAS, After taking Myitkyina, only 130 Merrills Marauders were fit for duty, and all remaining Merrills Marauders still in action were evacuated to hospitals due to tropical diseases, exhaustion, and malnutrition; and WHEREAS, For their bravery and accomplishments, Merrills Marauders were awarded the Distinguished Unit Citation, later designated as the Presidential Unit Citation, and each of Merrills Marauders also earned a Bronze Star with a V or Valor device; and WHEREAS, Though Merrills Marauders were operational for only a few months, the legacy of their bravery is honored by the United States Army through the modern day 75th Ranger Regiment, which traces its lineage directly to the 5307 Composite Unit, and the Rangers wear the Merrills Marauders patch as their crest; and WHEREAS, On February 27, 2019, Gilbert Howland, one of the last 13 living members of Merrills Marauders and a triple Combat Infantryman Badge recipient, who served in World War II, Korea, and two tours in Vietnam, placed a wreath at the Camp Stoneman Memorial at the Pittsburg Historical Museum to commemorate 2019 as the 75th anniversary of the 1944 Merrills Marauders mission in the China Burma India Theater, called the forgotten theater of World War II, and WHEREAS, On January 30, 2019, United States Representative Peter T. King, introduced House Resolution 906 in the 116th Congress, the Merrills Marauders Congressional Gold Medal Act, with the Senate Companion bill from Senator Johnny Isakson is expected shortly, in a third and perhaps final attempt at this recognition with only 13 of the original 3,000 Merrills Marauders still living; now, therefore, be it Resolved by the Senate and the Assembly of the State of California, jointly, That the Legislature urges the Congress of the United States to act favorably in regard to legislation to award the Congressional Gold Medal, the highest honor Congress can bestow, to Merrills Marauders; and be it further Resolved, That the Secretary of the Senate transmit copies of this resolution to the President and Vice President of the United States, to the Speaker of the House of Representatives, to the Majority Leader of the Senate, and to each Senator and Representative from California in the Congress of the United States.