Bombardment From 3–9 January 1945, the ships of Admiral Oldendorf's invasion force took a lengthy circuitous route through the previously captured islands of Leyte Gulf in the Southeast of the Philippines, shown in blue as the Eastern Visayas in the map at left, and West, South of the Southern Visayas through the Suriago Strait and the
Bohol Sea. Then heading north and following the Western coastlines of the Western Philippine Islands of Negros, Panay, and Mindoro (In green), shown at left in the map, the forward staged ships of Admiral Oldendorf's naval invasion force headed for the mouth of
Lingayen Gulf on the Island of Luzon, shown to the immediate left of Bagaio. From the mouth of the Gulf, two vertical channels would be swept of mines by the minesweepers, one for landing areas terminating at the base of the Gulf, west on the beach of Lingayen, and one for landing areas terminating east at the town of San Fabian. The narrow base of the roughly rectangular Lingayen Gulf provided a relatively small landing area, only 25–30 miles wide, but its assault forces needed to take only a 100-mile overland route South to reach Luzon's capital city of Manila, shown clearly at left. Commencing around noon on 6 January 1945, a heavy naval and air bombardment of suspected Japanese defenses on Lingayen began from their position inside the Gulf, the base of which is shown in the figure above. Estimates of resistance from the coastline and inland shores on the landing areas on the mouth of the Gulf proved inaccurate, as much of the bombardment proved unnecessary.
Minesweeping efforts Demolitions near the planned landing sites on the base of the Gulf by Underwater Demolition Teams were undertaken, but they found no beach obstacles, and only one mine and encountered sparse opposing forces. Lieutenant Commander W. R. Loud, who commanded the minesweeper force, claimed to have found around ten additional mines in his sweeping efforts by end of day 7 January, though intelligence estimates by Philippine resistance may have overestimated the number present. Smith writes that surprisingly, during the 7th, exploratory sweeps during the morning "turned up only two floating mines and none of the moored type." Both sources seemed to indicate a total of less than 10–12 mines, not a particularly large number for a close approach to a landing area, considering the large numbers soon to be found off the beaches of
Iwo Jima. As approach channels were swept, buoys were placed to delineate the areas where ships could approach or land safe from the threat of active contact mines. The sweepers performed with efficiency and courage considering they were the constant target of air attacks, several causing damage, or the sinking of their ships. They performed their tasks effectively during 6–8 January, during frequent attack, and in difficult weather, including high waves on the Eastern base of the gulf near Lingayen during 7 January, which may have affected those craft closer to the eastern side of the Gulf. Aircraft and naval artillery bombardment of the landing areas also occurred, with
kamikazes attacking on the 7th, though enemy
kamikazes, bombers and torpedo planes had reigned terror on the naval forces on their long route to the Gulf from the 2nd and would continue through the 13th. Smith writes that Allied planes from Allied escort carriers flew "from 250 to 300 sorties during the period from 6 through 8 January", bombing and strafing targets along the beaches. Many downed enemy planes and
kamikazes, but many escaped their grasp. Ian W. Toll writes that on 7 January, "in response to urgent requests from Admiral Kinkade and General MacArthur, Halsey threw his "big blue blanket" over Luzon." Airmen from the carriers, after returning to their ships, touted "claims of at least seventy-five Japanese planes destroyed on the ground." On the 8th, it was observed that in the town of
Lingayen, as a response to the pre-landing bombardment, Filipinos had begun to form a
parade, complete with United States and Philippine flags; fire was shifted away from that area.
Land battle , 9, 11 January 1945. landing at "Blue Beach,"
Dagupan, Lingayen Gulf, 1945 As shown at left, at 09:30 on 9 January 1945, about 68,000 GIs under General
Walter Krueger of the
U.S. 6th Army—following a devastating naval bombardment—landed at the coast of
Lingayen Gulf meeting no opposition. A total of 203,608 soldiers were eventually landed over the next few days, establishing a beachhead, stretching from Sual, and San Fabian at the far East of the map at the base of the Bolianu Peninsula, west to the central Gulf town of Dagupan (
XIV Corps), and then to the far Western town of Lingayen. The location of XIV corps is shown by the blue line at the center of the figure at left. The Lingayen Assault Force landing areas are shown at left by blue rectangles near the town of Lingayen, and the assault forces are shown as the blue lines further inland. The San Fabian Assault force (
I Corps) have landing areas shown as rectangles and a blue line indicating assault forces on right of figure by the town of San Fabian. The total number of troops under the command of MacArthur was reported to have even exceeded the number that
Dwight D. Eisenhower controlled in Europe. While aboard ship, Task Force 78, the San Fabian Attack Force, a full three days behind Admiral Oldendorf's Naval convoys, was commanded by Vice Admiral
Daniel E. Barbey, and Task Force 79, the Lingayen Attack Force, an equal distance behind Oldendorf, was commanded by Vice Admiral Theodore Wilkinson. Once disembarking from their ships, the two ground-based assault Task Forces would put more U.S. troops ashore on the first day at Lingayen than those arriving on the bloody beaches of Normandy on Day one of D-Day. Within a few days, the assault forces had quickly captured the coastal towns and secured the beachhead, as well as penetrating up to inland.
