U.S. prisoners of war are freed in the Philippines during World War II. Liberated men are being interviewed. 26th Cavalry Medical Corps Major Emil P. Reed is interviewed. He states that he was the Commanding Officer of a prison camp from October to January. He met Japanese commandants after being called by them and was told that they were free. He talks about the experiences of being in the prison and after being liberated. A thatched hut in the background.
U.S. prisoners of war are freed in the Philippines during World War II. Liberated men are being interviewed. Filipino Division officer Cecil H. Hay is interviewed. He states about his experiences after being freed from the Japanese prison camp.
Liberated United States prisoners of war (POWs) in the Philippines during World War II. Liberated men are being interviewed about their time in Japanese prison camps. A liberated sergeant is interviewed. He talks about his experiences in the prison camp and says that he is glad to be back at his home. A thatched traditional Filipino Bahay Kubo house in the background.
Allied internees are interviewed after their liberation in the Philippines during World War II. A man interviews a patient lying on a hospital bed. The patient talks about his experiences in the prison camp. He talks about the conditions in the Japanese prison camp as a former prisoner of war.
Soldiers of U.S. Army 6th Ranger Battalion, Alamo Scouts, and Filipino guerrillas setting out on a mission to rescue American prisoners of war from a prison camp behind Japanese lines, at Kabanatuan (Cabanatuan) in the Philippines, during World War 2. They move out on foot and ford a stream on their way.
U.S. prisoners of war, rescued by U.S. Army Rangers of the 6th Battalion, Alamo Scouts, and Filipino guerrillas, from Japanese prison camp at Cabanatuan, Philippines, during World War II. The rescued prisoners arrive at the 92nd Evacuation Hospital, at Guimba, Nueva Ecija, in ambulances and trucks. Soldiers and former prisoners gather outside the hospital buildings. Some of the freed prisoners rest on the ground outside the hospital buildings. The main building displays a sign reading: "Guimba East Central School, Academic Building No.2."
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