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OPINION: The Battle of Bud Bagsak
Amir Mawallil
Posted at Jun 16 2016 12:07 AM

Forget the name. But why should we not forget the name?

For people from Zamboanga City, Gen. John "Black Jack" Pershing is a popular park located right at the heart of the city, a city that is only about 8 hours from Sulu by slow boat.

And so we try to remember that what happened in Sulu between the Moro people and the American soldier who was memorialized by Zamboanga.

It’s clear that to memorialize the man was part of the deal — to also memorialize legend that surrounded his exploits in Sulu archipelago. It was a totem of gratitude from the people of Zamboanga City, an offensive against those who fought hard against the colonizer.

Ironically, to remember General Pershing was our participation in the construction of a grand Filipino narrative, which is Philippine history.

Last week, in a national newspaper, Senator Sonny Angara urged the government to educate young Filipinos about the Moro history by enacting a law that mandates integrating indigenous peoples and Moro history, culture, and identity in the curriculum of both basic and higher education.

The key word was integration. Perhaps through this law, Pershing and his exploit in the Battle of Bud Bagsak in 1913 will now be highlighted in the mainstream national cultural and intellectual production through memorializing and remembrance in aid of education as a state apparatus.

The Battle of Bud Bagsak was fought between June 11 and 15, 1913. Moro freedom fighters led by Datu Amil, together with their wives and children, were fortified in the mouth of a dead volcano, the Bud Bagsak, to resist American forces in the province aided by the local Moro leaders and natives.

Pershing had observed that whenever the American forces advanced, the Moro freedom fighters retreated to Bud Bagsak, carrying with them non-combatants, women and children, refusing inclusion and subjection.

Pershing, a veteran general whose expertise in pacifying natives extending back to the Sioux Indians rebellion in the Iowa in 1890s, devised a plan on how to penetrate the fortified Moro camp at the mouth of a volcano that was protected by a steep slope ringed by several cotta forts.

Bud Bagsak is a testament to the ageless narrative of warfare that deception is an indispensable tool to victory.

In January of the same year, Datu Amil was able to reinforce almost 3,000 Moro freedom fighters in Bud Bagsak. In February, Pershing brought in the 8th Infantry to Jolo to capture Bud Bagsak. In the guise of retreat and helplessness to engage Moros in a battle in their own territory, Pershing postponed the attack on Bud Bagsak, prolonging the standoff between the two parties for several months.

During the standoff, Pershing intended to separate the rebels first from the non-combatants as genocide in the archipelago (because of the past military operations), the collateral of the US imperialist project, reached the mainstream media in the homeland that sparked debates on the US presence in the Philippines.

Datu Amil fell into the trap because of hubris or miscalculation; no one can really tell. Perhaps he thought that the Americans were weak and their refusal to engage in battle was an impending sign of defeat.

This lasted for five months, too long for the Moro leader to stand. When Pershing finally attacked Bud Bagsak, Datu Amil retreated to the mountain with now reduced to 500 Moros with him.

For five months of game-playing and deterrence, his supporters were reduced in numbers as the long period of Pershing’s silent campaign against Datu Amil affected and disrupted the economy, trade, and agriculture on the island that forced some Moros to abandon Bud Bagsak.

It was in mid-June that Pershing and his men were able to penetrate the mouth of the mountain, killing almost 500 Moro combatants together with their women and children. The battle claimed 14 American lives. It was the last bloody Moro resistance in Sulu archipelago in the annals of Philippine history.

Philippine history as a grand narrative is an exercise of remembering. But how to forget or to remember with prejudice and selectivity, depending on how these processes, will serve the interests of the grand narrative.

Remembering, as a national activity, is seldom subjected to examination and uncovering of the truth. Because of this, the remembering is often reduced to ‘remembering how to forget’ — when half of the process should be intended to accept, recompense and correct, forgive, and heal.

What General Pershing’s name pushes us to remember is how to forget the Battle of Bud Bagsak.

"To remember how to forget" is how this macabre story of the battle between American soldiers, aided by locals and Moro recruits, and the supporters of Datu Amil is being constructed in the national imagination, if at all there is an attempt for its inclusion in retelling it to the Filipino nation.

We remember how the Americans "contained" the Moro rebellion in Mindanao, how they were able to successfully assimilate the Moros to the Filipino body politic through the sweetness of their promises of emancipation through their benevolence as a colonial master.

We remember how the Americans introduced education, established the local governance and bureaucracies in the archipelago, and civilized these various ethno-linguistic groups that resisted "civilization" and the promises of US benevolence.

What we have forgotten, however, is this: the Moro freedom fighters' resistance against colonialism as a tool for conquest and a system of domination against the US imperialist project that included creating a homogenous Filipino nation under the American rule and with its local complicit partners of nationalist comprador elites and landlords.

