My Great Uncle lost his life at Kokoda, in the Battle of Mission Ridge-Brigade Hill. R.I.P. Pvt James "Jim" Rogerson SX3730 KIA 7th Sept 1942 #ANZACHERO
Just the first land defeat we heard of. The future Marshall Zukov, who later took Berlin, thrashed an invading Japanese force in Siberia in 1939. The USSR kept this secret for half a century.
That MUST be 'fake news'. Everyone knows the USA was the ONLY nation to have military forces active in the Pacific theatre. 🤔 Just ask any American. They'll tell you. They won WWII single-handedly. It's a mystery as to who was fighting prior to the US very belatedly entering the war. Yanks swallow so much of their own propaganda they don't know up from down. 🤣🤣🤣🤣 Unfortunately Aus 'yoof' swallow almost as much Yank propaganda. There are libraries FULL of verifiable information. It's not difficult to learn - if one wants to.
Anyone heard of the 'Naked Gunner'? My grandfather (who was handing ammo to the AA guns) told me of a digger who was in a shower at the time of the raid (at the aerodrome) and just ran out with a towel on, which fell off pretty quick, and jumped on the AA gun naked and fought that way. Legend
Yep! I think Sunrise or something did a segment on the bombing for a major anniversary and the guy they interviewed told that story. His mates made jokes when they were leaving that they were afraid of his big weapon.
The entire Northern Coast from Broome to Townsville was bombarded over 2 years. It was relentless and everywhere there were more than two buildings, the bombers attacked. It was covered up to stop resentment against sending all of our troops and armaments overseas... they didn't want the troops in the European and African Theatres to know that their country had been attacked while they were fighting in foreign countries. The agreement between Menzies and Churchil was that Australia was allowed to be sacrificed, that Australian troops were notto be released to fight at home until after the Eurpean and then the African Theatres were won. Almost every eligible adult man had volunteered to fight for Europe Which is why the new PM Curtain had to introduce conscription of 18 year olds who with thd US Pacific fleet, New Zealand, defended our region against the Japanese. Churhill didn"t even want that to happen. He tried to get USA to sign a treaty to pledge the entire US military to the European Theatre. Churchill said they might after the European and African campaigns were won, pledge British troops to try to regain Australia from the Japanese. Thank goodness PM Menzies was votes out of office in time to organise defence of Australia, because those otger two had given up before it even began to affect Australia. The greatest crime in all of this is that our Asian neighbours we shoukd have been helping defend were quickly and thoroughly overrun and they suffered many casualties, loss of life and years of disruption, PTSD, comfort women, rapes, plunder. Churchill was not a hero to Australia.
Remember my mother talking about how she remembered Churchill having said 'Let the Japanese take Australia we'll (ie Britain) get it back later'....he appeared quite willing to sacrifice all of Australia at the time !!!
Yes, that is true. No ome cared about the amount of hardship and loss their was throughout Asia and the Pacific. Europe and Africa only were important, Menzies did not care because he only cared about Mother England.
Dude it aint an American thing. Most people around the world dont know about the world. An Example. Ask someone what one event started World War 1, not the event that lead to the start of World War 1, but the event that Started it. And the vast majority of people cannot answer it. Not Americans, not the French, not the Russians, for sure not the British, but maybe some Italians (Hint).
Ryan, another fact that you may not be aware of is that there were 2 Japanese mini submarines made it into Sydney Harbour during WW2. You may also like to do some research on the Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels (Papua New Guineans) who assisted the Australians during the war.
As a Grandson, Son and Nephew of WW1 and WW2 veterans I am always grateful to all the young Americans and Australians who died defending Australia. A lot of Australians don't even know about the Battle of The Coral Sea which was fought off the North Queensland Coast or that Japanese Subs got into Sydney Harbour. A big thankyou to the USA.
Yeah, my mother told me when the subs started sending their torpedos off, she and grandmother hid under the bed!! There were no shelters. They lived near Sydney Harbour. My father was fighting the Japs and my grandfather was a WW1 Gallipoli veteran..Bros are all Vietnam Vets...Strong military family.
A lot of us do know mate.... And most of us who had family here by 1900 have rellys that served... right up to the present. If there's one thing we've learnt... We haven't learnt a thing.
Australia was very heavily involved in the war in the Pacific. It was so close to home. Probably most Australians have grandparents who fought in Asia or the Pacific. Everyone had a role as it was so close. My grandfather and my great uncle fought in New Guinea and on the Pacific islands. When we studied WWII in History in high school (1989 for me) there were lots of original photos and memorabilia that came in with students and teachers. There were a huge number of Australians tortured and killed by the Japanese in their prison camps and death marches. The Sandakan March is a good example of the horrors of the War in the Pacific. Remember, the Japanese didn't sign on to the Geneva Convention so there was a massive difference in treatment of prisoners in Europe and the Pacific.
I would recommend doing at least part of the Sandakan death march if u ever have theopportunity. I really got a feel 4 the hardships they faced & learnt so much, more than in school.
My grandfather was in the navy during the war. He was supposed to be on a different ship, but he got the flu or something and had to be left at port and transferred to a different ship (HMAS Kanimbla) after he got better. The ship he was going to be on was destroyed. My grandmother (other side of the family) knew one of the guards killed in the Cowra breakout. He was her father's fishing buddy.
That history of Japanese utterly monstrous atrocities done to everyone they had anything to do with during WW2 isn't taught in Japan. I know a Japanese professor who was teaching in an Australian uni, and at dinner one evening with extended family, the conversation came up, and he completely negated it. It didn't happen as far as he was concerned. There were words had - and people left the dining-table to storm to their rooms. I always figured if a professor didn't know - then I would assume it just isn't taught over there. That does rub me the wrong way - though it isn't the people's fault - that's a government decision.
6:14 - The warning at the start of the video is a traditional notification to indigenous people as a respect to their culture, if I understand this correctly in some areas a dead person's name could not be said because you would recall and disturb their spirit, this also now extends to images.
What is not widely known even by the greater Australian population is that ALL of the Darwin raids were contested in the air by Australian and American fighter squadrons. Without these brave airman fighting and breaking up the bomber formations over the ocean the strikes on Darwin would have been far worse. Some units involved in defence: 75 squadron RAAF 77 squadron RAAF 78 Spitfire squadron RAAF Composite squadron RAAF (included Dutch and RAF Malaya and Dutch East Indies survivers) 49 Fighter Group USAAF. They operated from "secret" Camoflauged airstrips cut from bush away from Darwin township to escape detection by Japanese reconnaissance aircraft.
AA gunners were anti aircraft gunners. My father fought against the Japanese in New Guinea and was an AA gunner defending airfields against Japanese attacks. Australian forces inflicted the first defeat on Japanese forces in WW2 and stopped their southern advance in New Guinea.
My sister-in-law's Dad shot down aircraft in New Guinea. (Last name Blundell.) He was apparently sitting on a mountain in the jungle somewhere and just taking out planes.
The ‘panic’ was that Singapore had surrendered 4 days before the first attacks on Darwin, with the surrender of 130,000 British, Indian and Australian troops. Japan at this point seemed unstoppable.
@@shmick6079 when I learnt he was in ww II and what he did during the war, he became my hero, I never knew him he passed before I was born, but he was a hero for sure..
@@patrickgrant6389 wow, yeah scary times they were just glad our men and women could and can help protect our country... My grandfather passed before I was born so I heard stories from my mum aunties and Nana... I feel like I knew him..
I think it's a shame that more people don't realise what happened to Darwin.. All the emphasis seems to be about Pearl Harbour. A good film to watch, which gives some idea of what happened in Darwin is "Australia" by Baz Lurhmann. It was the first film I had ever seen that showed what happened....
There was a censorship blanket thrown over the incident for many years because it was considered too sensitive and upsetting for the Australian population
My grandfather was part of an army artillery unit in Darwin when it was bombed. My other grandfather was a civilian ferry skipper on Sydney harbour, he was coming back into dock and they had to scream at him to kill his lights because there was Japanese submarines in the harbour. And my fathers earliest memory is waking up to find all hi neighbours in their house in Sydney, they had come over because they could hear the shelling and theirs was the only brick house on the street. Finally don’t forget that New Guinea was an Australian territory until 1975 and there was a lot of fighting there.
As an Aussie, I was taught about the bombing of Darwin at school but I had no idea about other attacks, especially Cairns and Townsville which are towns in Northern Queensland.., Ryan, you, as an American, taught me more about Aussie WW2 history!!!!!
In my school days, the senior History course covered this. In those anxiety-ridden Cold War times, it was considered too worrying for younger years to study.
Cairns was a z squad and m squad commando training area, check out magnetic island history outside of Townsville. Atherton Tablelands was Aussie infantry and us airbase...some farms have the old bunkers from the old air strip
@@koolkat1573same... I'm enjoying learning this stuff too. I know the basics of ww2 but only what we were taught in school, which clearly wasn't enough. I don't recall being taught any indigenous history either other than story books in kinder (not surprising though for the 90's).
On the 15th Feb, 1942, four days before the 1st attack on Darwin, an American Army pilot, Lt. Robert J. Buel, flying a P-40, sortied north west out of Darwin and attacked a Japanese Kawanishi flying boat, but was shot down/killed. On the 19th Feb, 1st Lt. Oestreicher, also flying a P-40, shot down one Val and damaged another. We Australians remember them, and will never let their gallantry be forgotten.
I lived in New Guinea back during the time of their independence. 1976. The ppl there have a massive respect for Aussie soldiers. (The military cemeteries are the best kept i have ever seen.) The locals played very big role in helping the Aussie soldiers while they were fighting the Japanese there. (It's not an easy place to navigate ) I have been told that the Japanese hold the Aussie soldiers in very high regard after battling them.
