• 2 months ago
Battle of Manila by Department of Defense.
Documentary on invasion of the Philippines, covering the landings through the final liberation of the City of Manila.
Transcript
00:00The United States Army presents the Big Picture, an official report produced for the Armed
00:21Forces and the American people.
00:34When you're in the Army, you get a chance to do a lot of traveling, see a lot of sights,
00:39and meet all kinds of interesting people.
00:41For me, some of the most interesting have been right here in our own country.
00:47My name's Sergeant Stuart Queen, host for the Big Picture.
00:50A good percentage of ideas for the Big Picture is taken right out of our history books.
00:56Other stories feature current Army activities of interest to the nation.
01:01But once in a while, something unusual comes along, tying in the present with the past,
01:07and we come up with a warm, human interest story.
01:11In my work, I get around the country quite a bit.
01:14It's part of my job.
01:16And whenever I'm in this particular vicinity, along this stretch of road, I stop by a quaint
01:21little restaurant called Charlie's Harbor Inn.
01:24Because it was here at Charlie's, this story happened some months ago.
01:29It was right here I discovered for myself that truth can be stranger than fiction.
01:39It was the kind of incident you read about in a novel or see in a grade B movie.
01:44But if anyone told you it was a true story, well, nobody'd believe it in a thousand years,
01:50and I wouldn't blame them.
01:55But this story really did happen, I know, because I was there when it did, and I saw
02:00it all.
02:07Anything wrong, officer?
02:08Is this your car?
02:10Yeah, why?
02:12That's why.
02:14So help me, officer, I didn't even know it was there.
02:17Let me see your license.
02:20Look officer, I've only been here about ten minutes.
02:23Yeah, I know.
02:25I was just making an important phone call.
02:36Don't I know you from somewhere?
02:38Now look here, officer, I'm an honest, law-abiding citizen.
02:41I've never been in trouble with the police or anybody else.
02:44Why I never even...
02:45Hey, okay, forget it.
02:47You ever been in the service?
02:49Yeah, but what's that got to do with it?
02:51Never mind that.
02:52Just answer the question.
02:54When did you serve?
02:55World War II, in the army.
02:57Where?
02:58What part of the world?
02:59The Pacific.
03:00Say, what is this, an inquisition?
03:01All I did was...
03:02Take it easy, buddy.
03:03Take it easy.
03:05Where in the Pacific?
03:07Started in Australia, then New Guinea, Britain, the Admiralty's, and let's see, the Philippines.
03:16The Philippines?
03:17Where in the Philippines?
03:20Mostly Leyte and Luzon.
03:21Aha, Luzon.
03:22And we hit Lingayen Gulf, then right down to Manila.
03:25You were in the Battle of Manila?
03:28From the kickoff till the final whistle.
03:31Santo Tomas.
03:32Mean anything to you?
03:34I rode the back of the first tank in.
03:36I thought I recognized you.
03:38Me?
03:39From where?
03:40From Santo Tomas.
03:41You see, I was one of the civilian prisoners there on Manila that you and your outfit liberated.
03:46No kidding.
03:47Yeah.
03:48Well, if this don't beat...
03:50Well, if this ain't the...
03:52Look, you got a minute?
03:55Sure.
03:56Let me buy you a cup of coffee?
03:57Yeah, sure.
03:58Look, whoever thought that...
03:59Nobody would ever believe it.
04:00I know that.
04:01Here was a veteran of World War II, and here was a man he helped liberate, both meeting
04:11for the first time since that historic Battle of Manila in 1945.
04:15Peg, will you get us a couple of cups of coffee?
04:20Two cups of coffee?
04:21As I said before, a true story, stranger than fiction, taking place right before my eyes.
04:29Man, you've added a few pounds here and there.
04:32Food's better over here, and the wife's a good cook.
04:36Say, don't I remember your wife at Santo Tomas kind of frail?
04:41That's right.
04:42After you arrived, we had to take her out on a stretcher.
04:45How is she now?
04:46Couldn't be better.
04:47Matter of fact, we got four kids.
04:50Four?
04:51Yeah.
04:52That's great.
04:53My wife and I often talk about those days.
04:57We never did get much of a chance to thank you and your outfit for liberating us.
05:03I'll never forget the first day you arrived at Santo Tomas.
05:08How'd your outfit get there so soon?