What we try to forget is that Bud Bagsak was a bloody pacification project to reject the Moro assertions or the compromise of their own narratives in the construction of a homogenous archipelagic nation. The right to self-determination is among its conditions.

What we should always remember is that Bud Bagsak is a narrative of resistance against all forms of colonial domination, including that of Filipinos.

To remember then is to betray the cause. To forget is an act of defiance against appropriation.

What we try to remember now is how to forget that Moros resisted foreign domination as far back as the American colonial occupation of the archipelago.

What Philippine history, this insidious grand narrative, will not tell us is that Moro rebellion in Mindanao, even up to this day, has a long history of struggle, and it has a narrative of its own apart from the dominant narratives woven at the center: the Filipino nationalist narrative of a homogenous nation.

What we also try to remember is how to forget that Bud Bagsak, a Moro’s narrative for resistance, is a historical text critical and ambivalent to be included in the narratives of the victors, as the Scouts, local soldiers of the Philippine infantry, Moro and Filipino leaders in Mindanao and Manila and their perfidious relationship with the colonial master were direct and complicit partners in the gruesome murder of Moro freedom fighters and their families in Bud Bagsak.

The act of remembrance, in a country that is still haunted by its colonial past, is to continuously build those narratives that favor the center and to appropriate the peripheries or to silence the counter-narratives that will derail the grand narrative to reach its completion.

In times like these, when a bill in Philippine Congress is being pushed so Moro history can now be integrated in the curriculum on Philippine history— the act of forgetting, as in the tradition of Bud Bagsak and the Moro freedom fighters and non-combatants who fell in the battle, is an act of a non-committal form of resistance against the domination of an exclusive nationalist remembrance.

Amir Mawallil, 27, is a member of the Young Moro Professionals Network, the Philippines' biggest organization of Muslim professionals.



The Battle of Bud Bagsak (June 11-15, 1913)

Pershing's Disarmament Campaign:

    Sunday, April 16, 1911 1t Lt. Walter H. Rodney, a recently arrived young officer of the 6th Cavalry, was out for a stroll with his five year old daughter on a wide boulevard outside the walls of the Jolo garrison. As the pair walked by a cockpit, thronged with excited, screaming spectators watching a cockfight, a lone, young male Tausug approached from the opposite direction. As they passed one another, the Tausug suddenly pulled a barong from his shirt, whirled about, and repeatedly slashed the hapless officer about the head and shoulders. Rodney staggered to the side of the road, mortally wounded. His daughter, though traumatized, was left unharmed as the man quickly discarded his weapon and attempted to hide in the nearby crowd. Cries of "juramentado" went up from the cockpit and hundreds ran for the safety of the guarded village gate. The commanding officer of the garrison, by chance only a few yards away in a passing carriage, yelled for the gate sentries who, assisted by the crowd, confronted the assailant and shot him to death. Three days later, at the Asturias guardhouse, at the opposite end of the road, the sergeant of the guard began to search two young Moros for weapons, when both suddenly drew barongs from hiding and killed him instantly. Another guard shot both men, killing one and mortally wounding the other.
  
This was the first such incident in five years, and General Pershing concluded that, while Rodney's death was unfortunate, the real blame lay with the newly-arrived garrison commander who had failed to enforce a long standing order that no officers and men were to be permitted to go outside the garrison walls unless armed. Not only Rodney, but the commanding officer himself and several other nearby officers had been unarmed and might have been able to intervene. But to their dismay, in reporting on the incident the American press faulted Pershing and Bell, claiming they had been "too soft and weak" on the Moros. It turned out that a few Americans in the Philippines had anonymously written Rodney's father, a retired Army General,  falsely claiming that the real reason Rodney and the others had been unarmed was due to a direct order from Pershing forbidding them to carry weapons. The letters further claimed Pershing had claimed in to pressure from the datus. In in his grief, Rodney's father had written angry letters to the Taft administration and members of Congress raging over the "stupidity" and "calumny" of the "civil government" of Moroland. Uncharacteristically and for reasons unclear, Pershing panicked and reacted to the outside pressure even though his superiors fully supported him and knew the accusations to be false. Over the astonished objections of the Constabulary and Scouts, the very people he relied upon to maintain public order, on September 8, 1911 Pershing issued Executive Order No. 24 ordering the total and immediate disarmament of Moro Province, an action he had strongly opposed only a few weeks before.
   
Nearly all Army officers who had previously served in Moroland thought Pershing was out of his mind; particularly since it specified not just a total ban on firearms but the carrying of any and all edged weapons of more than six inches in length. This struck at the very heart of the Moro warrior culture and the reality that, despite a formal American system of laws and policing, the average Moro still looked upon his or her datu  for protection, redress, and justice, not the government. How could a datu enforce the traditional communal beliefs of right and wrong and preserve stability without arms? Even hard-line Leonard Wood, now Army chief of Staff, felt Pershing had bitten off more than he could chew. Holding out both a carrot and a stick, Pershing offered cash bounties on all proscribed weapons turned in before the end of 1911, but with the threat of heavy fines and incarceration for those caught with contraband weapons after that date. Those arrested were held indefinitely until relatives were able to raise money to pay the fines.
   
