Battle of Corregidor

Battle of Corregidor
Part of the Pacific Theater of World War II

American and Filipino prisoners, captured at Corregidor
Date5–6 May 1942
Location
Result Japanese victory
Belligerents

 United States

 Japan
Commanders and leaders
United States Jonathan M. Wainwright (POW)
United States George F. Moore (POW)
United States Samuel L. Howard (POW)
Empire of Japan Masaharu Homma
Empire of Japan Kureo Taniguchi
Empire of Japan Gempachi Sato
Empire of Japan Kizon Mikami
Empire of Japan Haruji Morita
Empire of Japan Col. Koike
Empire of Japan Col. Inoue
Units involved

Ground units:
4th Marine Regiment

Philippine Department

Philippine Commonwealth Army

Naval Units:
16th Naval District

Ground units:
Japanese Fourteenth Army

Aerial units:

22nd Air Brigade
Strength
13,000 U.S. and Filipino troops, 2 gunboats, and 1 minesweeper 75,000 Japanese troops
Casualties and losses
800 killed
1,000 wounded
11,000 POWs
1 gunboat sunk
1 gunboat scuttled
1 minesweeper scuttled
900 killed
1,200 wounded

The Battle of Corregidor (Filipino: Labanan sa Corregidor; Japanese: コレヒドールの戦い), fought on 5–6 May 1942, was the culmination of the Japanese campaign for the conquest of the Commonwealth of the Philippines during World War II.

The fall of Bataan on 9 April 1942 ended all organized opposition by the United States Army Forces in the Far East to the invading Japanese forces on Luzon, in the northern Philippines. The island bastion of Corregidor, with its network of tunnels and formidable array of defensive armaments, along with the fortifications across the entrance to Manila Bay, was the remaining obstacle to the Japanese 14th Army of Lieutenant General Masaharu Homma. Homma had to take Corregidor because as long as the island remained in American hands, the Japanese would be denied the use of Manila Bay and its harbor. The U.S. Army eventually recaptured the island in 1945.