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The FReeper Foxhole Remembers The Battle of Manila Bay - Jan. 21st, 2003
http://www.homeofheroes.com/wallofhonor/spanish_am/03_manila.html ^
Posted on 01/21/2003 5:35:58 AM PST by SAMWolf
U.S. Military History, Current Events and Veterans Issues
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Battle of Manila Bay Birth of the Modern US Navy
If the prospects for war with Spain had been a foregone conclusion for months, so too was the predicted outcome of such a conflict. The Spanish fleet, while still large, was an aging fleet that no longer reflected the luster and might that had made the terms "Spanish" and "Armada" synonymous. Despite the fact that many ships of the enemy fleet were constructed of steel, as were the newer warships of the U.S. Navy, they were no match for the modern guns of the American sailors. Author Sherwood Anderson had his own unique perspective of America's coming battles with Spain. He said it would be "Like robbing an old gypsy woman in a vacant lot at night after a fair."
Upon receiving orders to proceed, Admiral George Dewey set his own fleet on a course towards Luzon, departing Mirs Bay in China on April 27th. His flagship was the first class protected cruiser U.S.S. Olympia, followed by three second class cruisers Baltimore, Raleigh and Boston, the gunboats Petrel and Concord, the revenue cutter Hugh MuCulloch, and two transports Nanshan and Zafiro.
The three-day run across the South China Sea was made, as one Naval lieutenant later reported, "As directly and with as little attempted concealment as if on a peace mission. Lights were carried at night and elecric signals freely exchanged; but gruesome preparations were going on within each ship. Anchor chains were hung about exposed gun positions and wound around ammunition hoists; splinter nets were spread under boats; bulkheads, gratings and wooden chests were thrown overboard; furniture was struck below protective decks; surgical instruments were overhauled and hundreds of yards of bandaging disinfected. The sea was strewn for fifty leagues with jettisoned woodwork unfit to carry into battle." (Lt. John Ellicott)
Once his fleet had put to sea, Admiral Dewey ordered the men to muster on each ship to hear a reading of the proclamation issued five days earlier by General Basilio Augustin Davila, the Spanish governor-general of the Philippine Islands. In that proclamation Davila asserted that, "The North American people...have exhausted our patience and provoked war...with their acts of treachery. "A squadron manned by foreigners, possessing neither instruction nor discipline, is preparing to come to this archipelago with the ruffianly intention of robbing us of all that means life, honor and liberty. Pretending to be inspired by a courage of which they are incapable, the North American (U.S.) seamen undertake as an enterprise capable of realization, the substitution of Protestantism for the Catholic religion you profess, to treat you as tribes refractory to civilization, to take possession of your riches as if they were unacquainted with the rights of property, and to kidnap those persons whom they consider useful to man their ships or to be exploited in agriculture or industrial labor."
When the entire text of General Basilio's March 23rd proclamation had been read, the officers of each American ship informed the crew that their destination was the Philippine Islands to "capture or destroy the Spanish fleet." The cheers of the sailors and Marines echoed across the South China Sea as the United States Navy prepared for its first major foreign test as a world power.
As morning dawned on April 30th, Admiral Dewey's fleet sighted the coastline of the largest of the Philippine islands, Luzon. The United States Navy had finally arrived, prepared for war. First however, they had to locate the enemy fleet. Spanish Admiral Patricio Montojo y Pasaron was no novice at sea, and among the more than 700 islands of the archipelago there were literally thousands of small coves that would hide his vessels.
The logical location for finding the enemy would be somewhere in the vicinity of Manila Bay, a large inlet near the Philippine capital city, midway on the western coast of Luzon. Arriving at Luzon eighty miles north of Manila Bay, Dewey dispatched his warships Boston and Concord to reconnoiter the smaller bays and inlets as the remaining seven vessels slowly continued southward towards Manila Bay.
The Boston and Concord found no sign of the enemy fleet, then proceeded to enter Subic Bay at the northwest edge of the Bataan peninsula. Again they found no sign of the enemy vessels, and turned to rejoin the fleet. As they departed the bay they met the Baltimore, recently dispatched ahead of the rest of Dewey's warships to meet them. (Had the reconnaissance occurred one day earlier, the Boston and Concord would have steamed directly into the Spanish fleet. Within the previous 24 hours Admiral Montojo had sailed his warships out of Subic Bay after a 4-day stay, opting to enter the shelter of the larger Manila Bay.) As the sun began to set on the evening of April 30th, Admiral Dewey's full fleet of 7 warships and 2 transports had marshaled outside Subic. He ordered the commanding officers of each ship to join him on the flag ship Olympia, where he outlined his plans. For the men of the United States Navy, it would be a long night.