As expected the Moros were outraged, and in many cases took out their anger at what they saw as the impotency of their headmen by switching  allegiances to younger, vocal firebrands who, nursed a growing sense of shame and outrage that the older generation of leaders had so willingly acquiesced to a long period of control by foreigners. Particularly restive were the Maranaos of Lake Lanao and the Tausugs of Jolo. Violent incidents between Americans and Moros multiplied, resulting in a steady stream of small skirmishes in Lanao between the Constabulary and the Maranaos and the 2nd Battle of Bud Dajo on Jolo during Christmas Week of 1911. Random shots fired at night into the Jolo garrison became so common that the wives and dependents of the garrison were evacuated to Zamboanga. But in early 1912, as tensions were at a high point, word came down from the War Department for Pershing to back off from enforcement of the disarmament order until after the November US presidential elections.

Temporary Suspension of the Disarmament Order:

    The U.S. Presidential election of 1912 ranks as one of the more consequential in the nation’s history. The three-way battle between Taft, Roosevelt, and Woodrow Wilson had an impact on the future of the nation and, in turn, altered the great experiment in transplanting “Americanism” to the Philippine Islands, and solving its most intractable problem, Moroland. Pershing suspended enforcement, announced a new deadline for compliance after the November polling date, and renewed and increased the bounty offer for firearms. Wisely, he backed away from the ban on bladed weapons. Violence subsided. At first the Americans were at buoyed by seeing a dramatic increase in the number of weapons surrendered. But it soon became apparent that the new Tausug leadership were combing the populace for thousands of older, obsolete rifles, shotguns, and pistols, turning them in and using the proceeds to purchase modern, high-powered, bolt-action models from arms dealers. In effect, they were using the lull to  better their arms.

Renewal of the Disarmament Campaign:

    Following the election and in the substantial power vacuum that existed between then and the inauguration in March of 1913, the new deadline expired and Pershing issued orders to the Constabulary and Scouts to resume enforcement. But by now the Tausugs had coalesced behind a single, charismatic leader and Moro nationalist named Naquib Amil. When confronted by government agents over his known accumulation of a hidden a cache of at least 300 new, high-powered rifles, Amil simply shrugged and replied, “Tell the soldiers to come on and fight.”

    Pershing took up the challenge, sending three companies of Scouts, one company of Constabulary, a battery of mountain guns, and a troop of the 8th Cavalry to surround the small cotta of Amil’s deputy Datu Sahipa, suspected of being the hiding place of the arms. Although greatly outnumbered, 65-70 well-armed Tausugs, led by Amil and Sahipa, put up a stiff fight, repelling the initial assault, and inflicting 20% casualties on the American side and killing the American commander. Although two-thirds of the defenders died, Amil, Sahipa, and many others escaped with the arms cache through hidden passageways while a second assault was under preparation. Ominously, the American edge in firepower--and marksmanship—seemed to have eroded. A few days later a ferocious night attack was made by eight juramentados, religiously-motivated suicide warriors, on Camp Steever at Siet Lake. In the days that followed, several times snipers fired  into the Jolo garrison at night, forcing Pershing to once again evacuate badly spooked American dependents from the island.

    Amidst this fighting, an estimated more than 6,000 Moros loyal to Amil, almost ten times the number of those on Bud Dajo, gathered on a second dormant volcano, Bud Bagsak. With five separate summits, Bagsak posed a knottier tactical problem than Bud Dajo. Governor-General Forbes ordered Pershing to nip the insurgency in the bud, but Pershing feared an inadvertent blood bath, a repetition of 1st Bud Dajo on a larger scale. He knew that, as at Bud Dajo, two-thirds of those on the mountain were probably women and children. Using the Sultan of Sulu and a number of the older datus as intermediaries a bichara was arranged with Amil. Pershing promised to suspend the disarmament effort if Amil and his people would leave Bagsak, return to the villages, and keep the peace. The tensions briefly subsided and Pershing quietly suspended enforcement.

    However Governor General Forbes, seeking reappointment by the new Wilson administration and not wanting to appear weak, ordered Pershing to reinstitute the disarmament campaign. Reluctantly, Pershing  complied, but even many previously friendly Moros now refused to cooperate. Few firearms came in and the level of resistance ratcheted up.  In early June of 1913, Pershing received word that Amil had quietly returned to Bud Bagsak with between 300-400 well-armed men and built fortifications on its highest summit. Believing a showdown was now inevitable and fearing even more that there could be a pell-mell rush to the mountain of the large number of women and children from nearby coastal villages, Pershing devised a secret plan.

