Battle of Mabitac
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Template:Battlebox The Battle of Mabitac was an engagement in the Philippine-American War, when on September 17, 1900, Filipinos under General Juan Cailles defeated an American force commanded by Colonel Benjamin F. Cheatham.
Mabitac was linked to the garrison town of Similoan by a causeway which, on the day of the battle, was flooded with water (in many parts waist-deep). The water in the flanking rice fields was even deeper, making it impossible to properly deploy off the narrow road. Trenches occupied by Filipinos under Cailles cut across this causeway, blocking the path into Mabitac.
The battle began when elements of the 37th and 15th U.S. Infantry regiments, advancing from Siniloan, came under intense fire some 400 yards from the enemy trenches. Eight troops sent ahead to scout the enemy postions died to the last man as they closed to within 50 yards of the Filipinos. One of the last to fall was the intrepid 2nd Lieutenant George Cooper. However General Cailles being an honorable soldier, let the defeated Cheatham recover the bodies of the eight slain soldiers after the battle.
Meanwhile, the main body of U.S. Infantry had become pinned down in the waist-deep mud, still several hundred yards from the Filipino trenches. Unable to properly deploy, and in a dangerously exposed position, they engaged in a firefight with Philippine forces for nearly 90 minutes. Despite the bravery of one Captain John E. Moran, later awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor for his role in the battle, the Americans were badly mauled, sustaining scores of casualties.
Even supporting fire from a U.S. Navy gunboat (some 1,300 yards distant) and an attempted flank attack by 60 Americans, who had not participated in the costly frontal assault, could not dent the Filipino position. Eventually, General Cailles managed a skillful withdrawal in order to avoid envelopment, and by the next day his entire command had made good their escape.
The Americans lost some 21 killed and 23 wounded in the battle, an effective loss of 33% of their strength (termed a "profoundly impressive loss" by General Arthur MacArthur, Jr. in an effort to decrease the shock potential for U.S. servicemen). The Filipinos, in their turn, suffered 11 killed and 20 wounded. Numbered among their dead was one Lieutenant Colonel Fidel.
Major-General J.C. Bates later said of this battle: "It is deemed charitable as well as politic to drop a veil over this matter rather than to give any publicity that can be avoided."