Manila Bay is a large inlet on the western coast of Luzon, nearly twenty miles wide and twenty miles deep. Entrance to the bay is only achieved through a narrow passageway less than ten miles across, and broken up by the tadpole shaped fortress island of Corregidor, and the smaller islands of Caballo and El Fraile. At the north end of the entrance is the Bataan Peninsula and the city of Mariveles. With heavy guns placed on fortifications at Mariveles and Corregidor, and with additional batteries on the two smaller islands and the southern tip of the entrance, an enemy attempting to enter Manila Bay would be subject to an intense cross-fire from at least five batteries. At the north end of a small peninsula just southwest of the capitol city sat the Cavite arsenal, as well as additional fortifications on Sangley Point. Admiral Montojo chose to anchor his ten warships and their transports just outside the city of Manila, knowing that before an enemy could attack him, they would first have to run the gauntlet of shore batteries at the harbor's entrance. Scattered throughout the smaller coves and river inlets to the harbor he had another 20 or more small river boats. It was a perfect place to hide or, should an enemy dare to run the gauntlet, to stand and fight.
Aboard the Olympia, Admiral Dewey was planning to do just that. As the ship's band played "There'll be a hot time in the old town tonight," the American commander explained his order of battle. The young moon would provide just enough light for the lead ship to spot the island of Corregidor and the entrance to Manila Bay. By midnight however, the moon would set to provide a darkened passage for his fleet as they ran the enemy gauntlet. If all went well, when morning dawned, he would find and destroy the Spanish fleet.
At 7:30 that evening, the commanders each having returned to their respective warships, Admiral Dewey began leading the convoy towards Manila Bay in his flagship. Cruising at 8 knots, strung out behind him at intervals of 400 yards, was a single line of American Naval power: Baltimore, Raleigh, Petrel, Concord, Boston, McCulloch, Zafiro, and Nanshan...in that order. Each ship traveled under complete blackout conditions, save for a single light aft. Even that light was shielded so as to be hid from the periphery. Only the ship directly behind could see its faint glow, as the silent warships crept in a single line towards the battlefield.
At 10:40 the lights of the enemy encampment at Corregidor came into view, and the men of the American war ships were ordered to stand by their guns. Within the half hour the "Olympia" entered the Boca Grand, the larger of two channels entering Manila Bay. In the darkness the dull, gray ships silently crept forward, young and untested soldiers crouching in hushed anxiety near their guns. None would sleep on this night.
By 11:30 the fleet was committed to its dangerous course when the night was lit by a rocket from Corregidor. Young sailors held their breath as they awaited the crash of enemy guns that was destined to follow. None came. The American fleet had not yet been spotted and slowly continued onward. A short time later the lights at Corregidor, Caballo Island and on the San Nicolas Banks were extinguished for the night.
Midnight and total darkness fell over the passageway, and then came the first sounds of enemy fire. At last the shore batteries had detected the passage of the American battleships, and shells began to rain over the convoy. The first rounds came from the south shore near Punta Restinga, followed by the shells from the batteries at Caballo and El Fraile. The Raleigh and Concord briefly returned fire, but the Americans quickly noted that the enemy shells were falling far over their heads. In the darkness the ships were still nearly invisible as they ran the gauntlet.
Shortly after four o'clock on the morning of May 1st, the Olympia was well into the harbor, the other American ships behind her and prepared for battle. Skill and daring had enabled the 9 vessels to negotiate the passageway, thought to have been mined and directly under the shore batteries of the enemy, to find and sink the Spanish fleet. Twenty miles distant Admiral Dewey could see the lights of Manila. In front of the capitol city in a line northward from Sangley Point was anchored ten warships of Admiral Montojo. Concealment was no longer important, the Spanish now knew the Americans had arrived. Admiral Dewey's flagship became a beacon of flashing signal lights as he organized his ships for the battle that would come with dawn.