There's interviews with Japanese who came up against our blokes in New Guinea. Worth watching Also the first to engage the Japanese Imperial Marines on the track weren't even proper infantry..they were up there to mend roads & airstrips...a lot of em had never fired a rifle before... they did a tremendous job against the Japanese elite soldiers.
My mother was at boarding school on the coast of Queensland and that school was evacuated to an outback town called Barcaldine. As a safety precaution. Not many people know there was a thing called the “Brisbane line” that was an imaginary line from Brisbane across the continent that the government were prepared to give north of that line if invaded.
Yeah, it was called the Capricorn Line too (follows the tropic line across the country)... If the Japanese had got a foothold in Australia, we wdve had a bastard of a time getting them out Edit: It was a stupid idea...Blamey & MacArthur were butchers...their 'leadership' in NG was atrocious...& that's being kind.
My next door neighbour (who lived to be 98) was a ‘Rat of Tobruk’ as an anti aircraft gunner - whilst most of the ‘Rats’ redeployed to the Kokoda campaign, his battery was redeployed to Darwin. He said his war in Darwin was much harsher and more frightening than anything he ever experienced in the much more famous Tobruk campaign.
Well done, Ryan, great videos! My father worked in the Post Office in Darwin, he was supposed to join the Postmaster, Mr. Bald and his family in the air raid shelter, but he was delayed, locking documents in the safe, like the good Public Servant he was. The air raid shelter copped a direct hit, and all in it were killed. My father had PTSD from his experiences of being a civilian in a War Zone. He didn't speak much about the raid(s), except that the Japanese pilots flew so low that he could see whether or not they had moustaches. He said that with-out fail, each pilot made obscene gestures to him after they had deliberately tried to kill him by machine-gunning him. as he grovelled in the gutter on the edge of the street. They came back later in the afternoon & shot up the hospital, where he and many other wounded were. The hospital had large red crosses on the roof, and was nowhere near any military target. The pilots were obviously VERY skilful flyers, and clearly did not care about any Geneva Convention. My mother and brothers had been evacuated south just before the raid(s) and they lost everything, so we became War refugees in our own country. Life was incredibly tough for us. I was born in January 1944, exactly 9 months after a bunch of US Airforce P38 Lighnings shot down Admiral Yamamoto's plane. Yamamoto led the December 7 1941 attack on Pearl Harbour, HAWAII, and on Darwin. a couple of months later. A celebration, by my parents, maybe?
You have to understand that WW2 cemented the friendship that still exists today between Australia and the USA. During the war we had tens of thousands of US soldiers here in Australia. In fact recently, in Brisbane at the town hall during renovations an original wall in what was a soldiers canteen was stripped of cladding and what did they find ? They found hundreds of examples of grafitti that had been written by US soldiers serving and taking R and R here in Brisbane. They mostly wrote their names and where they came from in America. I was lucky enough to see it and I have to say it was very moving.
Back when I was a kid a lot of the War Widows and returned Servicemen used to tell us how they were getting ready to evacuate the women and kids South at the height of the war, they thought we were headed for annhilation after Britain wrote us off. The nets on the harbour were to foul up enemy propellers on the boats.
@@anthonyeaton5153 Churchill didn't want Australian troops sent back home from Europe and Africa. He said that Australia could be retaken later. We owe our survival to the USA and are forever grateful to them. Britain? pfffttt!
My father was in the Australian army and posted in Darwin about age 20 years during this attack. He didn't talk about it much, but now I believe he had PTSD and then loss of hearing. He said the soldiers slept under the defence trucks.
You should watch " When The War Came To Cowra." Which is in central New Soth Wales. We certainly treated our POWs a lot better then the Japanese treated ours.
That's for sure. I has an aunt , a nurse, who was a Japanese prisoner of war, captured after the sinking of the Vyner Brooke. One of my uncles was captured and made to work on the Burma Thailand railway. Both of them experienced horrendous conditions as prisoners of the Japanese.
Dr Tom Lewis has written quite a few books about these attacks on Australia in ww2. If you want extra info. "Eagles over Darwin: American Airmen Defending Northern Australia in 1942" is specifically about the US pilots who helped to defend Darwin. PS: It's a short read for a wide age group.
We also had attacks in Newcastle NSW. Fortress Newcastle went from Wollongong to port Stephen’s to protect the steelworks and the ports There’s still remnants of cannon fortresses throughout the bush in those areas
I was in Darwin when the new airport was built. When the old airport was demolished, the workers found a number of roof beams (steel) had holes from the strafing from back then. Many of the workers took home pieces of steel beams with the holes in as mementos. I saw some of this happen.
Tasmanian here I didn’t know about this either. My father fought in Papua New Guinea in the Admiralty Islands during WW2 he was a mechanic in the Royal Australian Air Force
My great uncle joined the airforce after this event and became a bomber pilot, protecting Australia from ships and submarines! He flew mostly from Townsville and Darwin, but was also in Coffs Harbour and Sydney to prevent submarine landings there, a decorated hero! He was promoted to Wing Commander and Pilot Officer!! He was reported missing, at 29, flying American admin officers to the islands! His memorial is in Darwin! 😪
My dad was a Flight Sargent in the RAAF in WWII, his first posting was to Horn Island which was heavily bombed, then he was posted to Darwin three weeks after the first bombing. He was in charge a section responsible for maintenance of aircraft radios. He worked closely with USAF guys stationed nearby. They had so many Mitsubishi Zeros bombing them back then, that till the day he died in 1998 he refused to buy a Mitsubishi vehicle.
@@peteroneill404 , my dad , was a much older father . I didn't know him that well . They were an incredible generation . They have my gratitude , and respect. Now , we are allies , did you take up Japanese ?
@@indigocheetah4172 I'm glad that dad and I were very close, and yes you are quite correct they were an incredible generation. I took Japanese for two years and learned enough to get myself into trouble, not quite as bad as the English class in the movie Stripes with Bill Murray.
Yes. The same Japanese pilots, aircraft and carriers that had attacked Pearl Harbour were involved, plus land based twin-engined medium bombers. More bombs were dropped on Darwin than on Pearl Harbour. At the time, Darwin was a small place, so the damage was severe. An invasion was expected, but never eventuated. A little later, even smaller Broome also copped it.
Kings and Generals is doing a massive history of the Pacific War, they're up to episode 87, May 1943. If you want to see Aussies and Americans fighting side-by-side in detail, episode after episode, about 20 mins each, check it out.
I spend a lot of time in Darwin. There is a very rich military history here with plenty of museums and plenty of sites that were active during the war and what is left is preserved. It's definitely worth checking it all out. And really worth a drive is going to the war graves cemetery in Adelaide River. That's a moving place to visit
My father [rip] fought in Papua/New Guinea and Borneo along side with the Americans in WWII. Also a passenger ferry and a wharf were torpedo in Sydney Harbour by two miniature submarines too!
Aussies were in WW2 years before the USA came onboard… Sydney had Japanese submarines in Sydney harbour. Our troops were sent off to support the UK and Europe against Germany and also South Pacific against Japanese.
I remember the stories my mum told me about when she was a kid during the war and the Japanese bombing Darwin and Japanese mini subs attacking in Sydney harbour They used to practice air raid drills at school and hide under their desks
My sisters Mother-in-law was a Gunner on the front line in the bunkers. She was a hero and part Aboriginal. She passed a few years ago now. God bless her. I have the most amazing memories of our Time together ❤
My grandfather was an amo truck driver and was on the docks on the first raid which he survived. He drove the trucks during 32 more raids, the last one got him injured with shrapnel to the brain..survived but with severe epilepsy into his 70s. My personal hero. One early story was how he used to tell me how there were no doors on the truck, so when a raid happened and a bomb was dropping he would throw himself into the ditch, and if the truck survived, would climb back on and keep driving...note...he drove ' ammunition ' trucks...so dangerous. My personal hero...so brave and he was only 19 at the time.he always said if it wasn't for the Americans, Australia would have been overrun. He never had a bad word for America. ❤
My Late ex Father-In -Law, Staff Sgt, Ernest Ross Hough, was attached to the workshops Company during that time and one of his functions as a highly skilled toolmaker and machinist, was to set up the gun sights on the coastal batteries and anti aircraft defences. He was injured by a fragment of a bomb splinter, which ricoched off of the workshop's roof as he was diving into a trench. The fragment was removed but he suffered from septicaemia from the wound. He was also, as part of the workshop company, required to assist in undertaking damage repairs and burial of the dead. Never talked about it, other than to say it was a scary time and that the death toll may have been played down, due to the effects upon the Australian population. The Japanese bombed the port of Broome. He was on duty when the Neptune loaded with mines and explosives, went up and it was a horrible thing to witness.
Ryan, many places were attacked. The West coast was bombed (Broome etc), Sydney was attacked (Japanese midget subs sunk a ferry, killing people...the subs were destroyed by mines). Further south, the Japanese bombed Nowra etc...A reconaissance plabe even flew over Melbourne and reputedly dropped a small bomb!....US servicemen were killed in Darwin. Robert
My uncle platoon where shipping out to Darwin and his mate wanted to go out with his girlfriend there last night in Brisbane. My uncle who was 18 at the time took his mates mail run and was killed by a truck in an accident on the Sunshine Coast Queensland. Sadly uncle Arnold's platoon didn't make it through the Darwin bombing. My grandmother never really recovered from his death.
