Philippine Division (United States) Explained

Unit Name:Philippine Division
12th Infantry Division
Dates:
  • 1922 – 1942
  • 1944 – 1947 (as 12th Infantry Division (Philippine Scouts)
Type:Square Division
Garrison:Fort William McKinley
Garrison Label:Headquarters
Battles:World War II
Philippine Islands
Notable Commanders:MG Jonathan M. Wainwright
MG William Weigel
Identification Symbol:None authorized
Identification Symbol Label:Distinctive unit insignia

Philippine Division, or from 1944–1947 the 12th Infantry Division, was the core U.S. infantry division of the United States Army's Philippine Department during World War II.

The division was organized in April 1922 and primarily consisted of United States Army officers and Filipino enlisted men. It primary purpose was to defend the Philippines from invasion. When the Philippine Army was established in 1935, it provided a potential candidate pool of Filipinos with military experience.

On 31 July 1941, the division consisted of 10,473 troops, mostly enlisted Filipinos, known as the Philippine Scouts who formed the 45th and 57th US Infantry Regiments. All of the division's enlisted men, with the exception of the 31st Infantry Regiment, and various military police and headquarters troops, were Philippine Scouts.[1]

In October 1941, as part of the U.S. Army Forces Far East, plans were made to "triangularize" the division. The 34th Infantry was detached from the 8th Infantry Division and moved to a port of embarkation in December 1941, along with two battalions of 105mm field artillery. The Philippine Division was to have two complete U.S. regimental combat teams in place by January 1942 to provide General Douglas MacArthur with a modern, trained mobile reaction force, while freeing up Philippine Scouts for rounding out other units. The outbreak of war in December 1941, however, isolated the Philippines and prevented implementation of the plan.

Shoulder sleeve insignia

Organization (July 1941)

Caption text
Unit Officers American enlisted Philippine Scouts (PS) enlisted Total
HHC, Philippine Division 30 (incl. 2 PS officers) 4 147 181
HQ, Special Troops 5 (incl. 2 PS officers) 5 5
12th Military Police Company (PS) 5 45 86 136
12th Ordnance Company (PS) 3 139 142
12th Signal Company (PS) 10 217 227
31st Infantry Regiment (assigned December 1941) 114 1,986 2,100
23rd Infantry Brigade (PS)
117 (incl. 3 PS officers) 2,148 2,265
118 (incl. 1 PS officer) 2,161 2,279
24th Infantry Brigade (PS) Brigade headquarters inactive
16 313 329
23d Field Artillery Regiment (PS) (QF 2.95-inch mountain gun) 10 391 401
24th Field Artillery Regiment (PS) (M1917 75mm gun) 39 (incl. 5 PS officers) 804 843
14th Engineer Regiment (PS) 24 (incl. 1 PS officer) 846 870
12th Medical Regiment (PS) 22 399 421
12th Quartermaster Regiment (PS) 18 (incl. 1 PS officer) 574 592
4th Veterinary Company (PS) 1 10 11

Lineage

Combat chronicle[2]

Wartime assignments

  1. U.S. Army Forces in the Far East (USAFFE) – 8 December 1941 – 24 December 1941.
  2. Bataan Defense Force – 24 December 1941 – 6 January 1942.
  3. U.S. Army Forces in the Far East (USAFFE) – 6 January 1942 – 26 January 1942.
  4. II Philippine Corps – 26 January 1942 – 7 April 1942.
  5. I Philippine Corps – 7 April 1942 – 10 April 1942.
  6. Prisoner of War Captivity – 10 April 1942 – 1945

Miscellaneous

The regimental colors of the 12th Quartermaster Regiment (PS) were given to an Army nurse (one of the "Angels of Bataan and Corregidor") by the regimental commander. Upon her capture she told the Japanese that it was "only a shawl" and kept it safe throughout more than three years of captivity.[3] Today, the colors are on display at the U.S. Army Quartermaster Museum, Fort Gregg-Adams, Virginia.

Commanders

Honors

Campaign participation credit

ConflictStreamerYear(s)
World War II
Philippine Islands7 Dec 41 – 10 May 42
World War II
World War II Victoryservice between 7 December 1941 and 31 December 1946

Decorations

Unit awards

RibbonAwardEmbroidered
Presidential Unit CitationLUZON 1941–1942[4]
Presidential Unit Citation BATAAN[5]
Presidential Unit Citation DEFENSE OF THE PHILIPPINES[6]
7 DECEMBER 1941 TO 10 MAY 1942[7]

Personal awards

Bibliography

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://usacac.army.mil/cac2/cgsc/carl/download/csipubs/OrderOfBattle/OrderofBattle1.pdf US Army Order of Battle 1919–1940 p. 287
  2. These combat chronicles, current as of October 1948, are reproduced from The Army Almanac: A Book of Facts Concerning the Army of the United States, U.S. Government Printing Office, 1950, pp. 510–592.
  3. http://www.quartermaster.army.mil/oqmg/professional_bulletin/1998/spring_1998/foundations.html Dr. Steven E. Anders, Heritage and Values: FOUNDATION FOR THE FUTURE: Building Great Quartermaster Soldiers
  4. (North Luzon Force, United States Army Forces in the Far East. Cited; War Department General Order # 14, 1942).
  5. (Army Troops, United States Army Forces in the Far East. Cited; War Department General Order #32, 1942.)
  6. (Military and naval forces of the United States and Philippine Governments. Cited; War Department General Order #22, 1942, as amended by Department of the Army General Order #46, 1948).
  7. (Military and naval forces of the United States and Philippine Governments. Cited; War Department General Order #47, 1950).