It was not until two o'clock in the morning that Admiral Montojo had been awakened to be informed that the Americans had entered the bay. He was stunned. The thought that the American commander would make the three-day trip from China and, on his first night upon arrival and without reconnaissance, dare to run the batteries and probable mine fields to enter Manila Bay in the dead of night, had never crossed his mind. Be that as it may, the Americans had arrived, and Montojo ordered his ships to raise steam. All his officers who had gone ashore to be with their families were awakened and called back to their ships.
At 4:00 A.M. coffee was served to the officers and men of Admiral Dewey's fleet. Three vessels of the reserve squadron were sent northward to lay to, while Dewey's remaining six ships continued their course towards Manila. At 5:05 A.M. the Stars and Stripes were unfurled from each of the war ships and Dewey gave the command to "Prepare for general action." Ten minutes later the enemy shore batteries at Sangley Point opened fire. The American ships returned fire, then turned towards the ships of Admiral Montojo.
Within minutes the early morning air was filled with the thunder of heavy guns, and geysers of water shooting heavenward as the enemy shells began falling around the American ships. Dressed in his crisp white Naval dress uniform, Admiral George Dewey stood on the bridge of his flagship "Olympia". In the preceding hours he had done the unthinkable, navigating the Boca Grand to find and meet the enemy. As the smell of smoke filled the air and the shells of the enemy erupted around his fleet, Dewey led the way into battle. At 5:40 A.M. he turned to the Captain Charles V. Gridley of his flagship, the USS Olympia and said:
"You may fire when ready."
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TOPICS: VetsCoR
KEYWORDS: admiraldewey; freeperfoxhole; philippines; spainishamericanwar
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To: MistyCA; Victoria Delsoul; AntiJen; All
Current Military News Kuwait Ambush Kills 1 American, Wounds 1
KUWAIT CITY - At least one terrorist opened fire Tuesday on a vehicle carrying two American civilians near a U.S. military base in Kuwait, killing one and critically wounding the other, U.S. officials said.
Both victims were contractors working for the U.S. military in Kuwait. Their four-wheel drive Toyota was ambushed and riddled with bullets at a stoplight on Highway 85 near Camp Doha, a military installation serving as a base for 17,000 troops in the oil-rich Gulf nation.
"We condemn this terrorist incident, which has tragically cost the life of an innocent American citizen," U.S. Ambassador to Kuwait Richard Jones said in a statement.
No group immediately claimed responsibility for the attack. The assailant or assailants, who fired from behind roadside bushes, were not identified.
The embassy statement said both men suffered multiple gunshot wounds. They were not immediately identified, though Interior Ministry official Brig. Mahmoud al-Dossari said the man who died was 51 and the wounded man is 47.
The wounded man was undergoing surgery Tuesday afternoon at Kuwait City's Al-Razi hospital. Hospital officials refused to provide details.
Al-Dossari also confirmed that the weapon used was a Kalashnikov.
Another Kuwaiti security official, speaking on condition of anonymity, agreed with the American assessment of the shooting as a terrorist act.
The attack took place Tuesday morning at a stoplight at the intersection of Highway 85 and Abu Dhabi Road north of Kuwait City, along the edge of a built-up neighborhood with a McDonald's and other businesses. The road leads to Camp Doha, about three miles away, and is lined with trees and bushes with open desert behind.
A Kuwaiti investigator said on condition of anonymity that an attacker fired a Kalashnikov assault rifle from behind the bushes. The gunman or gunmen fled.
The area was cordoned off with yellow crime tape. The bullet-riddled four-wheel-drive Toyota was loaded on to a flat bed truck and taken away.
Kuwaiti police and U.S. military police as well as black-clad Interior Ministry investigators wearing rubber gloves were all at the scene. The pavement was littered with broken glass.
"We have full confidence that the Kuwaiti authorities will pursue the investigation of this incident vigorously and professionally," Jones said in the statement.
Kuwait is critical to any U.S. invasion of Iraq because of its location at Iraq's southern border. Many Kuwaitis are grateful for the U.S.-led coalition that drove Iraqi invaders out of their country in the 1991 Gulf War. The pro-American feeling of most Kuwaitis makes them something of an anomaly in the Muslim world, where anti-U.S. sentiment and opposition to war in Iraq are running high.
Still, the support isn't universal and Americans have come under attack in Kuwait in recent months.
