I wrote this story 30 years ago as an antidote to the nightmares I was having, re-living the bloody battles of combat. I was told if I put my memories on paper, it would relieve my nightmares. One never forgets this kind of tragedy, no matter how old you get. I will be 80 this year and it is set in my mind as graphically clear today as it was the day it happened.
Japanese Marines were holding Zig-Zag Pass. It was predicted it could never be taken. We, the 38th Cyclone Infantry Division, had never been in combat, and this is what we were facing.
The number of Veterans of this conflict left to tell the personal stories of Zig-Zag Pass, are becoming fewer and fewer. I was only eighteen at that time, most of the men were in their 30's and 40's, I doubt if they are around now.
Our division had just finished a 6 month assignment in New Guinea, mostly unloading bombs from ships. The heat was unbelievable!! We were just 10 degrees from the equator. Refrigeration was a luxury not known there. I remember burying our soda & beer in the ground for cooling, which wasn't much cooler. We thought our camp in the jungle was close to hell. We found out later that this was heaven compared to combat.
Heading for we didnt know where, we were put in a convoy of ships. The ships finally unloaded at Laity Island in the Philippines. We were on guard duty there. After three months we shipped out again, back on a troop carrier in a large convoy of ships, destroyers, submarines & other combat fighting vessels.
We knew we were in for something
big, we didn't know what, until we arrived off the coast of Luzon
Island in the Philippines, at Subic Bay. Our convoy was moving
in a huge circle, at the same time lowering large landing craft
loaded with combat troops, while the big guns on our ships were
blasting away at the beaches.
When a landing craft was in
the water, it would join others in a smaller circle,
until all the landing crafts were in the water. I need not tell
you how scared we were, you could see the panic on men's faces,
without a doubt we were praying! We were not discussing theological
questions about the existence of God. WE WERE PRAYING!
The command was given the order to hit the beach. We came out of the circle and headed for the beach. The landing craft couldn't quite make it, so we jumped off the end of the craft and waded the rest of the way. To our delight there was no enemy waiting for us.
Our next assignment was a twenty mile hike. Twenty miles can be exhausting and excruciating with full back pack, cartridge belt, hand grenades and rifle. But that was incidental compared to the sniper fire, artillery, and the loss of several men along the way.
It was getting late in the evening so we dug in for the night. I dug my fox hole nice and deep. I had a sense that there would be big trouble that night. We were in a small valley with a horseshoe hill surrounding us on 3 sides. A perfect set up for disaster. It was a long day and I was so very tired. We had a quick dinner of C rations. While we were eating we looked up on the ridge above us, 600 to 700 yards away. There we saw a column of Japanese marines circling us. I cannot begin to explain the panic in the very depths of my being, And, I'm certain everyone else had the same feelings. I was getting ready to get down in my nice deep fox hole, where I would be pretty safe, when my Platoon Officer called my name, "Frame, you go with these two men, back on the side of that hill, and keep us informed of what the Japs are up to."
He was evidently going by a training manual. It was hard to believe he would send men into a sure death trap. The Japanese would be coming down that hill at any moment. Our artillery would be zeroing in on them. Our own troops would be turning 30 caliber machine guns at them, and we would be right in the middle.
YOU OBEY ORDERS IN COMBAT!!
The three of us took off with
our rifles and radio transmitter, and snuck up a ravine for some
cover. We climbed the hill for a couple hundred yards. It was
getting dark and there were some artillery shells exploding around
us.
We had to take cover fast. My two buddies went to one side of
a small hog-back ridge we were on. I went to the other, I don't
know why. I believe it was because I saw a large tree that had
fallen. I crawled up under it as far as I could get, and pulled
leaves up over me.
It wasn't long before all hell
broke loose. The Japanese were attacking our troops in the valley,
throwing mortar and artillery shells down on them.
Our troops were lighting up the skies with flares, and saturating
the area with
machine gun fire. I could see it all from under my tree.
I thought my platoon commander was sending me into great danger, but I was being led to safety, and didn't know it!! The only thing that attacked me was mosquitoes. They were big and nasty biting right through my clothing, I think they enjoyed eating through repellent. Funny how a little insect can be so unnerving in the midst of deadly artillery.
The next morning we radioed that we were coming in, we were afraid we would be picked off by our own men. I don't remember what we had for breakfast, food doesnt taste good with your guts in knots.
We started our push into Zig-Zag
Pass. The enemy didn't push very easily, they were dug into the
ground, with tunnels and bunkers, so concealed you could step
over them, or fall into them. It was really slow advancing. We
were pinned down with sniper, and machine gun fire so much of
the time. Our artillery and fire bombs from low flying airplanes
would clear out the jungle in front of us.
