WWII History of Rabaul, East New Britain - PNG

WWII History of Rabaul, East New Britain - PNG

Visit Papua New Guinea

11 лет назад

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@tonysaint6749
@tonysaint6749 - 08.04.2024 11:02

Beautiful thanks for sharing it with us 🙏🕊️

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@roubini74
@roubini74 - 04.12.2023 12:11

I chance upon this video during my recent research of the pacific war at the solomons. the most famous was guardacanal but there are many other tough battles such as around ports Moresby between Australians and Japanese.

the environment among the atmosphere must be tough and rough, with being continouus wet, battle, hungry, mosquitos, insects, heat to name a few.

RIP. may the world has long lasting peace.

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@leecoleman822
@leecoleman822 - 27.04.2023 09:50

T

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@leecoleman822
@leecoleman822 - 27.04.2023 01:14

🇵🇬

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@Wombat-gm4ne
@Wombat-gm4ne - 30.01.2023 00:10

Thanks for a great video.

New Britain and Rebaul an amazing place to visit. Along with 7 friends I did the trek from near Rebaul across the island to Tol Plantation - I'd say this one of the great memories of my life. Highly recommend.

If you're interest in more information about Lark Force in WW2 an amazing book definitely worth reading is

(on Amazon Kindle)

Invasion Rabaul : the epic story of Lark Force, the forgotten garrison, January-July 1942 / Bruce Gamble.

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@garymckee448
@garymckee448 - 22.03.2022 06:08

So actually the Japanese won look at the vehicle they are riding in.

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@mikehutcheson2356
@mikehutcheson2356 - 13.03.2022 07:08

Bita Paka .... NOT Bitter Parker!!!!!

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@gwalaus
@gwalaus - 11.01.2022 10:33

Great video, thanks for posting. Going there next year. My father served 14/32nd Batt. Jacuinot Bay, Waitavolo, Tol, Bacon Hill. He returned and died age 78. Looking forward to seeing the area.

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@crunchytheclown9694
@crunchytheclown9694 - 30.12.2021 11:31

TY

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@ThePhosphater
@ThePhosphater - 20.10.2021 21:42

Thanks for posting this very interesting and moving.

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@pietervaness3229
@pietervaness3229 - 20.10.2021 03:16

VERY NICE VIDEO ... I JUST WISH THE PRESENT JAPANESE GOVT. WOULD MAINTAIN. A L L THE MEMORIALS TO THEIR WAR DEAD X. THE BLACKS OF THESE ISLANDS , AS WELL AS IN CENTRAL AFRICA ARE MARVELOUS PEOPLE WHO RESPECT STILL, THEIR HERITAGE AND CULTURE , AND RESPECT FOR LIFE AND NATURE ... TOTALLY UNLIKE THE AFAMs IN U S WHO ...
,

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@Stew357
@Stew357 - 10.10.2021 14:01

Very interesting video, ty!

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@josephlaiam1510
@josephlaiam1510 - 29.09.2021 07:42

Why can't they add some lighting in the tunnels? The presenter had to carry his own torch.

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@bloodworthmagic
@bloodworthmagic - 13.09.2021 00:06

I don't like the co-prosperity sphere on the memorial. At the time it was propaganda program that amounted to a sick joke.

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@sergioofthejungle3011
@sergioofthejungle3011 - 17.07.2021 00:40

The sweat pouring out of him, just from being there, shows the stress that the unacclimatized body would have to endure when thrust into battle.

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@kristhompson8112
@kristhompson8112 - 20.06.2021 15:21

Found it very interesting. Hope to travel there one day when the New World War with Covid 19 has ended, It may be with us for some time yet .

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@Groovy_Bruce
@Groovy_Bruce - 16.06.2021 04:15

“War, at the end of the day, is an extension of politics. It represents a breakdown of the political system.”
Haha I was not expecting a Klausewitz flex.

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@Groovy_Bruce
@Groovy_Bruce - 16.06.2021 03:43

Didn’t this place start as a German colony?
Man, it would be cool to go on a trip like this. Too bad the locals hate howlies.

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@jasonparr4275
@jasonparr4275 - 12.06.2021 09:13

Brilliant video mate, lest we forget!!

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@makaveli5620
@makaveli5620 - 10.06.2021 12:49

ENB✊🏿

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@aGwEENapple
@aGwEENapple - 22.04.2021 20:58

I like this guy but he says uh a lot lol

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@johnrobson6776
@johnrobson6776 - 07.04.2021 21:29

EXCELLENT PRESENTATION.

