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PRIVATE FIRST CLASS GEORGE C. SHERMAN was born in New York in 1906 to Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Harvey Sherman. In 1920 the family, which included younger brother John H., lived at 6243 Washington Avenue in Philadelphia PA. They soon after moved to Ventnor NJ, where George started high school at Atlantic City High. His maternal Aunt, Alice Deegan, married noted Camden journalist Dan McConnell during this time. The Sherman family moved once again, to Camden NJ, where George Sherman graduated from Camden High School in the middle 1920s. He was a star tennis player at both schools. George Sherman later attended Swarthmore College in Swarthmore PA. By April of 1930, the Sherman family had moved to Los Angeles CA, where they rented a home at 2003-3/4 Argyle Avenue. During this period George and John Sherman became the contract bridge champions of California, and operated a contract bridge academy in Hollywood for a time. In 1932 they brothers won a national bridge championship. George Sherman enlisted in the United States Army on February 22, 1941. His parents had relocated to 14 West Ridley Avenue in Ridley Park, Pennsylvania by that time. Private First Class Sherman was assigned to duty in the Philippine Islands. He was serving, along with Private First Class James W. Bramen, of Gibbsboro NJ, in the 808th Military Police Company, at Fort William McKinley in Manila in the fall of 1941. The 808th Military Police Company was one of the rare racially integrated units in the United States Army, with Filipinos and Americans serving side by side. The 808th, which had only 69 men in July of 1941, had its numbers increased to 160 by November 30th of that year. Private First Class Sherman spent a week in hospital while at Fort William McKinley in October of 1941. In December of 1941, immediately after the attack on Pearl Harbor, the Japanese invaded the Philippine Islands. Private Sherman survived the initial onslaught and took part in the desperate defense the United States forces mounted in the winter and spring of 1942. Cut off from any chance of reinforcement or re-supply, the American and Filipino soldiers, sailors, and airmen did what they could with what they had. Private First Class Sherman was reassigned to Company L, 31st Infantry Regiment. When the Japanese
Fourteenth Army came ashore at Lingayen Gulf, MacArthur's beach defense
troops, composed solely of recently drafted Philippine Army soldiers,
collapsed. After two days of fighting and delaying actions near the
beaches, MacArthur decided to retreat to the Bataan Peninsula. His army
fought a series of delaying actions as they withdrew south toward Bataan.
The poorly trained Philippine Army soldiers held in some places but fled
in others. The elite Philippine Scout 26th Cavalry, American light
tanks, and Filipino and Scout artillery were the only units that could
successfully fight the Japanese. Because the Japanese were more
concerned with capturing Manila, they sent only modest forces against
the Philippine Army as it entered Bataan. The 31st Infantry was called upon one last time in early April to counterattack Japanese penetrations of Filipino lines. The Americans were now so weak that many could not make the march into combat. The starving men cautiously probed into the Japanese advance force and stalled the enemy for a short time. With only 800 men remaining and both flanks open and threatened, the regiment was forced to retreat, leaving only small groups of men to fight the last, hopeless delaying actions. The Japanese pushed to the southern reaches of Bataan. By the time Bataan surrendered on April 9, 1942, the 31st Infantry had been destroyed. It had, however, fought to the last and had sustained its motto, Pro Patria (for country). Not all troops of the 31st Infantry laid down their arms in April of 1942. Most of the survivors underwent brutal torture and humiliation on the Death March and nearly four years of captivity. However a few hundred of the 31st's survivors escaped to continue resisting. Approximately 300 men from the 31st escaped the advancing Japanese and escaped to Corregidor. Private First Class Sherman was among that number. The Japanese began their final assault on Corregidor with an artillery barrage on May 1, 1942. On the night of May 56, two battalions of the Japanese 61st Infantry Regiment landed at the northeast end of the island. Despite strong resistance, the Japanese established a beachhead that was soon reinforced by tanks and artillery. The defenders were quickly