MACARTHUR

  • MANILA’S LIBERATION AT HAND

    Manila, Philippines · February 3, 1945 On this date in 1945, 35,000 soldiers of the U.S. Sixth Army under Lt. Gen. Walter Krueger, sup­ported by 3,000 Filipino guerril­las, began entering Manila, capital of the Philip­pines, and soon liber­ated nearly 6,000 Allied and Fili­pino pri­soners. Some of them, like the 64 U.S. Army nurses, were taken captive…

  • AMERICANS ADVISED TO LEAVE JAPAN

    Washington, D.C. · January 9, 1941 On this date in 1941 in Washington, D.C., the U.S. State Depart­ment advised Amer­i­can citi­zens to leave Japan. Two sum­mers earlier the State Depart­ment had in­formed Japan that it would not renew the 1911 Treaty of Com­merce and Navi­ga­tion between the two coun­tries, leaving the U.S. free in Janu­ary…

  • IWO JIMA BOMBING CONTINUES

    Saipan Island, Northern Marianas · January 7, 1945 In early October 1944 the U.S. high command decided that, after securing the Philip­pine island of Leyte (done before the end of Decem­ber), Gen. Douglas Mac­Arthur was to lib­er­ate neigh­boring Lu­zon Is­land, while Fleet Adm. Ches­ter Nimitz, from his station in the Cen­tral Pacific, would attack the…

  • JAPAN CAPTURES ISLAND CAPITAL

    Manila, Philippines · January 2, 1942 Japan intended to occupy the Philippine Islands as part of its plan for a “Greater East Asia War.” The nation’s Southern Expeditionary Army Group was tasked with seizing the islands, British Malaya (today’s Malaysia), and the Netherlands East Indies (now Indonesia) simul­taneously with the Japanese Navy’s assault on the…

  • JAPANESE TROOPS LAND ON LUZON

    Manila, Philippines · December 10, 1941 On this date in 1941, three days after the U.S. Pacific fleet had been crippled at Pearl Harbor, Japa­nese troops landed on the U.S.-held island of Guam in the west­ern Paci­fic Ocean and occu­pied it with­in hours. On the same day ele­ments of the Japa­nese 14th Area Army under Lt….

  • MACARTHUR: “I HAVE RETURNED!”

    Leyte, Philippines · October 20, 1944 In October 1944 Lt. Gen. Tomoyuki Yamashita commanded 225,000 Japa­nese sol­diers in the Philip­pines. On this date in 1944, on a 25‑mile stretch of Leyte Island in the Philip­pines, an Allied fleet of more than 730 trans­port and escort ves­sels, supported by air­craft carriers and 100 war­ships, put 160,000 U.S. troops ashore under…

  • PACIFIST BECOMES JAPAN PRIME MINISTER

    Tokyo, Japan · October 9, 1945 On this date in 1945 in Tokyo, Baron Kijuro Shidehara became Prime Minis­ter of Japan at the head of a consti­tu­tional govern­ment com­mitted to pur­suing a peace­ful future. Before the war Shide­hara had been a pro­mi­nent Japa­nese diplo­mat and a leading pro­po­nent of paci­fism in Japan. On Octo­ber 9 the…

  • FIRST BOOTS ON JAPAN ARE ARMY BOOTS

    Kyūshū Island, Japan · August 25, 1945 On this date in 1945, ten days after Japan had agreed to uncon­di­tional sur­render, two U.S. Army pilots flying P‑38 Lightnings on armed recon­nais­sance landed on Kyūshū Island, the southern­most Japa­nese home island, after one of the P‑38s ran low on fuel. The two pilots became the first Amer­i­cans…

  • LAST HOLDOUTS SURRENDER TO JAPANESE

    Manila, Occupied Philippines · May 6, 1942 On December 8, 1941, Japanese forces invaded the Philip­pines, a largely self-governing U.S. pos­ses­sion. (Decem­ber 8, Manila and Japa­nese time, was the same date Japa­nese car­rier-based planes attacked Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, in a set of inter­locked assaults on U.S. mili­tary assets in the Paci­fic region.) The com­bined U.S.-Filipino force…