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John Carlisle - Red Arrow Men: The 32nd Division on the Villa Verde Trail

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Red Arrow Men: The 32nd Division on the Villa Verde Trail: summary, description and annotation

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Red Arrow Men: The 32nd Division on the Villa Verde Trail, first published in 1945, is the account of embedded journalist John Carlisle with the U.S. Armys 32nd Infantry Division in Luzon, Philippines, in 1945. At that time, the 32nd was engaging the Japanese on the Villa Verde Trail. It would take 119 days of fierce, close-quarters combat to advance slightly more than 20 miles over rough, jungle-covered terrain, and seize their objective of the Cagayan Valley. As author Carlisle states in the Foreword: This was a mauling fight against the Jap in his remarkable defensive positions, against the terrain, supply and climate. In those 119 days the Red Arrow boys fought 22 miles, sometimes 35 yards at a time, with the Jap never more than 30 feet away. The division killed 9,000 Japanese and took 50 prisoners. It lost 4,226 men, about a third of the division strength. Their hard-won victory saw the surrender of Japanese General Tomoyuki Yamashita and his exhausted, starving troops. Red Arrow Men portrays theses experiences from the perspective of the foot-soldier, most of whom were from Michigan, and Carlisle talked with many men (and a number of WACs and female Red Cross workers), and relates their moving stories. Of note is that in World War Two, the 32nd Division logged a total of 654 days of combat, more than any other United States Army division.

