 |
75mm Gun Motor Carriage T12, Philippines, late 1941. |
by
George R. Reed, Captain, Field Artillery, U.S. Army
This was originally prepared as a
manuscript by the author in 1948 and submitted to The Adjutant General
(Historical Section), Washington, D.C. Copy obtained from the National
Archives, Washington, D.C.
•
Provisional
Field Artillery, Self-Propelled Mounts, Fort Stotsenberg, Pampanga
First
Battalion
Commanding
Officer: Major D. S. Babcock
Battery
Commanders: Captain John Curtis, Lieutenant Murray M. Day, Lieutenant Brunette,
Lieutenant Corrigan
Second
Battalion
Commanding
Officer: Major Joseph Ganahl
Battery
Commanders: Lieutenant William Jones, Lieutenant Travis Perrenot, Lieutenant
Daniel W. Cranford, Lieutenant Peck
Third
Battalion
Commanding
Officer: Major J. R. Lindsay
Battery
Commanders: Lieutenant Wayne Fisher, Lieutenant George A. Reed (the author of
this work), Lieutenant Van de Lester, Lieutenant Svobodny
The
self-propelled mount was the only piece of modern artillery materiel in the
Islands. Fifty of them had arrived in Manila the previous month (November) and
had only been brought to Stotsenberg four days before war was declared. Two of
them were still in Manila. Essentially, the self-propelled mount is a French
75-mm gun mounted on a half-track scout car. The car is stiff and unwieldy in
handling as well as being very vulnerable from the front. In spite of this
these guns proved to be very valuable during the retreat into Bataan.
The
personnel of this group was drawn from a number of sources: battalion and
battery commanders were American officers; junior officers were from the
Philippine Army; the firing battery was from the Philippine Army; the
half-track drivers were from the 14th Engineers (Philippine Scouts); and the
ammunition truck drivers were from the 200th Coast Artillery Corps (National
Guard).
My
assignment at Fort Stotsenberg was to Battery E, 24th Field Artillery
(Philippine Scouts), as the battery executive. For a short period before the
war I was attached to the 21st Field Artillery (Philippine Army) as adjutant of
American instructors. The camp was located at Sta. Ignacia, Tarlac. Colonel
Catalan was the Philippine Army commander and Col. R. C. Mallonee was the
commanding officer of American instructors.
On 6
December 1941, Col. H. N. Lockwood, S-3 of the Field Artillery Brigade, arrived
in camp at Sta. Ignacia with orders to report to the brigade commander without
delay. That same day I reported to Col. Louis R. Dougherty who ordered me to
report to Maj. D. S. Babcock. That evening Maj. Babcock gave me command of the
Fourth Field Battery. The next day, 7 December 1941, being Sunday no work was
scheduled, however, Maj. Babcock suggested I go to the gun park and familiarize
myself with the weapon, which I did.
On the
morning of 8 December, we heard by radio of the bombing of Pearl Harbor and the
declaration of war.
Fourth Field
Battery, 3rd Provisional Battalion, Field Artillery (SPM)
Commanding Officer:
First Lieutenant George A. Reed, USA
Executive Officer:
Second Lieutenant Amador Lim, PA
Supply Officer:
Third Lieutenant Amado Santiago, PA
Liaison Officer:
Third Lieutenant Romero, PA
I
reported to Maj. Babcock at the half-track park opposite the ordnance shop
immediately after hearing the news over the radio. The drivers of the tracks
from the 14th Engineers, Philippine Scouts, were also present. With their help
I began to draw equipment for the guns and tracks. These guns were to be
completely equipped. At 10:00 a.m. Maj. Babcock received the following message
from brigade headquarters: “Japanese planes have been sighted over Lingayen
Gulf.” Battery commanders were ordered to take their guns and place them under
cover in various parts of the post and then return for further orders. I took
my battery to the rear of 2nd Battalion, 24th Field Artillery, and on returning
to Maj. Babcock I was told that I could pick up my ammunition trucks and
drivers in the rear of the brigade motor shop, after which I was to draw 300
rounds of ammunition for each gun at the magazine. I found the trucks behind
the motor shop, but the drivers were absent. I found they were having lunch at
their barracks. At approximately noon Lt. Langlois and I watched sixty-four
planes bomb Clark Field. After the bombing the drivers returned. We then took
the trucks, drew the ammunition and returned to the rear of the 24th Field
Artillery barracks. Returning to Maj. Babcock I was ordered to take my guns and
trucks to the forage farm under cover of darkness. This order was carried out
and all elements were placed under cover. On the completion of this move I
reported to Col. J. T. Tacy at Camp Del Pilar where I received my quota of
Philippine Army personnel.
