daily menu » rate the banner | guess the city | one on one

Go Back   SkyscraperCity > Asian Forums > Philippine Forums > Around the Philippines > Photography, Heritage and Architecture

Photography, Heritage and Architecture Participate in the FPC, the weekly Filipino Photo Contest


Reply

 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old September 20th, 2004, 05:42 AM   #61
muzic_lover2981
jon
 
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: angeles city
Posts: 73
Likes (Received): 2

grabe cool pic...informative ang dating!
muzic_lover2981 no está en línea   Reply With Quote

Sponsored Links
 
Old September 20th, 2004, 05:42 AM   #62
muzic_lover2981
jon
 
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: angeles city
Posts: 73
Likes (Received): 2

grabe cool pic...informative ang dating!
muzic_lover2981 no está en línea   Reply With Quote
Old September 20th, 2004, 05:42 AM   #63
muzic_lover2981
jon
 
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: angeles city
Posts: 73
Likes (Received): 2

grabe cool pic...informative ang dating!
muzic_lover2981 no está en línea   Reply With Quote
Old September 20th, 2004, 07:21 AM   #64
pau_p1
Proud to be Filipino
 
pau_p1's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Metro Manila, Singapore
Posts: 3,563
Likes (Received): 54

wow... those were very nice pictures indeed...
pau_p1 no está en línea   Reply With Quote
Old September 20th, 2004, 07:21 AM   #65
pau_p1
Proud to be Filipino
 
pau_p1's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Metro Manila, Singapore
Posts: 3,563
Likes (Received): 54

wow... those were very nice pictures indeed...
pau_p1 no está en línea   Reply With Quote
Old September 20th, 2004, 07:21 AM   #66
pau_p1
Proud to be Filipino
 
pau_p1's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Metro Manila, Singapore
Posts: 3,563
Likes (Received): 54

wow... those were very nice pictures indeed...
pau_p1 no está en línea   Reply With Quote
Old September 20th, 2004, 08:00 AM   #67
renell
Here Since 2002
 
renell's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Sydney/Metro Manila
Posts: 6,715
Likes (Received): 2

only the last one i've seen before. the rest haven't seen before. weren't the POWs kept in the old bilibid prison?
__________________
dafuq I've been here ten years?!
renell no está en línea   Reply With Quote
Old September 20th, 2004, 08:00 AM   #68
renell
Here Since 2002
 
renell's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Sydney/Metro Manila
Posts: 6,715
Likes (Received): 2

only the last one i've seen before. the rest haven't seen before. weren't the POWs kept in the old bilibid prison?
__________________
dafuq I've been here ten years?!
renell no está en línea   Reply With Quote
Old September 20th, 2004, 08:00 AM   #69
renell
Here Since 2002
 
renell's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Sydney/Metro Manila
Posts: 6,715
Likes (Received): 2

only the last one i've seen before. the rest haven't seen before. weren't the POWs kept in the old bilibid prison?
__________________
dafuq I've been here ten years?!
renell no está en línea   Reply With Quote
Old September 20th, 2004, 08:04 AM   #70
ryanr
Registered non-User
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Vancouver
Posts: 6,664
Likes (Received): 7

Interesting pictures...Our country has gone through so much! And manila was such a great city back then.
ryanr no está en línea   Reply With Quote
Old September 20th, 2004, 08:04 AM   #71
ryanr
Registered non-User
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Vancouver
Posts: 6,664
Likes (Received): 7

Interesting pictures...Our country has gone through so much! And manila was such a great city back then.
ryanr no está en línea   Reply With Quote
Old September 20th, 2004, 08:04 AM   #72
ryanr
Registered non-User
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Vancouver
Posts: 6,664
Likes (Received): 7

