雅各布·史密斯 (Chinese Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "雅各布·史密斯" in Chinese language version.

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arlingtoncemetery.net

esquiremag.ph

pbs.org

  • Miller p. 220; PBS documentary "Crucible of Empire"页面存档备份,存于互联网档案馆); Ten days after President McKinley's death, the residents of Balangiga, a tiny village 400 miles southeast of Manila, attacked the local U.S. garrison. While U.S. soldiers ate breakfast, the church bells rang a signal. Filipinos brandishing machetes emerged from their hiding places. Forty-eight Americans, two-thirds of the garrison, were butchered, in what is called the Balangiga massacre. On the orders of General Jacob H. Smith, U.S. troops retaliated against the entire island of Samar where Balangiga is located. The exchange is known because of two courts-martial: one of Waller, who was later court-martialed for ordering or allowing the execution of a dozen Filipino bearers, and the other of Gen. Jacob H. Smith, who was actually court-martialed for giving that order. The jury is out to the extent that order was carried out, because Littleton Waller actually countermanded it to his own men and said "Captain David Porter, I've had instructions to kill everyone over ten years old. But we are not making war on women and children, only on men capable of bearing arms. Keep that in mind no matter what other orders you receive." Undoubtedly, some men did commit atrocities regardless of Waller's commands.

sciotohistorical.org

web.archive.org

  • General Jacob H. Smith & the Philippine War’s Samar Campaign. [2021-04-06]. (原始内容存档于2020-09-20). 
  • Jacob Hurd Smith, Brigadier General, United States Army. [2021-04-06]. (原始内容存档于2020-12-05). 
  • The True Story of Jacob Smith, the 'Monster' of the Philippine-American War. [2021-04-06]. (原始内容存档于2020-12-04). 
  • Miller p. 220; PBS documentary "Crucible of Empire"页面存档备份,存于互联网档案馆); Ten days after President McKinley's death, the residents of Balangiga, a tiny village 400 miles southeast of Manila, attacked the local U.S. garrison. While U.S. soldiers ate breakfast, the church bells rang a signal. Filipinos brandishing machetes emerged from their hiding places. Forty-eight Americans, two-thirds of the garrison, were butchered, in what is called the Balangiga massacre. On the orders of General Jacob H. Smith, U.S. troops retaliated against the entire island of Samar where Balangiga is located. The exchange is known because of two courts-martial: one of Waller, who was later court-martialed for ordering or allowing the execution of a dozen Filipino bearers, and the other of Gen. Jacob H. Smith, who was actually court-martialed for giving that order. The jury is out to the extent that order was carried out, because Littleton Waller actually countermanded it to his own men and said "Captain David Porter, I've had instructions to kill everyone over ten years old. But we are not making war on women and children, only on men capable of bearing arms. Keep that in mind no matter what other orders you receive." Undoubtedly, some men did commit atrocities regardless of Waller's commands.