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@Errr717
@Errr717 - 14.12.2020 03:33

I really enjoyed this highly informative video, and I loved the musical piece at the end.

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@tomandalbert
@tomandalbert - 12.11.2020 08:17

Wonderful! My curiosity and Australian mates brought me here and to Bougainville and we paid teenagers to take us around. Thanks for the memories of good times celebrating and paying tribute to those that made the ultimate sacrifice.

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@jarrodyuki7081
@jarrodyuki7081 - 23.10.2020 12:19

guadalcanal port moresby and rabaul all belong to japan.

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@jarrodyuki7081
@jarrodyuki7081 - 22.10.2020 14:30

sara ba rabaul yo. mata kuru made wa.

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@noddytiddlywinks6873
@noddytiddlywinks6873 - 18.09.2020 16:17

from a brit vet....deepest RESPECT for your service SIR :-)

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@jaywinters2483
@jaywinters2483 - 25.08.2020 20:33

the Natives at the end singing and making music on the shore is such a blessing. What a beautiful people.

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@garycody1929
@garycody1929 - 05.06.2020 11:22

Military people are never referred to as assassinated in times of war. It is always referred to as "killed in action"

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@williamferri3982
@williamferri3982 - 16.04.2020 03:53

Ws

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@amarbaha
@amarbaha - 12.04.2020 05:18

I was there in 1996, lovely people and a completely historic site. Needs a lot of infrastructure to be rebuilt and investment.

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@dsbond8048
@dsbond8048 - 03.04.2020 16:25

The majority of allied airmen captured at Rabaul were tortured and executed. I find your politically correct take on the Japanese memorial very distasteful. The Japanese still deny the atrocities committed at Nanking, Bataan,, Wake, Unit 731, Rabaul..... the list goes on.

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@prettythang3038
@prettythang3038 - 29.03.2020 05:20

I hate that name New Britain island they need to change it.

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@walterdanielswalter.r.dani7628
@walterdanielswalter.r.dani7628 - 20.02.2020 11:07

Wan Kantrie< Beautiful song

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@garymckee8857
@garymckee8857 - 19.11.2019 00:19

Looks like the Japanese won everyone is driving Toyota's

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@fidelisrickie5835
@fidelisrickie5835 - 06.10.2019 00:41

God bless Rabaul, thank you for sweet home Rabaul, Thanks for many who help form home, from early years to today. Great during WW11. God has rewarded you all, glory to God.

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@pedrodepaca57
@pedrodepaca57 - 20.04.2019 08:04

My mothers brother was part of Lark force, BMDR George Allen Lees, heavy artillery battery. Captured then perished POW Monte Video Maru. Lest We Forget.

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@jameshartsfield8585
@jameshartsfield8585 - 18.03.2019 05:55

Nice job! much more enlightening than seeing bombs drop on the jungle, as in earlier documentaries.

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@larrytischler8769
@larrytischler8769 - 18.03.2019 04:33

Yamamoto was not the most brilliant admiral. His complex plan for the disaster at Midway was credited to his "Victory Disease". He divided up his forces and that enabled the much smaller US Naval force to win. Yamamoto did not take early steps to defend Guadalcanal which lead to the Japanese having to turn back from their attack on Port Moresby to re-enforce Guadalcanal but they never did that adequately either. He was based on Truk, not at Rabaul. Nimitz was far superior.

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@stuart8663
@stuart8663 - 26.01.2019 01:28

Frustratingly out of sync

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@rachealtikatikan8551
@rachealtikatikan8551 - 08.06.2018 08:05

My island

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@Skipper.17
@Skipper.17 - 20.03.2018 03:52

Why do people always think that the battle of the pacific started with pearl harbour. The Japanese invaded Thailand before the attack on pearl harbour had commenced.

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@leesenger3094
@leesenger3094 - 08.11.2017 02:13

Big thanks to Australian Vets for their sacrifice! I also really enjoyed the Papuan song at the conclusion of the vid. When I closed my eyes , I imagined beaches, sun, palm trees and headhunters with sharpened spears and teeth. The for the upload and be well.

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@1jeepinray
@1jeepinray - 14.07.2017 02:35

I also think you'll find it was Nave who broke the coded message responsible for Yamato's demise.