pushed back toward the stronghold of Malinta Hill. Private First Class George C. Sherman was killed in action during this battle. Late on May 6, General Wainwright asked Japanese Gernal Homma for terms of surrender. Homma insisted that surrender include all Allied forces in the Philippines. Believing that the lives of all those on Corregidor would be endangered, Wainwright accepted. On May 8, he sent a message to General Sharp, still resisting the Japanese elsewhere in the Philippines, ordering him to surrender the Visayan-Mindanao Force. Sharp complied, but many individuals carried on the fight as guerrillas. Due to the circumstances of war on May 6, 1942 and the days thereafter, Private First Class Sherman's body was not recovered, and he was listed as as listed as missing in action, effective May 7, 1942. After the war records were found establishing that he had been killed on May 5. A Finding of Death was issued for Private First Class George C. Sherman on February 1, 1946. Private First Class George C. Sherman is memorialized on the Tablets of the Missing at Manila American Cemetery in Manila, Philippine Islands. He was survived by his parents. His father returned to Los Angeles, and passed away at the age of 90 on Mar 2, 1962. |
Thanks to Fred Baldassarre of "The Battling Bastards of Bataan" who supplied much of the above information concerning American POWs in the Philippines and the conditions they endured. |
George
& John Sherman about 1912 |
Camden
Courier-Post Published after December 7, 1941 |
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Private First Class George C. Sherman died fighting the Japanese in the Philippines. A Finding of Death was issued on February 1, 1946. Several other Camden County men met similar fates while prisoners. To learn more of what happened to George C. Sherman and his comrades, read the outline below, and click on the links provided. |
(The purpose of this "Outline of Events" is to provide an overall picture into the plight suffered by the Defenders of Bataan. It is not meant to provide detailed, all-inclusive, information. If you wish detailed information, on any of the steps of this outline, feel free to e-mail, "The Battling Bastards of Bataan". Our intent is to provide you with the truth.) *************** 1. On Dec. 7, 1941, Japan attacked Pearl Harbor. The American Pacific Naval Fleet suffered heavy losses in lives and ships. The Fleet was incapacitated and could not, in that state, defend American interest in the Pacific Rim and in Asia. 2. Only eight hours later, on Dec. 8, 1941 (due to the difference in time zones), Japan launched an aerial attack on Philippines. Most of the American Air Force, in the Philippines, was destroyed, while the planes were on the ground. 3. A few days later, Japanese forces, led by Lt. Gen. Masaharu Homma, landed on the Philippines. The Japanese landings were in Northern Luzon and in the Southern Mindanao Islands. 4. Gen. Douglas MacArthur, Commander of the Filipino-American forces decided to meet the Japanese at their points of landing. This course of action deviated from the original War Plan, devised prior to WW II, which called for the American forces to withdraw into the Bataan Peninsula in case of attack. 5. Inexperienced troops failed to stop the Japanese at these points of landing. MacArthur had to revert back to the original plan, withdrawing the Filipino-American forces into the Bataan Peninsula. By the January 2, 1942, the Northern Luzon forces were in-place for the defense of Bataan. 6. Their mission, in the baseball vernacular, was to "lay down a bunt". They were to stall the Japanese advancement, by forcing them to use much of their troops and resources in the capturing of the Philippines, for as long as possible. This would buy the necessary time needed to rebuild the American Pacific Fleet, which at the time had been crippled, by the Pearl Harbor attack and the bombing of the American Air Bases, in the Philippines. 7. The Filipino-American Defense of Bataan was hampered by many factors: a) A shortage of food, ammunition, medicine, and attendant materials. b) Most of the ammunition was old and corroded. The AA shells lacked proper fuses, as did many of the 155mm artillery shells. c) Tanks, Trucks, and other vehicles were in short supply, as was the gasoline needed to power these items of warfare. d) Poorly trained Filipino troops, most of who never fired a weapon, were thrown into frontline combat against highly trained Japanese veterans. Americans from non-combatant outfits: such as air corpsmen and, in some instances, even civilians, were formed into provisional infantry units. 