Talisay Landing

[1] The landing was part of Operation Victor II, an Allied military campaign to liberate the islands of Cebu, Bohol, and Negros from the Japanese forces.

[2] Before the landing, the Cebu guerrilla force of 8,500 men and intelligence network alerted the Allied forces about the plan of the Japanese to scatter landmines in the landing areas to delay the Allied advance.

[2][3] Armed with this knowledge, the landing was preceded by a bombardment of the beaches in Talisay to soften up Japanese positions.

[4] The landing at Talisay paved the way to the liberation of Cebu on 27 March 1945, and the surrender of the Japanese forces on the island on 28 August 1945.

[5] In Talisay's beachfront, a set of seven life-sized statues were installed to commemorate the landing event.

Talisay Landing Historical Marker