FROM SHANGHAI TO CORREGIDOR: Marines in the Defense of the Philippines
by J. Michael Miller
Bataan
Battery A moved to Corregidor on 17 February leaving
a Marine Air Warning Detachment, the USAFFE Guard, and Battery C as the
only Marines remaining on Bataan. Disease became a problem for Battery
C, as Lieutenant Simpson recalled, "the heat was terrific, malaria
cropped out among the men every day or so, yet we had to stay manned
every day all day because of constant enemy air activity" The battery
often left one gun unmanned to have full crews on the remaining
guns.
The Bombardment Continues
On 6 February, Japanese artillery opened fire on
Corregidor and the fortified islands from positions in Cavite Province.
The forts were shelled eight more days and bombed twice in February.
Occasional shelling and bombing hit the fortified islands until 15
March, when the Japanese began preparations to renew their offensive on
Bataan. The bombing and artillery raids now continued unabated until the
end of the siege. The Japanese conducted attacks spaced over every
24-hour period after 24 March to prevent any rest by the defenders.
Japanese harassing artillery fires, conducted every 25-30 minutes
throughout the night, caused the Marines to dub the annoying cannon
"Insomnia Charlie." The artillery spotting balloon over Bataan was
nicknamed "Peeping Tom."
The events of 30 March typify the constant Japanese
bombardment. There were two periods of shelling, beginning at 0950 and
1451, and six bombing raids, beginning at 0040 and spaced throughout the
day. One Marine, Private First Class Kenneth R. Paulin of Company M, 3d
Battalion, was killed during the day by shellfire from the Cavite shore.
The bombing raids finally ended at 2205. The attacks were renewed at
0102 on the same schedule, except 10 bombing raids occurred on 31
March.
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An
unexploded bomb at Middleside, Corregidor, March 1942. Austin C. Shofner
Papers, Personal Papers Collection, MCHC
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At this time, the major problems facing Major General
Jonathan Wainwright, USA, commander of U.S. Forces on the Bataan
Peninsula, were dwindling food supply and an increased disease rate. By
March, the daily ration of food for the men on Bataan was 1,000 calories
with food for Corregidor rationed to last until the end of June 1942. On
27 March, Wainwright telegraphed Mac Arthur in Australia to report the
June deadline and asked for supplies. He also stated that "with ample
food and ammunition we can hold the enemy in his present position, I
believe, indefinitely"
On 1 April, General Wainwright recognized that little
or no food could arrive through the Japanese blockade and ordered a new
reduced ration. The 4th Marines and other defenders of Corregidor now
consumed 30.49 ounces of food per day: 8 ounces of meat, 7 ounces of
flour, 4 ounces of vegetables, 3 ounces of beans and cereals, 2.5 ounces
of rice, 3 ounces of milk, and approximately 3 ounces of miscellaneous
food stuffs.
"We were hungry all the time," remembered Private
First Class Ben L. Lohman, "We ate mule meat . . . when the mules were
killed in the bombing . . . they'd bring the carcasses down and we'd eat
'em." Drinking water was distributed only twice a day in powder cans,
but bombing and shelling often interrupted the resupply. The staple food
for the 4th Marines was cracked wheat, sometimes made into dumplings,
sometimes served with syrup. The continued lack of a proper diet created
major problems for the 4th Marines, as men were weakened and lacked
reliable night vision. Some Marines lost up to 40 pounds during the
bombardment.
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LtCol Herman R. Anderson stands on the beach on
Corregidor with the assembled officers of 2d Battalion, 4th Marines and
several Filipino officers. Note the thick layers of oil on the beaches
from ships sunk in Manila Bay. Department of Defense Photo (USMC)
58736
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On 9 April, Bataan fell to the Japanese after a final
offensive broke through the USAFFE defenses trapping more than 75,000
men. Battery C managed to escape at the last minute, but the Marine
guards at USAFFE headquarters and the Air Warning Detachment were taken
prisoner, and endured the infamous Bataan Death March. The Japanese
wasted little time before focusing their attention on Corregidor,
intensifying their bombardment of the island the same day Bataan
fell.
Although food was in short supply on Corregidor.
ammunition was relatively plentiful. As of 7 April, the island had
5,177,900 rounds of armor piercing, clipped, and tracer .30-caliber
ammunition and a total of 161,808 rounds of .50-caliber ammunition. Gen
Wainwright wrote, "Our flag still flies on this beleaguered fortress."
and added in his memoir, "I meant to see it keep flying."
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