8. The Defenders of Bataan continued to hold their ground, without reinforcements and without being re-supplied. Disease, malnutrition, fatigue, and a lack of basic supplies took their toll. 9. On March 11, 1942, Gen. MacArthur was ordered to Australia, Gen. Wainwright took his place in Corregidor, as Commander of the Philippine forces, and Gen. King took Wainwright's place, as Commander of the Fil-American forces in Bataan. 10. Around the latter part of March, Gen. King and his staff assessed the fighting capabilities of his forces, in view of an impending major assault planned by Gen. Homma. Gen. King and his staff determined the Fil-American forces, in Bataan, could only fight at 30% of their efficiency, due to malnutrition, disease, a lack of ammunition and basic supplies, and fatigue. On April 3, 1942, the Japanese launched their all out final offensive to take Bataan. 11. On 9 April 1942, Gen. King surrendered his forces on Bataan, after the Japanese had broken through the Fil-American last main line of resistance. 12. The Japanese assembled their captive Fil-American soldiers in the various sectors in Bataan, but mainly at Mariveles, the southern most tip of the Peninsula. Although American trucks were available to transport the prisoners, the Japanese decided to march the Defenders of Bataan to their destinations. This march came to be known as the "Death March". 13. The "Death March" was really a series of marches, which lasted from five to nine days. The distance a captive had to march was determined by where on the trail the captive began the march. 14. The basic trail of the "Death March" was as follows: a 55-mile march from Mariveles, Bataan, to San Fernando, Pangpanga. At San Fernando, the prisoners were placed into train-cars, made for cargo, and railed to Capas, Tarlac, a distance of around 24 miles. Dozens died standing up in the railroad cars, as the cars were so cramped that there was no room for the dead to fall. They were, then, marched another six miles to their final destination, Camp O'Donnell. 15. Several thousand men died on the "Death March". Many died, because they were not in any physical condition to undertake such a march. Once on the march, they were not given any food or water. Japanese soldiers killed many of them through various means. Also, POWs were repeatedly beaten them and treated inhumanely, as they marched. 16. Approximately, 1,600 Americans died in the first forty days in Camp O'Donnell. Almost 20,000 Filipinos died in their first four months of captivity, in the same camp. The healthier prisoners took turns burying their comrades into mass graves, just as they, themselves, would be buried, days or weeks later. 17. Camp O'Donnell did not have the sanitation sub-structure or water supply necessary to hold such a large amount of men. Many died from diseases they had since Bataan. Many caught new diseases, while at the Camp. There was little medicine available to the prisoners. Their inadequate diets also contributed to the high death rate. Diseases such as dysentery, from a lack of safe drinking water, and Beri-Beri, from malnutrition were common to the POWs. The Japanese soldiers continued to murder and mistreat their captives. 18. Due to the high death rate in Camp O'Donnell, the Japanese transferred all Americans to Cabanatuan, north of Camp O'Donnell, on June 6, 1942, leaving behind five hundred as caretakers and for funeral details. They in-turn were sent to Cabanatuan on July 5, 1942. The Filipino prisoners were paroled, beginning in July, 1942. 19. Cabanatuan was the camp in which the men from Corregidor were first united with the men from Bataan. No Americans* from Corregidor ever made the "Death March" or were imprisoned in Camp O'Donnell. Not having suffered the extreme depravations and conditions endured by the men from Bataan, the prisoners from Corregidor were, overall, much healthier. (*There were Philippine Scouts and some men from the Philippine Army, captured in Corregidor, who were interned in Camp O'Donnell.) 