The time
until 20 December was spent in training and equipping the Philippine Army
personnel of the battery. These men had had six weeks of training at Camp Del
Pilar before the war. During this period also, Maj. Ganahl with three batteries
left for north Luzon, Lt. Perrenot was attached to the 26th Cavalry, Philippine
Scouts, and Maj. Babcock with four batteries left for southern Luzon.
On the
evening of the 20th of December Maj. Lindsay ordered all battery commanders to
place their guns so as to be able to repel an attack of parachute troops on
Clark Field. I placed my guns under a line of trees on the east side of the
buildings of the forage farm and established an observation post on Lone Hill.
Early on
the morning of 21 December, I received orders to proceed to Carmen, Pangasinan,
where I would defend the bridge over the Agno. This move was completed without
any difficulty and the guns were placed as shown in Figure 1. [Editor’s Note:
None of the figures mentioned in this work were available.] In the afternoon
Gen. W. E. Brougher, Commanding General, 11th Division, Philippine Army,
visited the line at Carmen and named Capt. Robert Besson as combat team
commander. We encountered some trouble in getting the half-tracks over the
levee and into their positions. I asked Capt. Besson if he would like a tank
block on the road to Rosales. He replied in the affirmative and that night we
moved the guns on the right of the bridge to the positions marked 1 and 2. Two
Japanese planes dropped bombs at the bridge that afternoon but failed to hit
it. On the 22nd, Maj. Lindsay passed through Carmen on his way to Rosales to
see Lt. Van de Lester. I saw Lt. Fisher, who had a badly infected foot, trying
to contact the battalion commander.
On the
23rd of December two Japanese planes dropped five bombs at the bridge, one of
which struck the span next to the bank dropping that span, which had been
prepared for dynamiting, into the river. I made an inspection of the guns
immediately after the bombing, and when I reached number four gun I found that
a piece of steel from the bridge had gone through the hood of the track, taking
off a corner of the cylinder head, passing through the instrument panel, the
door, and then dropping to the ground. In addition, steel from the bridge had
punctured the radiator and tires of an ammunition truck which was nearby. I
sent both back to Stotsenberg to the ordnance shop, telling them to stop at
Maj. Lindsay’s command post on the way back. Later in the day the battalion
commander contacted for a report in order to find out what had happened to the
mount, and before leaving promised to replace the ammunition truck. I moved the
gun by the hotel to the position formerly held by the damaged gun.
24 December
Lieutenant
Van de Lester was reported killed in action at Binalonan. Knowing Lt. Van de
Lester to be dead I stopped an SPM which was on its way to him. The track was
stripped. There was no sight, ammunition, equipment or oil in the recoil
cylinder and the gun was full of cosmoline. The driver and I cleaned the gun.
We furnished it with a panoramic sight and ammunition, but had no filler pump
with which to fill the recoil cylinder. The tanks had none and I was unable to
find one anywhere since there are no other SPMs near. Repair of the bridge to
permit traffic was begun with Maj. S. Malevich, Gen. Wainwright’s staff, in
charge of construction.
Generals
J. R. N. Weaver, tank commander, J. M. Wainwright, Northern Luzon Force
Commander, and G. M. Parker, Southern Luzon Force Commander, had a conference
in Carmen on Christmas Day.
I
received the information too late to contact Lt. Perrenot who was over the
river and was unable to cross as bridge repairs were incomplete. I sent the
extra SPM back to Maj. Lindsay. There was a great amount of motor traffic
moving to the rear. Major Lindsay inspected the gun positions and approved of
them. Bridge repairs were completed. Lieutenant Perrenot picked up members of
his battery who had been dropped off at my position that morning.