Interesting pictures...Our country has gone through so much! And manila was such a great city back then.
ryanr no está en línea   Reply With Quote
Old September 20th, 2004, 08:08 AM   #73
renell
Here Since 2002
 
renell's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Sydney/Metro Manila
Posts: 6,715
Likes (Received): 2

still is right now if we take care of it properly.
__________________
dafuq I've been here ten years?!
renell no está en línea   Reply With Quote
Old September 20th, 2004, 08:08 AM   #74
renell
Here Since 2002
 
renell's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Sydney/Metro Manila
Posts: 6,715
Likes (Received): 2

still is right now if we take care of it properly.
__________________
dafuq I've been here ten years?!
renell no está en línea   Reply With Quote
Old September 20th, 2004, 08:08 AM   #75
renell
Here Since 2002
 
renell's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Sydney/Metro Manila
Posts: 6,715
Likes (Received): 2

still is right now if we take care of it properly.
__________________
dafuq I've been here ten years?!
renell no está en línea   Reply With Quote
Old September 20th, 2004, 08:14 AM   #76
ryanr
Registered non-User
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Vancouver
Posts: 6,664
Likes (Received): 7

yeah it is...but i mean "great" great.... like the great cities of Paris, Tokyo, London, etc...
ryanr no está en línea   Reply With Quote
Old September 20th, 2004, 08:14 AM   #77
ryanr
Registered non-User
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Vancouver
Posts: 6,664
Likes (Received): 7

yeah it is...but i mean "great" great.... like the great cities of Paris, Tokyo, London, etc...
ryanr no está en línea   Reply With Quote
Old September 20th, 2004, 08:14 AM   #78
ryanr
Registered non-User
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Vancouver
Posts: 6,664
Likes (Received): 7

yeah it is...but i mean "great" great.... like the great cities of Paris, Tokyo, London, etc...
ryanr no está en línea   Reply With Quote
Old October 22nd, 2004, 05:17 AM   #79
lanztrick05
lanztrick
 
Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Manila and Quezon Prov.
Posts: 17
Likes (Received): 0

The Battle of Manila

hey guys!!! this is my first tym 2 post on this thread. here are some WWII pics that I got from www.***************.

[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/gmp1a.jpg[/IMG]
Our first photo in this series is of the centre of town, looking north. At the centre of the photo is the Post Office. In front of it is the theater, and on the right is Quezon Bridge. The Bridge on the left is the Sta Cruz Bridge, which will be renamed the MacArthur Bridge.

[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/manila1.jpg[/IMG]
City Hall. If you're walking from Luneta, you'll be coming from the road on the left, Padre Burgos. The main road running South-North through the photo is Taft Ave. The road running along the bottom of the photo is Ayala Boulevard. The walls of fortress Intramuros can be seen top left. Artillery was lined up in the park for direct fire on the walls. The east wing of City Hall was also destroyed by direct fire artillery when it was considered too costly in casualties to root out the remaining defenders. Enter City Hall through the front, and ascend the grand wooden staircase, as did MacArthur. The ambience is unmistakenly "Lost American Empire." Up close to City Hall tower, you can easily see the shell holes which have been plastered over. (National Archives Photo

[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/manila6.jpg[/IMG]
The former Legislature Building is now the Manila Museum, and you can go in, sign the visitors book, and walk through the various galleries. Unfortunately, due to decades of underfunding and political disinterest, it's a sad place which doesn't reflect the enthusiasm and creativity of its staffmembers. The 4.2 inch mortars in the infantry units were incapable of penetrating the reinforced concrete, and the 75 or 76mm guns on the tanks and tank destroyers experienced similar problems


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/mnlapic.jpg[/IMG]
[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/congrss.JPG[/IMG]
[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/congress.jpg[/IMG]
[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/manila1a.jpg[/IMG]
Malacanan Palace is in the foreground, with its ornamental gardens on the near side of the Pasig, and the Palace on the far side. ( National Archives Photo)