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Barajima Books 2020 all rights reserved No part of this publication may be - photo 1
Barajima Books 2020 all rights reserved No part of this publication may be - photo 2
Barajima Books 2020, all rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted by any means, electrical, mechanical or otherwise without the written permission of the copyright holder.
Publishers Note
Although in most cases we have retained the Authors original spelling and grammar to authentically reproduce the work of the Author and the original intent of such material, some additional notes and clarifications have been added for the modern readers benefit.
We have also made every effort to include all maps and illustrations of the original edition the limitations of formatting do not allow of including larger maps, we will upload as many of these maps as possible.
RED ARROW MEN
The 32 nd Division on the Villa Verde Trail
JOHN M. CARLISLE
Red Arrow Men was originally published in 1945 by Arnold-Powers, Inc., Detroit.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
TABLE OF CONTENTS
REQUEST FROM THE PUBLISHER
DEDICATION
The American soldier at war is a tremendous fellow with an unusual capacity for courage and ingenuity, stamina and just plain guts. Nowhere in the history of World War II was the American soldier called upon to show more daring and head-on bravery than GI Joe of the Thirty-Second Division during the Villa Verde operation.
For 119 days the fighting Red Arrow Division fought up the winding hairpin turns of the Villa Verde Trail. High in the Caraballo Mountains of Northern Luzon, against a determined, fanatical enemy who elected to fight and die where he was dug in.
This was a mauling fight against the Jap in his remarkable defensive positions, against the terrain, supply and climate. In those 119 days the Red Arrow boys fought 22 miles, sometimes 35 yards at a time, with the Jap never more than 30 feet away. The division killed 9,000 Japanese and took 50 prisoners. It lost 4,226 men, about a third of the division strength.
In this operation, as a civilian, was amazed what GI Joe, just the ordinary guy in his foxhole, could do and did.
They outdid the imagination in this daily routine, and through it all he dreamed and thought of home.
While I was living with these Red Arrow veterans of the Villa Verde, it occurred to me again and again that while true democracy was fighting to preserve its way of life, GI Joe was fighting to get home.
The Red Arrow veteran epitomized the spirit of the American Army, one of the most magnificent in the history of war, a determination to fight like hell and then get home. For our soldiers in the Southwest Pacific saw a lot of the world, and the more they saw the more they liked the home they had left with a reverence and a longing that sometimes seemed pitiful as they sat under ponchos in little foxholes half filled with water on Caraballo Mountains.
And so, to these veterans of the Red Arrow Division, this book is respectfully dedicated in the hope that it somewhat preserves their flaming courage, daring and will to win on the Villa Verde Trail.
JOHN M. CARLISLE
FOREWORD
I can think of no better tribute to the men of the 32 nd Division than this collection by Jack Carlisle. Jack was there. He saw the battle of the Villa Verde Trail unfold before his eyes. His story is a firsthand account of fighting over some of the most rugged terrain encountered in the entire Pacific War.
We of the 32 nd came to know Carlisle well in those days of the Villa Verde. He was with us during the most critical phase of the operation. On several occasions he accompanied me to the front. I saw him talk with many a front line infantryman. In the case of many Michigan men he brought them the first personal word they had from home in many long months of overseas service.
But Jack didnt talk only with the heroes. No mans story was too insignificant. He talked to all of the men, regardless of whether they were buck privates doing KP in a rear echelon or machine gunners on a mountain perimeter. They all got their names in the paper. Theyre all heroes, and he made them all heroes.
Throughout the Villa Verde operation, Carlisle showed a tireless determination to dig-out and record every phase of the Divisions combat function. He recorded this story not in general terms but in specific terms of the individual GI in every echelon.
Carlisle tells more vividly than anyone to date the story of the Villa Verde.
The 32 nd went into action in the Sixth Armys I Corps Sector in Northern Luzon on January 30, 1945. Our mission was to drive 24 miles up into the Caraballo Mountains along the Villa Verde Trail to its junction with Highway 5 and thus secure one of the only two Southern approaches to the Cagayan Valley. The 25 th Division was to drive up Highway 5 and meet us at Santa Fe, thus creating a pincer movement.
So, while other elements of the Sixth Army drove south toward Manila, the 32 nd and the 25 th launched their pincer movement designed to open the way to the Cagayan Valleywhich runs north to Aparri.
We found ourselves facing defenses prepared by an old enemy, Lieut. Gen. Tomoyuki Yamashita, the man they called Tiger of Malaya and The Butcher of Bataan. The 32 nd had had a taste of his caves and pillboxes, his artillery and his concealed machine guns in the Ormoc Corridor on Leyte. We knew we were in for a tough assignment on the Villa Verde Trail from the very beginning.
Yamashita had done a more thorough job of his Villa Verde defenses than those on Leyte because hed had more time.
It took us 119 days to secure the Villa Verde and during that time we killed 8,900 Japanese.
I hold the Villa Verde operation up as an example of what teamwork can do. Every element of this Division did a magnificent job. Without the work of the Engineers, the Medical Corps, the Artillery, the Quartermaster, Ordnance and all the supporting elements of the Division, our three infantry regiments, the 126 th , 127 th and 128 th couldnt have done their job.
I shall always remember the 916 men who died in the winning of the Villa Verde. The pages of this book are a tribute to them.
We have here a segment of the Pacific War and the Pacific Victory. This is how it was done all the way from New Guinea up the road back. Its typical of the blood, the struggle and the sacrifice.
On Sept. 2, 1945, Gen. Yamashita, the old Tiger himself came into the 32nds lines to surrender. It was a great moment for the 32 nd , a glorious finish to this long bitter struggle.
MAJ. GEN. W. H. GILL
1 Death Stalks the Trail
There is no harder fighting by American troops anywhere on the far-flung war fronts of the world than on the Villa Verde Trail, 6,000 feet up in the Caraballo Mountains.
For 90 days, as this is written, the rugged troops of the 32 nd Division have fought their way 20 miles up the foot-path trail, building a road with armored bulldozers, climbing up the precipitous ridges and hills on the flanks, fighting the Japs yard by yard.
In those 90 days the 32 nd has killed 6,000 Japs, taken 24 prisoners and out-fought, out-gamed and outmaneuvered the best troops in the Japanese army.
This is a fight to the death up here in the clouds. The Japs wont retreat. They wont surrender. They dig in to die for their emperor.
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