Excellent project. Thank you for sharing these photos and for doing the right thing with the remains. I know a Marine who was there in a tank unit who will be interested in this page. I'll forward the link to him. This is the type of posting that makes this forum worth visiting.
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Dug Relics from Recent Trip to Okinawa
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Relic's from Okinawa
I have heard my dad say that when he was in the South Pacific, that when they had to clean up a battlefeild in a hurry and then move on that they often would put small arms and weapons and other equipment in the shell holes or foxholes that might be nearby and cover them up. I can see where there would be places like that, and with caves and such there would be a lot of relics scattered on the different islands. You have a good report here and interesting artifact's.
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SW Pacific
Hi Gents
I have done a couple of deployments in the SW Pacific and there is stuff everywhere, but the tropical weather and time have taken its toll. In the Solomon Islands you literally only had to walk off a side road and you would stumble across some relic of war. There is still lots of old explosive ordnance, and even some of the militants there were still running around with old M1 rifles and carbines. Unfortunately, from a collectors POV, they hit them with a gas axe, thus they were lost to our hobby forever.
Regards;
Johnsy
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Originally posted by totenkopf059 View PostWhat kind of stuff did you see?
Mainly old ordnance, helmets (very poor condition), the rubbish of war like old ration tins, bottles, ammo clips. Nothing really worth taking as it was all damaged. There is a battle-field tour run out of Honiera, but us "white-fellas" weren't to welcome at the time.
I have been to islands were there are old tanks and aircraft, but again, time (and the jungle) are reclaiming these relics.
When I was in Kupang in West Timor (prior to our despute with Indosnesia) we had a look at some old tunnel systems there, but there are no relics to speak of. Unlike the islanders in the SW Pacific, they are not superstious of touching the stuff, so anything left behind by either the Japanese or Allied forces is long gone and been put to use elsewhere. I would imagine any helmets left here would have been hammered into woks. I went to Kupang seven times, and we only realised on the last visit that there was a tunnel right next to the bar we drank at.
Off topic, when I was serving with the patrol boat squadron we went to the Montebello Island group off the West Australian coast. While we were there I went over to Trimoulle Island for a wander around. Besides hundreds of turtle skeletons there are old Spitfire frames and Merlin engines, bunkers and all types of military junk. This is where they carried out Operation Hurricane, the testing of an atom bomb in 1952. I went over the island to the bay were they set it off and stood at ground zero. If you look back toward the east from there you can see a fault line from the shock wave. That was a really interesting day for me, no one else seemed interested so I spent a pleasant few hours by myself looking around before going back to the cramped confines of a Fremantle PB. I would have liked to souvenier something, but you can't take metal objects off the island due to radiation hazard. I should have taken a turtle skull, regret not doing that.
Regards;
Johnsy
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Originally posted by Alan Smith View PostWere you able to disarm the grenades and Knee mortar rounds and bring them home with you?Attached Files
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