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/manila3.jpg[/IMG]
The Sta. Cruz bridge is in the foreground, leading to Sta Cruz. (It is now the MacArthur Bridge.) The bridge in the background is Jones Bridge. The large gutted building is the Post Office. Intramuros (behind) is almost completely destroyed. The South Port Area fronts Manila Bay. (National Archives Photo )


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/manila4.jpg[/IMG]
At their most vulnerable point in an assault river crossing, troops found that the south bank of the Pasig, having suffered the attention of heavy artillery fire, was strewn with a screen of rubble stretching down to the low water mark. The assault upon Intramuros from the north would initiate with an amphibious crossing over the Pasig by the 129th Infantry, whilst the 145th Infantry would move overland west and through the breaches opened by the artillery. (National Archives Photo )


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/manila5.jpg[/IMG]
Tanks and Tank destroyers could not cross the Pasig until February 13. No photograph illustrates the destruction of old Manila better than this one. (National Archives Photo )


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/bayview.jpg[/IMG]
This is the site of one of the major blots on Japanese martial character. Twenty-five caucasian and mestizo women separated from their families were confined here over a period of a few days and a joro house (brothel) established close to the combat area so that marines coming off duty might satisfy their fantasies before dying in battle. One of our good correspondents, Joe Romero, has established a site about his experiences as a child caught in the midst of the Battle of Manila, including his imprisonment inside the Barview. Visit Joe's page at What Did You Do In The War Daddy? The Bayview was but one of several joro houses set up throughout the Ermita area. The building was torched on 13 February. (Paul C. Whitman photo )


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/grteast.jpg[/IMG]
The Great Eastern Hotel. (Paul C. Whitman photo )


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/pasiga.jpg[/IMG]
The City Hall tower can be seen in the background. Jones Bridge in the foreground. I have no idea what the name of the monument is. (National Archives photo )

David "Sarge" Ross, who is working on a military board game "Battle of Manila" writes:- "The caption on photo #10 talks about a monument by the Jones Bridge. With all the research I've done on my Battle for Manila project, I've acquired a number of US Army, Navy, and private party photos plus the Archieve ones. I have several that show this "monument". However...

If this were the Jones Bridge, from the angle of the photo, you would see the HUGE Post Office Building...It's not there! If you go downriver one bridge, to the Quezon Bridge...the P.O. would be off to the right, out of the photo...to the left, warehouses etc...the City Hall tower in background...and the "monument"...it's the smokestack atop the Insular Ice Plant...I have five or six photos and they all show the same thing. Magellan's Monument is along the south shore of the Pasig, but it's much closer to the Treasury Building, smaller in size, and white in color...not black. Just thought you'd like to have an answer for your mystery.


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/theater.jpg[/IMG]
The theatre is still there today, immediately opposite the Post Office, but is so isolated by the choked roads around it that it's all to easy to miss it's art deco magnificence. (Paul C Whitman photo )


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/church1.jpg[/IMG]
Quiapo Church. Caption is invited. (Paul C Whitman photo )


[IMG]http://http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/hotel45.JPG[/IMG]
Manila Hotel 1945. (Paul C Whitman photo )


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/hotel41.JPG[/IMG]
Manila Hotel 1941. (Paul C Whitman photo )


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/basin.jpg[/IMG]
The Basin. (Paul C Whitman photo )


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/high_angle_aerial_photo.jpg[/IMG]
On the left (South) bank of the Pasig River reading from the bottom: Insular Ice Plant (lower foreground), Santa Cruz Bridge (destroyed), Post Office and Jones Bridge. Tall prominent buildings in the lower right foreground is the Great Eastern Hotel. Just above it is Plaza Goiti. Santa Cruz Church (destroyed) is at the far corner of the Plaza. Behind this plaza is the Santa Cruz Plaza. At far left center, just beyond Jones Bridge, is the National City Bank of New York. Most of the North bank is known as the Escolta, or business district. The long building on the lower bank of the canal is the Philippine Trust Company. The photo was taken on 9 March 1945. (National Archives Photo)