At dawn
on 26 December we received our first hostile machine gun fire from the north
bank of the river. During the day we received 40-mm fire from a tank which was
eventually put out of commission by Lt. Lim’s gun. For a time we were under
fire from what I believe was a self-propelled mount, possibly one of Lt. Van de
Lester’s guns. A shell from this gun struck our ammunition truck on the road.
The driver, Pvt. Robert Arledge, 200th Coast Artillery Corps, was killed.
Captain Besson received orders from Gen. Brougher to retire at nightfall.
During the afternoon we received heavy mortar fire which soon had Carmen in
flames. Shortly after noon friendly, indirect, artillery fire from the right
rear was directed at the bridge over the river. This fire fell short of the
target. Most of the shells fell in the area between the river and the road
running parallel to it. I ascertained later that this fire had been directed by
the 91st Field Artillery, Philippine Army. Lieutenant Lim’s gun was hit in
front by a 40-mm shell, the driver, Pedro Sarabia, 14th Engineers, Philippine
Scouts, was killed and the tracks torn from the mount. Lieutenant Lim destroyed
the gun and set it afire. We retired at nightfall as far as San Miguel looking
for Maj. Lindsay’s command post as my rear echelon had gone there that morning.
We fed the battery with the maintenance company of the 192nd Tank Battalion and
then started north again. I found the command post north of Tarlac, Tarlac, and
was ordered to report to Gen. Brougher at Victoria, Tarlac. We had hardly started
when the driver of the SPM drove it off the road into a dirt bank. The motor
refused to start, so I hitched the track on behind one of my 6x6 ammunition
trucks and towed it to Victoria, where we arrived about dawn. We traveled about
eight miles an hour.
I
reported to Gen. Brougher who gave me orders to report to the combat tea
commander at the road intersection north of Guimba, Nueva Ecija. On arrival at
the road intersection I saw Capt. Dysterhoff who told me to use my gun as I saw
fit. (See Figure 2). I asked Capt. Dysterhoff what he would do if he were
hard-pressed, since the bridge to the south which had been bombed by the
Japanese several days before, cut off all retreat to the direct rear and left
only the road to Pura as a way out for us. This road, which lay directly across
the front of the Japanese advance, was not open to me for retreat since my
maximum speed was only eight miles an hour. So we pioneered a road down to the
creek and winched all our trucks across. About this time my other gun was
pulled to a point one kilometer south of the bridge by A Company, 192nd Tank
Battalion. The engine had no power because of a torn gasket on the cylinder
head. I was able to obtain one from Lt. Hurd, commanding officer of A Company.
During
the afternoon artillery to the east on the road to the Cagayan Valley moved
from our front to our rear. I contacted Lt. Howard Amos, liaison officer of the
91st Field Artillery, Philippine Army, whom I had known at Stotsenberg. It was
his opinion as well as my own that the attack would not be pushed along the
road we were defending. Orders were received from Gen. L. R. Stevens,
Commanding General, 91st Division, to retire at 9:00 p.m. About sunset I was
contacted by Lt. Robert McDowell, commanding officer of the Second Platoon,
Company B, 192nd Tank Battalion, who had been sent by Gen. Brougher to pull my
foremost gun out by way of Pura to Stotsenberg to be repaired. Lieutenant
McDowell had no extra cable and would not split his platoon to pull my other
gun out, so I arranged with Lt. Hurd for one of his tanks to pull the track out
to Baloc Junction. Lieutenant Amos and I in my sedan led A Company out to Baloc
Junction. I took the gun there, dropped Lt. Amos at Santa Rosa, and proceeded
to San Isidro, arriving there about 5:00 a.m. The motor sergeant began to put
the new gasket on the cylinder head while I reported to Gen. Stevens who told
me that I would find Gen. Brougher at Magalang. I proceeded to Magalang, but
found that the 11th Division command post was not there. After gassing all
motor vehicles I picked up Maj. Joseph Ganahl who was also looking for the
division command post and we proceeded north to Concepcion where he located
Gen. Brougher’s headquarters. I was ordered to join other elements of the
Provisional Field Artillery at La Paz, Tarlac. The following morning (29
December) I placed my gun in support of a gun under Lt. Peck on the road to
Cabanatuan. (See Figure 3.)