A U.S. Marine was killed and a second was wounded Oct. 8 when two Kuwaiti Muslim extremists opened fire on a group of Marines taking a break from training. The attackers were killed by other Marines. On Nov. 21, a Kuwaiti policeman shot and seriously injured two U.S. soldiers after stopping their car on a highway.
Kuwaiti Parliament Speaker Jassem al-Kharafi told reporters that Tuesday's shooting was "an act of an individual that doesn't represent the opinion of the Kuwaiti people."
He added: "There have been similar incidents in the past and there might be more in the future by saboteurs, intruders and ignorant people." Al-Kharafi said such shootings could take place anywhere and "we are not a country of angels."
Kuwait is the only country in the Gulf where large numbers of American ground troops are assembling and engaged in training for desert warfare.
Tens of thousands more U.S. and British troops are expected in Kuwait in the run-up to a possible war against Iraq which President Bush says will be necessary unless Iraqi President Saddam Hussein rids his country of all weapons of mass destruction.
The United States announced Monday that it is sending a specially tailored force of about 37,000 soldiers, spearheaded by the Texas-based 4th Infantry Division the largest ground force identified so far among the nearly 100,000 U.S. troops included in deployment.
In Cairo, Egypt, visiting Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud Al Faisal said Saudi Arabia hopes the attack wouldn't harm the close Kuwaiti-U.S. relationship.
"This is very unfortunate and we are sending our condolences to the American Administration and his (the victim's) family," Prince Saud said.
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21
posted on
01/21/2003 6:34:00 AM PST
by
SAMWolf
(To look into the eyes of the wolf is to see your soul)
To: Mudboy Slim
Morning Mud.
22
posted on
01/21/2003 6:36:21 AM PST
by
SAMWolf
(To look into the eyes of the wolf is to see your soul)
To: SAMWolf
Prayers for the victims and their families...
My company has support personnel there...waiting...
23
posted on
01/21/2003 6:36:29 AM PST
by
HiJinx
(We Love TEXANs!)
To: larryjohnson
Morning Larry.
24
posted on
01/21/2003 6:37:20 AM PST
by
SAMWolf
(To look into the eyes of the wolf is to see your soul)
To: SAMWolf
bump
To: SAMWolf
If the twisted fragments of memory serve right, during teh naval fighting around Cuba proper, we captured a Spanish flagship and had been of mind to tow it back to the US.
The small salvage fleet ran into a heavy storm and had to cut the Spanish ship loose. It eventually ran into a reef and sank.
Any clue what the devil I'm babbling about? Don't remember any ship names offhand.
26
posted on
01/21/2003 7:50:08 AM PST
by
Darksheare
(This tagline has been deleted by the Americans for Social Septicemia, "I got burning, in my soul!")
Comment #27 Removed by Moderator
To: AntiJen
bump
28
posted on
01/21/2003 8:11:38 AM PST
by
fatima
(The birthday cake was heavy but the candles made it light.)
Comment #29 Removed by Moderator
To: coteblanche
I believe there is a real danger, that I may never get back to my duties of the day.Please help
LOL! Sounds like you've been bitten by the "History Bug", unfortunately there is no known cure.
However, if you take one Foxhole Thread daily and see me every morning, the cravings for more history can be suppressed temporarily, and you can get back to living some semblence of a normal life. Thanks for the Battling Bastards of Bataan poem. There is an upcoming Thread about the Bataan Death March.
30
posted on
01/21/2003 8:36:22 AM PST
by
SAMWolf
(To look into the eyes of the wolf is to see your soul)
To: Darksheare
Sandoval, a steel gunboat, was launched on 20 September 1895 at Clydebank Engine and Shipbuilding Co., Clydebank, Scotland, for the Spanish Navy. She was captured on 17 July 1898 upon the surrender of Spanish forces at Santiago de Cuba. Taken in tow by the tug, Potomac, Sandoval was berthed alongside Vulcan. on 2 September 1898 and commissioned the same day, Lt. Edwin C. Anderson in command.