Heavy losses on land and sea Despite their success in driving out the Japanese forces stationed there, the Americans and their mostly Australian allies suffered relatively heavy losses; particularly to their convoys, due to
kamikaze attacks. While not the highest in U.S. casualties, the subsequent Battle for Luzon was the highest net casualty battle U.S. forces fought in World War II, with 192,000 to 217,000 Japanese combatants dead, though some sources quote losses as high as 380,000 for the entire conflict including non-combat casualties (mostly from starvation and disease). The battle saw 8,000 American combatants killed, or as many as 10,000 in the entire conflict. Total non-combat American casualty estimates have ranged as high as 93,400 among the Sixth Army when illness from disease and non-combat injuries are accounted for.
Overview of ships damaged 3–13 January 1945 During the invasion by sea, which is the primary subject of this article, from 13 December 1944 – 13 January 1945, including the time Allied ships entered the Philippines through Leyte Gulf to Lingayen, as well as action taken two weeks before off the Northern Philippine Islands of Mindoro and Marinduque, a total of 24 Allied ships were sunk and another 67 were damaged by
kamikazes, though this number includes naval activities off the West coast of Luzon, outside of Lingayen Gulf, off the Philippine Visaya Islands and the Island of Mindoro, which were necessary as preliminaries to secure the Island of Luzon for the invasion force. Ships damaged by
kamikazes between 3–11 January on the way to Lingayen included the
battleships , and (the latter was also accidentally hit by friendly fire), the
heavy cruiser , the
light cruiser , and the
destroyer minesweepers and . The captain, aware of the kamikaze threat, had assigned multiple lookouts throughout the carrier's deck. But a lack of radar signals, a common and vexing problem during the battle, had led the task group to believe that the Japanese planes had withdrawn, and the kamikaze attack took the lookouts by complete surprise. was only able to respond with inaccurate anti-aircraft fire, whilst
Ommaney Bay was unable to react at all. The plane sliced across the superstructure with its wing, collapsing it onto the flight deck, and then veered into her flight deck on the forward starboard side, releasing the two bombs, with one penetrating the flight deck and setting off a series of explosions among the fully gassed planes on the hangar deck. Pressure to her water main was lost when the second bomb passed through the hangar deck, making it more difficult to fight fires. Fires and explosions, including the intense heat and dark smoke of an oil fire, continued until the decision was made to scuttle her with a torpedo later in the day. Considered sunk by Naval statistics, her kamikaze strike, though coming early in the battle, represented the greatest loss of life to a single ship with 93 killed and 65 wounded. 19
Grumman FM-2 Wildcat fighters and 10
Grumman TBM Avenger torpedo bombers went down with
Ommaney Bay. None of her planes were able to take off before the attack.
USS Manila Bay struck It is strongly speculated by Samuel Eliot Morison that the late afternoon kamikaze strikes on 5 January between 16:51 and 17:50 on , , , , , and came from 16 kamikaze planes and 4 escorts that took off at 15:57 from the Japanese airbase at Mabalacat, formerly
Clark Air Base, north of Manila. The attacks occurred west of Luzon about off the coast of
Corregidor. The air base's relative proximity to the Allied ships insured relatively full tanks, and the tactical training they had received from Commander Tadashi Nakajima in kamikaze targeting methods, maneuvering and dive strategies increased their chances of making it to their targets and dealing a more damaging strike. Just before 17:50, on 5 January, two
kamikazes dove at
Manila Bay from the portside. The first plane hit the flight deck to starboard abaft the
bridge, causing fires on the flight and hangar decks, destroying radar transmitting spaces, and wiping out all communications. The second plane, aimed for the bridge, missed the island close aboard to starboard and hit the sea off the fantail.
