Death March
The Survivors of Bataan
940.5472 KNO 1981 Donald Knox
Interviews with 68 survivors
- Japanese Attack Luzon 1941 December 8
 - Bataan Surrender 1942 April 9 (10,000 Americans, Maj. Gen. Edward P. King)
 - Corregidor Surrender 1942 May 6
 - pxi 6000 to 7000 died in captivity
 - pxiii 4000 alive when Japan surrenders in August 1945
 - WP: between 19,500 and 50,000 Japanese surrendered to Western Allies before April 1945
 - WP: Meiji Japan adopted western POW policies, no-surrender fanaticism emerged 1920s and 1930s
 - pxxi April 1943 American prisoners escape Davao prison camp to Australia
 - pxxii 78K troops, 66K Filipino and 12K Americans
 - pxxxii Japanese planned for 40K captives
 p03 moderate prime minister ( Prince Fumimaro Konoe ) replaced by former war minister Hideki Tojo
04 35 B-17 bombers at Clark Field
- 10 told to scatter tanks, loaded machine guns by hand, then ordered to clean the cannons
 - 13 B-17s land to re-gas, lined up on runway
 - 19 Japanese attack "mapped out perfect", every bomb hit a gasoline storage tank or an airplane
 - 24 double bottom, hiding in the bottom of the ship, the slobs were the brave ones
 - 27 P-35 radials short noses, P-40 long noses tip onto nose on grass runways
 - 27 Zero more maneuverable and wins dogfights, P-40 faster, hit-and-run instead
 - 28 bad ammunition, P-40 gun jams had to be cleared on the ground
 - 32 Japanese enter Manila 1942 Jan 2
 53 First Bataan battle line from Mauban across Mount Natib to Abucay
- plenty of ammunition, half rations
 - hold out until the American fleet arrived (but two years needed to fight its way across the Pacific)
 
65 old WW1 doughboy helmets
- 118 Death march (5K to 10K Filipinos died, 600 to 700 Americans died)
 - 153 to Camp O'Donnell (partly completed airfield) near Capas
 - 359 1943 defeats, millions of factory workers drafted, war captives replaced many 
- 337 Hell ships 1944 Sep-Dec, overloaded freighters from Philippines to Japan, more than 5000 died when ships sunk
 - 175 camps, shoveling coal, repairing track, mines and foundries, loading cargo ships
 
 - WP Phillipines Liberation 1944 Oct 20 to 1945 Aug 15
 - WP Corregidor Allied capture 1945 Feb 27, Manila Allied capture March 3, Fort Drum incinerated April 12
 - 439 Camp in Omuta, smoke from Nagasaki 40 miles southwest
 - 440 Camp in Korea, Japanese colonel surrenders to senior officer Lt. Col. Curtis Beecher USMC
 - 441 Camp Omine Machi commander Omura surrenders to US senior officer, who commands him to keep it and take it home
 - 446 American pilot drops note "open the kitchen door", bounced a rolled-up newspaper through it on next pass.
 
