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What happen during the bataan death?

On April 9, 1942, 75,000 US troops and Filipino soldiers surrendered to the Japanese after 7 months of fighting. These men were denied food, water, and medicine and forced to march 65 miles through the jungle. About 1000 Americans died and 9,000 Filipinos died.http://bataanmarch.com/about-bataan/


What was the result of the bataan death march?

The Bataan Death March showed the world how cruelly the Japanese were willing to behave in their quest for domination of the Pacific. Thousands of people were killed, and even more were starved and beaten.


When did the Bataan Death March end?

In 1942, during the second world war, more than 70,000 American and Filipino prisoners were captured by Japanese forces, making a rough estimate of 140,000 of Filipino and American soldiers forced into an epic trek. Between 600 and 700 Americans and 5,000 to 10,000 Filipino soldiers died during a forced march under their captors' orders and threat of death. However, estimates of living and deceased soldiers vary; it is believed that more than 20,000 prisoners died before reaching their destination which was to be a POW camp. The 80 mile journey on foot was from Mariveles (southern tip of Bataan Peninsula) to San Fernando in the Philippines. It started 9th April and finished on 15th, during six (6) grueling and abusive days, plus without food or water. Deaths were caused by lack of food and water, already malnourished and suffering illnesses or wounds, and direct physical abuse and murder by the Japanese. About 120,000 survived. Of those, only 6 were living when the Japanese Government formally apologized decades later. The main reason the Japanese committed this horrific act was to demoralize America, e.g. simply because the Japanese chose to abuse their power in inflicting inhumane torture (they knew many of the men would die under such conditions) and direct murder (shooting them).


Who lead the bataan death march?

The Bataan Death March was led by the Imperial Japanese Army in April 1942 during World War II. After the surrender of the United States-led Filipino forces in the Battle of Bataan, approximately 75,000 Filipino and American prisoners of war were forced to march over 60 miles to prison camps. The march was characterized by extreme brutality, with thousands of prisoners dying due to exhaustion, dehydration, and Japanese mistreatment.


What were names of men during World War 2?

Some of the names of men during World War Two were Henry, John, Jon, Joseph, Samuel, Harrison, and Nathanial. There are many more names but these are some.

Related Questions

Who was in Batan Gang?

Men who were on the Bataan Death March during WW2.


What was Bataan breath March?

It was the Bataan Death March where the Japanese marched Americans and Filipino troops that they had captured through a jungle to a prison. Over 7,000 of the men died on the march.


What happend to men during the bataan death march if they couldn't keep up?

The Japanese shot anyone who could not keep up or tried to help anyone who fell down on the Bataan Death March.


Who marched on the batan death march?

The Bataan Death march was a forced march of mostly American prisoners of war by the Japanese. Several thousand of the men died of exhaustion and thirst on the brutal trek in April of 1942.


How many men died on the bataan death march?

Approximately 5,000-10,000 Filipino and 600-650 American prisoners of war died .


What During the Bataan Death March?

On April 9, 1942, 75,000 US troops and Filipino soldiers surrendered to the Japanese after 7 months of fighting. These men were denied food, water, and medicine and forced to march 65 miles through the jungle. About 1000 Americans died and 9,000 Filipinos died.http://bataanmarch.com/about-bataan/


During the Bataan Death March what happened?

On April 9, 1942, 75,000 US troops and Filipino soldiers surrendered to the Japanese after 7 months of fighting. These men were denied food, water, and medicine and forced to march 65 miles through the jungle. About 1000 Americans died and 9,000 Filipinos died.http://bataanmarch.com/about-bataan/


What happened during bataan death march?

On April 9, 1942, 75,000 US troops and Filipino soldiers surrendered to the Japanese after 7 months of fighting. These men were denied food, water, and medicine and forced to march 65 miles through the jungle. About 1000 Americans died and 9,000 Filipinos died.http://bataanmarch.com/about-bataan/


What happen during the bataan death?

On April 9, 1942, 75,000 US troops and Filipino soldiers surrendered to the Japanese after 7 months of fighting. These men were denied food, water, and medicine and forced to march 65 miles through the jungle. About 1000 Americans died and 9,000 Filipinos died.http://bataanmarch.com/about-bataan/


What was the result of the bataan death march?

The Bataan Death March showed the world how cruelly the Japanese were willing to behave in their quest for domination of the Pacific. Thousands of people were killed, and even more were starved and beaten.


When was the Death Camp finally stopped after the Bataan Death March?

Here is an explanation about the people of the Bataan Death March and the POW camp they were interned in for three years.Bataan Death MarchFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaBataan -- Death march -- Corregidor -- MindanaoThe Bataan Death March (also known as The Death March of Bataan) took place in the Philippines in 1942 and was later accounted as a Japanese war crime. The 60-mile (97 km) march occurred after the three-month Battle of Bataan, part of the Battle of the Philippines (1941--42), during World War II. In Japanese, it is known as Batān Shi no Kōshin.The march, involving the forcible transfer of 75,000 American and Filipino prisoners of war captured by the Japanese in the Philippines from the Bataan peninsula to prison camps, was characterized by wide-ranging physical abuse and murder, and resulted in very high fatalities inflicted upon the prisoners and civilians along the route by the armed forces of the Empire of Japan. Beheadings, cutting of throats and casual shootings were the more common actions---compared to instances of bayonet stabbing, rape, disembowelment, rifle butt beating and a deliberate refusal to allow the prisoners food or water while keeping them continually marching for nearly a week in tropical heat. Falling down or inability to continue moving was tantamount to a death sentence, as was any degree of protest or expression of displeasure.Prisoners were attacked for assisting someone failing due to weakness, or for no apparent reason whatsoever. Strings of Japanese trucks were known to drive over anyone who fell. Riders in vehicles would casually stick out a rifle bayonet and cut a string of throats in the lines of men marching alongside the road. Accounts of being forcibly marched for five to six days with no food and a single sip of water are in postwar archives including filmed reports.The exact death count has been impossible to determine, but some historians have placed the minimum death toll between six and eleven thousand men; whereas other postwar Allied reports have tabulated that only 54,000 of the 72,000 prisoners reached their destination---taken together, the figures document a casual killing rate of one in four up to two in seven (25% to 28.6%) of those brutalized by the forcible march. The number of deaths that took place in the internment camps from delayed effects of the march is uncertain, but believed to be high.


What were benefits from bataan death march?

During the Bataan Death March about 10,000 Filipino and American soldiers died.The relationship between the Philippine's and America became stronger because they now saw themselves as equals.The American defenders of Corregidor surrendered and were forced to march inland .