05:10Well, it was all part of the stepped-up liberation of the Philippines.
05:15As I recall...
05:16You really want to hear about it?
05:20Yeah, I sure would.
05:22Well, as I recall, the G.I.s had taken Leyte and landed on Mindoro, the island directly
05:28south of Luzon.
05:30So my outfit and a lot of others were ready for the main event.
05:35We hit the beach at Lingayen Gulf, about a hundred miles north of Manila.
05:39We thought we'd be moving right into the teeth of Jap resistance, but we were wrong.
05:44That was to come later.
05:52We pushed on down the valley toward Manila, cleaning out little pockets of resistance
05:58where we found them.
06:03Out ahead of us, Air Force and Navy planes were softening up the way.
06:22We moved cautiously forward, wondering what had happened to the enemy.
06:47And for a while there, it looked like we were tourists,
06:51having ourselves a real ball.
06:56Along the way, one of the G.I.s picked up an innocent-looking piece of paper, which
07:01turned out to be a Japanese field order.
07:04It stated,
07:05All Filipinos found on the field of battle were subject to immediate execution.
07:10This applied to all Filipinos in Manila.
07:14Filipino guerrillas brought in reports that American and allied prisoners were starving
07:19and being mistreated in the city.
07:21So we stepped up the pace in the outskirts of Manila and finally established contact
07:26with the enemy.
07:27But we soon lost it, and we realized that the Japs were withdrawing to the heart of
07:32the city.
07:35At Grace Park, where the monument stands, snipers took potshots at us and slowed down
07:40our advance somewhat.
07:42And the only satisfaction I recall here was that my outfit was the first to enter Manila
07:47properly.
08:00A fierce battle suddenly developed in, of all places, Rizal Stadium, Manila's baseball
08:06park.
08:07The enemy had dug himself in under the stands, and we slugged it out with him with no
08:12cover.
08:17Rizal Stadium, a baseball park.
08:28No game today.
08:36Then we raced into the University of Santo Tomas and liberated, along with you, hundreds
08:41of American and allied internees.
08:45It had been three years since this pathetic group of prisoners had seen a free American
08:50or a square meal.
08:52Everyone in Santo Tomas was fortunate that there had been U.S. Army and Navy nurses who
08:57had been captured on Corregidor to care for you during those dark years.
09:01After we arrived, wires were sent home by the internees, and many replies came back
09:06in a few hours, affecting some noticeably.
09:15But for everyone, the liberation was a big celebration party.
09:20Kids who'd had no toys for three years now had giant-sized ones.
09:26And all of us were discussing how wonderful it was that the nightmare was over, at last.
09:32But the nightmare wasn't all over.
09:45The enemy started shelling us at Santo Tomas.
09:48We saw internees who'd survived the three years as prisoners killed by the incoming
09:53fire.
09:54I'll never forget how the shelling of this non-military target continued for several
10:00days while we evacuated the seriously ill and injured.
10:08Finally, the shelling of Santo Tomas let up.
10:11The Japs needed their artillery fire more urgently elsewhere.
10:14Then the internees were evacuated to the States, most of them by plane.
10:19But I guess you'd remember more about that evacuation than I would.
10:23I'll never forget it.
10:25Even a few more days rescuing us, I don't think my wife could have held out.
10:30But she made it okay, thanks to you and your buddies.
10:34That's the way the ball bounces.
10:36You never know when you can help the next guy.
10:38Yeah.
10:39I remember when I left Luzon, the battle in Manila seemed to be getting worse.
10:43Yeah, it sure was.
10:45What with the excitement of going back to the States after being a prisoner for three
10:49years, I never did get the dope straight on how the final stages of the battle
10:55went.
10:56It's all kind of fuzzy in my mind.
10:59All I know is we won, but it was quite a scrap, wasn't it?
11:04It was rough.
11:05Yeah.
11:07I know.
11:09How'd you make out after I left?
11:12Well, we got ourselves a good taste of street fighting.
11:15Being jungle G.I.s up till then, we found we had a lot to learn about fighting in
11:20city streets and big office buildings.
11:22But we learned fast.
11:25Combat is one thing for sure, a good teacher.
11:28How'd you come out?
11:30Oh, me personally, okay, but not so for some of the others.
11:34The deeper we got into Manila, the more fanatical the Jap resistance became.
