41st Division (Philippines)

Last updated
41st Division
41st Philippine Division Emblem 1941-42.jpg
41st Philippine Division Emblem 1941-42
Active28 August 1941 - 9 April 1942
DisbandedApril 9, 1941
CountryFlag of the Philippines (1946-1998).svg  Commonwealth of the Philippines
AllegianceFlag of the United States Army.svg  United States Army
Philippine Commonwealth Army Flag.png Philippine Commonwealth Army
BranchArmy
Type Infantry Division
RoleDivision
Size8200
Part of South Luzon Force(II Philippine Corps)
Cantonment Tagaytay, Cavite
AnniversariesAugust 28
EquipmentM1903 Springfield Rifles
M1917 Enfield Rifles
M1923 Thompson Submachineguns
M1918 Browning Automatic Rifles
M1917 Browning Machineguns
M2 Browning Heavy Machineguns
M1916 75mm Guns
QF 2.95inch Mountain Guns
3inch Stokes Mortars
Engagements World War II
DecorationsPhilippine Presidential Unit Citation
Philippine Defense Campaign Medal
Commanders
Commander BGen. Vicente P. Lim
Senior InstructorCol. Malcolm V. Fortier, USA
Chief of StaffLCol. Tomas Domaoal, PA
Notable
commanders
Brigadier General Vicente Lim
Insignia
Identification
symbol
Philippine Army Infantry BC.jpg

The 41st Infantry Division was a division of the Philippine Army under the United States Army Forces in the Far East (USAFFE).

Contents

Organization

Brigadier General Vicente Lim, Commander 41st Infantry Division Brigadier General Vicente Lim.jpg
Brigadier General Vicente Lim, Commander 41st Infantry Division

The division had an authorized strength of 7,500 men. [1] As of March 1942, the division had fewer than 6,000 men. [2] The 41st Field Artillery Regiment had sixteen 75-mm. guns and eight 2.95-inch pack howitzers. [3]

History

It was active from August 28, 1941 to April 9, 1942, whereupon it surrendered when Bataan fell. Previously it was active in the City of Manila, Southern Luzon. BGen. Vicente P. Lim (PA) (USMA, 1914) was the division's commander, [4] and Col. Malcolm V. Fortier was the division's Senior Instructor, desperately trying to get the new recruits of the division (nearly the entire cadre) up to par in a record amount of time.

By 4 November 1941, the 41st was put under the South Luzon Force (SLF) under the command of BGen. George M. Parker, along with the 51st Division and the Battery A of 86th FA of the Philippine Scouts. [5]

The first days

After the Japanese invasion of the Philippines in December 1941, it formed part of South Luzon Force (activated December 13, 1941) under BGen. George M. Parker Jr. The South Luzon Force controlled a zone east and south of Manila. Parker had the Philippine Army's 41st and 51st Infantry Divisions and the 2nd Provisional Artillery Group of two batteries of the U.S. 86th Field Artillery Regiment (Philippine Scouts). [6]

When the Japanese began landing at Lamon Bay on December 24, 1941, South Luzon Force was badly dispersed. The 41st Division (PA) on the west coast was in position, but elements of the 51st Division along the east coast were in the process of movement. [7] Meanwhile, upon activation of War Plan Orange-3, the Southern Luzon Force was called to Bataan. BGen. Parker sent his division staff to relay to BGen. Lim, and movement only commenced when 41st Division staff officers were able to commandeer buses of the Pasay Transportation Company.

