Upload
accrane
View
3.224
Download
7
Tags:
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
Warning: This presentation contains graphic images
World War II
World War IIThe costliest war in history
Estimates of over 60 million dead
World War II
World War II
World War II
World War II
The Japanese Invasion of the Philippine Islands
The Bataan Death March
United States
• After World War I, the U.S. wanted to remain as neutral as possible
• Wanted to take an isolationist stance• “It’s a European war”• Was , however, shipping supplies to British
Japan
• Had been extending its empire for almost half a century
• Had control over Korea, Manchuria, and wanted to spread into China and the Pacific
1941
December 7, 1941
• Japanese attack Pearl Harbor
USS Arizona
USS Arizona
USS Shaw
USS Arizona
USS Shaw
USS West Virginia
USS Arizona
USS Shaw
USS West Virginia
USS California
Following the day of infamy
• Japanese invade Philippine Islands December 8, 1941
Furthest extent of Japanese control
April 1942
April 1942
April 1942
• Over 60,000 American and Filipino troops taken as POWs
• Over 60,000 American and Filipino troops taken as POWs
The Death March
• The Death March ended over two weeks after the fall of Bataan
• Between six and eleven thousand Americans and Filipinos died
• Survivors herded to camps throughout the Pacific
• Thousands more died in these camps
• Survivors herded to camps throughout the Pacific
• Thousands more died in these camps
The end draws near
• By late 1944, American forces reached the Philippine Islands in its own Pacific campaign
• There remained only several camps, including:– Palawan– Cabanatuan
• Japan orders death of POWS
The end draws near
• By late 1944, American forces reached the Philippine Islands in its own Pacific campaign
• There remained only several camps, including:– Palawan– Cabanatuan
• Japan orders death of POWS
Palawan
• Over 150 POWs forced into air raid shelters and burned alive
• Those trying to escape were shot
Cabanatuan
Sources• Sides, Hampton. Ghost Soldiers. New York: Anchor Books, 2001.
• Taylor, Frank. “Agony in the Pacific.” Magazine and date unknown: 57-71.
• Associated Press. “Shameful War Chapter.” Sun-Sentinel 5 April 1992: 1G.
• “Death was a part of our life.” LIFE Date and pages unknown.
• Knowles, Jesse. “The Bataan Death March.” Online. Available http://www.geocitites.comPentagon/8967/. 13 April 2004
• PBS. “Capture and Death March.” Oneline. Available http://www.phs.org/wgbh/amx/macarthur/sfeature/bataan_capture.html. 29 February 2004
• Dorsey, Chris. “Our POWs Shouldn’t Have to Wait Anymore.” Newsweek 4 November 2002: 14.
• Boren, Homer and Fridlund, Paul. “The Will to Live.” American History Illustrated September/October 1993: 50.
• Author unknown. “Memorial Page to Bataan, Corregidor, & Visayan-Mindanao Force.” Online. Available http://members.terracom.net/~vfwpost/Bataan.html. 28 April 2004.
• Art Montana. “Ben Steele’s Personal Chronicle from Bataan to Hiroshima.” Online. Available http://www.artmontana.com/Article/steele/Images/hisown.html. 28 April 2004.
• Author unknown. “Military Cartoon – 1944.” Online. Available http://usd230.k12.ks.us.PICTT/publications/cartoons/1944/m/gif. 28 April 2004.
• Author and title unknown. Online. Available http://www.battlingbastardsbataan.com. 25 February 2004.
• Author and title unknown. Online. Available http://sanddiego.edu/gen/USPics/bataan. 25 January 2004.
Music
• Athanassios Efthimiou Kapralos, Never Again• Magnatune Compilation, Classical, “Ensemble
Sreteniye”
• Retrieved through Creative Commons
Stories of the events surrounding the march
Recommend reading
Recommend viewing