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View Full Version : 11th Abn Raid at Los Banos


greenberetTFS
02-23-2011, 14:02
Sorry,this posting is a day late...My old outfit the 11th Abn Div was de-activated in Germany in 1958,3 months later I was transfered to the 10th at Bad Tolz....This occurred on the same day that the Marines took Iwo Jima...Nothing was ever mention in the news about this because the Marines got all the attention that day...It was the only combat jump by the 11th. :D


Raid at Los Banos...:D

A large number of civilian prisoners had been detained by the Japanese on Luzon, mostly in internment camps scattered throughout the island. The largest of these was located on the campus of the Agricultural College of the Philippines at Los Baños, some forty miles (64 km) south-east of Manila...General Douglas MacArthur had tasked the 11th Airborne Division with rescuing the Los Baños internees on 3 February, but the division's ongoing combat operations around the Genko Line left it unable to divert any resources at that time...All that could be accomplished during February was to gather information, primarily through liaison with the guerilla groups operating in Southern Luzon and around Los Baños. Maj. Gen. Swing and his command staff were briefed daily by the officer working with the guerilla groups, Major Vanderpool...From the guerillas and a few civilians that had escaped the camp, Vanderpool established that it was surrounded by two barbed-wire fences approximately six feet tall. Several guard towers and bunkers dotted its perimeter, each containing at least two guards. Prisoners left each morning under armed guard to gather food supplies and firewood from a nearby town...Vanderpool was informed that the camp's population consisted of American civilians in three distinct groups: Protestant missionaries and their families; Roman Catholic nuns and priests; and professional workers such as doctors and engineers, and their families. The latter group included several hundred women and children. While all the inmates appeared to be in good health, many had become weak from food rationing.

On 20 February, Maj. Gen. Swing was finally able to release sufficient troops for a raid on the Los Baños camp, and a four-phase plan was devised by Major Vanderpool and the divisional staff officers...The divisional reconnaissance platoon would travel across a nearby lake and move to the outskirts of the camp, securing a large adjacent field as the drop zone for a company of paratroopers. Having landed, the paratroopers would eliminate Japanese resistance in the area, secure the camp, and prepare for its evacuation. Fifty-four amphibious Amtracs would transport two additional companies of paratroopers to the lake shore, where a beachhead would be established while the Amtracs continued to the camp to evacuate its occupants. Simultaneously, a task force consisting of a reinforced infantry battalion, two battalions of heavy artillery and a tank destroyer battalion would advance down Highway 1 towards Los Baños to interdict any Japanese attempts to interfere.

Assisted by a group of guerrillas, on the night of 21 February the divisional reconnaissance platoon made their way to the lake and collected ten canoes. Despite navigational difficulties, the platoon came ashore near Los Baños at 02:00 the following morning, and after securing the paratroopers' drop zone, concealed themselves in the jungle near the camp...During the afternoon B Company of the 1st Battalion, 511th PIR was transferred to the airfield from which they would be deployed, while the rest of the battalion rendezvoused with the Amtrac convoy...At 07:00 on the morning of 23 February, B Company took off in ten C-47 Skytrain transport aircraft, arriving over their drop zone shortly afterwards....As the first paratroopers landed, the reconnaissance platoon and the supporting guerilla fighters opened fire on the camp's defences, using Bazooka rounds to penetrate the concrete pillboxes, and then entered the camp to engage its garrison. The paratroopers soon joined the battle, and by 07:30 the Japanese guards had been overcome and the internees were being rounded up and readied for evacuation...At the lakeshore the 511th's other two companies had secured their beachhead, and the convoy of Amtracs reached the camp without incident. Priority during loading was given to the women, children and wounded; some of the able-bodied men walked alongside the Amtracs as they returned to the beach. The first evacuation convoy left the camp at approximately 10:00, with B Company, the reconnaissance platoon and the guerrillas remaining behind to provide a rearguard. By 11:30 all of the civilians had been evacuated, and at 13:00 the Amtrac convoy returned for the rearguard, with the last paratroopers leaving the beach at approximately 15:00...Meanwhile on Highway 1, the taskforce that had been deployed to protect the operation met heavy Japanese resistance and suffered several casualties, but was able to block Japanese forces that advanced on the camp, before retreating back to American lines...The raid had been a complete success, liberating 2,147 civilians...This gave them their nick name "The Angels"... ;)

Big Teddy :munchin

glebo
02-23-2011, 14:21
Very interesting, thanks for posting....

mark46th
02-23-2011, 14:50
Good stuff! Usually, all we hear about is Cabanatuan. I like the "Navigational difficulties" part...

