Dalton Pass

Dalton Pass road over the Caraballo Mountains.

Dalton Pass, also called Balete Pass, is a zigzag road and mountain pass that joins the provinces of Nueva Ecija and Nueva Vizcaya, in central Luzon island of the Philippines.

Geography

The summit of the mountain pass is at around 3,000 feet (910 m) in elevation,[1]:517 located where the Caraballo Sur (mountain range) and the Sierra Madre (mountain range) meet. The headwaters of the Digdig River originate just south of the pass.[1]:517 Balete Ridge starts two miles to the west-northwest of the pass, with a high point at Mt. Imugan (5,580 feet), and extends nine miles to the east-southeast, where it ends at Mt. Kabuto (4,600 feet ).[1]:517–518

Dalton Pass is a gateway to the Cagayan Valley, and the Ifugao Rice Terraces.

Gateway over Dalton Pass road on entering Nueva Ecija province.

Battle of Balete Pass

The Japanese strategy during the Battle of Luzon was to fight a delaying retreat from Baguio to Bayombong, and then to a final defensive position in Kiangan, Ifugao.[2]:Map 2,88,99 The pass was the only access between Central Luzon and the Cagayan Valley, and was the scene of much bloody fighting in the Battle of Luzon, during the final stages of World War II.

Balete Pass lies along Highway 5 from San Jose City and Santa Fe, and became a defensive position for Tomoyuki Yamashita's forces. A similar defensive battle was fought at Salacsac Pass, along the Villa Verde Trail joining San Nicolas and Santa Fe.[2]:Map 2 and 4

Japanese Gen. Yoshiharu Iwanaka's 2nd Tank Division fought a retreating battle from San Jose to Dupax, before confronting the American 32nd Division, under the command of Maj. Gen. William H. Gill, at Salacsac Pass in early March 1945.[2]:70–72 That left the Japanese 10th Division, under the command of Lt. Gen. Yasuyuki Okamoto, to confront the American 25th Division, under the command of Maj. Gen. Charles L. Mullins, at Balete Pass.[2]:83,98

Almost of seized of all stronghold 2,700 to 8,600 local Filipino troops and military officers under the Philippine Commonwealth Army and the Philippine Constabulary are sending combat operations to for aiding them by the local recognized guerrillas and the American ground force under the U.S. Army's 25th and 32nd Infantry Division to joining the Battle of Balete Pass were included Villa Verde Trail and Salacsac Pass and fight by the Japanese. The casualties of all stronghold Filipino soldiers and officers between the Commonwealth regulars and constables almost 285 killed and 1,134 wounded in battle.

According to Ogawa, "When Balete was about to be captured, those unable to move were left to die after much pain and agony. Some of the more fortunate were given potassium cyanide or hand grenades to dispose of themselves quickly."[2]:98 The Americans took the Balete area on 31 May 1945.[2]:102

The Japanese lost 7,750 at Balete Pass, and 5,410 at Salacsac Pass.[2]:Map 2 The Battle of Balete Pass incurred the death of 685, and the wounding of 2,090, 25th Division American soldiers between 21 Feb. and 31 May 1945.[1]:539 The Battle of Villa Verde Trail, or the Battle of Salacsac Pass, cost the American 32nd Division, 825 killed, and 2,160 wounded.[1]:539 The Japanese 10th Division and 2nd Tank Division were finished as effective combat units.[1]:510,535

The namesake of the pass, General James Dalton II, died of a sniper's bullet in the battle.

Balete Pass Tourism Complex

The Balete Pass Tourism Complex is in the summit area of the pass. The "National Shrine of the Battle of Balete" and other monuments and memorials honor the war losses. The shrine is at the highest point at the "Dalton Pass Viewpoint with Shed" provincial project, which offers long vistas of the mountains and forests.

Flora

The Dalton Pass area is home to the only critically endangered orchid of Nueva Ecija, Ceratocentron fesselii, which is endemic to the province. It has orange flowers with purple lips and that glows lightly at dark. It is threatened by illegal logging, and illegal collecting for the orchid trade in the international black market.

The national government has yet to dedicate the natural Dalton Pass habitat as a nature reserve to protect the endemic orchid, leaving extinction of the orchid in the wild a threat.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Smith, R.R., 2005, Triumph in the Philippines, Honolulu: University Press of the Pacific, ISBN 1410224953
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Ogawa, T., 1972, Terraced Hell, Tokyo: Charles E. Tuttle Company, Inc., ISBN 080481001X

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Dalton Pass.

Media related to Balete Pass Tourism Complex at Wikimedia Commons
Media related to Dalton Pass Viewpoint with Shed at Wikimedia Commons
Media related to Monuments and memorials of Dalton Pass at Wikimedia Commons

Coordinates: 16°07′59″N 120°55′55″E / 16.1331362°N 120.9319578°E / 16.1331362; 120.9319578

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