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Thread: Bombing of Darwin anniversary

  1. #1
    Ean Austral Guest

    Bombing of Darwin anniversary

    Gday All,

    Well today was another Anniversary of the Bombing of Darwin, its a shame it was raining and most ceremonies were held indoors, but still a important day in this countries history..

    19 feb 1942...A day we should never forget..

    Cheers Ean

  2. #2
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    When we were in Darwin we went to East Point Museum, we hadn't realised how many bombs Darwin got till then

    A very important day for everyone to remember....
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  3. #3
    Ean Austral Guest
    Quote Originally Posted by The ho har's View Post
    When we were in Darwin we went to East Point Museum, we hadn't realised how many bombs Darwin got till then

    A very important day for everyone to remember....
    Im pretty sure more bombs were dropped on Darwin than Pearl Harbour..It was the same Japanese carrier group that came to Darwin from Pearl Harbour.

    The Adelaide river war momorial is also well worth a visit

    Cheers Ean

  4. #4
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    Back in the late 70's I had a look around around East Point which was pretty derelict and in a poor state in those days. I was amazed at the size of the gun emplacements. Judging by the radius of the rail track that the guns swivelled on they must have been enormous guns. Even the underground concrete bunker systems where the shells were stored was an eye opener. Good to hear it has been preserved. A very important part of Australias history. Most people are not aware of how real the Jap threat was to Australia. There have been reports of Jap infantry recce patrols getting as far inland as Katherine. The coastline from Darwin to Cape York was pretty much undefended in the war years with no radar etc and they pretty much relied on aircraft reports and the "coast watcher" horse patrols to report any unusual activities. A good friend of mine,Willie Shadforth, a part aboriginal and owner of Seven Emus station near Borroloola in the NT was one of these coast watchers. Anyone who knows the Gulf will appreciate how easy it would have been for an invading force to land under cover of darkness undetected. Thankfully the Japs were turned back in New Guinea and the Coral Sea.
    Cheers......Brian
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  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ean Austral View Post
    Im pretty sure more bombs were dropped on Darwin than Pearl Harbour..It was the same Japanese carrier group that came to Darwin from Pearl Harbour.

    The Adelaide river war momorial is also well worth a visit
    Cheers Ean
    Yes well worth the visit we stopped there as well..

    Mrs hh
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  6. #6
    Ean Austral Guest
    East point received funding not that many years ago and it has been restored and think its getting another update very soon.

    I think that what surprised many was that 1 of the main groups of planes that bombed Darwin actually followed the adelaide river to the stuat highway then flew up the highway and bombed most of the runways and planes as the other group came into the harbour..

    We were extremely lucky there was no invasion party that came ashore at the same time otherwise things may have been very different..

    Cheers Ean

  7. #7
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    Bessie, my Mother in Law was evacuated from Darwin on the 17th February 1942 by ship and travelled around the top end to Fremantle then eventually back to Brisbane. She used to work in the Vic Hotel, went up there to be with her husband. A couple of her best friends are buried in the Adelaide River War cemetery, killed whilst working the switches at the PO at the time.
    Harry, the Father in Law, when asked what he did when the bombing took place, always replied that they simply hid in hollow logs. He served in the Navy on the boom ships.
    Having delved into the situation at Darwin at the time, he may just have been telling the actual truth too!
    Definitely would not have been a nice place to be in those dark days.
    Regards
    Glen

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  8. #8
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    Not the bombing of Darwin but to do with the defence of the Gulf.
    A few years ago we had a patrol of Norforce (I think) come through looking like a mob of bandits.
    After entertaining the community kids with a few blanks I had a long chat with the bloke in charge. He gave me a card & asked me to let him know if any other military types came into town.
    I said it would probably be a bit late to give him a call once the Indonesians were marching down the main drag.
    I was very amused when he replied he was far more interested in if we saw other Australian troops, he liked to know who was mucking about in his back yard. He indicated that if the Indonesians came that we should all run away. Monty Python anyone?
    Jonesfam
    PS Not the same bloke but they still come through every now & then.

  9. #9
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    This was indeed a very significant even for Australia. People may find the following excellent article by former naval officer, and historian, Tom Frame interesting: Quadrant Online - The Bombing of Darwin. Wikipedia also has quite a good coverage of the issue: [ame="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bombing_of_Darwin"]Bombing of Darwin - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia@@AMEPARAM@@/wiki/Filearwin_42.jpg" class="image"><img alt="Darwin 42.jpg" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/a2/Darwin_42.jpg/300px-Darwin_42.jpg"@@AMEPARAM@@commons/thumb/a/a2/Darwin_42.jpg/300px-Darwin_42.jpg[/ame].

    Cheers
    KarlB

  10. #10
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    One of my Uncles was in the RAAF and lucky to be on the airfield when it was bombed.

    He had a camera and film. Told me many had cameras it was film that was very hard to come by.

    Have seen the photos he took during and just after the bombing. He reckoned that you could count more bodies in his photos than the official body count.

    As he got older became a bit funny about the photos as was worried if they found out and someone could then show the death toll was understated they would take away his war pension.


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