Ryan Darwin is a very Historical State of Australia. It is very remote from every other State.They vertically fought this attack with the Service men serving there. I went there 12 years ago. They rebuilt only to be wiped out by a Cyclone. They have rebuilt again and now it is a beautiful place to visit. The history of the bombing is everywhere you go,to the old runways, the underground tunnels. Darwin's version of Americas Servicemen Cemetry at Arlington. There are still relics everywhere you go in the Northern Territory. So very proud to be a Aussie.
During WWII the prime minister called in all the media heads and said he didn't want them to report on the bombings in northern Oz so they didn't. !! It wasn't until I travelled up the Cape York Peninsula in the late 1980s that I even knew we'd been bombed. We still weren't being taught about it in school! The islands in the Torres Strait, and near the tip of the Peninsula, had army and air bases, but I think these were set up after Darwin was bombed. I saw the wreck of a WWII plane on an old grass air strip. All the troops deployed in the north of Australia were very inexperienced! Lots of Aboriginal men joined up to fight in their local areas as land (or country) is very significant for them and they will always fight for it. I learnt lots from this video! I hadn't realised how many died in that first raid even though I've seen the graves of all who fell in these raids. I was 29 when I visited the Adelaide River Cemetry and cried because everyone but the post office workers were younger than me! It was very confronting! Pearl Harbour was bombed, then Singapore fell and then Darwin was bombed. And the Japs were gradually getting closer to Australia through Indonesia which is why the US ships were in Darwin at the time. The main action though was in New Guinea (now Papua New Guinea). The Japs landed on the north coast and were trying to take the eastern part of the island. Look up the Kokoda Track. This was a long and fierce battle between the Japs and the Aussies. They fought so hard with the help of the locals and were eventually able to defeat the Japs. But it was a close run thing as the Japs got quite close to Port Moresby. The Aussies knew that if the Japs got there then it would be easy for them to get to Australia and they weren't going to let that happen!! There was fighting all through the northern South Pacific islands. The US fought alongside the Aussies to keep the Japs at bay. One big battle was the Battle of the Coral Sea. The Kokoda Track is now hiked by people wanting to understand what the fighting in PNG was liked. They are amazed by how hard the terrain is and when you think of men fighting there ... ! So yeah lots of war history in Australia. On the night of 31 May/ 1 June the Jap mini subs entered Sydney Harbour. However someone heard Japanese on the radio and was able to alert the navy who sunk all 3 subs, 2 within the harbour itself. It was the only time they attacked Sydney. The US troops fighting in the Pacific would come to Australia for r&r. Many married Australian women who then moved to the US.
I grew up in Darwin, this was such a big part of our education, the reminders are all around you. Most people knew someone who had lived through it. The local museum had a great interactive display.
i recall reading that during the raid one bloke (a Machine gunner) was in the shower when the raid struck and ran to his position wearing nothing but his tin hat (helmet), boots and a towel. And at some point during the attack he 'lost the towel' XD
My father was in Darwin with the 16th Battalion during the bombing befor being sent overseas. He has a medal for it. The medal was for those troops that spent six months or more in the Darwin area during the Japanese bombing campaign.
My grandfather fought in ww11 , he was in the navy . When he got home from the war he never spoke to anyone about it . He died of old age when I was about 24 and when we were packing up his room I seen all his medals and other war stuff for the first time in my life. I had no idea he had them
If you ever visit Darwin, Stokes Hill Wharf (The wharf where MV Neptuna was sunk during the first attack) has an excellent display on the bombing of Darwin. The underground fuel tanks built during WWII are also nearby, and have tours running through that facility
Australia was directly attacked a number of different times and ways, during ww2. Not that it was a contest, to be sure. Axis commerce raiders operated in close proximity. Just a few weeks before Pearl Harbor, German Raider 'Kormoran' fought Aussie light cruiser HMAS Sydney just off the coast of Western Australia. Both ships sank in that battle - Sydney was lost with ALL hands, 645 in all. It remains by far the single worst loss of life in the history of the Royal Australian Navy. Japanese minisubs raided Sydney Harbor, none returned and damage was mostly light, but they did sink a small accomodation ship (HMAS Kuttabul, a converted ferry) with loss of life. The larger Japanese submarines that carried those minisubs went on to fire shells into a Sydney suburb and sink some ships up north. Hospital ship 'Centaur' was sunk off the coast of Queensland with heavy loss of life. There were the air raids on Darwin and various other places across the north of Australia. The big raid on Darwin did the most damage and loss of life, so naturally gets a lot of the attention. In the aftermath of the Darwin Raid, there was 'the Adelaide Derby'. Communications broke down, there was a lot of disorder, and many people believed an full-on invasion was in progress. So a number of units and individuals basically fled Darwin and headed south. It is popularly believed that some got as far south as Adelaide (look at a map) before things were sorted out. The Cowra Breakout is worth examination. Basically, there was a large POW camp near the town of Cowra, in NSW. Inmates were Germans and Italians (mostly captured in the Middle East), and Japanese. Conditions were, from all accounts, okay with some prisoners even allowed to work for pay on nearby farms. In 1944, 1100 Japanese prisoners rioted and staged a mass breakout (the Germans and Italians did NOT participate in any way). In the end, 4 Australian soldiers died, and 233 prisoners died either during the escape or by suicide afterwards. All escapees (359 in all) were recaptured within a fortnight. Btw, there is anecdotal evidence to suggest that the Japanese may have landed small number of troops in northern Australia at one time or another. But the areas in question were so isolated and the environment so hostile that they either withdrew very quickly or were basically "swallowed up".
You should be able to find a video like this. About Japanese midget submarines trying to enter Sydney harbour in world war 2. It was there interesting from memory
As a Darwin local, The Bombing of Darwin was tragic and every year we do a ceremony on the day and there are many abandoned ww2 facilities, bunkers, storage areas all over the Darwin area and at Darwin Harbour we have the Royal Doctor Flying Service tourist facility with a birds eye view simulating the attack, a VR experience, multiple cinema rooms that tell stories of people who were there during the bombing, then on the Esplanade we have the USS Peary (DD-226) Memorial where a salvaged canon from the ship points in the direction to where she lays today. also you should watch a documentary about RAAF's 77 squadron in the Korean war, its in 3 parts but there's a full version that goes for about an hour and 20 minutes so you could do a 1 hour special or a 3 part reaction im not fussed with either one, here's the link to the full version th-cam.com/video/VKKI5XCQDoQ/w-d-xo.html
My dad was in a transport regiment in Melbourne and would travel to Darwin. I remember him telling a story about how he was carrying Nitroglycerin. He told us that Nitro was so unstable that if the truck hit a pothole it ‘could’ explode. Similarly, just travelling on flat surface could also unsettle the nitro, and it might explode. Remembering that Melbourne to Darwin would have mostly been potholes. Who in the hell would do that now. Very brave blokes in those days. We don’t get them anymore.
My uncle was a young bloke in Darwin working at his first job in the Post Office. As the raids came over, he was outside it and crawled underneath inbetween the stumps that were supporting it. One almighty explosion somehow sent a biscuit tin skidding across the ground towards his head which knocked him unconscious. We rented ( I was 2 turning 3) an old typical Northern Territory house some years later. It had an iron roof and a low semi walled, topped with lattice, verandah all around the outside. This was used as sleeping areas during the hot humid nights to catch any breezes as you slept. I have vivid memories of living there. Everytime the heavy tropical Darwin rain was thrown down in blinding sheets, sometimes accompanied by huge, cracking and booming thunderstorms, the bucket cupboard was rushed. So many metal buckets had to be placed under all the streaming drips pouring through the lines of bullet holes in the roof left by the Japanese air raids. They'd been patched but were no match for Darwin downpours. I didn't know it at the time but since, have sometimes wondered how many people and their children might have been hit in that house alone. These raids and then later the 1975 massive Cyclone Tracey disaster that entirely flattened the whole city, led to an entire new shiny Darwin being built. The original old iconic Darwin has been largely replaced.
12:05 you put your damaged fighter down in a field if it can land, if not in the nearby ocean. They had super flat Darwin landscape on one side and an ocean no deeper than like 100ft for kms
This was super informative Ryan. I learnt about the raid on Darwin & surrounds in school, of course, but had forgotten the details. My grandfather & great uncles fought in WW2 & up until the day she died, my grandmother never forgave the Japanese. Don’t get me wrong, she was the kindest, most lady-like & generous person I’ve ever met. Her manners wouldn’t let her say anything terrible about the Japanese until she was near the end of her time & even then she said nothing harsh. Due to my grandfather’s civic duties in a sister city to a city in Japan, she had to meet & entertain dignitaries, she was always polite & welcoming but she found it very hard to cope, bless her ❤️
Thanks for covering this, it's a piece of history that Australians should be more familiar with. My Dad was in the army, so growing up I did live in Darwin for a while; we still have a lot of our military there because it is such a strategically important city. You may also be interested in learning about the Japanese attack on Sydney. Three midget submarines got into Sydney Harbour and fired torpedoes (Hence why nets were important and the Japanese wanted them destroyed). Yes, shots were fired in Sydney Harbour, though I haven't really seen much on TH-cam about that attack. We had a visit by a Japanese submarine in my city of Newcastle too, but it isn't as dramatic. They fired at the city, and missed their target. Fortunately we have this 19th Century fortress built to repel the Russians, that was able to fire back at the submarine. We missed, but the Japanese retreated anyway.
I grew up in Australia in the 1960s and seventies. We never got the full story until the mid-eighties. The Australian Government downplayed it at the time so as not to create panic and the full story was forgotten for over 40 years. we were taught that there was "a raid" on Darwin. The main thing taught at school was the retreat by the army while the Navy and Air Force remained.