11:39They couldn't escape, and they wouldn't surrender.
11:42So they fought till they died, most of them anyway.
11:46Our casualties were heavy.
11:50And the more we moved into the heart of the city, the more the enemy took
11:54advantage of the huge government buildings for defensive positions.
11:57Some of the buildings had to be ripped apart stone by stone before we could
12:01continue our advance.
12:03The enemy defensive plan soon became apparent.
12:06He was fighting delaying actions to allow his troops to cross the Pasig River,
12:10which cuts Manila east and west right through the middle.
12:13We pressed forward as fast as we could through fantastic tangles of broken
12:18buildings.
12:54Pasig River, a bridge was destroyed, leaving one less for us when we reached
12:58the river.
12:59Our troops found out the hard way just about all there is to know about
13:03street-to-street, building-to-building combat.
13:06And the more we learned, the faster we moved, denying the enemy the advantage
13:11of a leisurely withdrawal.
13:13Those Japs who couldn't pull back dug in and fought till they died.
13:18Many Filipinos braved front-line fire, handing out cigars or candy to show
13:23their gratitude to us.
13:40The enemy had orders from the Imperial High Command, hold Manila or burn it.
13:46The torch was put to those parts of Manila the Japs could no longer hold.
13:53Barrels and drums of gasoline and motor oil were detonated by the Japs inside
14:01buildings from one end of Manila to the other.
14:04And through all of the inferno, the G.I.s kept up the initiative,
14:08carrying the attack forward toward the Pasig River.
14:23Any of the firefighting equipment which had survived the street fighting was used,
14:28but it was hardly worth the effort.
14:39The fire gained momentum, burning city blocks at a time, consuming everything
14:44in its path that would burn.
14:46And it seemed to reach its peak of destruction.
14:49The Battle of Manila had reached a decisive phase.
14:52We were north of the Pasig River, and the Japs were south and moving into
14:56the famed old walled city called Intramuros.
14:59We kept the enemy pinned down with our fire while we brought up troops
15:03to prepare for a boat crossing of the Pasig.
15:07We kept the enemy pinned down with our fire while we brought up troops
15:10to prepare for a boat crossing of the Pasig.
15:13.
15:34Several times we saw General MacArthur supervising the direction of battle.
15:39At one moment he gazed out across Manila Harbor at an island of rock called Corregidor.
15:45No doubt he recalled how the Japanese had attacked the Philippines in December 1941.
15:51.
16:10And then in May 1942, the enemy swarmed over Corregidor.
16:15No doubt, too, the General had many times pondered the fate of his troops
16:20who were outnumbered, out of ammunition, food, and medical supplies,
16:23and thus compelled to surrender.
16:26The tide of hope had reached its lowest ebb for Americans
16:29when General Jonathan Wainwright sat at the surrender table.
16:33And the American flag was lowered on Corregidor.
16:38.
16:51There was one thing General MacArthur wanted more information about,
16:55the condition of the prisoners taken on Corregidor and elsewhere in the Philippines.
17:00The word had gotten around about the Death March,
17:03a forced march of the American prisoners by the Japanese which caused many to die.
17:08These were the troops the General had in mind when he returned to the Philippines.
17:14The General had all of those depressing memories of 1942 to consider
17:18while he directed the battle in Manila three years later during February 1945.
17:24An isolated pocket of Jap resistance developed in Manila's city prison called Bilibid.
17:31The Filipinos brought in word that American prisoners, many captured on Corregidor,
17:35were being held in Bilibid.
17:37We stepped up the attack and raced toward the city prison.
17:51Inside Bilibid, we wiped out the Japs
17:54and found the GI prisoners starved, abused, old beyond their years,
17:59but possessing an undaunted spirit.
18:03They lined up for chow with a three-year appetite.
18:10These were young fighting men on Corregidor.
18:13Now they were no longer young, but they were alive.
18:19While the battle raged on, preparations were made for an aerial invasion of Corregidor.
18:24For Manila could not be secure without Corregidor in our hands.
18:29A parachute jump would be coordinated with an amphibious landing on the island fortress.
18:36Air Force and Navy pounded the rock while the troop carriers flew in the parachutists.
18:47And when the drop zone on Corregidor was lined up,
18:51there was nothing left to do but jump.
