Invasion of Lingayen Gulf | |||||||
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Part of World War II, Pacific War | |||||||
The U.S. Navy battleship USS Pennsylvania leading the battleship USS Colorado and the heavy cruiser USS Louisville to the shores of Lingayen. | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Australia | |||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Jesse B. Oldendorf Douglas MacArthur Walter Krueger | Tomoyuki Yamashita | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
875 + warships 203,608 soldiers : 1 heavy cruiser |
Roughly 450–600 aircraft, 200 used as kamikazes 262,000 troops on Luzon[1] | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
United States 29,560 wounded (Entire Luzon campaign) |
Japan 217,000 dead, 9,050 taken prisoner[2][4] (Entire Luzon campaign) |
The Invasion of Lingayen Gulf (Filipino: Paglusob sa Golpo ng Lingayen), 6–9 January 1945, was an Allied amphibious operation in the Philippines during World War II. In the early morning of 6 January 1945, a large Allied force commanded by Admiral Jesse B. Oldendorf began approaching the shores of Lingayen from Lingayen Gulf, on the island of Luzon. U.S. Navy and Royal Australian Navy warships began bombarding suspected Japanese positions along the coast of Lingayen from their position in Lingayen Gulf for three days. On "S-Day", 9 January, the U.S. 6th Army landed on a roughly 25 mi (40 km) beachhead at the base of the Gulf between the towns of Lingayen and San Fabian.