Manila, 1945 (also Shanghai mid-'30s)
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Manila, 1945 (also Shanghai mid-'30s)
I mostly came back to share these with you folks; they've got a bit more international interest than most of the photos I take/collect.
My father picked up an old book of navigation tables and found this packet of photographs inside. They seem to have been taken soon after the battle for Manila, so March or early April 1945. The photographer was crew aboard a freighter, as a note was enclosed with the photos: "We run between Manila and New Guinea. Nothing at all to worry about."
Images link to big versions; captions are all original. (Edited to change file host, and for new versions of photos.)
Manila, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
Letran University
Manila, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
Jap [sic, for all instances] freighter sabotaged at Pier 7--burnt out Manila hotel beyond ship
Manila, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
American dead on field before walled city. City Hall--MacArthur's Hdqts.--in background
Manila, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
Pier Seven (copy)
Manila, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
Ruins silhouetting Santa Cruz church
Manila, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
Ruined business district
Manila, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
Pasig River over which American had to cross
Manila, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
San Juan de Dios hospital building devastated inside walled city
Manila Bay, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
Tanker--note how forward deck has been blown out
Manila Bay, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
What happened to the rising sun
Manila Bay, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
A few more of the Jap ships sunk
Manila Bay, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
One of the 286 ships sunk in Manila harbor. She looks good here but aboard an old steam freighter. The Jap ships must have been in terrible condition.
Manila Bay, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
Sunken Jap freighters
Manila Bay, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
Manila, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
Where artillery fired point blank at Intramuros wall to make a storming point. It took 6 days to breach it.
Manila, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
Manila's shell-battered government building
Manila, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
Japs lined up Manila's street cars to make barrier
Manila, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
Manila's ruined legislative building
Manila, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
The once beautiful post office. The Japs hidden in basement had to be blasted out with grenades. Note shell scarred tree, also trenches to left.
My father picked up an old book of navigation tables and found this packet of photographs inside. They seem to have been taken soon after the battle for Manila, so March or early April 1945. The photographer was crew aboard a freighter, as a note was enclosed with the photos: "We run between Manila and New Guinea. Nothing at all to worry about."
Images link to big versions; captions are all original. (Edited to change file host, and for new versions of photos.)
Manila, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
Letran University
Manila, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
Jap [sic, for all instances] freighter sabotaged at Pier 7--burnt out Manila hotel beyond ship
Manila, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
American dead on field before walled city. City Hall--MacArthur's Hdqts.--in background
Manila, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
Pier Seven (copy)
Manila, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
Ruins silhouetting Santa Cruz church
Manila, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
Ruined business district
Manila, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
Pasig River over which American had to cross
Manila, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
San Juan de Dios hospital building devastated inside walled city
Manila Bay, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
Tanker--note how forward deck has been blown out
Manila Bay, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
What happened to the rising sun
Manila Bay, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
A few more of the Jap ships sunk
Manila Bay, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
One of the 286 ships sunk in Manila harbor. She looks good here but aboard an old steam freighter. The Jap ships must have been in terrible condition.
Manila Bay, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
Sunken Jap freighters
Manila Bay, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
Manila, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
Where artillery fired point blank at Intramuros wall to make a storming point. It took 6 days to breach it.
Manila, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
Manila's shell-battered government building
Manila, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
Japs lined up Manila's street cars to make barrier
Manila, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
Manila's ruined legislative building
Manila, 1945 by bdstickney, on Flickr
The once beautiful post office. The Japs hidden in basement had to be blasted out with grenades. Note shell scarred tree, also trenches to left.
Last edited by Simplicius on Sun Feb 24, 2013 7:58 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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- The Mang, the Myth, the Legend.
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Re: Manila, 1945
man
Re: Manila, 1945
Good collection there. Really like that last frame.
"also it really shits my mum so it's a good way of winding her up"
-thejester
-thejester
Re: Manila, 1945
The last two are really moving. I was just at our legislature last two days, for speaker elections and opening ceremonies, and they are beautiful buildings (legislatures generally), so to see one so thoroughly gutted and destroyed...
Re: Manila, 1945
Does it bother anyone if I bump this to New Testing, so that it get preserved ?
No.
Re: Manila, 1945
False. It does. It's just more "a week or so" rather than "24 hours".Phantasee wrote:Nothing is getting pruned in OT anyway.
Anyway, I'll be abusing my mod powers now.
No.
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Re: Manila, 1945
These are good pics. I'd like to use 3 or 4 of them for a book Im writing on Salvage in the war. Does anyone, including the poster, know if they can be used?
many thanks,
paolo
many thanks,
paolo
Re: Manila, 1945
You'll have to send a private message to Simplicius and hope he get a notification mail, because it seems that he hasn't come here in quite a while.
No.