Perry. Everything was kept secret from us about Darwin and other places as they did not want to frighten us. We were a very small population and nearly all our fellows were fighting overseas. We got a lot of propperganda in the papers. Our blokes were wanted home but that “bloke overseas” would not let them return.
It was more than a raid, it was campaign objective that made Peal Harbour look like a paintball game in comparison. Why they semi-secret it because the amount of people kill & property damage they caused. It did not only freaked us out, but the entire allied command because the fear was a direct Australian land invasion was immediate, the Americans nor the British could help at that time.
I grew up in Darwin and to this day any time they build around the harbour shells are found from the air raid. Exploded and some that are still alive. The bomb squad from the army gets called out a lot during these times.
My father was in the RAAF at Darwin during the raids. All young men without experience😮😮 of warfare. My father tells me he was one of the men who released the prisoners from Fanny Bay Gaol under orders and destroyed the prison records.
Hi Ryan good you have shared this extremely significant WW2 history which I’ve found over decades few USAmericans know about and that’s unfortunate because it would help them understand more about our AusUSA alliance ever since. My Great Uncle was killed in Kalimantan fighting alongside Americans and is buried on an Malaysian Island. Just check what one of your most famous WW2 Generals were doing at that time. Douglas MacArthur famously said “I shall Return” in a small rural town in South Australia. For our population Australia has exceptional involvement in supporting Allies beginning with the Boer War but huge in both World Wars. Have you checked what we did for you in Vietnam? Still raw for many my age. Korea? And all that’s well before Iraq Afghanistan!
12:25 In Field Marshal Sir Thomas Blamey Square, Canberra, there's a huge Australian-American Memorial commemorating the help given by the United States during WWII. The money for the monument was raised by public appeal in barely six weeks. The plaque reads: "In grateful remembrance of the vital help given by the United States of America during the war in the Pacific 1941-1945. Unveiled by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II February 16th 1954" 🇦🇺 🇺🇸
I lived in Darwin for several years. There are lots of war memorials, old bases, many old fortifications, and a great museum with lots of planes, tanks, equipment, and so on. The history of WW2 is everywhere there. Today, there is a major Australian Army and air force base there. America has a base there too. The Marine Rotational Force-Darwin is a United States Marine Corps Marine Air-Ground Task Force based at Matilda Lines at Robertson Barracks and at RAAF Base Darwin.
The Japanese were in Papua New Guinea, pushing on Port Moresby.. PNG is approx 150kms (80 miles) from mainland Australia. A Wharfe is a shipping jetty, a structure built out into the harbor to unload/load ships.. The Tiwi and PNG Islanders also all knew the "enemy" were evil and violent, and sided with the Allies. They saved the lives of thousands of wounded men whom they transported by hand, through the jungles, along with supplies, for the Allies.. 10:35 he is talking about the USS Perry, the US Navy ship that was bombed and sank with lives lost.. First time Australians and Americans served together was actually under the Australian Command of Gen Sir John Monash in WWI.
The thing at the beginning is more of a respect thing, not about how many of us are in a specific area I myself am aboriginal, and I was brought up that for one year after someone has passed away, you don't say their name or have their picture up So the video starting with that is an indication that they're trying to be respectful of our culture by letting us know ahead of time that some of the people shown, mentioned, or if they even have recording of the person's voice, have passed
Most Australians didn't know about the bombings until after the war. The government didn't want to panic the public. My parents witnessed the attack on Sydney Harbour by the mini submarines. I am not surprised that you didn't know about the bombings. The American education system seems to teach little about the rest of the world. To most Americans nothing exists outside of the USA. I have been to the US many times and seen how little Americans know. I loved being in the US I find Americans very welcoming, friendly and helpful. You need to be congratulated for your curiosity about Australia and the rest of the world.
Aussie war documentaries, which I think are worth watching WW1: Lighthorseman: Charge of Beersheba, WW2: Beyond Kokada, Korean: Kapyong and Vietnam: Battle of Long Tan
A lot more bombs were dropped on Darwin than Pearl Harbor, as if the Imperial Japanese learnt from Pearl Harbor and decided to conduct a full on attack on the entire city. If you visit Darwin you can still see a lot of history from the war, there's old bunker style tunnels which were used for storage which is open to the public to explore, also one of the old huge AA guns in East Point is now converted to a war museum and they have a lot of old relics there and you can go out on the structure where the AA gun is still located. You don't realize how huge those bunkers are on TV, until you go to one in person.
Always enjoy your videos. Another interesting piece of Australian history during World War II is the worlds largest mass escape of prisoners war in the small country town of Cowra New South Wales. I am sure you will find it interesting.
You know, this is what I love about your channel. Not everyone would be interested in this subject, it probably won't get as many views as videos of us all laughing at Americans for the dumb things they say, etc. But you are genuinely interested in this country and our history and are willing to watch documentaries about it and learn the things you don't know. You don't just assume things about Australia. You're also not afraid to ask questions or admit you don't know things. Top quality content mate, love it. Also, to you and every other American, don't feel bad for not knowing about this particular subject. I know we all laugh at the American education system, but I'm Australian and I never learned about this either! Whenever we learned about WW2 it was always about hitler and the holocaust. I only learned about this when I was an adult watching non-Australian documentaries about the war. 😂
My parents came to Darwin in 1956. Living here today does worry me with the rising hostility against China. We are still a prime target should war start. Of note, you should also check out what happened to darwin in 1974 with cyclone Tracy. Darwin's been wiped out a few times.
My mother's farther was a civil engineer working in Darwin during the air raids, he passed away when I was about 2, so I never knew him or heard of his experiences first hand
It was quite common for pilots to survive in US and British planes. The canopy could be popped open quickly, you're sitting on a parachute attached to you, and a life raft. Flap the plane up side down and fall out or climb out. At low altitude you putt the plane into a belly flop tail first into the water and get out before it sinks. The Jap planes were less survivable. The fuel tank was behind the pilot with no fire control system. The hatches opened in a way that made it hard to get out in a hurry. Many more died.
The population that lived in the southern states were kept in the dark about the bombings. A lot of American service men died that day, so it is wonder why their sacrifice is not honored as others have been in the Pacific theater of battles in the second world war. 88 officers and sailors died on the USS Peary, so it should be something that should be taught in your schools.
one of the 4" guns off the u.s frigate robert.e peary was salvaged from the wreck and mounted in the park pointed to the place where the peary sank. it was the u.s navys biggest loss of life in australian waters.
Grandfather, Grandmother, Great Aunt, other Grandfather and two Great Uncles (one Kia) all served in WW2. All but my Grandmother served defening the north of Australia.
Ryan, you should check out the first time the Japanese were defeated in a land battle, it was in New Guinea by the Australians.
The aussies were also the first ones to hand the german wermacht a defeat in a land battle in africa
My Great Uncle lost his life at Kokoda, in the Battle of Mission Ridge-Brigade Hill. R.I.P. Pvt James "Jim" Rogerson SX3730 KIA 7th Sept 1942
#ANZACHERO
Just the first land defeat we heard of. The future Marshall Zukov, who later took Berlin, thrashed an invading Japanese force in Siberia in 1939. The USSR kept this secret for half a century.
That MUST be 'fake news'.
Everyone knows the USA was the ONLY nation to have military forces active in the Pacific theatre. 🤔
Just ask any American.
They'll tell you.
They won WWII single-handedly.
It's a mystery as to who was fighting prior to the US very belatedly entering the war.
Yanks swallow so much of their own propaganda they don't know up from down. 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Unfortunately Aus 'yoof' swallow almost as much Yank propaganda.
There are libraries FULL of verifiable information.
It's not difficult to learn - if one wants to.
Milne Bay.
Anyone heard of the 'Naked Gunner'? My grandfather (who was handing ammo to the AA guns) told me of a digger who was in a shower at the time of the raid (at the aerodrome) and just ran out with a towel on, which fell off pretty quick, and jumped on the AA gun naked and fought that way. Legend
Can't get much more aussie than that now can you. Lol
Yep! I think Sunrise or something did a segment on the bombing for a major anniversary and the guy they interviewed told that story. His mates made jokes when they were leaving that they were afraid of his big weapon.
I have actually heard that story...but didn't know it actually happened on home soil lol. That's some spirit right there.
The entire Northern Coast from Broome to Townsville was bombarded over 2 years. It was relentless and everywhere there were more than two buildings, the bombers attacked.
It was covered up to stop resentment against sending all of our troops and armaments overseas... they didn't want the troops in the European and African Theatres to know that their country had been attacked while they were fighting in foreign countries.
The agreement between Menzies and Churchil was that Australia was allowed to be sacrificed, that Australian troops were notto be released to fight at home until after the Eurpean and then the African Theatres were won.
Almost every eligible adult man had volunteered to fight for Europe
Which is why the new PM Curtain had to introduce conscription of 18 year olds who with thd US Pacific fleet, New Zealand, defended our region against the Japanese.
Churhill didn"t even want that to happen. He tried to get USA to sign a treaty to pledge the entire US military to the European Theatre.
Churchill said they might after the European and African campaigns were won, pledge British troops to try to regain Australia from the Japanese.
Thank goodness PM Menzies was votes out of office in time to organise defence of Australia, because those otger two had given up before it even began to affect Australia.
The greatest crime in all of this is that our Asian neighbours we shoukd have been helping defend were quickly and thoroughly overrun and they suffered many casualties, loss of life and years of disruption, PTSD, comfort women, rapes, plunder. Churchill was not a hero to Australia.
