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61st Field Artillery Regiment (PA) | |
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Active | August 28, 1941 - May 12, 1942 |
Disbanded | May 12, 1942 |
Country | Philippines |
Allegiance | United States |
Branch | Army |
Type | Field Artillery |
Role | Army Reserve |
Size | 1,800 |
Part of | 102nd Infantry Division 61st Infantry Division |
Garrison/HQ | Camp Cabatuan, Iloilo |
Equipment | M1917 Enfield Rifles M1923 Thompson Submachineguns M1918 Browning Automatic Rifles M1917 Browning MachinegunsContents |
Engagements | Battle of Tagoloan Battle of Mangima Grand Canyon |
Decorations | Philippine Distinguished Unit Citation |
Commanders | |
Notable commanders | Colonel Hiram Tarkington Major John Lewis |
Insignia | |
Identification symbol |
61st Field Artillery Regiment was a reserve unit of Philippine Army activated in August 1941 as part of 61st Infantry Division based in Panay Island. It fought as infantry as the SS Corregidor, the ship transporting their guns, was sunk when it hit a landmine in Manila Bay.
Philippine Commonwealth Army Field Artillery Regiments | ||||
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The regiment was organized among the reserve soldiers mainly the island of Panay and housed in the training camp in Dingle, Iloilo. Personnel recruited within Panay except for officers that came from Luzon. Captain Gavino of Philippine Army initial commander and USAFFE headquarters sent Major John Lewis along with 4 Lieutenants to help train in September. In November 1941, Lieutenant Colonel Hiram Tarkington arrived to assumed command and Major Lewis slid as Executive Officer. [1]
Composing Regimental Staffs are Captain Jacinto Gavino as S3 but assumed command of 1st Battalion in April 1942, Captain Walter Wald became S2 and 1Lieutenant Laspatora is the S4.
1st Battalion was commanded by Captain Albert Price but later replaced by Major Jacinto Gavino, 2nd Battalion by 1Lieutenant Murphy but later replaced by Captain Trinidad in Mindanao, and 3rd Battalion by Captain Walter Wald later replaced by Captain Senen Cleofe. [2]
In January 1942, a secret order was received by 61st Division Headquarters to transfer 61st Field Artillery Regiment along with 61st and 62 Infantry Regiments. On January 5, the regiment left Panay for Negros Island and travel via motor transport for Dumaguete port. On January 8, 1942, they arrived in Bugo, Misamis Oriental in Northern Mindanao. Change of order came and they were posted on that area to defense any landing of the Japanese.
New headquarters 102nd Infantry Division under Colonel William P. Morse was activated to command all forces in the Cagayan Sector. 61st Field Artillery, 81st Field Artillery, 62nd Infantry and 103rd Infantry are now under this division.
From Panay Kawamura Detachment appeared in Macajalar Bay on May 6, 1942, landing started right away at Bugo, Tagaloan, and Cagayan de Oro. 61st Field Artillery Regiment has limited engagement but due to the farthest proximity of Bugo to Sayre Highway, Colonel Tarkington withdraw his regiment and moved to Alae. The regiment was ordered to Force reserve area in Somilao Sector under Colonel William F. Dalton. [3]
61st Field Artillery moved to Puntian and deployed with 93rd Infantry on the left and 103rd Infantry on the right in Dalirig. Colonel Tarkington at dusk to conferred with Colonel Dalton on defense plan and left Lieutenant Colonel Lewis in charge. At late evening Japanese made intrusion in the Puntian area but regiment repulsed but costly. Tarkington hurriedly went back after hearing the intrusion and news Colonel Lewis was killed. At early morning he found Lewis only wounded but the regiment hold the line. [4]
Colonel William F. Dalton, commander of Somilao Sector ordered all units within the sector to surrender at daybreak of May 11, 1942. With all frustrations and hurt Colonel Hiram Tarkington surrender his troops but he allowed Filipino soldiers who refused to surrender to disperse to the mountains. He doctored his roster and allowed them to escaped. The regiment was assembled and disarmed in Camp Casisang in Malaybalay, where Americans and Filipinos were separated.[ citation needed ]
The regiment disbanded after the war and never reactivated. [5]
The 61st Division of the Philippine Army was an infantry division from the 1941 to 1942.
The 81st Infantry Division was a reserve division of the Philippine Army under the United States Army Forces in the Far East (USAFFE). It was established in the prewar period and fought 1941–1942. Its troops are from Cebu, Bohol, and Leyte but most of its troops are Americans and junior officers are Filipinos coming mostly from Luzon. The division served in defense of Mindanao but it never commanded the 4 of its maneuver regiments but was supplemented with 61st Infantry from Panay and 73rd Infantry from Negros. Also, 2nd Regular Regiment was transferred to its command in the early part of Japanese invasion of Mindanao.
The 102nd Infantry Division was a division of the Philippine Army under the United States Army Forces in the Far East (USAFFE).
