FROM SHANGHAI TO CORREGIDOR: Marines in the Defense of the Philippines
by J. Michael Miller
Olongapo
On 12 December, Japanese troops made another landing
in southeastern Luzon. At 1020, Headquarters, 4th Marines, was notified
by rifle range personnel of the approach of enemy aircraft. Air-raid
sirens sounded swiftly. Five minutes passed, and with no aircraft
sighted, the field music sounded "secure." At once, the roar of Japanese
aircraft was heard. Seven Japanese fighters followed a flight of PBYs of
Navy Patrol Wing 10 to the base, waited for them to land, and attacked.
All of the PBYs were soon in flames and the Japanese then turned to the
Olongapo naval station. A single aircraft flew low over the station to
test the level of anti-aircraft fire.
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Olongapo Navy Yard, 27 October 1941. Note the water tank
and the old cruiser Rochester (CA-2). Navy Historical Center Photo
80-G-1783219
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Marines opened fire on the Japanese aircraft with
automatic rifles, rifles, and light machine guns, but with little
effect. Sergeant Pat Hitchcock remembered, "They evidently were not
impressed because they were very casual about their strafing runs." The
Japanese fighters attacked the base for almost an hour.
Private First Class Thomas S. Allender was stationed
on the water tower armed with a .30-caliber machine gun and soon engaged
the aircraft as they strafed the Navy Yard. "That god-dam plane was
shooting at him. He'd run around to the other side of the tank and the
guy would go by," recalled Master Technical Sergeant Ivan L. Buster,
"and then the guy would come back and he'd run around to the other side
of the tank again." Allender remained on the tower for the entire raid
untouched, although the tank itself was riddled with machine gun fire,
"with water spraying everywhere." A Marine gunnery sergeant lay in a
ditch on his back firing his .45-caliber pistol at the aircraft on their
strafing runs. When asked between attacks why he was firing at all, he
responded, "This makes me feel better."
(click on image for an enlargement in a new window)
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On 13 December, 27 bombers appeared over Olongapo at
1155 and bombs began to hit the Navy Yard and the civilians in the town.
No installations were hit, although bombs straddled the regimental
hospital located at the Riverside Cabaret. Again, no weapons in the Navy
Yard could reach the altitude of the enemy aircraft. Corporal Earl W.
Hettgar remembered staring up at the Japanese aircraft, which were
flying so low the Marines could "look up into the bomb bays" of the
aircraft. Many houses in the town were destroyed with 13 civilians
killed and 40 wounded.
Private First Class Neil P. Iovino became the first
4th Marines casualty when bomb fragments struck him in the abdomen. The
fragments shattered his gun stock first, preventing a more serious
injury. Two other Marines were also wounded. That night, the men of the
2d Battalion were amused when they heard Radio Tokyo announce that the
4th Marines had been annihilated.
(click on image for an enlargement in a new window)
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After the bombing, most of Lieutenant Colonel
Anderson's 2d Battalion moved to the hills on the Manila Road five miles
outside the Navy Yard. Several times, portions of the 2d Battalion were
rushed to the beachfront to repel reported landings near Calapacuan
Point and permanent defensive positions were set up along Mauqinaya
Beach. Lieutenant Colonel "Red" Anderson calmed his men by walking among
them as they dug, saying, "That's okay men, they got nothin' bigger than
8-inch shells to throw at us!"
The battalion also formed blocking positions on the
Manila Road at Mount Panaigar in the Zambales Mountains in coordination
with the Philippine Army's 31st Division. On 22 December, the Japanese
landed their 48th Division north of Olongapo at Lingayen Gulf and
the main body of the 2d Battalion returned to protect the Naval Station
from any supporting Japanese landing.
The Japanese quickly crushed American and Philippine
resistance at Lingayen Gulf, and united with the troops previously
landed on northern Luzon. On 24 December, another major force, the
16th Division, landed just 60 miles from Manila at Lamon Bay
General Douglas MacArthur, commanding USAFFE (United States Army Forces
in the Far East), knew the situation was hopeless. He decided to
withdraw all American and Philippine forces to the peninsula of Bataan
where a final stand would be made, in conjunction with the fortified
islands in Manila Bay.
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