Richard
02-23-2011, 16:01
Airborne Trivia:

Fryar Field, the Fort Benning drop zone in Alabama, is named after MOH recipient PVT Elmer E. Fryar, Co E, 511th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 11th Airborne Division.

I've got around 50 jumps on Fryar.

Anybody else here ever jump there? ;)

Richard :munchin

glebo
02-23-2011, 17:22
Haaaa, Fryer....never heard of the joint.....except for "keep your feet and knees together Airborne"!!!!

And that's all I've seen of Alabama...nice place....from under a 'chute..good 'ol T-10's:D

What did ya'll 'ol timers jump....T-1, or a poncho with 550 cord:eek:

Anyway,...

Is Cabanatuan the place where some of the folks went over the cliff????

I'm no history buff, but I seem to recall reading something along those lines..

Utah Bob
02-23-2011, 18:27
Haaaa, Fryer....never heard of the joint.....except for "keep your feet and knees together Airborne"!!!!

And that's all I've seen of Alabama...nice place....from under a 'chute..good 'ol T-10's:D

What did ya'll 'ol timers jump....T-1, or a poncho with 550 cord:eek:

Anyway,...

Is Cabanatuan the place where some of the folks went over the cliff????

I'm no history buff, but I seem to recall reading something along those lines..

Cabanatuan was the Ranger op. They made a movie about it.

Richard
02-24-2011, 06:19
Is Cabanatuan the place where some of the folks went over the cliff????

That was the 503rd's jump on Corregidor which earned them the nickname, "The Rock."

The initial airborne assault resulted in >25% casualties - winds and cliffs, only 6 second 'Topside' DZs requiring multiple turnarounds and low passes by the a/c, a naval bombardment that did little but rubble empty structures and creating DZs of dangerously shattered trees and large chunks of concrete which led to > injuries, an enemy who had the opportunity to shoot many of the paratroopers as they slowly descended under canopy in squad-sized groups.

The Japanese forces there were disorganized but tenacious even though they had lost their entire leadership with the first wave when a paratrooper threw a grenade in their HQs and killed them all - the loss of their leadership was a huge boon to the 503rd and the success of their mission.

Such daring, courage and tenacity in battle in WW2 and since is what has earned the American Paratrooper the reputation as a warrior which remains to this day.

I've been to Corregidor - for anybody in the RPI, it's worth a visit to the area to walk the Parade Ground and Golf Course DZs on Topside.

Richard

glebo
02-24-2011, 07:40
Thanks for the history lesson Richard. :lifter Good info...now that I've learned something....can I go home now???:D

greenberetTFS
02-24-2011, 09:04
Thanks for the history lesson Richard. :lifter Good info...now that I've learned something....can I go home now???:D

Oh come on guys,with Richard,remember you can take the man out of the teacher but never can you take the teacher out of the man.............;)

Big Teddy :munchin

greenberetTFS
02-24-2011, 09:24
That was the 503rd's jump on Corregidor which earned them the nickname, "The Rock."

The initial airborne assault resulted in >25% casualties - winds and cliffs, only 6 second 'Topside' DZs requiring multiple turnarounds and low passes by the a/c, a naval bombardment that did little but rubble empty structures and creating DZs of dangerously shattered trees and large chunks of concrete which led to > injuries, an enemy who had the opportunity to shoot many of the paratroopers as they slowly descended under canopy in squad-sized groups.

The Japanese forces there were disorganized but tenacious even though they had lost their entire leadership with the first wave when a paratrooper threw a grenade in their HQs and killed them all - the loss of their leadership was a huge boon to the 503rd and the success of their mission.

Such daring, courage and tenacity in battle in WW2 and since is what has earned the American Paratrooper the reputation as a warrior which remains to this day.

I've been to Corregidor - for anybody in the RPI, it's worth a visit to the area to walk the Parade Ground and Golf Course DZs on Topside.

Richard

That's correct Richard,they went from Europe to the Pacific(only Abn. unit that did that) and as an independent unit and not assigned to the 11th................ Gregory Peck was in the 503rd in the movie "Man in the Grey Flannel Suit"..... How's that for trivia Richard? .................;)

Big Teddy :munchin