The Battle:

    Orders were posted temporarily suspending all field operations, including disarmament activities, stating General Pershing would be absent for several weeks in order to enjoy a vacation with his family at Lake Lanao. That night with much fanfare and ceremony, Pershing departed Zamboanga by an Army transport, accompanied only by his aide de camp. But once away from the city the running lights were doused and the vessel headed to two nearby islands to pick up waiting companies of Philippine Scouts. Arriving in Jolo near midnight, he walked into the middle of a raucous party of the Army’s 8th Infantry at the officer’s club. Pershing ordered them to sober up and assemble their men, their assignment to guard Jolo.

    Pershing quickly assembled an expeditionary force of 883 officers and men, however only one infantry company (50 men from Company M) and a demolition detail from the 8th Cavalry (25 men) were US Army Regulars. Over 90% of the force consisted of eight companies of Philippine Scouts (including the two that were all Moro). Two thirds of the expedition piled onto large barges pulled by steam launches, traveling 15 miles along the coast to land at a trail leading directly up to Bud Bagsak. The other third marched 20 miles overland to flank the opposite side of the mountain. By early the next morning, Bud Bagsak had been surrounded and the trails that could bring reinforcements, supplies, and the huge expected surge of villagers from the coast had been blocked. As a result, few if any additional warriors and almost no women and children reached the mountain during the battle that followed. However, Amil and his small band of 300-400, while surprised, were dug into defensive positions and prepared with abundant ammunition.

    The large crater of Bagsak was horseshoe-shaped, closed on three sides and open at one-end. Three smaller summits within the crater stood just behind the opening and guarded the entrance. An immediate, simultaneous assault took the three smaller hills in the early morning hours, with minimal casualties. Amil made a serious, and fatal, tactical mistake by concentrating most of his men and firepower on the higher, main summit and too few on these three lesser rocky promontories, where they could have brought a deadly cross-fire to bear and possibly blocked Pershing’s men from entering the crater or at least made them pay a higher price.  The defenders only briefly resisted and then fled to trenches on the side of a fourth, but lower, summit named Pujagan, further back in the crater. From these heights, two mountain guns, the 8th Infantry company, and two Scout companies pummeled the trapped Tausugs for the rest of the day and through the night, inflicting many casualties and gradually rendering Pujagan untenable. In desperation, the survivors made a last desperate, suicidal charge in successive waves of 12 to 20 men each, getting as close as 40-50 feet from the American lines but no further. An American officer recounted, “None of the charging Moros reached our lines alive.” A day later in burying the bodies, the corpse of Amil was found. But Sahipa and about half of the defenders still commanded the ridges and summit of Bud Bagsak.

    For the next two days, Pershing carefully maneuvered his forces into position for a final assault. However, highly accurate, long-range Tausug sniper fire from well up the mountain hindered the effort and caused the death of Captain Taylor Nichols, who led both Moro companies. Pershing selected the two all-Moro Scout companies (170 men total and now under the command of Captain George Charlton) to make the final assault. On June 15, the 51st Scouts, Maguindanaos from Cotabato, and the 52nd Scouts, Maranaos from Lanao, attacked up through lines of trenches and barricades, straight up a steep, partly open , curving slope for 450 yards (415m) to eventually capture a large stone cotta at the top. The 51st and 52nd were backed up by the 24th (Ilocano) and 31st (Tagalog) Scouts, Christian companies from the northern Philippines. The intense fighting that followed lasted nine hours, and became the fiercest, hardest-fought military action to take place in Moroland during the entire period of direct American rule. But nearly all of the fighting on the American side, although directed by white officers, would be carried out by Moro or Filipino foot soldiers and non-coms, supported by three mountain guns of an American battery. The 8th Infantry company would watch, not participate in the pivotal final battle.

    At 1:30 PM, two-thirds the way up the slope, the assault began to stall. Pershing rushed to the front line and took personal charge. He wrote his wife Frankie a few days later, “It looked for a time as though we should not be able to carry it…. I am a wreck today.” He rallied the Scouts just in time. Sensing a counter-attack, Captain George Charlton, ordered his men back to a defensive position just in time to meet a furious charge from above. Firing without stop, the Moro Scouts inflicted heavy losses on the defending Tausugs, but as both sides ran low on ammunition rifles were flung aside and Moros on both sides reverted to their ancient form of warfare; a desperate hand-to-hand battle of kris, barong, and kampilan, see-sawing back and forth for another two hours. The Christian Scouts rushed ammunition from below to their Muslim compatriots and the end came with a climactic, final rifle assault by the Moro Scout companies on the stone cotta, its screaming defenders making a last, furious counter-charge at 4:40 PM. “A few escaped but the remainder fought with fanatical fury until life was extinct” (wrote 1st Lt. James Collins who stood beside Pershing).