During
the day we heard considerable artillery fire to the north. Major Lindsay
contacted me in the later afternoon, ordered me to turn my gun over to Lt.
Peck, locate the Fifth Battery somewhere north of Capas and to take over from
Lt. Fisher who would go to the hospital. I contacted Lt. Fisher that night at
San Miguel, Tarlac.
Fifth Field
Battery, 3rd Provisional Battalion, Field Artillery (SPM)
Lieutenant
Fisher left immediately for the hospital. I made an inspection of the gun
positions before turning in and found them to be satisfactory. (See Figure 4.)
Early on
the morning of 30 December I inspected the guns and found them to be in a
deplorable mechanical condition. There were only thirty-five rounds of
ammunition, none of which were even ready to be fused. The bodies of all the
tracks, which should have been kept clear, were piled high with unopened
ammunition boxes, duffel bags, food and other impediment. The ammunition
cylinders beneath the breech were covered and it would have been difficult to
fire the gun. I had the duffel bags and all impediments, which could be spared,
placed in the supply truck. I supplied each gun with one hundred rounds of
ammunition stored in opened boxes ready for firing.
I found
Lt. McDowell with three tanks present in the barrio. We heard considerable
firing well to the north.
On 30
December I received a note from Col. R. C. Mallonee, senior American instructor
of the 21st Field Artillery, Philippine Army, to the effect that I was attached
to the 21st Division, Philippine Army, Gen. Capinpin, commanding. I reported to
Col. Mallonee at the division command post, who ordered me to report to Col. G.
H. McCafferty, senior instructor of the 22nd Infantry, Philippine Army, and
coordinate my retreat with the last element of the 22nd Infantry. I contacted
Col. McCafferty and then arranged with Lt. McDowell for the defense of the road
until the infantry was well to the rear. In the retreat the SPMs took up
positions one kilometer apart and leap-frogged front to rear all the way to the
next defense line. The first elements of the 22nd Infantry began to pass
through San Miguel at sundown. The last troops had passed by 12:00 a.m. That
night we retired to the Bamban River line without incident. (See Figure 5.)
On 31
December, we are out of contact with the Japanese. All was quiet. The Japanese
seem to have a policy of limited objectives. If they had only known what was
holding up their advance they wouldn’t have hesitated but would have pushed us
back into Bataan immediately. The bridge over the Bamban was dynamited on the
night of the 31st of December.
1 January
1942
There
was a conference at the division command post in Mabalacat to coordinate the
retreat which was to take place the following night. My policy would be the
same. There was a division of elements at Angeles, some were to go by way of
the San Fernando-Guagua road while others were to retire by road. On the
morning of 1 January, I leap-frogged number one gun to the rear. It was too
close under the heights of the north bank of the Bamban. The gun fired on
Japanese machine gun patrols before moving. There was heavy fire on the hills
to the left flank. They are the only point of observation within our lines and
they overlooked the Japanese advance. The retreat was carried out without
incident, and on the morning of the 2nd I placed my guns in depth along the road
south of Hacienda Pio. (See Figure 6.) I reported to Col. Mallonee at the
division command post, San Jose, and was informed there would be no move
tonight. On the way to the command post I had noticed a tank platoon, Lt.
McDowell commanding, off the road in some trees a good distance behind the
lines just east of Kalantas. While in San Jose I found Capt. Donald Haynes,
commanding officer, B Company, 192nd Tank Battalion, who was using his radio to
maintain contact with his platoons, of which Lt. McDowell’s was one. I asked
him for a note placing his platoons at my disposal and received the same.