20. Cabanatuan, for most prisoners, ended up being a temporary camp. The Japanese had a policy (which was a direct violation of the Geneva Convention) that prisoners were to be used as a source of labor. They sent most of the prisoners, from Cabanatuan, to various other camps in the Philippines, China, Japan, and Korea, where they were used as slave labor. Some worked in mines, others in farms, others in factories, and others unloading ships in Port Areas, for the remainder of the war. Each subsequent prison camp, after Cabanatuan, has a story of it's own. 21. Left behind, in Cabanatuan, were, approximately, 511 officers and the prisoners too sick to move (and most of those too sick to move never recovered and died in Cabanatuan). Towards the end of the war, most of the men who stayed behind were placed on ships and sent to other camps, in Japan, Korea, and China. The Japanese did not mark these ships, to note that there were prisoners on board. They were bombed and torpedoed by American planes and submarines. Most of these men died, by drowning at sea. 22. Most prisoners who left Cabanatuan in 1942, were sent to the other countries mentioned, in ships appropriately called, "Hell Ships". These "Hell Ships" sailed from Manila to their various destinations in Japan, Korea, or China. As mentioned earlier, the Japanese did not mark these ships as being prison ships, so they were targets for American planes and submarines. Thousands of Americans, who were passengers on these ships, met their deaths by drowning at sea. 23. The conditions on these ships are indescribable and far worse than the conditions endured in "Death March" and Camp O'Donnell. 24. For the remaining three years of their captivity, the Defenders of Bataan were spread throughout the various slave labor camps in Japan, Korea, China, and the Philippines, until each camp was individually liberated, in 1945. These prisoners endured the whims of their brutal captors, with similar conditions and miss-treatment as those experienced in the "Death March", and Camp O'Donnell, and the uncertainty of when, if ever, their captivity would end. 25. Coming from the warm tropical climate of the Philippines, the men sent to Japan, Korea, and China had to adjust to the sub-freezing temperatures of Northern Asia, without the proper personal equipment and indoor heating to survive such cold temperatures. In Manchuria, China, the POWs, who died in the winter, were placed in an unheated shack for their bodies to freeze, because the ground was so frozen and hard that they could not be buried until the spring. 26. After they were released, these men were sent to various military hospitals for physical examinations. Many of their ailments, due to malnutrition, went undiagnosed. Many of the systemic fevers they had contracted went undiagnosed. More importantly, the psychological scars they suffered were never recognized. It was not until years after the Vietnam War, the US government recognized "Post Traumatic Stress Disorder" or PTSD as a legitimate disorder. It is safe to say, each of these men has carried these scars for the rest of their lives, and indirectly, so did their families. 27. After the war, little was made of the plight of these men. Until recently, few books were written about their ordeal. There were many reasons for this: by the time the Defenders of Bataan came home, the US had already heard a multitude of war stories about the great battles in the Pacific and in Europe. The Defenders of Bataan had surrendered. (Most Americans failed to recognize that the Defenders of Bataan were surrendered as a force, by their Commanding General. They did not surrender as individuals.) 28. After the War, Japan and the US formed an alliance to ensure their mutual economic prosperity and to ensure their mutual security. It became an unwritten policy to play down Japanese War Crimes, satisfied with the meager results produced by the Tokyo and Manila War Crimes trials. 29. Unknown to most: POWs held by the Germans died at a rate of 1.1%. POWs held by the Japanese died at a rate of 37%. The death rate amongst the Defenders of Bataan was much higher, because of their weakened condition, prior to their capture. 30. Germany has acknowledged their war crimes and has made restitution to the victims. Japan has denied everything. In their history books and in their school books, they have re-written history in an effort to falsely show they were the victims of the War, citing the atomic bombs in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, as proof of their victimization. After the war and faced with the threat of the Soviet Union, The United States and it's allies permitted Japan to escape the close scrutiny given to the Germans. Known Japanese war criminals went free to, not only, walk the streets of Japan, but the streets of the United States, as well. Please bring this outline to the attention of your school systems, which are negligent in presenting this part of World War II to the American youth. |
The Memory and
Sacrifice of George C. Sherman is held dear by his cousin, |