HMAS Australia struck five times The heavy cruiser was the only invasion ship struck five times, though her considerable casualties of forty-four dead and seventy-two wounded were the result of only the first two strikes, of which only the second caused serious damage. While roughly northwest of
Manila Bay on her approach to the mouth of the Gulf to provide fire support for the Lingayen landings at San Fabian,
Australia was struck portside amidships at 17:35 on 5 January. Twenty-five were killed and thirty were wounded, though Morison put the figures at thirty killed and forty-six wounded, mostly from the gun crews of the port-side secondary and anti-aircraft guns. However, the damage to the ship was not serious enough to withdraw her from her duties, and she continued in operation. The ships reached the gulf early on 6 January, and by 11:00,
Australia had commenced pre-landing bombardment. While in the gulf, a second
kamikaze rammed the cruiser at 17:34 on 6 January between the starboard 4-inch guns, killing fourteen and wounding twenty-six. The casualties again consisted primarily of gun crews, and after this point, there were only enough trained personnel to man one 4-inch gun on each side of the cruiser. On 8 January,
Australia was attacked twice by
kamikazes in quick succession: at 07:20, a twin-engine bomber hit the water near the cruiser and skidded to connect with the ship's port flank, then a second aircraft attacked at 07:39, again shot down just before it hit the port side at the waterline. A bomb carried by the second attacker opened a hole in the hull, causing a 5-degree
list, but despite the explosion and a large quantity of debris and shrapnel, casualties were limited to a few cases of shock, and
Australia was deemed capable of carrying out the bombardments assigned to her that day. Although there were no casualties, the crash damaged the funnel, radar, and wireless systems, and the decision was made to withdraw the cruiser for repairs. As her minesweeping unit swept the gulf on 6 January, several
kamikazes launched an attack on
Hovey and her formation, severely damaging around 12:52, and just earlier claiming
Hoveys sister ship around 12:15.
Hovey would take a number of survivors of
Brooks from , which had picked up part of her crew after she had been abandoned due to fires. Around 12:15, prior to the
Brooks giving the order to abandon her crew,
Hovey slipped her gear and stood in to assist
Long.
Long had been hit by a low flying
kamikaze Mitsubishi Zero on her portside below the bridge about above the waterline. Soon the entire bridge and well deck was on fire, and fearing explosions to the forward magazine and ready ammunition, the order was given by Captain Stanley Caplan to abandon ship to those men trapped in the forecastle forward of the forward mast, though the crew aft abandoned ship. Because of the fire and continued air attacks,
Hovey could not get alongside, but spent an hour picking up 149 survivors, nearly the entire ship's complement. After a second
kamikaze hit near the bridge later on 6 January, with her back broken,
Long eventually sank on the morning of 7 January at 16°12'N, 120°11'E, in the gulf about north of the beaches of Lingayen. Completing her sweeps by end of day,
Hovey withdrew with the rest of her division as darkness fell to open waters outside of Lingayen Gulf. At 03:45 on the morning of 7 January, Commander Loud's
Hovey, with her load of survivors from both
Long and
Brooks still crammed aboard, was positioned, along with the rest of the large minesweeper group, off the northwest corner of the Gulf, abreast of Cape Balinao. Steaming ahead were the
destroyer escorts
Barton,
Walke,
Radford, and
Leutze, intending to provide support against coastal batteries, including those stationed off Cape Balinao, if necessary. Acting as flagship,
Hovey took the lead of her formation and began sweeping operations shortly after 04:00. Less than half an hour later, radar reports flashed out that enemy aircraft were inbound, and
Hoveys crew again secured her sweep gear and manned their guns. Sighting two inbound planes, at least one a torpedo bomber, flying just above the water materializing out of the predawn darkness and haze at 04:50,
Hoveys gunners took both aircraft under fire. The second aircraft was set afire from the gunners aboard as it closed on
Hoveys port side, splashing over her starboard beam. The plane may have received additional fire from
Hoveys gunners. At the same instant, a torpedo released from one of the planes found its mark and slammed into
Hoveys starboard side at her aft engine room. The force of the blast buckled
Hoveys
keel and killed most of the men in her after engine room, in addition to knocking out power and communications to most of the ship. Within seconds the midship was exposed to massive flooding that snapped her keel in half and caused the ship to begin breaking up.
USS Hovey sinks from aerial torpedo Within two minutes of the torpedo impact,
Hoveys bow section was listing 90 degrees as men stationed there scrambled to abandon the sinking vessel. Moments later, a bulkhead gave way and sent the bow vertical in the water where for a few seconds it lingered before plunging to the bottom.
Hoveys stern remained on an even keel as it slowly swamped, allowing most of the crew and rescued sailors there to get off before it too sank at this location at 04:55 on 7 January 1945. When
Hovey sank, she took 24 of her crew and 24 men from her sister ships
Long, and
Brooks with her to the bottom. Five of those lost when
Hovey sank came from
Brooks. She sank roughly north of the base of the gulf at a depth of , at 16°20'N 120°10'E.
