| Location |
RHC |
| Item Call Number |
D 767.4 S63 1993 |
| Status |
Available |
| Barcode |
13982 |
| International Standard Book Number |
- International Standard Book Number - (hardbound)
|
| Language Code |
- Language code of text/sound track or separate title - eng
|
| Main Entry |
- Personal name - Smith, Robert Ross
|
| Title Statement |
- Title - Triumph in the Philippines /
- Statement of responsibility, etc. - by Robert Ross Smith
|
| Publication, Distribution, Etc. (imprint) |
- Place of publication, distribution, etc. - Washington, D.C. :
- Name of publisher, distributor, etc. - Center of Military History, U.S. Army,
- Date of publication, distribution, etc. - 1993.
|
| Physical Description |
- Extent - xxii, 756 p. :
- Other physical details - ill., maps ;
- Dimensions - 23 x 18 cm.
- Accompanying material - + 1 compact disc (digital ; 4 3/4 cm.); application/pdf (.pdf) 105 MB
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| Content Type |
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| Media Type |
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| Carrier Type |
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| Series Statement/title |
- Title - United States Army in World War II. War in the Pacific.
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| Summary, Etc. |
- Summary, etc. - First published 1963, several reprints. This volume is part of the multi-volume official "US Army in World War II" series; tenth in the sub-series "War in the Pacific." (This series is also called the "Green book series" because the original hardbound copies were in green). This is the official account of US Army operations in the liberation campaign after the Leyte operations. Official in the sense that this was commissioned, funded and published by the US Army, which also checked the drafts of this work. The army also provided full support to the author, a professional military historian working at the Office of the Chief of Military History, in accessing sources and individuals to interview, as well as travel to the Philippines. This volume deals with the ground campaign to liberate the Philippines - after Leyte - from the Japanese. It covers plans and preparations, the landings at Lingayen and the drive south to Manila; the battle of Manila, the battles to retake Corregidor and Bataan, the north Luzon campaign, the fighting in the Visayas and Mindanao. The campaign is told in much detail, including information from the Japanese side. Told largely from an institutional perspective, the narrative is quite impersonal, but this work remains the definitive study on US army operations in the liberation of the Philippines. The Luzon campaign sometimes goes down to regimental and even battalion level, but the Visayas Mindanao campaign is covered in much less detail. Despite the plethora of sources, several key histories were missing or absent, which the author acknowledges. Especially felt was the lack of full guerrilla histories. As a military history, the coverage is of the movement and operations of military units, usually on the regimental level and above. There is thus scarce mention of the human element, very little on the guerrillas, and almost nothing on civilian casualties and suffering. As an Army history, there is also hardly any coverage of air and naval operations. - Prof. Ricardo T. Jose
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| Language Note |
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| Subject Topical Term |
- Topical term or geographic name as entry element - World War, 1939-1945
- General subdivision - Campaigns
- Geographic subdivision - Philippines.
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| Subject Geographic Name |
- Geographic name - Philippines
- General subdivision - History
- Chronological subdivision - Japanese occupation, 1942-1945.
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| Index Termuncontrolled |
- Uncontrolled term - Battle of Manila
- Uncontrolled term - liberation of the Visayas and Mindanao
- Uncontrolled term - Lingayen landing
- Uncontrolled term - Luzon campaign
- Uncontrolled term - Military history - Philippine liberation campaign
- Uncontrolled term - US Army
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