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@normanfeinberg9968
@normanfeinberg9968 - 22.06.2017 04:38

As A former USAF flight engineer,I respect your service and your desire to keep history alive.The sacrifices of those young men,must never be forgotten.We enjoy the freedom we have today because they were willing to lay down their lives for freedom in fighting a cruel foe.My family fought in ww2 against the Japanese as well as the Germans.Iwas in service during the Vietnam war all the way up through desert storm.I am now a man of peace and harbor no Ill will against any man.War is evil but free men and women must stand up against injustice and fight for the downtrodden wherever they may be.God Bless.

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@tylerj2710
@tylerj2710 - 19.06.2017 05:42

1140 Im out. you know that "honey comb" your talkuing about. we would like to see that too. camerman needs to look around instead of being stuck up you ass..therefore can see nothing but your ass.

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@tylerj2710
@tylerj2710 - 19.06.2017 05:29

port mosby?WHAT>?

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@kennethlyneham138
@kennethlyneham138 - 17.03.2017 17:48

I have visited Tavui Point or Submarine Point as it was also known, where the navel gun is situated above the cliffs overlooking the sea.
I doubt very much that those semicircular indentations in the concrete had anything to do with storage of rounds of ammunition for that gun.
More likely they came from some form of form-work around which the concrete was poured.
Where the tunnels ended, way up on the cliff face, there used to be the bases for anti-aircraft guns that were positioned there and were fired out through the openings.
At the bottom of the cliff, it is possible to walk out about 70 to 100 meters in water that is onle about 1 meter deep until you get to the edge of a submerged cliff that is reported to be about 150 meters down.
This is where the midget submarines were brought up from the deep and them pulled onto rail carts that were then pushed into the tunnels cut into the base of the cliff.
That's the reason the place was colloquially named, "Submarine Point".
Not far further along Kokopo road from where the landing barges are parked in the tunnels, there is another tunnel complex built into the hill.
When I lived there in 1969, I found an entrance near where the long hill came down to almost meet Kokopo road. It was quite small but just big enough for me to crawl inside on my hands and knees. Once inside, I could stand up but not always completely upright because I am taller than most Japanese whom the tunnels were built for.
There is a huge complex of tunnels, many on different levels and as they wend their way up through the hill, eventually they have three exits on the other side leading to a Japanese grave site that has three obelisks with Japanese righting on them.
I am not sure if they really are graves, they could also be of religious significance.
I have a topographical map that I recorded almost all of the tunnels around Rabaul.
I agree completely with Mike Hutcheson about 'Yamamoto's bunker, it wasn't.
The bunker was the communications and planning centre for the naval fleet in that area.

Where the local fellows were digging, supposedly looking for a tunnel, I doubt very much if they would find one there, judging by the amount they had removed.

When I lived there, I heard that there were a couple of places that it was thought where tunnels might be.
Those tunnels were not blown in by bombs dropped on them, they were purposely blown up by army sappers.

When they were clearing out the Japanese at the end of the war, many refused to surrender and remained hiding inside the tunnels.
Because it was too dangerous to enter and remove them, they used flamethrowers to put as much lit fuel as possible into the entrances which were then blown up, burying, suffocating and interning for good, the Japanese soldiers inside. The soil surrounding the entrances was pushed down in such a manner, that once the vegetation had grown for some time, there would be no indication whatsoever that a tunnel had ever been there.

I returned to Rabaul in 1988 with my wife and 3 children and I showed them all of these places. We stayed in the village of Ngatur, about a 40 minute drive outside of Kokopo with the family of a very close friend of mine, Emil TaVauta.
Sadly Emil had died about eight years before, he left a wife Iapin and 9 children behind, all of whom I call family.
I returned alone once more in 2015 and stayed in the same village for 3 weeks over Christmas.
I miss them a lot and now that I am 71, I doubt I will return.
Rabaul is my second home, it's where my heart is.

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@dianalouisebrelaz9079
@dianalouisebrelaz9079 - 06.03.2017 11:13

My husband and I were in Rabaul from 1952 to 1955. We ran the garage, and the Book Shop in Mango Avenue.
Our home was on Jack Thurston 's land close to Carpenters Wharf. I am now a 90 yo with wonderful memories
of Rabaul.

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@farmrrick
@farmrrick - 09.02.2017 10:51

I would not call Yamamoto's shoot down an assassination.

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