Remember my mother talking about how she remembered Churchill having said 'Let the Japanese take Australia we'll (ie Britain) get it back later'....he appeared quite willing to sacrifice all of Australia at the time !!!
Yes, that is true. No ome cared about the amount of hardship and loss their was throughout Asia and the Pacific.
Europe and Africa only were important, Menzies did not care because he only cared about Mother England.
Thank you for being an American wanting to learn about the world.
Agreed, not many Americans seem very interested in learning about the rest of the world.
Yeah most you meet don't have much of an idea on the outside world
Dude it aint an American thing. Most people around the world dont know about the world. An Example.
Ask someone what one event started World War 1, not the event that lead to the start of World War 1, but the event that Started it. And the vast majority of people cannot answer it. Not Americans, not the French, not the Russians, for sure not the British, but maybe some Italians (Hint).
Yes I totally agree. Thats why people around world think yanks are ignmnorany
Ryan, another fact that you may not be aware of is that there were 2 Japanese mini submarines made it into Sydney Harbour during WW2. You may also like to do some research on the Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels (Papua New Guineans) who assisted the Australians during the war.
For such a small city, Darwin has a fascinating history.
The military presence in Darwin is so full on, I felt like I was in a war zone when I lived there. Truly amazing history that runs into the present.
As a Grandson, Son and Nephew of WW1 and WW2 veterans I am always grateful to all the young Americans and Australians who died defending Australia. A lot of Australians don't even know about the Battle of The Coral Sea which was fought off the North Queensland Coast or that Japanese Subs got into Sydney Harbour. A big thankyou to the USA.
Yeah, my mother told me when the subs started sending their torpedos off, she and grandmother hid under the bed!! There were no shelters. They lived near Sydney Harbour. My father was fighting the Japs and my grandfather was a WW1 Gallipoli veteran..Bros are all Vietnam Vets...Strong military family.
The subs also hit Newcastle on their way to Sydney.
A lot of us do know mate....
And most of us who had family here by 1900 have rellys that served... right up to the present.
If there's one thing we've learnt...
We haven't learnt a thing.
@@baabaabaa2293 *rellies Gotta spell rellies right mate.
@@darrylphillips3423
When I was in school Coral Sea week was celebrated each year. Head honcos from the USN would visit Australia.
Australia was very heavily involved in the war in the Pacific. It was so close to home. Probably most Australians have grandparents who fought in Asia or the Pacific. Everyone had a role as it was so close. My grandfather and my great uncle fought in New Guinea and on the Pacific islands. When we studied WWII in History in high school (1989 for me) there were lots of original photos and memorabilia that came in with students and teachers. There were a huge number of Australians tortured and killed by the Japanese in their prison camps and death marches. The Sandakan March is a good example of the horrors of the War in the Pacific. Remember, the Japanese didn't sign on to the Geneva Convention so there was a massive difference in treatment of prisoners in Europe and the Pacific.
I would recommend doing at least part of the Sandakan death march if u ever have theopportunity. I really got a feel 4 the hardships they faced & learnt so much, more than in school.
My grandfather was in the navy during the war. He was supposed to be on a different ship, but he got the flu or something and had to be left at port and transferred to a different ship (HMAS Kanimbla) after he got better. The ship he was going to be on was destroyed.
My grandmother (other side of the family) knew one of the guards killed in the Cowra breakout. He was her father's fishing buddy.
That history of Japanese utterly monstrous atrocities done to everyone they had anything to do with during WW2 isn't taught in Japan. I know a Japanese professor who was teaching in an Australian uni, and at dinner one evening with extended family, the conversation came up, and he completely negated it. It didn't happen as far as he was concerned. There were words had - and people left the dining-table to storm to their rooms. I always figured if a professor didn't know - then I would assume it just isn't taught over there. That does rub me the wrong way - though it isn't the people's fault - that's a government decision.
i dont think the germans/nazis signed the geneva convention either.
😢
6:14 - The warning at the start of the video is a traditional notification to indigenous people as a respect to their culture, if I understand this correctly in some areas a dead person's name could not be said because you would recall and disturb their spirit, this also now extends to images.
What is not widely known even by the greater Australian population is that ALL of the Darwin raids were contested in the air by Australian and American fighter squadrons. Without these brave airman fighting and breaking up the bomber formations over the ocean the strikes on Darwin would have been far worse.
Some units involved in defence:
75 squadron RAAF
77 squadron RAAF
78 Spitfire squadron RAAF
Composite squadron RAAF (included Dutch and RAF Malaya and Dutch East Indies survivers)
49 Fighter Group USAAF.
They operated from "secret" Camoflauged airstrips cut from bush away from Darwin township to escape detection by Japanese reconnaissance aircraft.
AA gunners were anti aircraft gunners. My father fought against the Japanese in New Guinea and was an AA gunner defending airfields against Japanese attacks. Australian forces inflicted the first defeat on Japanese forces in WW2 and stopped their southern advance in New Guinea.
Your father is a legend mate :)
My Father was 2/6 and 2/12 independent companies (aka M|Z special forces). All those diggers did good.
@@damoricho Thank you on behalf of my father and all Australian soldiers who fought in WW2. I proudly wear his medals on Anzac Day.
My sister-in-law's Dad shot down aircraft in New Guinea. (Last name Blundell.) He was apparently sitting on a mountain in the jungle somewhere and just taking out planes.
@@boots3066 Nice work :)
The ‘panic’ was that Singapore had surrendered 4 days before the first attacks on Darwin, with the surrender of 130,000 British, Indian and Australian troops. Japan at this point seemed unstoppable.
Op Jaywick gave em a but of a pay back ;)
It was the Australians that deserted en masse at Singapore then going on the rampage.
@@anthonyeaton5153
Yep, the British always have someone else to take the blame.
My grandfather was in Darwin during the bombings and he was rescuing people from the danger, he did what he had to do during the Darwin bombings...
Your grandfather was a hero.
"he did what he had to do during the Darwin bombings..." That was very ominous my dude
My grandfather was on Tiwi island and he can remember seeing all the zeros flying over to bomb Darwin
@@shmick6079 when I learnt he was in ww II and what he did during the war, he became my hero, I never knew him he passed before I was born, but he was a hero for sure..
@@patrickgrant6389 wow, yeah scary times they were just glad our men and women could and can help protect our country... My grandfather passed before I was born so I heard stories from my mum aunties and Nana...
I feel like I knew him..
I think it's a shame that more people don't realise what happened to Darwin.. All the emphasis seems to be about Pearl Harbour. A good film to watch, which gives some idea of what happened in Darwin is "Australia" by Baz Lurhmann. It was the first film I had ever seen that showed what happened....
There is actually a black and white movie made in the 1950's.
The movie wasnt particularly good but the bombing of Darwin scene was brilliant.
There was a censorship blanket thrown over the incident for many years because it was considered too sensitive and upsetting for the Australian population
My grandfather was part of an army artillery unit in Darwin when it was bombed. My other grandfather was a civilian ferry skipper on Sydney harbour, he was coming back into dock and they had to scream at him to kill his lights because there was Japanese submarines in the harbour. And my fathers earliest memory is waking up to find all hi neighbours in their house in Sydney, they had come over because they could hear the shelling and theirs was the only brick house on the street. Finally don’t forget that New Guinea was an Australian territory until 1975 and there was a lot of fighting there.
As an Aussie, I was taught about the bombing of Darwin at school but I had no idea about other attacks, especially Cairns and Townsville which are towns in Northern Queensland.., Ryan, you, as an American, taught me more about Aussie WW2 history!!!!!
In my school days, the senior History course covered this. In those anxiety-ridden Cold War times, it was considered too worrying for younger years to study.
Everyone got bomb by Japanese and Americans 😂
Cairns was a z squad and m squad commando training area, check out magnetic island history outside of Townsville.
Atherton Tablelands was Aussie infantry and us airbase...some farms have the old bunkers from the old air strip
They don’t tell about the mini jap sub they found in the Sydney harbour as well.
@@williamscholl8203 Z force done most of their training on Fraser Island they had a secret training base over there.
Please watch more about Australian history. You’re starting to learn more than most Aussies know themselves… which I think is just great
I’m Australian but this is my first time hearing about this.
@@koolkat1573same... I'm enjoying learning this stuff too. I know the basics of ww2 but only what we were taught in school, which clearly wasn't enough. I don't recall being taught any indigenous history either other than story books in kinder (not surprising though for the 90's).
There are many myths mingled with Australian military history. Be careful.
On the 15th Feb, 1942, four days before the 1st attack on Darwin, an American Army pilot, Lt. Robert J. Buel, flying a P-40, sortied north west out of Darwin and attacked a Japanese Kawanishi flying boat, but was shot down/killed. On the 19th Feb, 1st Lt. Oestreicher, also flying a P-40, shot down one Val and damaged another. We Australians remember them, and will never let their gallantry be forgotten.
I lived in New Guinea back during the time of their independence. 1976.
The ppl there have a massive respect for Aussie soldiers. (The military cemeteries are the best kept i have ever seen.)
The locals played very big role in helping the Aussie soldiers while they were fighting the Japanese there. (It's not an easy place to navigate )
I have been told that the Japanese hold the Aussie soldiers in very high regard after battling them.
There's interviews with Japanese who came up against our blokes in New Guinea.
Worth watching
Also the first to engage the Japanese Imperial Marines on the track weren't even proper infantry..they were up there to mend roads & airstrips...a lot of em had never fired a rifle before... they did a tremendous job against the Japanese elite soldiers.
