From the Philippines to Victory: The Final Campaigns of the 164th Infantry
In this episode of The Past Less Travelled, we continue the story of North Dakota’s 164th Infantry Regiment as the Pacific War moves toward its final chapters.After enduring some of the harshest combat conditions of the war on Guadalcanal, the men of the 164th arrive on Bougainville hardened, experienced, and adaptable. No longer raw troops, they apply hard-earned lessons from earlier campaigns—embracing jungle patrolling, coordination with artillery and air support, and constant adaptation to terrain, enemy tactics, and operational tempo. Bougainville marks a turning point where American ingenuity, endurance, and combined-arms warfare steadily tighten the noose around Japan’s Pacific defenses.As the war progresses, the conversation traces the 164th’s role in the broader island-hopping campaign of the Philippines, the grinding reality of disease and exhaustion, and the high cost paid even as victory comes into view. We also reflect on the closing months of the war and what “the end” truly meant for soldiers who had spent years in combat zones far from home.With no surviving North Dakota veterans of the regiment remaining, this episode underscores why preservation and interpretation matter now more than ever. That mission continues through the work of the 164th Infantry Remembrance Association, whose living history efforts aim to give families, descendants, and the public a clearer picture of what these men experienced.The episode concludes with a look ahead to our upcoming living history event, February 27–March 1, where the stories of the 164th will be brought to life through authentic interpretation, material culture, and firsthand storytelling—ensuring their legacy endures beyond the last living memory.