Chandler, soon stood by rescuing the survivors of all three ships from the sinking
Hovey, a total of 229 crew. Of the 229 men
Chandler rescued from
Hovey, roughly half were likely survivors of
Long, and had escaped from two successively abandoned and badly damaged ships.
USS New Mexico struck At 1159 on 6 January 1945,
Lieutenant General Herbert Lumsden was killed when a
kamikaze struck the bridge of the battleship . He was the most senior
British Army combat fatality of World War II. Lumsden was British Prime Minister
Winston Churchill's personal liaison to General Douglas MacArthur. The ship sustained 30 dead and 87 wounded, when the
kamikaze hit her bridge, killing Lumsden and her commanding officer, Captain Robert Fleming. Rear Admiral George Weyler, commander of the San Fabian fire support force and previously the commander of the battleship fleet in the
Battle of Leyte Gulf a few months earlier, and British Admiral Sir
Bruce Fraser, commander of the
British Pacific Fleet, were in the bridge also, but they were on the starboard side and unharmed. They were only a few yards from being killed or seriously wounded.
USS California struck Shortly after 17:15 on 6 January, two
kamikaze Zeros approached USS
California. Her gunners shot down one, but the other struck her at port by her mainmast. The
kamikazes fuel tanks leaked gasoline, starting a fire and a 5-inch shell from another ship accidentally hit one of her 5-inch guns, which exploded inside the turret, and started another fire. The fires were quickly suppressed, but significant casualties resulted, including 44 killed and 155 injured.
USS Louisville hit twice Rear Admiral Theodore E. Chandler, Commander of Cruiser Division 4, died from his wounds on 7 January 1945, a day after the bridge of the heavy cruiser , where he was helping to direct operations, was struck a devastating blow by a
kamikaze, having received a less damaging strike by a
kamikaze on the previous day. Admiral Chandler received a posthumous
Navy Cross for his direction of operations aboard the besieged cruiser.
USS Mississippi struck began shelling Japanese positions on the island of Luzon on 6 January 1945. During the bombardment, a Japanese
kamikaze struck the ship on 9 January at 13:02, but she remained on station, bombarding the Japanese defenses, until 10 February, when she withdrew to Pearl Harbor for repairs. At 13:03, a Japanese "Val" had struck the battleship on the port side below bridge level, landing on an anti-aircraft gun and toppling over the side. Twenty-three were killed and sixty-three wounded, giving the battleship one of the heavier casualty rates of those struck.
USS Belknap struck At 07:53, on 11 January 1945, the
Clemson-class destroyer USS
Belknap was forced to train all her guns on a Japanese
kamikaze which eventually crashed her number two stack, nearly disabling her engines, and resulting in the death of 38 and wounding 49 of her crew. These included Underwater Demolition Team 9, on board when she was hit, which cost the team one officer, 7 enlisted, 3 missing in action and 13 wounded. Earlier, from 3–11 January 1945, she had acted as a shore bombardment and beach reconnaissance vessel at the Lingayen landings.
SS Kyle Johnson, David D. Field damaged One of the worst losses of life was suffered by merchant marine vessel SS
Kyle V. Johnson at 18:30 on 12 January, when a kamikaze dive, among a group of six attacking enemy planes, started a large fire, killing 120 men. Two of the planes splashed just short of SS
David Dudley Field, causing minor engine room damage, but
Edward N. Wescott received considerable damage from flying debris, wounding six of her merchant seamen, and seven of her Naval armed guard crew. With few enemy planes remaining on Luzon, the
kamikazes went after victims of opportunity, the slower, cargo ships, which certainly had poorer air defenses than battleships and cruisers, yet represented a large target, that may have had somewhat limited mobility due to their size, weight, and weather conditions in the gulf.
Escort carrier Salamaua struck At 08:58 on 13 January, the escort carrier was struck by an unidentified kamikaze who dove almost vertically at too great a speed to give the ship's gunners time to respond. The plane, which plunged through the flight deck, carried two bombs, one under each wing. One bomb exploded causing fires on the flight deck, hangar deck, and a few additional areas. The second bomb did not explode but penetrated the ship's starboard side at the waterline. With a loss of power communication and steering, fifteen men aboard
Salamaua were killed, and eighty-eight wounded. Two Grumman FM-2 fighters and one Grumman TBM torpedo bomber were destroyed by the kamikaze attack. ==Success of
kamikazes==