18:59♪♪
19:04♪♪
19:11♪♪
19:16Supplies were dropped right where they were needed.
19:20♪♪
19:29While the parachutists seized their objectives on top of the island,
19:33an amphibious task force hit the beaches.
19:37♪♪
19:47Another airdrop of supplies.
19:49For at first, everything was delivered by parachute.
19:53♪♪
20:02Although Corregidor was lightly defended,
20:05every Jap there fought a fanatical battle.
20:08While the island fighting continued, the battle in Manila was going into the final phases.
20:14All of the enemy forces alive had withdrawn into the walled city south of the Pasig River.
20:19Now the Japs literally had their backs to the wall.
20:23They couldn't escape and wouldn't surrender.
20:26So we got set for the final round.
20:29The plan roughly was to concentrate our artillery, mortar, and small arms fire on the enemy while we crossed the Pasig.
20:38Wire communications were strung to assure the closest coordination of overhead fire.
20:44♪♪
20:48Finally, when everything was all set, the order was given to commence firing.
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21:52♪♪
22:02We lined up assault boats and amphibious tracked vehicles and then made the first river crossing attempt.
22:08We had no way of knowing how successful our concentration of fire had been on the enemy in the walled city.
22:14But we found that they apparently were effective since the only incoming fire on us was small arms.
22:20♪♪
22:27Soon we were pouring across the river, getting established on the south side and moving toward the closest wall of the walled city.
22:35♪♪
22:42All of us knew by now that the toughest barrier of Manila was directly ahead.
22:49A 14-foot thick wall of intramurals.
22:52While we approached our objective, our artillery and tracked vehicles gave us direct fire support.
22:58♪♪
23:07Between the river and the walled city was an open park area.
23:11As we moved over it, we realized that this was the first open spot we had crossed since the Battle of Manila had begun.
23:18♪♪
23:28The closer we got to the walled city, the more we saw the effectiveness of our artillery and mortar fire in softening up the enemy positions.
23:37Filipinos willingly pointed out prepared defensive positions of the enemy.
23:41♪♪
23:57Finally, we reached the outside wall.
24:01♪♪
24:15It took a great deal of probing to find the proper place to make the assault.
24:20For breaching this fortress was no easy matter regardless of how much artillery we had poured into it.
24:26But we finally cracked it.
24:29♪♪
24:52Once inside Intramuros, the city within the walls, the battle was suddenly over.
24:59Only the rubble and chaos of combat remained.
25:03And among the debris we found human wreckage.
25:07♪♪
25:28Many of the Filipinos who had lived in Intramuros were dead.
25:33Those who somehow miraculously survived started a great mass exodus across the river to go anywhere.
25:40Anywhere away from the horrors of the walled city.
25:44♪♪
26:06Although the fighting in Manila was over, there still was one more military action to be taken.
26:13A general had said he would return.
26:16He had.
26:18Now, with a flag raising ceremony on Corregidor, the Battle of Manila was officially over.
26:25♪♪
26:33And that's how the Battle of Manila went.
26:35It was a rough one.
26:37Gruesome at times.
26:39And I thank my lucky stars I got out of it okay.
26:42Some of my best friends didn't.
26:44Maybe you'll understand how indebted I feel towards them.
26:47Yeah, I guess so.
26:49Look, you gotta come out to the house and see the wife.
26:53I can't tell you how happy she'll be to meet you again.
26:57Why don't you come out some night for dinner? Soon.
27:00Whatever you say.
27:01Good.
27:03Looks like we've got some unfinished business here.
27:07Yeah, it sure does.
27:12Well, there's one way to finish it.
27:15But good.
27:23That's just the way it happened.
27:25And a good finish it was for a true story.
27:29In an important sense, the incident has meaning for all of us.
27:33For it brings into sharp focus the great sacrifices and courage which typify our armed forces.
27:40It is this type of unsung action that gives depth and meaning and purpose to military history.
27:47And to a country's heritage.
27:49Oh yes, one more thing I'm sure about.
27:52It'll be a long time before I can forget Charlie's Battle.
27:56It'll be a long time before I can forget Charlie's place.
27:59It will always remind me of a certain careless motorist and a good-natured forgiving cop.
28:16The Big Picture is an official report for the armed forces and the American people.
28:23Produced by the Army Pictorial Center.
28:30Presented by the Department of the Army in cooperation with this station.

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