"it's not an easy place no navigate"
I guess you'd describe the Simpson as "not the wettest of places"?
tee hee....
@@themudpit621 slight understatement! 🤣
My mother was at boarding school on the coast of Queensland and that school was evacuated to an outback town called Barcaldine. As a safety precaution. Not many people know there was a thing called the “Brisbane line” that was an imaginary line from Brisbane across the continent that the government were prepared to give north of that line if invaded.
It was a scorched earth plan.
Wow! You know a sub got into Port Phillip Bay between Vic and Tassie !
@@narellesmith7932 and three into Sydney Harbour, 81 years ago yesterday (1/6/1942)
Yeah, my dad told me about the Brisbane line when I was a kid; it was kind of a scary thought.
Yeah, it was called the Capricorn Line too (follows the tropic line across the country)...
If the Japanese had got a foothold in Australia, we wdve had a bastard of a time getting them out
Edit: It was a stupid idea...Blamey & MacArthur were butchers...their 'leadership' in NG was atrocious...& that's being kind.
My next door neighbour (who lived to be 98) was a ‘Rat of Tobruk’ as an anti aircraft gunner - whilst most of the ‘Rats’ redeployed to the Kokoda campaign, his battery was redeployed to Darwin. He said his war in Darwin was much harsher and more frightening than anything he ever experienced in the much more famous Tobruk campaign.
Well done, Ryan, great videos! My father worked in the Post Office in Darwin, he was supposed to join the Postmaster, Mr. Bald and his family in the air raid shelter, but he was delayed, locking documents in the safe, like the good Public Servant he was. The air raid shelter copped a direct hit, and all in it were killed. My father had PTSD from his experiences of being a civilian in a War Zone. He didn't speak much about the raid(s), except that the Japanese pilots flew so low that he could see whether or not they had moustaches. He said that with-out fail, each pilot made obscene gestures to him after they had deliberately tried to kill him by machine-gunning him. as he grovelled in the gutter on the edge of the street. They came back later in the afternoon & shot up the hospital, where he and many other wounded were. The hospital had large red crosses on the roof, and was nowhere near any military target. The pilots were obviously VERY skilful flyers, and clearly did not care about any Geneva Convention. My mother and brothers had been evacuated south just before the raid(s) and they lost everything, so we became War refugees in our own country. Life was incredibly tough for us. I was born in January 1944, exactly 9 months after a bunch of US Airforce P38 Lighnings shot down Admiral Yamamoto's plane. Yamamoto led the December 7 1941 attack on Pearl Harbour, HAWAII, and on Darwin. a couple of months later. A celebration, by my parents, maybe?
Broom in western Australia got attacked too
You have to understand that WW2 cemented the friendship that still exists today between Australia and the USA. During the war we had tens of thousands of US soldiers here in Australia. In fact recently, in Brisbane at the town hall during renovations an original wall in what was a soldiers canteen was stripped of cladding and what did they find ? They found hundreds of examples of grafitti that had been written by US soldiers serving and taking R and R here in Brisbane. They mostly wrote their names and where they came from in America. I was lucky enough to see it and I have to say it was very moving.
Overpaid, oversexed and over here. That was the description from my grandparents.
Back when I was a kid a lot of the War Widows and returned Servicemen used to tell us how they were getting ready to evacuate the women and kids South at the height of the war, they thought we were headed for annhilation after Britain wrote us off.
The nets on the harbour were to foul up enemy propellers on the boats.
Don’t be silly, Britain did NOT write off Australia. Read proper history for crying out loud.
@@anthonyeaton5153 Churchill didn't want Australian troops sent back home from Europe and Africa. He said that Australia could be retaken later. We owe our survival to the USA and are forever grateful to them. Britain? pfffttt!
My father was in the Australian army and posted in Darwin about age 20 years during this attack. He didn't talk about it much, but now I believe he had PTSD and then loss of hearing. He said the soldiers slept under the defence trucks.
You should watch " When The War Came To Cowra."
Which is in central New Soth Wales.
We certainly treated our POWs a lot better then the Japanese treated ours.
don't get my blood boiling... I can't bear to think of what prisoners of that Empire suffered.
That's for sure. I has an aunt , a nurse, who was a Japanese prisoner of war, captured after the sinking of the Vyner Brooke. One of my uncles was captured and made to work on the Burma Thailand railway. Both of them experienced horrendous conditions as prisoners of the Japanese.
Dr Tom Lewis has written quite a few books about these attacks on Australia in ww2. If you want extra info. "Eagles over Darwin: American Airmen Defending Northern Australia in 1942" is specifically about the US pilots who helped to defend Darwin. PS: It's a short read for a wide age group.
Anzac Day in Darwin 2024, an American unit marched in our parade today. Just wonderful!
One day a few months later, the US Navy took care of those 4 Japanese aircraft carriers at Midway.
We also had attacks in Newcastle NSW. Fortress Newcastle went from Wollongong to port Stephen’s to protect the steelworks and the ports
There’s still remnants of cannon fortresses throughout the bush in those areas
I was in Darwin when the new airport was built. When the old airport was demolished, the workers found a number of roof beams (steel) had holes from the strafing from back then. Many of the workers took home pieces of steel beams with the holes in as mementos. I saw some of this happen.
Hahaha! I lived in the caravan park across the road...$27 per wk.
When B52s & F1-11s took off, we realised why it was so cheap!!
Tasmanian here I didn’t know about this either. My father fought in Papua New Guinea in the Admiralty Islands during WW2 he was a mechanic in the Royal Australian Air Force
My grandad was in the air force in papua
@@kyliemitchellharper6872 hi mate
My great uncle joined the airforce after this event and became a bomber pilot, protecting Australia from ships and submarines! He flew mostly from Townsville and Darwin, but was also in Coffs Harbour and Sydney to prevent submarine landings there, a decorated hero! He was promoted to Wing Commander and Pilot Officer!! He was reported missing, at 29, flying American admin officers to the islands! His memorial is in Darwin! 😪
My dad was a Flight Sargent in the RAAF in WWII, his first posting was to Horn Island which was heavily bombed, then he was posted to Darwin three weeks after the first bombing. He was in charge a section responsible for maintenance of aircraft radios. He worked closely with USAF guys stationed nearby. They had so many Mitsubishi Zeros bombing them back then, that till the day he died in 1998 he refused to buy a Mitsubishi vehicle.
My dad was a flight sargent RAAF then too..in charge of supplies
My father was the same . You can't blame them .
@@indigocheetah4172 No I don't blame him, in fact he encouraged me to learn Japanese at High School.
@@peteroneill404 , my dad , was a much older father . I didn't know him that well . They were an incredible generation . They have my gratitude , and respect. Now , we are allies , did you take up Japanese ?
@@indigocheetah4172 I'm glad that dad and I were very close, and yes you are quite correct they were an incredible generation. I took Japanese for two years and learned enough to get myself into trouble, not quite as bad as the English class in the movie Stripes with Bill Murray.
As someone who was born in Darwin I felt very proud to see you react to this and understand why the bonds between our two countries remain so strong.😊
Yes. The same Japanese pilots, aircraft and carriers that had attacked Pearl Harbour were involved, plus land based twin-engined medium bombers. More bombs were dropped on Darwin than on Pearl Harbour. At the time, Darwin was a small place, so the damage was severe. An invasion was expected, but never eventuated. A little later, even smaller Broome also copped it.
Kings and Generals is doing a massive history of the Pacific War, they're up to episode 87, May 1943. If you want to see Aussies and Americans fighting side-by-side in detail, episode after episode, about 20 mins each, check it out.
www.youtube.com/@KingsandGenerals/playlists
I spend a lot of time in Darwin. There is a very rich military history here with plenty of museums and plenty of sites that were active during the war and what is left is preserved. It's definitely worth checking it all out. And really worth a drive is going to the war graves cemetery in Adelaide River. That's a moving place to visit
My father [rip] fought in Papua/New Guinea and Borneo along side with the Americans in WWII. Also a passenger ferry and a wharf were torpedo in Sydney Harbour by two miniature submarines too!
my dad was sent into darwin just after this raid he was in the engineers he told me a few stories about being bombed very proud of him
Aussies were in WW2 years before the USA came onboard… Sydney had Japanese submarines in Sydney harbour. Our troops were sent off to support the UK and Europe against Germany and also South Pacific against Japanese.
I remember the stories my mum told me about when she was a kid during the war and the Japanese bombing Darwin and Japanese mini subs attacking in Sydney harbour
They used to practice air raid drills at school and hide under their desks
My sisters Mother-in-law was a Gunner on the front line in the bunkers.
She was a hero and part Aboriginal. She passed a few years ago now.
God bless her.
I have the most amazing memories of our Time together ❤
My grandfather was an amo truck driver and was on the docks on the first raid which he survived. He drove the trucks during 32 more raids, the last one got him injured with shrapnel to the brain..survived but with severe epilepsy into his 70s. My personal hero. One early story was how he used to tell me how there were no doors on the truck, so when a raid happened and a bomb was dropping he would throw himself into the ditch, and if the truck survived, would climb back on and keep driving...note...he drove ' ammunition ' trucks...so dangerous. My personal hero...so brave and he was only 19 at the time.he always said if it wasn't for the Americans, Australia would have been overrun. He never had a bad word for America. ❤
My grandfather flew reconnaissance in Darwin, scooping up shot down airmen.