    The American expeditionary force lost fifteen dead and twenty-nine wounded, roughly a 5% casualty rate (author’s count made from unit reports). An official body count was not made of the Tausug dead, although it was reliably estimated that from 300 to 400 male warriors had been on the mountain at the outset of the battle and there had been no reinforcements. Escape tunnels had been incorporated into the trenches and cottas, and the two blocking companies had been pulled away from their flanking positions. As the fighting neared an end, a large number of defenders were observed fleeing, perhaps as many as one-third who were on the field. Few rifles were recovered from the battlefield, most having been carried off. Thus, although there was no official count, it appears likely between 200 to 300 Tausugs were killed in the battle. The climactic final assault was largely a Moro-versus-Moro fight, Maguindanaos and Maranaos against Tausugs, although the dangerous task of carrying ammunition and water up the exposed slope fell to Christian Filipinos.

Aftermath:

    Perhaps because of few American deaths and the public focus on the upcoming transfer of political power, the battle received little attention in the American press. But one month later a former civilian employee of the Quartermaster Corps named John McLean got off a boat from Manila, went immediately to the offices of a small San Francisco newspaper, and leveled the charge that he had been present on Jolo during the battle and claimed as fact that 1,600 Moros, mostly women and children, had been massacred by (white) American troops. He further asserted that Pershing had placed three newspaper reporters under arrest in order to suppress the story. The front-page headline read “BUTCHERED MOROS HE SAYS.” But other newspapers, skeptical of the source, were unable to find verification and refused to publish it. Gaping holes were discovered in McLean’s story. He had not been on Jolo at the time but was in Manila, having earlier been fired from his job and ordered off the island. He had skipped the Philippines behind an assumed name, leaving behind a wife, a mistress, many children and a large amount of unpaid bills. His former boss scathingly dismissed his story, “the truth is not in him and we never took seriously anything that he said.” The story died. However, two months later, The International Socialist Review repeated the false charges in an inflammatory and dissembling article, without providing any new factual support. Ironically, this flawed article, its highly inflated body count, and the claims of a massacre, have been cited as factual by later historians and is often quoted on current-day Muslim separatist web sites as if it were the true picture.

    In the official history of the US Army, the Battle of Bud Bagsak is cited as the last Moro resistance to American rule. This is simply untrue. A large number of Tausugs escaped the mountain, taking their weapons with them. There were two additional battles fought entirely by the Constabulary and Scouts only a few months later, one easily equaling that at Bud Bagsak. A far larger battle was fought by the Constabulary and Scouts against the Maranaos in Lanao in 1917. In fact it was five years later before the last American died fighting the Moros; 1st Lt. Charles C. LaRouche of the Constabulary in September of 1918. The only period with an absence of Moro resistance to American (and the Philippine Commonwealth government) was during WWII, when they fiercely turned their attention to a new set of occupiers, the Japanese.



  The Battle of Bud Bagsak - June 11-15, 1913
The Rodney Affair and Disarmament Campaign which led up to the battle

Lt. Rodney's killer, lying dead on Asturias Road

Another dead attacker on an unrelated attack on the Sergeant of the Guard at Asturias Gate three days later

    More than 5,000 firearms were turned in during the second bounty offer, but most were old or obsolete. Defeating the purpose of the bounty, the Tausugs used the money to buy new high-powered, bolt action rifles from arms dealers in nearby Singapore - in effect rearming. Above are weapons either turned in or confiscated in Lanao District.

Two Moro soldiers of the 52nd Company Philippine Scouts, with Springfield M1903 rifles and "bolo" bayonets.

52nd Company Philippine Scouts in 1912 (Library of Congress)

    Beginning in 1907, the number of American soldiers in Moroland was steadily and deliberately reduced by a build up in Philippine Scouts. The Scouts consisted of Filipino enlisted ranks with American officers. The officers consisted of volunteers from the Regular Army, from both commissioned and non-commissioned ranks, who were given special four-year temporary commissions.  By 1912 Scouts outnumbered Army Regulars by 4 to 1 and the Regular Army's role had reverted to being a backup reserve. Being a Scout officer was quite attractive. It invariably meant a temporary promotion of one or two rungs for a Regular officer and a commission for a sergeant, all at the Regular pay scale and full credit for their temporary rank at retirement. It also was where the action was. Filipino soldiers also had major incentives. They were recruited into companies organized by native language or dialect and received far higher pay, allowances, and benefits than their counterparts in the Constabulary. Pershing received permission from General Bell to form the first two (and only) all-Moro Scout companies; the 51st (Maguindanaos from Cotabato) and the 52nd (Maranaos from Lanao). Since the Moro Constabulary had long been distinguished by the red fez, the Moro Scouts adopted its own distinctive brimless headgear (in photos above) copied from that of British Muslim troops in India and Malaya.