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- Posts: 3
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Re: Manila, 1945
hi,
thanks. ive tried but always say "This message may not have been sent by: " and i cant PM yet. any ideas?
cheers,
paul
thanks. ive tried but always say "This message may not have been sent by: " and i cant PM yet. any ideas?
cheers,
paul
Re: Manila, 1945
Do we really have newbie restrictions up in here? C'mon guys.
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Re: Manila, 1945
Thanks fellas, the messages got thru, tho they went to my inactive flickr accnt. oh well!
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- Posts: 5
- Joined: Thu May 24, 2012 12:44 am
Re: Manila, 1945
Oxymoron's message brought me here, albeit a little late. I'll try e-mailing diverpawl directly since it would seem to be easiest, but if that doesn't work I'll keep an eye out for him on this board.
Thanks for dropping me a line, by the way.
Thanks for dropping me a line, by the way.
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- Posts: 5
- Joined: Thu May 24, 2012 12:44 am
Re: Manila, 1945
Working a lot. I have a great (volunteer) gig in a local museum in their photo archive, I've been scanning and cataloging my grandfather's substantial collection of photos, and I try to squeeze in a little shooting when I can (am only just getting some film after month without, though, and I need to re-stock chemicals too). Trying to devise an actual career out of all this, but grad school seems hell of expensive on my small income and the museum needs some big grants to do the hiring they'd like, so...
Got married last fall, too. That was really nice.
How've you been?
Got married last fall, too. That was really nice.
How've you been?
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- Posts: 5
- Joined: Thu May 24, 2012 12:44 am
Re: Manila, 1945 (also Shanghai mid-'30s)
Also, since I had this one edited (again, new file host):
Shanghai, China, 1932-1937 by bdstickney, on Flickr
Shanghai, China, between the January 28 Incident in 1932 and the 1937 Battle of Shanghai. Japanese Special Naval Landing Force soldiers drive through the intersection of Jiangxi Road and Fuzhou Road. I don't know whether the two guys in the background between the vehicles are Japanese or Chinese, but they have cloth caps and armbands while the SNLF motorcyclist has no bands--maybe they're Chinese police? Whatever the occasion, there is plenty of civilian sidewalk and automobile traffic.
Hamilton House is one of a pair of Art Deco buildings near the Bund, the other being the Metropole Hotel. As near as I can tell, the armored car is a Sumida Type 2593.
The calm before the storm, pretty much.
Shanghai, China, 1932-1937 by bdstickney, on Flickr
Shanghai, China, between the January 28 Incident in 1932 and the 1937 Battle of Shanghai. Japanese Special Naval Landing Force soldiers drive through the intersection of Jiangxi Road and Fuzhou Road. I don't know whether the two guys in the background between the vehicles are Japanese or Chinese, but they have cloth caps and armbands while the SNLF motorcyclist has no bands--maybe they're Chinese police? Whatever the occasion, there is plenty of civilian sidewalk and automobile traffic.
Hamilton House is one of a pair of Art Deco buildings near the Bund, the other being the Metropole Hotel. As near as I can tell, the armored car is a Sumida Type 2593.
The calm before the storm, pretty much.
Last edited by Simplicius on Sun Feb 24, 2013 8:01 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Manila, 1945 (also Shanghai mid-'30s)
Glad to hear you're doing well.
Re: Manila, 1945 (also Shanghai mid-'30s)
I must express the fact I like you sharing these old pictures and their context with us. They give life to what would otherwise only be sterile words in insipid books.
No.
Re: Manila, 1945 (also Shanghai mid-'30s)
I was there at Chinese New Year's. Weird.Simplicius wrote:Also, since I had this one edited:
Shanghai, China, between the January 28 Incident in 1932 and the 1937 Battle of Shanghai. Japanese Special Naval Landing Force soldiers drive through the intersection of Jiangxi Road and Fuzhou Road. I don't know whether the two guys in the background between the vehicles are Japanese or Chinese, but they have cloth caps and armbands while the SNLF motorcyclist has no bands--maybe they're Chinese police? Whatever the occasion, there is plenty of civilian sidewalk and automobile traffic.
Hamilton House is one of a pair of Art Deco buildings near the Bund, the other being the Metropole Hotel. As near as I can tell, the armored car is a Sumida Type 2593.
The calm before the storm, pretty much.
People in glass trousers shouldn't shit bricks.
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- Posts: 5
- Joined: Thu May 24, 2012 12:44 am
Re: Manila, 1945 (also Shanghai mid-'30s)
Sadly almost all of my old photos couldn't even be fairly called of national interest, let alone international, or else I'd happily keep on a-postin'.Oxymoron wrote:I must express the fact I like you sharing these old pictures and their context with us. They give life to what would otherwise only be sterile words in insipid books.
@Bounty: From what I was reading when I was researching that photo, Shanghai is a very good place for surviving Art Deco architecture. Have you encountered much of it?