Upon completing preliminary repairs, Sandoval was taken in tow by the tug, Manati, and beached near Fisherman's Point, Cuba. There she was careened and her hull cleaned in preparation for the voyage to the United States. Towed off the beach on 1 October, Sandoval ran steam trials on 27 October and departed Santiago Bay on 3 November 1898. Calling at Key West on 9 November, Sandoval sailed on 13 November in company with her sister gunboat, Alvarado, for Jacksonville, Fla. ; Port Royal and Charleston, S.C. ; Wilmington, N.C. ; Hampton Roads, Va, ; and arrived at Norfolk on 24 December 1898. After calling at Annapolis on 29 December, Sandoval reached the Washington Navy Yard on 3 January 1899 for repairs. Standing down the Potomac on 3 April 1899 after overhaul, Sandoval and Alvarado continued northward to New York ; Providence, R.I. ; Boston and Marblehead, Mass. Then proceeding to the Portsmouth (N.H.) Navy Yard, Sandoval was decommissioned on 10 May 1899 and was placed in reserve.
Recommissioned on 14 October 1900, Sandoval was assigned to the United States Naval Academy as a practice ship. Sandoval and her sister, Alvarado, remained at Annapolis until 1906, returning to the Norfolk Navy Yard to decommission on 22 March 1906. Loaned to the New York Naval Militia on 16 November, she arrived in Lake Ontario in September 1907. Commissioning each summer for training duty on the Great Lakes, she was based at Charlotte Harbor, N.Y., and frequently cruised to Ogdensburg and Sackets Harbor, N.Y. During World War I, Sandoval continued her training duties on the Great Lakes, calling at ports such as Erie, Pa., and Chicago, Ill., into 1918.
Declared surplus to Navy requirements, Sandoval was ordered sold on 10 July 1919 and accordingly struck from the Navy list on 23 July 1919. She was sold on 30 September 1919 to Charles S. Neff of Milwaukee, Wis. She was registered until 1924 as a private yacht.
31
posted on
01/21/2003 8:39:38 AM PST
by
SAMWolf
(To look into the eyes of the wolf is to see your soul)
To: SAMWolf
Seems to me there was a cruiser or such that was captured (We'd battered the heck out of it first.)
National Geographic has been looking for it in the Carribean. I seem to remember that they think they found it.
Gonna go troll their site to see if I can stir some memories here.
32
posted on
01/21/2003 8:44:45 AM PST
by
Darksheare
(This tagline has been deleted by the Americans for Social Septicemia, "I got burning, in my soul!")
To: Darksheare
Let us know what you find. I only had time for a quick search.
33
posted on
01/21/2003 8:46:14 AM PST
by
SAMWolf
(To look into the eyes of the wolf is to see your soul)
To: SAMWolf
Found it, wrong war...
"Afire and abandoned after the Battle of Santiago in 1898, the Spanish Infanta Maria Teresa was being towed back to the United States as a prize of war when she was cast adrift in a storm. More than a century later, she was rediscovered in the warm waters off the Bahamas."
Garn..
34
posted on
01/21/2003 9:01:10 AM PST
by
Darksheare
(This tagline has been deleted by the Americans for Social Septicemia, "I got burning, in my soul!")
To: AntiJen
Present!
35
posted on
01/21/2003 9:08:24 AM PST
by
manna
Comment #36 Removed by Moderator
To: SAMWolf
Don't forget, the USS Olympia is still afloat--moored opposite the USS New Jersey on the Philly-side of the Delaware River. As far as I know, she's the only warship of that era still afloat. A great tour for history buffs.

The beautiful USS Olympia
To: AntiJen; SAMWolf
Thanks Jen!

Spanish Wreck after Battle of Manila Bay
38
posted on
01/21/2003 9:52:03 AM PST
by
facedown
(Armed in the Heartland)
To: Antoninus
How far along are they on the restoration work?
Last I knew, she was deteriorating badly, and the bureau of parks didn't want to bother shelling out to fix her, she being a national monument and all.
39
posted on
01/21/2003 9:54:29 AM PST
by
Darksheare
(This tagline has been deleted by the Americans for Social Septicemia, "I got burning, in my soul!")
To: SAMWolf
Found it at Naval History Magazine's website.
I'd have to pay them to download/ view anything more than an abstract on that article.
Hmm.. having fun getting info out of this Black Hole I call a brain. Data goes in.. good luck getting it back out.
Guess I'd be good in national security work....
"Vee 'Av vays ov makeeng yu talk."
"Talk about what?"
40
posted on
01/21/2003 10:04:55 AM PST
by
Darksheare
(This tagline has been deleted by the Americans for Social Septicemia, "I got burning, in my soul!")
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