That didn't get rid of the Japs. They were down deep in the ground
and would pop up almost right under you. I was walking along the
side of a tank as it moved along blasting at bunkers.
A Japanese marine jumped up out of a hole just a few feet away with a TNT charge, ran to the tank, threw the charge under the tank and ran back to his hole. I wasn't fast enough to get a shot at him.
We had just taken a hill and
we were feeling at ease getting ready to dig in for the night
when all of a sudden the enemy cut loose with a machine gun.
Several men were hit before we could hit the ground . One of my
buddies standing beside me, got his arm half shot off. Over the
hill from us, artillery dropped in on the men in the valley. A
man's head flew up over our heads. We were lying on our stomachs
trying to dig in for the night. I felt cramps in my stomach, feeling
I was terribly constipated. I snuck back down over the hill and
nothing happened. I kept hurting so I told the medic and he examined
me. In short, he told me I was having an appendicitis attack,
and would have to go to the hospital.
Was that good news to me? You better believe it!! I was getting out of this mess. I was transported by ambulance to a small emergency hospital about ten miles back.... I was put on an operating table. An army Captain with a 45 hanging on his hip, and a male nurse carrying a gasoline lantern, checked me out.
The Captain said, You have a busted appendix and need to be operated on immediately. He gave me a spinal injection, which numbed me from the waist down. Half way through the operation, the Japanese started throwing hand grenades and firing on the hospital. I thought I was lucky to get away from the front line, now I wasn't so sure! I could hear the hospital help running outside. I was looking for the enemy to come through the tent at any moment. The doctor had to sew me up fast. I was put on a cot and left alone. I was the only one in the tent. I couldn't move because of the spinal injection. I tried to roll off the cot, and get under it so I could hide, but I couldn't move so I did the only thing possible: I prayed, and went to sleep.
The next morning I was taken
to an army hospital in the town of San Antonio, I
believe. Word was trickling in from wounded soldiers saying that
I hadn't been gone long before another counter attack on my company
took place, with lots of casualties. I was in the hospital a couple
weeks when the head nurse caught me and another patient out behind
the hospital, riding a bucking burro!
In a few more days I was headed back to combat. I caught up with my company. They were retaking Clark Air Field which is close to the City of Manila. I hadn't been in combat too long when my heavy cartridge belt came down over my incision and tore it open. Back in the hospital and another operation! They removed gauze that the first doctor missed when he sewed me up too quickly. I'm surprised he took the time to sew me up, while hand grenades were being thrown at the tent.
Zig Zag Pass was taken from
the Japanese and I thank God that He spared my life through that
battle.
Clark Air Field
There were bullets zinging
over my head, artillery and mortar shells bursting all around,
only a few of us left in my Infantry Company.
I was down in my fox hole writing my mother a letter.
I was trying to tell my mother that I didn't think I was going
to make it back...,
seeing so many of my buddies shot down all around me,
their bodies riddled with bullets and shrapnel, breathing through
holes in their backs,
begging me to finish them off with no medic around.
My body was always tense, waiting for that bullet with my name
attached.
A few weeks before I wrote my good bye letter, the Japanese just
before darkness and under the cover of the thick jungle, positioned
themselves just 30 to 40 feet outside of our perimeter, which
is a circle of men in fox holes. A fox hole is about 3 to 4 feet
wide and 3 to 4 feet in the ground.
At night our artillery would put a barrage of explosives all around
us, about 75 to 100 feet out. To keep any infiltration of the
enemy from coming in on us under the cover of darkness, this time
they had already come in, laying only a few feet from us.
That night we were ordered to unload our guns, fight hand to hand,
with knives, shovels, or what ever we wanted to use .
We were fighting the Japanese Marines. No way, if I could help
it, I was going to tackle one of those big guys in hand to hand
combat.
I had a 38 special hand gun tucked away for close combat.
The Japanese attacked us.
I could hear them coming from the other side of our position.
I could hear the sound of clashing weapons, moaning ,and intense
fighting.
They were coming my way. I can't tell you how scared I was.
I lay on my back my knees drawn up, my head on my helmet, my 38
pointing at the opening.
And I prayed!! Then I went to sleep. Am I a hero or what? I had
a dream of the brightest beam of light shining down from the heavens.
I must of slept for a couple of hours.
When I woke up every thing was quiet. I stood up to relieve myself,
over the edge of the fox hole.
The next morning my squad leader told me he was ready to jump
me, thinking I was the enemy. He also told me a Japanese soldier
had stepped over my fox hole while I was sleeping.
The moon was shining down through the trees.
He evidently thought I was dead, and went on.
I truly begin to think I had my heavenly Father with me.
Jack______Dana |
I met Jack in Hawaii we were best buddies. |