Battle of Bud Bagsak

The Battle of Bud Bagsak as depicted from U.S. Army Poster No. 21-48 dated 1963.
The Battle of Bud Bagsak, fought from 11 June to 15 June 1913, was a battle-turned massacre which took place in the Moroland of Jolo, southern Philippines. This four-day battle was led by U.S. Brigadier General John “Black Jack” J. Pershing of the 8th Infantry and Philippine Scouts against Moro fighters armed with traditional weapons such as kris, barong, spear and guns they collected from defeated Americans.
Contents [hide]
1 Background
2 Battle
3 Aftermath
4 See Also
5 External Link
6 References
7 Citation
Background

Several months before the actual assault of the crater, a band of Moros (about 6,000 to 10,000) of Lati fortified themselves at the top of Mount Bagsak. Since the Spanish period, outlaws, such as remontados and vagamundos, found home in the wilderness, and so until the American period, the government officials and the military were continuously chasing these “bandits.”
The Moros were watching over the military. Whenever the American troops were inactive, they send their children and women in the fields to work and to supply their band with food. They also had their eyes on General John J. Pershing – a simple visit of the General to Jolo already alerted the Moros
The American military led by Gen. Pershing, were faced by problems. First, they do not know how to get the women and children off the mountain before they attack the Moro outlaws in it. Another is the “unstoppable bravery” of the Moros only armed with a number of local blades and overflowing courage. This led to the invention of U.S. Army Colt 0.45 caliber pistol.

Battle

Gen. Pershing then had a secret plan – a tactic he kept to himself. On 5 June, a telegram was sent to the commanding officer of Jolo ordering all field operations off and commanding the troops into the barracks. After four days, he made a public announcement that he'll be at Camp Kiethley in Mindanao to visit his family. But the General has something on his mind. Evening of 9 June, he sailed from Zamboanga and when the ship was a distance away from the island, the course was changed to Basilan and to Siasi, where they picked up the 51st and 52nd Scout Companies, respectively.
Silently, their ship sailed for Jolo and harbored on the night of 10 June. Around 5 o'clock in the morning of 11 June, the troop advanced on Mount Bagsak. The Americans had difficulty penetrating the the mountain as the main cotta was formidably defended by stone fortress. Five forts support the main cotta – Pujacabao, Bunga, Matunkup, Languasan and Pujagan. The only way to reach the summit was to do a simultaneous assault of all the smaller defensive forts.
The troop was divided into different directions. They positioned themselves in strategic locations and started the attacks on the forts. Of the five supporting forts, the cotta of Lagusan was captured without difficulty.
For the next two days, the attacks continued bringing casualties to both parties. On the fourth day, the American troops prepared for their final assault. For two hours, the troop conducted a barrage to the Moro fort after which they moved up the hill for the attack. Sharpshooters were scattered in the area. They reached the top of the hill while gunmen fired on the fort nonstop. At the fort, the Moros stood on its walls with their sharp, bladed weapons in one hand. By 5 o'clock in the afternoon, Gen. Pershing commanded Captain Charleton for their final attack. They successfully took over the fort, and the savage battle ended.

Aftermath

During the final assault, the 13 men of the American troops were killed, and the entire battle caused the lives of 2,000 Moros, of which 196 were women and 340 were children. Although defeated, the Moros only showed that they did not, and will never, fear death. In the words of General Pershing :




Battle of Bud Bagsak in Sulu

They are absolutely fearless, and once committed to combat they count death as a mere incident."

From January-June, the whole Moro ward of Lati with a population of between 6,000 to 10,000, fortified themselves in a cotta in Mt. Bagsak.
On June 11, 1913 Gen. John Pershing ordered the attack with the assistance of Charlie Schuck who reported that it was easy to attack the Moro Fort. General Pershing and his American military attacked the Fort at Bud Bagsak. The Muslim led by their Nakil Amil bravely defended their Fort, first with guns and bullets and knives and bolos.

The four-day battle was personally led by U.S. Brigadier General John "Black Jack" J. Pershing of the 8th Infantry and Philippine Scouts against Moro resistance fighters armed mostly with kris, barongs, spears and few guns. In many other battles in the Morolands, the U.S. Army Colt 0.45 caliber pistol was tested and perfected as an effective "man stopper" against the brave Moro fighters.

During the battle Pershing came up to the front line and: "Stood so close to the trench, directing operations, that his life was endangered by flying barongs and spears which were being continually hurled from the Moro stronghold." At this point in the battle, Pershing sent American officers into the front lines to lead the attack.