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/escolta_debris.jpg[/IMG]
The Escolta, and the debris amongst its damaged buildings. (National Archives Photo)


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/bldgs_in_manila.jpg[/IMG]
Rizal Avenue, at one time the prosperous business district which was the hub of activity. The city's largest and most modern theater, the "Avenue"(still present beside the National Bookstore Avenida) still appears to be in good condition, but is gutted. (National Archives Photo)


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/postoff.jpg[/IMG]
The Post Office (Paul C. Whitman Photo)


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/plaza_espana.jpg[/IMG]
Plaza de Espaņa, within Intramuros on 23 February 1945 (National Archives Photo)


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/aerial_manila.jpg[/IMG]
What is now known as Luneta Park was, during the 1920's, a wide expanse of parkland at the edge of Intramuros (on the left midground). The Manila Hotel has it's own ocean frontage, and to the left foreground are the Maritime Piers. The Rizal monument is one of the few fixed points which hasn't changed in all the years. (National Archives Photo)


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/bilibid_prison_1899.jpg[/IMG]
Bilibid Prison, 1899. (National Archives Photo)


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/bomb_on_manila.jpg[/IMG]
On 22 November 1944, there was an air raid on Manila's docks. This 2000lb bomb partially conceals Luneta Park at the right foreground of the photo. Quezon Bridge, with its unusual T-shaped walkway to Provisor Island, still stands. Immediately to the left of the bottom of the bomb is the City Hall. (National Archives Photo)


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/trams.jpg[/IMG]
Pre-war, Manila had an electric trolley systems. (My father told me that Douglas MacArthur, in partnership with some highly placed friends, reputedly had a number of strategic business investments in Manila, of which this was one. I have no confirmation whatsoever of this.) The trolley cars were set aflame by the Japanese defenders, and used as an ambush site. (Paul C. Whitman Photo)


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/flame_1.jpg[/IMG]
In one of the streets of Manila, its name lost to history, a scene is repeated showing the vicious fighting that occurred throughout the city. A flamethrower squad, amidst large numbers of shell casings littering the street, clears a high-rise building of Japanese troops. Kneeling down, the operator is covered by two other team members as he targets the front entrance of a high-rise building. The flamethrower is of the M2-2 backpack type. See below for further photographs



In the second and third photos, the occupants, caught by the stream, run out of the building.
[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/flame_2.jpg[/IMG]
[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/flame_3.jpg[/IMG]
lanztrick05 no está en línea   Reply With Quote
Old October 22nd, 2004, 05:17 AM   #80
lanztrick05
lanztrick
 
Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Manila and Quezon Prov.
Posts: 17
Likes (Received): 0

The Battle of Manila

hey guys!!! this is my first tym 2 post on this thread. here are some WWII pics that I got from www.***************.

[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/gmp1a.jpg[/IMG]
Our first photo in this series is of the centre of town, looking north. At the centre of the photo is the Post Office. In front of it is the theater, and on the right is Quezon Bridge. The Bridge on the left is the Sta Cruz Bridge, which will be renamed the MacArthur Bridge.

[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/manila1.jpg[/IMG]
City Hall. If you're walking from Luneta, you'll be coming from the road on the left, Padre Burgos. The main road running South-North through the photo is Taft Ave. The road running along the bottom of the photo is Ayala Boulevard. The walls of fortress Intramuros can be seen top left. Artillery was lined up in the park for direct fire on the walls. The east wing of City Hall was also destroyed by direct fire artillery when it was considered too costly in casualties to root out the remaining defenders. Enter City Hall through the front, and ascend the grand wooden staircase, as did MacArthur. The ambience is unmistakenly "Lost American Empire." Up close to City Hall tower, you can easily see the shell holes which have been plastered over. (National Archives Photo