Visayas-Mindanao Force was a military formation created in November 1941 to command all soldiers of US Army, US Philippine Scouts, Philippine Army, and Philippine Constabulary in the southern islands of the Philippines. Colonel William F. Sharp was appointed as commanding general and was promoted to Brigadier General in November 1941 and later Major General. His executive officer was Major Howard Edmands. He was just starting to organize his command and train his soldiers into a fighting unit when the war started on December 7, 1941.
Mindanao Force was a corps size military unit defending the island of Mindanao, the second largest island of the Philippines, from March 17, 1942, to its surrender on May 9, 1942. The force was created when the Visayas-Mindanao Force was split into two in March 1942. It was initiated in February 1942 in the headquarters of the United States Army Forces in the Far East, but took effect when General Douglas MacArthur departed for Australia on March 17, 1942.
61st Infantry Regiment was a military unit and formation of the Philippine Army, activated in August 1941 in Panay Island. It is under the command of 61st Infantry Division. The regiment collapsed in May 1942 with its commanding officer captured by the Japanese Army in Lanao.
The 73rd Infantry Regiment of the Philippine Commonwealth Army was activated on August 25, 1941, was inducted to United States Army Forces in the Far East on September 1, 1941, by Captain Eugene B. Hicker of US Army. It was the last regiment among the three authorized to organized so it was not included when the entire 71st Infantry Division was ordered transferred to the main island of Luzon in September 1941.
101st Infantry Regiment is military unit and formation activated by Philippine Army during the early days of World War II. It was composed of Filipinos who resided in Mindanao, few officers from Luzon, Moros, and American soldiers assigned to command and train the regiment. It is known for his action in Davao province during the early days of war. It is credited for holding Japanese forces from reaching Kabacan for December 1941 to April 1942. It held them beyond Digos sector for 4 Months, that it needed reinforcements in April to reach Kabacan.
102nd Infantry Regiment is a military unit of the Philippine Commonwealth Army during World War II. I was activated in September 1941 and inducted to USAFFE on the same month. It fought under 101st Infantry Division
103rd Infantry Regiment is a unit activated by the Philippine Army during World War II. I was organized in Mindanao in November 1941 which was not yet ready to fight when the war broke out.
62nd Infantry Regiment was Philippine Army Reserve unit activated in November 1941 in Panay Island. It was organized from the Army reservist in that area with officers mostly coming from Luzon and Americans. I was based and trained in Cabatuan, Iloilo and was placed as part of 61st Infantry Division activated on November 1, 1941, in preparation for Japanese invasion of the Philippines.
63rd Infantry Regiment is a reserve unit of Philippine Army activated and organized during World War II. I was organized from reservist and recruits high school and college students around the 6th Military District. It is part of the 61st Infantry Division activated to cover the island of Panay. The regiment fought entirely in Panay island until it was ordered to surrendered on May 12, 1942.
United States Forces in the Philippines (USFIP) is a unified command in the Philippines during World War II. It was the successor to the United States Army Forces in the Far East (USAFFE) which General Douglas MacArthur commanded. He moved to Australia as he evacuated as ordered by President Roosevelt in March 1942. The command only lasted two months as it surrendered by Lieutenant General Jonathan M. Wainwright to Lieutenant General Homma Masaharu commander of 14th Army of the Imperial Japanese Army.
Japanese invasion of Panay on April 16–18, 1942 was the second landing in the Visayas Islands after Fil-American forces surrendered in Bataan on April 9, 1942. It is the next step to prevent any supplies reach Corregidor Island and control the Visayas waters and established bases for the campaign to invade island of Mindanao to complete the invasion of the Philippines.
Japanese invasion of Cotabato is one of the three landings made by the Japanese Army during their siege of Mindanao.
75th (Provisional) Infantry Regiment was a reserve unit of Philippine Commonwealth Army activated under Negros Force in January 1942. It saw no action as it was disbanded in May 1942 after it surrendered to Japanese during World War II. Most of its soldiers escaped and joined guerilla movement organized by Major Salvador Abcede.
81st Field Artillery Regiment is a reserve unit of Philippine Commonwealth Army activated in August 1941 as part of 81st Infantry Division. It was organized and inducted in Cebu out of reserve soldiers and officers.
Hiram Wendell Tarkington was a colonel in United States Army known for commanding the 61st Field Artillery Regiment of the Philippine Army from November 1941 to May 1942. He became a prisoner of war after the surrender of American forces in the Philippines and was imprisoned until the end of the war. After retiring from the Army in 1954, he led civil defense in Florida from 1955 until 1968.
Japanese Invasion in Cagayan de Oro, a military conflict during early days of World War II in the Philippines. It took place from May 6 to 12, 1942. Their main objective was to capture vital Del Monte Fields and link with Sakaguchi Detachment from the south via Sayre Highway.
106th Infantry Regiment, is a reserve unit of Philippine Commonwealth Army activated in January 1942 to augment the forces in Mindanao. It was attached to Zamboanga Force under Lieutenant Colonel William F. Dalton and later Lieutenant Colonel Alvin T. Wilson.
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