My Late ex Father-In -Law, Staff Sgt, Ernest Ross Hough, was attached to the workshops Company during that time and one of his functions as a highly skilled toolmaker and machinist, was to set up the gun sights on the coastal batteries and anti aircraft defences. He was injured by a fragment of a bomb splinter, which ricoched off of the workshop's roof as he was diving into a trench. The fragment was removed but he suffered from septicaemia from the wound. He was also, as part of the workshop company, required to assist in undertaking damage repairs and burial of the dead. Never talked about it, other than to say it was a scary time and that the death toll may have been played down, due to the effects upon the Australian population. The Japanese bombed the port of Broome. He was on duty when the Neptune loaded with mines and explosives, went up and it was a horrible thing to witness.
It was not until I lived in darwin that I learnt more about this part of our Aussie history.
Ryan, many places were attacked. The West coast was bombed (Broome etc), Sydney was attacked (Japanese midget subs sunk a ferry, killing people...the subs were destroyed by mines). Further south, the Japanese bombed Nowra etc...A reconaissance plabe even flew over Melbourne and reputedly dropped a small bomb!....US servicemen were killed in Darwin. Robert
My uncle platoon where shipping out to Darwin and his mate wanted to go out with his girlfriend there last night in Brisbane. My uncle who was 18 at the time took his mates mail run and was killed by a truck in an accident on the Sunshine Coast Queensland. Sadly uncle Arnold's platoon didn't make it through the Darwin bombing. My grandmother never really recovered from his death.
Ryan Darwin is a very Historical State of Australia. It is very remote from every other State.They vertically fought this attack with the Service men serving there. I went there 12 years ago. They rebuilt only to be wiped out by a Cyclone. They have rebuilt again and now it is a beautiful place to visit. The history of the bombing is everywhere you go,to the old runways, the underground tunnels. Darwin's version of Americas Servicemen Cemetry at Arlington. There are still relics everywhere you go in the Northern Territory. So very proud to be a Aussie.
During WWII the prime minister called in all the media heads and said he didn't want them to report on the bombings in northern Oz so they didn't. !! It wasn't until I travelled up the Cape York Peninsula in the late 1980s that I even knew we'd been bombed. We still weren't being taught about it in school! The islands in the Torres Strait, and near the tip of the Peninsula, had army and air bases, but I think these were set up after Darwin was bombed. I saw the wreck of a WWII plane on an old grass air strip.
All the troops deployed in the north of Australia were very inexperienced! Lots of Aboriginal men joined up to fight in their local areas as land (or country) is very significant for them and they will always fight for it.
I learnt lots from this video! I hadn't realised how many died in that first raid even though I've seen the graves of all who fell in these raids. I was 29 when I visited the Adelaide River Cemetry and cried because everyone but the post office workers were younger than me! It was very confronting!
Pearl Harbour was bombed, then Singapore fell and then Darwin was bombed. And the Japs were gradually getting closer to Australia through Indonesia which is why the US ships were in Darwin at the time.
The main action though was in New Guinea (now Papua New Guinea). The Japs landed on the north coast and were trying to take the eastern part of the island. Look up the Kokoda Track. This was a long and fierce battle between the Japs and the Aussies. They fought so hard with the help of the locals and were eventually able to defeat the Japs. But it was a close run thing as the Japs got quite close to Port Moresby. The Aussies knew that if the Japs got there then it would be easy for them to get to Australia and they weren't going to let that happen!! There was fighting all through the northern South Pacific islands. The US fought alongside the Aussies to keep the Japs at bay. One big battle was the Battle of the Coral Sea. The Kokoda Track is now hiked by people wanting to understand what the fighting in PNG was liked. They are amazed by how hard the terrain is and when you think of men fighting there ... !
So yeah lots of war history in Australia.
On the night of 31 May/ 1 June the Jap mini subs entered Sydney Harbour. However someone heard Japanese on the radio and was able to alert the navy who sunk all 3 subs, 2 within the harbour itself. It was the only time they attacked Sydney.
The US troops fighting in the Pacific would come to Australia for r&r. Many married Australian women who then moved to the US.
I grew up in Darwin, this was such a big part of our education, the reminders are all around you. Most people knew someone who had lived through it. The local museum had a great interactive display.
i recall reading that during the raid one bloke (a Machine gunner) was in the shower when the raid struck and ran to his position wearing nothing but his tin hat (helmet), boots and a towel. And at some point during the attack he 'lost the towel' XD
I remember reading some where "More bombs fell on Darwin then Pearl Harbour"
They bombed Broome in Western Australia, Darwin in the Northern Territory & Townsville in Queensland. Also attracted Sydney with mini-subs.
My father served in Darwin during this phase of the war. The Yanks were very popular during their service in Aus.
Mine too 😢
well, the Yanks were not so popular with some. Battle of Brisbane!
My father was in Darwin with the 16th Battalion during the bombing befor being sent overseas. He has a medal for it. The medal was for those troops that spent six months or more in the Darwin area during the Japanese bombing campaign.
My grandfather fought in ww11 , he was in the navy . When he got home from the war he never spoke to anyone about it . He died of old age when I was about 24 and when we were packing up his room I seen all his medals and other war stuff for the first time in my life. I had no idea he had them
If you ever visit Darwin, Stokes Hill Wharf (The wharf where MV Neptuna was sunk during the first attack) has an excellent display on the bombing of Darwin. The underground fuel tanks built during WWII are also nearby, and have tours running through that facility
Visited Darwin at Christmas. During the war were not told what happened . They just played it down.
Australia was directly attacked a number of different times and ways, during ww2. Not that it was a contest, to be sure.
Axis commerce raiders operated in close proximity. Just a few weeks before Pearl Harbor, German Raider 'Kormoran' fought Aussie light cruiser HMAS Sydney just off the coast of Western Australia. Both ships sank in that battle - Sydney was lost with ALL hands, 645 in all. It remains by far the single worst loss of life in the history of the Royal Australian Navy.
Japanese minisubs raided Sydney Harbor, none returned and damage was mostly light, but they did sink a small accomodation ship (HMAS Kuttabul, a converted ferry) with loss of life. The larger Japanese submarines that carried those minisubs went on to fire shells into a Sydney suburb and sink some ships up north.
Hospital ship 'Centaur' was sunk off the coast of Queensland with heavy loss of life.
There were the air raids on Darwin and various other places across the north of Australia. The big raid on Darwin did the most damage and loss of life, so naturally gets a lot of the attention.
In the aftermath of the Darwin Raid, there was 'the Adelaide Derby'. Communications broke down, there was a lot of disorder, and many people believed an full-on invasion was in progress. So a number of units and individuals basically fled Darwin and headed south. It is popularly believed that some got as far south as Adelaide (look at a map) before things were sorted out.
The Cowra Breakout is worth examination. Basically, there was a large POW camp near the town of Cowra, in NSW. Inmates were Germans and Italians (mostly captured in the Middle East), and Japanese. Conditions were, from all accounts, okay with some prisoners even allowed to work for pay on nearby farms. In 1944, 1100 Japanese prisoners rioted and staged a mass breakout (the Germans and Italians did NOT participate in any way). In the end, 4 Australian soldiers died, and 233 prisoners died either during the escape or by suicide afterwards. All escapees (359 in all) were recaptured within a fortnight.
Btw, there is anecdotal evidence to suggest that the Japanese may have landed small number of troops in northern Australia at one time or another. But the areas in question were so isolated and the environment so hostile that they either withdrew very quickly or were basically "swallowed up".
You should be able to find a video like this. About Japanese midget submarines trying to enter Sydney harbour in world war 2. It was there interesting from memory
As a Darwin local, The Bombing of Darwin was tragic and every year we do a ceremony on the day and there are many abandoned ww2 facilities, bunkers, storage areas all over the Darwin area and at Darwin Harbour we have the Royal Doctor Flying Service tourist facility with a birds eye view simulating the attack, a VR experience, multiple cinema rooms that tell stories of people who were there during the bombing, then on the Esplanade we have the USS Peary (DD-226) Memorial where a salvaged canon from the ship points in the direction to where she lays today. also you should watch a documentary about RAAF's 77 squadron in the Korean war, its in 3 parts but there's a full version that goes for about an hour and 20 minutes so you could do a 1 hour special or a 3 part reaction im not fussed with either one, here's the link to the full version th-cam.com/video/VKKI5XCQDoQ/w-d-xo.html
My dad was a WW2 vet. He served mostly in Australia but also in Papua New Guinea.
My dad was in a transport regiment in Melbourne and would travel to Darwin. I remember him telling a story about how he was carrying Nitroglycerin. He told us that Nitro was so unstable that if the truck hit a pothole it ‘could’ explode. Similarly, just travelling on flat surface could also unsettle the nitro, and it might explode. Remembering that Melbourne to Darwin would have mostly been potholes. Who in the hell would do that now. Very brave blokes in those days. We don’t get them anymore.
My uncle was a young bloke in Darwin working at his first job in the Post Office. As the raids came over, he was outside it and crawled underneath inbetween the stumps that were supporting it. One almighty explosion somehow sent a biscuit tin skidding across the ground towards his head which knocked him unconscious.
We rented ( I was 2 turning 3) an old typical Northern Territory house some years later. It had an iron roof and a low semi walled, topped with lattice, verandah all around the outside. This was used as sleeping areas during the hot humid nights to catch any breezes as you slept. I have vivid memories of living there. Everytime the heavy tropical Darwin rain was thrown down in blinding sheets, sometimes accompanied by huge, cracking and booming thunderstorms, the bucket cupboard was rushed. So many metal buckets had to be placed under all the streaming drips pouring through the lines of bullet holes in the roof left by the Japanese air raids. They'd been patched but were no match for Darwin downpours. I didn't know it at the time but since, have sometimes wondered how many people and their children might have been hit in that house alone.