[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/manila6.jpg[/IMG]
The former Legislature Building is now the Manila Museum, and you can go in, sign the visitors book, and walk through the various galleries. Unfortunately, due to decades of underfunding and political disinterest, it's a sad place which doesn't reflect the enthusiasm and creativity of its staffmembers. The 4.2 inch mortars in the infantry units were incapable of penetrating the reinforced concrete, and the 75 or 76mm guns on the tanks and tank destroyers experienced similar problems


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/mnlapic.jpg[/IMG]
[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/congrss.JPG[/IMG]
[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/congress.jpg[/IMG]
[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/manila1a.jpg[/IMG]
Malacanan Palace is in the foreground, with its ornamental gardens on the near side of the Pasig, and the Palace on the far side. ( National Archives Photo)


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/manila3.jpg[/IMG]
The Sta. Cruz bridge is in the foreground, leading to Sta Cruz. (It is now the MacArthur Bridge.) The bridge in the background is Jones Bridge. The large gutted building is the Post Office. Intramuros (behind) is almost completely destroyed. The South Port Area fronts Manila Bay. (National Archives Photo )


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/manila4.jpg[/IMG]
At their most vulnerable point in an assault river crossing, troops found that the south bank of the Pasig, having suffered the attention of heavy artillery fire, was strewn with a screen of rubble stretching down to the low water mark. The assault upon Intramuros from the north would initiate with an amphibious crossing over the Pasig by the 129th Infantry, whilst the 145th Infantry would move overland west and through the breaches opened by the artillery. (National Archives Photo )


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/manila5.jpg[/IMG]
Tanks and Tank destroyers could not cross the Pasig until February 13. No photograph illustrates the destruction of old Manila better than this one. (National Archives Photo )


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/bayview.jpg[/IMG]
This is the site of one of the major blots on Japanese martial character. Twenty-five caucasian and mestizo women separated from their families were confined here over a period of a few days and a joro house (brothel) established close to the combat area so that marines coming off duty might satisfy their fantasies before dying in battle. One of our good correspondents, Joe Romero, has established a site about his experiences as a child caught in the midst of the Battle of Manila, including his imprisonment inside the Barview. Visit Joe's page at What Did You Do In The War Daddy? The Bayview was but one of several joro houses set up throughout the Ermita area. The building was torched on 13 February. (Paul C. Whitman photo )


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/grteast.jpg[/IMG]
The Great Eastern Hotel. (Paul C. Whitman photo )


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/pasiga.jpg[/IMG]
The City Hall tower can be seen in the background. Jones Bridge in the foreground. I have no idea what the name of the monument is. (National Archives photo )

David "Sarge" Ross, who is working on a military board game "Battle of Manila" writes:- "The caption on photo #10 talks about a monument by the Jones Bridge. With all the research I've done on my Battle for Manila project, I've acquired a number of US Army, Navy, and private party photos plus the Archieve ones. I have several that show this "monument". However...

If this were the Jones Bridge, from the angle of the photo, you would see the HUGE Post Office Building...It's not there! If you go downriver one bridge, to the Quezon Bridge...the P.O. would be off to the right, out of the photo...to the left, warehouses etc...the City Hall tower in background...and the "monument"...it's the smokestack atop the Insular Ice Plant...I have five or six photos and they all show the same thing. Magellan's Monument is along the south shore of the Pasig, but it's much closer to the Treasury Building, smaller in size, and white in color...not black. Just thought you'd like to have an answer for your mystery.