But, after four days, the Fort at Bud Bagsak, along with every warrior fell. General Pershing in a letter to his wife, he wrote: "THE FIGHTING WAS THE FIERCEST I HAVE EVER SEEN. "
The Moros fought like Devils. They justified the observation Pershing had made of them: "They are absolutely fearless, and once committed to combat they count death as a mere incident."
http://www.bangsamoro.info/modules/wfsection/article.php?articleid=1


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Swish of the Kris
Kris versus Krag
The Battle of Bud Bagsak

The battle of Bagsak had its beginnings several months before the actual assault of the crater. The mountain peak had been for some time the rendezvous of the outlaw element of all of the southern islands, and the big problem the Americans faced was that of getting the women and children off the hill before the final clean-up was made.

So long as the Moros saw that the American troops were inactive and in barracks many of the women and children would be sent down to work in the fields, but at the first suggestion of an American expedition all of the non-combatants would be recalled to the mountain. As General Pershing had stated, when the Moro makes his last stand, he wishes his women and children with him. The Moros kept a very close check on General Pershing, for every visit of the General to Jolo was the signal for a stampede to Bagsak. Pershing soon discovered that the taking of Bagsak without the slaughter of women and children would have to be an undertaking planned with the greatest secrecy. In planning the campaign, Pershing exercised rare judgment.

To begin with, he kept his plans absolutely to himself, not even confiding in his closest officers. On June 5 he sent a telegram to the commanding officer at Jolo calling off all field operations and ordering the troops into barracks. Four days later he announced publicly that he would visit his family at Camp Kiethley in Mindanao and with that apparent plan in mind he sailed from Zamboanga on the evening of June 9. When the transport Wright was well out of sight of Zamboanga the course was changed and the ship picked up the 51st Company of Scouts at Basilan, proceeding on to Siasi to load the 52nd Scout Company.

With lights out and the smokestack muffled, the Wright then crept into Jolo harbor late on the night of June 10. The maneuver was wholly unexpected and the General found the American soldiers at a moving picture show. The call to arms was sounded and in an incredibly short time the troops were en route to Bagsak.

All of the forces were concentrated at Bun Bun on the beach and by five o'clock in the morning the advance on Bagsak had begun.

The mountain crest was defended by formidable cottas crowned by the stone fortress of Bagsak at the summit. Supporting the main cotta were five subsidiary forts admirably located for defensive purposes. These five cottas, namely, Pujacabao, Bunga, Matunkup, Languasan and Pujagan, were grouped about the huge stone fort of Bagsak in such a manner that a simultaneous assault of all of the cottas was necessary in order to prevent a great loss of life on the part of the attackers.

The American force was divided into two wings and very explicit attacking directions were issued. The right wing, consisting of the 8th Infantry and the 40th Company of mountain guns, was under the command of Major Shaw, and its objective was the cottas of Languasan and Matunkup. The left wing, composed of the 51ist and 52nd Companies of Scouts and a mountain gun detachment, was under command of Van Natta, and were ordered to attack the cottas of Pujacabao and Bunga. Pujagan and Bagsak were to be taken after these assaults had been successfully executed.

After a heavy preliminary shelling by the mountain guns, the columns moved to attack. While the attack was in progress, Captain Moylan was ordered with the 24th and 31st Companies of Scouts, to take a position on the south slope of Bagsak to cut off the retreat of the Moros, Captain Nichols led his company against Matunkup, which fell at noon of the first day's fighting. In taking Matunkup, the attacking force was compelled to climb a sheer cliff one hundred feet high, pulling themselves up the precipice by clinging to vines, while in the face of a heavy fire. There were eight casualties in the American force before the summit was finally gained. Captain Nichols then led his company on to the cotta of Pujacabao, the men opening up on the Moros at close range and then dropping within the cotta walls to battle hand to hand.

The terrific shelling Pujacabao had received from the mountain battery had eliminated many of the Moro defenders. Amil, the Moro leader, was severely wounded by a shell fragment, whereupon he retreated to Pujagan, where he was killed the following day.

The cotta of Languasan was captured without difficulty with a loss of one man, but the American forces had eight casualties during the period of Moro counter-attacks made in an effort to recover the fortress.

With three of the cottas in American hands, the surviving Moros retreated to Bagsak, Pujagan and Bunga and the first day's operations came to an end.

On Thursday, June 12, the American forces poured a continuous fire from rifles and mountain artillery upon the cottas of Bunga and Pujagan, and there was a great deal of skirmishing. The Moros began a series of rushes upon the American troops holding Languasan. The Mohammedans would rush out in groups of ten to twenty, charging madly across 300 yards of open country in an effort to come hand to hand with the Americans. Amil, his son, and the Data Jami led three of the attacks; in each instance, the charging Moros were accounted for long before they reached the American trenches. It was during one of these charges that Captain Nichols was killed by a bullet through the heart from a high-powered rifle.