These raids and then later the 1975 massive Cyclone Tracey disaster that entirely flattened the whole city, led to an entire new shiny Darwin being built. The original old iconic Darwin has been largely replaced.
wow, cool memory.
12:05 you put your damaged fighter down in a field if it can land, if not in the nearby ocean.
They had super flat Darwin landscape on one side and an ocean no deeper than like 100ft for kms
This was super informative Ryan. I learnt about the raid on Darwin & surrounds in school, of course, but had forgotten the details.
My grandfather & great uncles fought in WW2 & up until the day she died, my grandmother never forgave the Japanese. Don’t get me wrong, she was the kindest, most lady-like & generous person I’ve ever met. Her manners wouldn’t let her say anything terrible about the Japanese until she was near the end of her time & even then she said nothing harsh. Due to my grandfather’s civic duties in a sister city to a city in Japan, she had to meet & entertain dignitaries, she was always polite & welcoming but she found it very hard to cope, bless her ❤️
Thanks for covering this, it's a piece of history that Australians should be more familiar with. My Dad was in the army, so growing up I did live in Darwin for a while; we still have a lot of our military there because it is such a strategically important city.
You may also be interested in learning about the Japanese attack on Sydney. Three midget submarines got into Sydney Harbour and fired torpedoes (Hence why nets were important and the Japanese wanted them destroyed). Yes, shots were fired in Sydney Harbour, though I haven't really seen much on TH-cam about that attack.
We had a visit by a Japanese submarine in my city of Newcastle too, but it isn't as dramatic. They fired at the city, and missed their target. Fortunately we have this 19th Century fortress built to repel the Russians, that was able to fire back at the submarine. We missed, but the Japanese retreated anyway.
I grew up in Australia in the 1960s and seventies. We never got the full story until the mid-eighties. The Australian Government downplayed it at the time so as not to create panic and the full story was forgotten for over 40 years.
we were taught that there was "a raid" on Darwin.
The main thing taught at school was the retreat by the army while the Navy and Air Force remained.
Agreed - it was put forward as the bombing of Darwin. Bombing as in single. I had no idea of the bombing across the whole of Northern Australia.
Perry. Everything was kept secret from us about Darwin and other places as they did not want to frighten us. We were a very small population and nearly all our fellows were fighting overseas. We got a lot of propperganda in the papers. Our blokes were wanted home but that “bloke overseas” would not let them return.
It was more than a raid, it was campaign objective that made Peal Harbour look like a paintball game in comparison. Why they semi-secret it because the amount of people kill & property damage they caused. It did not only freaked us out, but the entire allied command because the fear was a direct Australian land invasion was immediate, the Americans nor the British could help at that time.
I grew up in Darwin and to this day any time they build around the harbour shells are found from the air raid. Exploded and some that are still alive. The bomb squad from the army gets called out a lot during these times.
A lot of areas in northern parts of Australia saw bombings and dogfights in the air in ww2
Typical Aussie Sheila, you are my first post ever. Love watching, I'm learning so much about my own country. Thanx
My father was in the RAAF at Darwin during the raids. All young men without experience😮😮 of warfare. My father tells me he was one of the men who released the prisoners from Fanny Bay Gaol under orders and destroyed the prison records.
Hi Ryan good you have shared this extremely significant WW2 history which I’ve found over decades few USAmericans know about and that’s unfortunate because it would help them understand more about our AusUSA alliance ever since. My Great Uncle was killed in Kalimantan fighting alongside Americans and is buried on an Malaysian Island.
Just check what one of your most famous WW2 Generals were doing at that time. Douglas MacArthur famously said “I shall Return” in a small rural town in South Australia.
For our population Australia has exceptional involvement in supporting Allies beginning with the Boer War but huge in both World Wars. Have you checked what we did for you in Vietnam? Still raw for many my age. Korea? And all that’s well before Iraq Afghanistan!
In Australia, the colloquial/slang term for a veteran or vet or returned serviceman is a "digger".
12:25 In Field Marshal Sir Thomas Blamey Square, Canberra, there's a huge Australian-American Memorial commemorating the help given by the United States during WWII. The money for the monument was raised by public appeal in barely six weeks. The plaque reads:
"In grateful remembrance of the vital help given by the United States of America during the war in the Pacific 1941-1945.
Unveiled by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II
February 16th 1954"
🇦🇺 🇺🇸
I lived in Darwin for several years. There are lots of war memorials, old bases, many old fortifications, and a great museum with lots of planes, tanks, equipment, and so on. The history of WW2 is everywhere there. Today, there is a major Australian Army and air force base there.
America has a base there too. The Marine Rotational Force-Darwin is a United States Marine Corps Marine Air-Ground Task Force based at Matilda Lines at Robertson Barracks and at RAAF Base Darwin.
America servicemen went to Darwin on r & r, it was also a stageing/supply point for them.
The Japanese were in Papua New Guinea, pushing on Port Moresby.. PNG is approx 150kms (80 miles) from mainland Australia.
A Wharfe is a shipping jetty, a structure built out into the harbor to unload/load ships..
The Tiwi and PNG Islanders also all knew the "enemy" were evil and violent, and sided with the Allies. They saved the lives of thousands of wounded men whom they transported by hand, through the jungles, along with supplies, for the Allies..
10:35 he is talking about the USS Perry, the US Navy ship that was bombed and sank with lives lost..
First time Australians and Americans served together was actually under the Australian Command of Gen Sir John Monash in WWI.
I had no idea it went on for 2 years! Glad you covered this, thank you!
My father and my father in law were both serving in Darwin when it was bombed.
The thing at the beginning is more of a respect thing, not about how many of us are in a specific area
I myself am aboriginal, and I was brought up that for one year after someone has passed away, you don't say their name or have their picture up
So the video starting with that is an indication that they're trying to be respectful of our culture by letting us know ahead of time that some of the people shown, mentioned, or if they even have recording of the person's voice, have passed
Most Australians didn't know about the bombings until after the war. The government didn't want to panic the public. My parents witnessed the attack on Sydney Harbour by the mini submarines. I am not surprised that you didn't know about the bombings. The American education system seems to teach little about the rest of the world. To most Americans nothing exists outside of the USA. I have been to the US many times and seen how little Americans know. I loved being in the US I find Americans very welcoming, friendly and helpful. You need to be congratulated for your curiosity about Australia and the rest of the world.
Aussie war documentaries, which I think are worth watching WW1: Lighthorseman: Charge of Beersheba, WW2: Beyond Kokada, Korean: Kapyong and Vietnam: Battle of Long Tan
A lot more bombs were dropped on Darwin than Pearl Harbor, as if the Imperial Japanese learnt from Pearl Harbor and decided to conduct a full on attack on the entire city. If you visit Darwin you can still see a lot of history from the war, there's old bunker style tunnels which were used for storage which is open to the public to explore, also one of the old huge AA guns in East Point is now converted to a war museum and they have a lot of old relics there and you can go out on the structure where the AA gun is still located. You don't realize how huge those bunkers are on TV, until you go to one in person.
Also, keep in mind, Australia was the only American ally who sent troops, ships and aircraft to Vietnam at the request of LBJ.
Didn't New Zealand send troops too?
We have been by America's side in every
War.
Always enjoy your videos. Another interesting piece of Australian history during World War II is the worlds largest mass escape of prisoners war in the small country town of Cowra New South Wales. I am sure you will find it interesting.
You know, this is what I love about your channel. Not everyone would be interested in this subject, it probably won't get as many views as videos of us all laughing at Americans for the dumb things they say, etc. But you are genuinely interested in this country and our history and are willing to watch documentaries about it and learn the things you don't know. You don't just assume things about Australia. You're also not afraid to ask questions or admit you don't know things. Top quality content mate, love it.
Also, to you and every other American, don't feel bad for not knowing about this particular subject. I know we all laugh at the American education system, but I'm Australian and I never learned about this either! Whenever we learned about WW2 it was always about hitler and the holocaust. I only learned about this when I was an adult watching non-Australian documentaries about the war. 😂
My parents came to Darwin in 1956. Living here today does worry me with the rising hostility against China. We are still a prime target should war start. Of note, you should also check out what happened to darwin in 1974 with cyclone Tracy. Darwin's been wiped out a few times.
darwin takes a pounding but always gets back up
Thank you for teaching an Australian about our own history.
My mother's farther was a civil engineer working in Darwin during the air raids, he passed away when I was about 2, so I never knew him or heard of his experiences first hand
It was quite common for pilots to survive in US and British planes. The canopy could be popped open quickly, you're sitting on a parachute attached to you, and a life raft. Flap the plane up side down and fall out or climb out. At low altitude you putt the plane into a belly flop tail first into the water and get out before it sinks. The Jap planes were less survivable. The fuel tank was behind the pilot with no fire control system. The hatches opened in a way that made it hard to get out in a hurry. Many more died.
The population that lived in the southern states were kept in the dark about the bombings. A lot of American service men died that day, so it is wonder why their sacrifice is not honored as others have been in the Pacific theater of battles in the second world war. 88 officers and sailors died on the USS Peary, so it should be something that should be taught in your schools.
one of the 4" guns off the u.s frigate robert.e peary was salvaged from the wreck and mounted in the park pointed to the place where the peary sank. it was the u.s navys biggest loss of life in australian waters.
A lot of troops had been sent to Europe and beyond and Australia was worried about defence.
Grandfather, Grandmother, Great Aunt, other Grandfather and two Great Uncles (one Kia) all served in WW2. All but my Grandmother served defening the north of Australia.
That was amazing! I'm an Aussie and didn't know it went for 2 years!!!!!!