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/theater.jpg[/IMG]
The theatre is still there today, immediately opposite the Post Office, but is so isolated by the choked roads around it that it's all to easy to miss it's art deco magnificence. (Paul C Whitman photo )


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/church1.jpg[/IMG]
Quiapo Church. Caption is invited. (Paul C Whitman photo )


[IMG]http://http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/hotel45.JPG[/IMG]
Manila Hotel 1945. (Paul C Whitman photo )


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/hotel41.JPG[/IMG]
Manila Hotel 1941. (Paul C Whitman photo )


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/basin.jpg[/IMG]
The Basin. (Paul C Whitman photo )


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/high_angle_aerial_photo.jpg[/IMG]
On the left (South) bank of the Pasig River reading from the bottom: Insular Ice Plant (lower foreground), Santa Cruz Bridge (destroyed), Post Office and Jones Bridge. Tall prominent buildings in the lower right foreground is the Great Eastern Hotel. Just above it is Plaza Goiti. Santa Cruz Church (destroyed) is at the far corner of the Plaza. Behind this plaza is the Santa Cruz Plaza. At far left center, just beyond Jones Bridge, is the National City Bank of New York. Most of the North bank is known as the Escolta, or business district. The long building on the lower bank of the canal is the Philippine Trust Company. The photo was taken on 9 March 1945. (National Archives Photo)


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/escolta_debris.jpg[/IMG]
The Escolta, and the debris amongst its damaged buildings. (National Archives Photo)


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/bldgs_in_manila.jpg[/IMG]
Rizal Avenue, at one time the prosperous business district which was the hub of activity. The city's largest and most modern theater, the "Avenue"(still present beside the National Bookstore Avenida) still appears to be in good condition, but is gutted. (National Archives Photo)


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/postoff.jpg[/IMG]
The Post Office (Paul C. Whitman Photo)


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/plaza_espana.jpg[/IMG]
Plaza de Espaņa, within Intramuros on 23 February 1945 (National Archives Photo)


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/aerial_manila.jpg[/IMG]
What is now known as Luneta Park was, during the 1920's, a wide expanse of parkland at the edge of Intramuros (on the left midground). The Manila Hotel has it's own ocean frontage, and to the left foreground are the Maritime Piers. The Rizal monument is one of the few fixed points which hasn't changed in all the years. (National Archives Photo)


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/bilibid_prison_1899.jpg[/IMG]
Bilibid Prison, 1899. (National Archives Photo)


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/bomb_on_manila.jpg[/IMG]
On 22 November 1944, there was an air raid on Manila's docks. This 2000lb bomb partially conceals Luneta Park at the right foreground of the photo. Quezon Bridge, with its unusual T-shaped walkway to Provisor Island, still stands. Immediately to the left of the bottom of the bomb is the City Hall. (National Archives Photo)


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/trams.jpg[/IMG]
Pre-war, Manila had an electric trolley systems. (My father told me that Douglas MacArthur, in partnership with some highly placed friends, reputedly had a number of strategic business investments in Manila, of which this was one. I have no confirmation whatsoever of this.) The trolley cars were set aflame by the Japanese defenders, and used as an ambush site. (Paul C. Whitman Photo)


[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/flame_1.jpg[/IMG]
In one of the streets of Manila, its name lost to history, a scene is repeated showing the vicious fighting that occurred throughout the city. A flamethrower squad, amidst large numbers of shell casings littering the street, clears a high-rise building of Japanese troops. Kneeling down, the operator is covered by two other team members as he targets the front entrance of a high-rise building. The flamethrower is of the M2-2 backpack type. See below for further photographs



In the second and third photos, the occupants, caught by the stream, run out of the building.
[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/flame_2.jpg[/IMG]
[IMG]http://www.***************/CorregidorResources/G-3_Ops_-_Manila/flame_3.jpg[/IMG]
lanztrick05 no está en línea   Reply With Quote


Reply

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off



All times are GMT +2. The time now is 07:59 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2013, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Feedback Buttons provided by Advanced Post Thanks / Like v3.1.2 (Pro) - vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2013 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.
vBulletin Optimisation provided by vB Optimise (Pro) - vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2013 DragonByte Technologies Ltd. (Resources saved on this page: MySQL 23.08%)

SkyscraperCity ☆ High there, what's up!

Hosted by Blacksun, dedicated to this site too!
Forum server management by DaiTengu