Bataan

The 41st Division was one of the first units to reach Bataan, and rallied around Abucay from December 23–25, 1941. [8] The division was in position along the Mt. Natib trail and Balantay River and defended the center of the Abucay Line, [9] against Japanese assaults [10] until ordered to retreat on 22 January. [11]

The Orion-Bagac line showing the U.S. positions around 27 January 1942 Orion-Bagac Line.jpg
The Orion–Bagac line showing the U.S. positions around 27 January 1942

The 41st Division was then ordered to hold east of Pantingan River in Pilar, Bataan and west of Mount Samat, along the Orion-Bagac Line, making them as the key unit to hold any southern movement of the Japanese forces through Trail 29. The 41st Division gave the stiffest opposition to the Japanese offensive, punishing elements of the opposing Japanese 65th Brigade's 141st Battalion. BGen. Lim at some point directed small and effective counter-offensives, only to be directed to return to the Bagac-Orion Line. The 141st Battalion by April 9 recorded that they have lost 70% of their manpower facing the 41st Division units. In exacting revenge after the Fall of Bataan, the 65th Brigade mistook the men of the 91st Division for the 41st Division, and had them summarily executed to now what is known as the Pantingan River massacre. [12]

The division held the extreme left of the II Corps line on the eve of the last Japanese offensive in Bataan on April 3, along with the 31st Division. [13] Such was the effect of bombardment that even before the Japanese tank-infantry attack had begun to roll, the 41st Division had ceased to exist as an effective military organization. The units most affected by the bombardment and the assault were the 42d and 43d Infantry. The first, in the center of the division front where bamboo fires burned fiercely, had retreated in a disorderly fashion, some of the men following Trail 29 into the 41st Infantry area, and others drifting eastward to join the retreating 43d on the western slopes of Mt. Samat. Only the 41st Infantry on the extreme left of the line, which had escaped the full weight of the preliminary bombardment, had withdrawn in an orderly fashion. [14]

Despite the attempt to stem the Japanese advance, [15] by 4 April the division was routed. [16] On 9 April, the inevitable bitter end came. MGen. Edward P. King Jr., commander of Bataan Defense Force, surrendered to prevent the unnecessary slaughter of his war-torn troops, negotiating the surrender of the Bataan troops with the Japanese High Command. [17]

The Japanese was so rapid that BGen. Vicente Lim and his division staff was captured before even MGen. Edward King's capitulation of Bataan. The division initially began marching from Pilar, Bataan on what would later be known as the infamous Bataan Death March all the way to San Fernando, Pampanga. They covered about 65 km under intense conditions of heat and brutality from the guards. Upon arrival in San Fernando 6,000 of them were herded in the city's cock pit arena. The following day, the POWs from the 41st Division were packed 80-100 in railway boxcars and transported from San Fernando to Sto. Domingo Station at Capas, Tarlac. From there, the POWs marched the remaining distance of 7 km to Camp O'Donnell to be incarcerated with 65,000 other Filipino and American POWs for the next 4 months under deplorable conditions, leading to 400 deaths per day. [18]

Memorial

41st Division Philippine Army USAFFE historical marker 41st Division Philippine Army USAFFE historical marker.jpg
41st Division Philippine Army USAFFE historical marker

There are a couple of memorials and markers honoring the BGen. Vicente Lim and the 41st Division:

Order of battle

Notable members

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References

  1. Morton 1953, p. 27.
  2. Morton 1953, p. 405.
  3. Morton 1953, p. 327.
  4. Morton 1953, p. 109.
  5. Alcaraz, Ramon (3 November 1941). "Diary of Ramon Alcaraz - November 4, 1941". The Philippine Diary Project. Retrieved 13 May 2020.
  6. Morton 1953, pp. 68–69.
  7. Morton 1953, p. 141.
  8. Morton 1953, p. 251.
  9. Morton 1953, p. 265.
  10. Morton 1953, p. 275.
  11. Morton 1953, p. 291.
  12. Nelson, Jim. "The Causes of the Bataan Death March Revisited". The US-Japan POWs Dialogue. Archived from the original on August 8, 2006. Retrieved 24 April 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  13. Morton 1953, p. 422.
  14. Morton 1953, pp. 424–425.
  15. Morton 1953, p. 425-427.
  16. Morton 1953, p. 429.
  17. Morton 1953, p. 466.
  18. Buencamino, Felipe III. "Diary of Felipe Buencamino III". The Philippine Diary Project. Retrieved 23 April 2020.

Bibliography