American Army officer
John P. Woodridge is an American Army officer who served in World War II in the Philippines. He was known as commander 81st Field Artillery Regiment that fought Japanese in Mindanao in May 1942. He was POW and he boarded a hell ship to be taken to Mukden, Manchuria but was bombed and he went missing. He was promoted to full Colonel posthumously in 1945.
Career
He was assigned as senior instructor to 81st Field Artillery Regiment based in Bohol, attached to 81st Infantry Division. In January 1942, he was ordered to assumed to command of the regiment and ordered to transfer the regiment to Mindanao. Upon arrival his regiment was placed under the new unit 102nd Infantry Division under Colonel William P. Morse.[1]
On May 6, 1942 Kawamura Detachment invaded northern Mindanao and both 81st Field Artillery and 61st Field Artillery assigned to defend northern Misamis was pushed back due to combined air and naval support of the landing force. Without a single gun themselves they retreated towards Sayre Highway.[2]
81st Field Artillery retreated towards Sayre Highway and prepared a new defensive line in Mangima Grand Canyon. After Japanese breached Mangima Canyon 81st Field Artillery and others units retreated to Somilao Sector and posted in Dalirig. Last Japanese incursion in the line on the night on May 10, 1942, although Mindanao Force troops successfully repulsed it they took heavy casualties. By dawn orders came to surrender at daybreak of May 12, 1942. All US and Filipino troops assembled in Camp Casisang, Malaybalay, Bukidnon.[citation needed]
All Americans was held while Filipino soldiers were released in August 1942. Americans was brought to Luzon in preparation to be transferred to Japan. Woodridge among them was boarded in one of the hell ship that was bombed by American planes on the way to Formosa in January 1945. He was lost in the sea and never found.[citation needed]
Woodridge was posthumously promoted to Colonel and was put in the Walls of Missing in Manila American Cemetery at Fort Bonifacio, Philippines.[3]
See also
References
External links
- There Were Others, Unpublished Papers of Colonel Hiram Tarkington, CO 61st Field Artillery