The American forces holding Languasan were subjected all day long to a merciless fire from the cotta of Bunga. Notwithstanding the aid of the mountain artillery, the American forces were unable to capture any of the Moro positions during the fighting of the second day.

On the morning of the third day Captain Moylan was ordered to take the cotta of Bunga. The capture of this fortress was absolutely necessary in order to secure a position from which the tremendous stone cotta of Bagsak could be shelled. Captain Moylan took Bunga after a five-hour attack, which was supported by sharpshooters and artillery. Among his casualties was one man who was cut in two by a barong. The balance of the third day was devoted to hauling the heavy guns up the steep slope of Bunga.

On Saturday morning, the fourth day of the battle, Captain Charleton and Lieutenant Collins were sent with 51st and 52nd Companies and a detachment of cavalry to reconnoiter the rim of the crater and to find a position from which the infantry could launch a final assault on Bagsak cotta. The rest of the day was devoted to digging the troops in, in a position about 600 yards from the Moro fort, while the mountain guns fired constantly into the cotta.

Sunday morning brought preparations for the final assault. The mountain guns opened up for a two-hour barrage into the Moro fort, and at nine o'clock in the morning the troops moved up the ridge for the attack. The heavy American artillery shelled the Moros out of the outer trenches supporting the cotta of Bagsak and the sharpshooters picked them off as they retreated to the fortress. After an hour's hard fighting, the advance reached the top of the hill protected by the fire of the mountain guns, to a point within seventy-five yards of the cotta.

To cover that last seventy-five yards required seven hours of terrific fighting. The Moros assaulted the American trenches time after time only to be mowed down by the entrenched attackers.

General Pershing came in person to the firing line early in the attack, exposing himself to the full fire of the cotta. At 4:45 in the afternoon, the American forces were within twenty-five feet of the cotta. The Moros realized that their time on earth was short. They stood upright on the walls and hurled their barongs and krises at the troops beneath them, wounding four of the attacking force.

At five o'clock General Pershing gave the order for the final assault, and standing within twenty-five feet of the walls he watched Captain Charleton take his men over the walls and the battle of Bud Bagsak was won. Thirteen men were lost in the final assault.

About 500 Moros occupied the cottas at the beginning of the battle of Bagsak and with few exceptions they fought to the death.

With this battle, the organized resistance of the Moros was broken and the episode of "Kris versus Krag" came virtually to an end. There were a few more minor battles, but never again did the Moros place a formidable force in the field against the Americans. The Mohammedans fought a grand fight at Bagsak against superior weapons. They showed the Arnercans, as they had showed the Spaniards, that they were not afraid to die.

http://www.bakbakan.com/swishk/swk3-24.html
Related links :
Swish of the Kris
http://www.bakbakan.com/swishk/swk3-24.html


MILF
http://www.mnlf.net/History/bud_bagsak450_1.htm


A long-buried war with the Moros.
http://research.unc.edu/endeavors/win2006/feature_04.php


From Bates Treaty to Bud Bagsak
http://www.angelfire.com/on4/zambalesforum/batestreaty.htm


Pershing
http://www.diggerhistory.info/pages-leaders/ww1/pershing.htm


Photos of Sulu Archipelago during the American Era - circa 1910 -1020

Posted by Emmanuel Esber at 10:29 AM  
4 comments:

AnonymousNovember 18, 2007 at 4:42 PM
My Great Uncle was Captain Taylor A Nichols, killed at Bagsak on June 12, 1913. Could you please correct your spelling of our last name? When referencing my Uncle, please spell his name Nichols, not Nicholls (only one L). Thanks so much, and thank you for your articles. Since my earlist recollection I listened with fascination to my Father speak of his Uncle Taylor, who lead a very interesting and honorable life and died too young. I continue to this day to absorb any and all information I can find on this fine man. Uncle Taylor's death took a great toll on the family, as he was a beloved son, brother and uncle and a fine soldier.

Thank you for your post.
L Nichols

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Dan NicholsDecember 2, 2013 at 10:26 AM
I have been doing some family research and I believe that we may be related in a long lost way.
I think Taylor A. Nichols is the nephew to my Great, Great Grandfather, Oliver David Nichols.
If you see this and can, please respond to try and confirm this and discuss other things.
You can contact me at the following...
dan_nichols01@att.net
or,
dan@foremachine.com

Thanks,
Dan Nichols

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JeannieJune 16, 2009 at 9:19 AM
I just found out that my Grandfather, Elijah H. Hubbard, was at the Battle of Bud Bagsak. So I am interested in finding information on this.

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Mat Salleh MuhammadJanuary 1, 2013 at 2:15 AM
Yeah whatever. they are killer. The moro didnt start the war. The Moro didn't even go to America to start the war. the Moro only using the swords and shields they still don't and forced the American Army have to Fall back. The American Killed the Women and child there. All i found on this blog was sadness of the American did to the Moro.


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