Just
west of Pio I picked up Lt. Grover C. Richards, an instructor with the 3rd
Battalion, 21st Infantry, Philippine Army, who told me that the command post of
the 21st was surrounded. I parked my car on the line of 2nd Battalion, 21st
Field Artillery, Philippine Army, guns, and Sgt. Hagedorn, Lt. Richards, and I
started to walk forward. As we did so, a platoon of tanks passed us going
forward. We had not walked 200 yards when the same tanks came charging back. I
turned to Richards and said, “Those tanks should have stayed up there.” He
replied, “They’re not doing my command post any good.” I told him to go forward
to my first gun and wait there while I went back and contacted the tanks.
I went
back to the woods and after some persuasion and showing the note from Capt.
Haynes, Lt. McDowell agreed to bring his tanks up with my guns. I started back
and was a good distance in advance of the tanks when I was fired on by a
Japanese machine gunner at the bamboo line. I jumped out of the car, threw a
grenade, and got my rifle. The tanks had come up by this time and they began to
throw 37mm, .50- and .30-caliber into the bamboo. I climbed on top of the
leading tank and used the turret gun until it jammed. I then jumped off the
tank, got them to stop firing, and lead them up the road on foot and placed a
tank with each of my guns.
With
some of the men from the tanks I made a scouting trip to where the ground
dropped off in order to be sure there were no Japanese nearby. When I returned
to my first gun, Lt. McDowell stuck his head out of the turret and asked me if
I expected him to stay where he was that night. I replied in the affirmative.
He said,
“But we are vulnerable at night.”
“So are
my guns,” I replied.
“I won’t
stay,” he answered.
“Oh,
yes, you will.”
“No, I
have a platoon coming up to relieve me. We don’t stay in the front line more
than twenty-four hours.”
“Well,”
I answered, “the man who relieves you will.”
Sergeant
Hagedorn and I then drove to Hacienda Pio to meet Lt. Harrison. While there
firing broke out nearby and Filipinos began to run past. Hagedorn and I drove
out to the road. There was much confusion; only one machine gun was firing; the
personnel of the 21st were lying down behind their guns; whereas one shell
would have ended the Japanese penetration.
At the
intersection to the main road I found the tanks, 2nd Platoon, B Company,
retreating. I stopped them and asked Lt. Jennings where he was going.
“To the
rear. The Japanese have broken through.”
“How
about staying with my guns?” I asked.
“No!” he
replied.
I
threatened him with a court-martial, but it didn’t do any good and he went on
to the rear. I stopped the sergeant of the next tank with a few hard words and
put his tank and the other two in position with my guns again. Not long
afterwards Lt. Jennings returned and asked me where I wanted his tank. After
that things quieted down. The 21st command post had been relieved in the
afternoon when the tanks came up with my guns.
4 January
There is
heavy artillery fire on the main road to the south. The Japanese have
apparently given up their attempted flank movement here. Firing is sporadic.
There is Japanese and Philippine Scout cavalry in the mountains to the north.
Captain Fowler, 26th Cavalry, Philippine Scouts, contacted me to tell me of the
presence of his troops in the vicinity so that my guns would not fire on them
before ascertaining their identity. When on the Bamban Line I had received
orders to fire on any cavalry, since none of ours was in the vicinity at the
time. Colonel Mallonee ordered me to follow my same procedure in covering the
retreat of the infantry tonight.
The
retreat began at nightfall and by noon next day we were in Dinalupijan, Bataan.
At the command post Col. Mallonee ordered me to place my guns on the road to
Guagua at nightfall and to follow the 26th Cavalry across the Lyac Junction
Bridge into Bataan, at which time I would revert to the command of the
Provisional Field Artillery (SPM). He did not know the rendezvous area of the
SPMs. I crossed the bridge sometime around 11:00 p.m. and met Maj. Ganahl who
was looking for some SPMs that had gotten lost. He told me the rendezvous area
was on the Pilar-Bagac Road near Bagac. I found the area the next day and
reported to Col. Babcock.
Two
days later, 8 January 1942, I turned the battery over to Lt. Daniel W. Cranford
and became S-1 and S-4 of the 1st Provisional Battalion, Field Artillery (SPM),
Maj. Joseph Ganahl commanding.