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    Aleut Island Attu

    Thought this might be of interest to the forum. I read about this little known battle a few years back. From accounts there is still plenty of kit laying about due to the remote location.

    Regards;

    Johnsy

    Japanese and US officials have found four mass graves that they believe hold the remains of 500 World War II soldiers, nearly 65 years after a bloody battle on the remote Alaskan island of Attu.
    A small team of specialists also found two boots containing bone fragments, remains that were exposed by erosion, said Bruce Woods, a spokesman for the US Fish and Wildlife Service, which oversees the island.
    The four-day search, which concluded over the weekend, was the third for soldiers who died on treeless, mountainous Attu - on the western edge of the Aleutian Islands and the site of the only World War II battle in continental North America.
    Previous searches in 1953 and 1978 led to the removal and reburial of about 300 sets of remains, but the bodies of about 2,000 more war dead remain on Attu, according to Woods.
    Attu, about 2,740 km southwest of Anchorage, was occupied by the Japanese in 1942. Residents of the tiny Aleut village were taken prisoner and sent to Japan, never to return home.
    In 1943, US forces took control of the island after a two-week battle that claimed about 540 American and 2,400 Japanese lives. Many of the Japanese committed suicide instead of surrendering, with only 28 Japanese soldiers surviving.
    Last week's discovery of the mass graves confirmed some of the burial records from 1953, said a US Defence Department officer who was on the expedition.
    "It was not easy to find. Within the burial site, quite a bit of digging was done," said Major Christopher Johnson of the department's Prisoner of War/Missing Personnel Office, noting that six decades worth of vegetation had concealed the sites.
    The remains were reburied in a brief ceremony, according to officials.
    The ultimate fate of the remains on Attu will be decided by the Japanese government. The bodies could stay on the island or be excavated for reburial elsewhere, said Woods.
    </BOD>

    #2
    I have often though that that would be a very interesting battlefield to search on. But it is a bit far from where I live

    The article isnt very clear, saying that the remains were reburied: where were they reburied, and how exactely did a team of "a few specialists" exhume 500 bodies in 4 days?

    JL

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      #3
      Check this out:

      http://www.uscgalaska.com/go/doc/780/164968/

      A quick Google search didn't really supply much more info, history dosen't sell...

      Regards;

      Johnsy

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by Jean-Loup View Post
        I have often though that that would be a very interesting battlefield to search on. But it is a bit far from where I live

        The article isnt very clear, saying that the remains were reburied: where were they reburied, and how exactely did a team of "a few specialists" exhume 500 bodies in 4 days?

        JL
        Bulldozer.

        Comment


          #5
          Looking at those photos I couldn't help but think what a beautiful, green island! There's a trip there scheduled for 2008 but extremely costly..

          -Eric

          Comment


            #6
            Attu Island

            Might be awhile before I can get it up, but I have a US helmet that was supposedly worn by a vet on Attu Island. Also, we have a rugged environment up here, yeah, lots of stuff was probably left behind, but it's all rust..... Chris...

            Comment


              #7
              I looked at the photos on the link. The guys dont seem to have any of the typical grave searching equipement, for example a simple probe!

              Comment


                #8
                There is a Japanese war memorial on Attu - a very modernist geodesic design if I recall correctly, near Massacre Bay (named not for the bloodletting of 1943 but, supposedly, for the killing of native Aleuts there by Russian fur traders in the late 18th century.)

                I lived on Kodiak Island as a kid but I never got that far out on the Aleutian chain - I always wanted to see the Japanese Kyo Hyoteki midget sub at Kiska, the Japanese gun emplacements there, and the derelict "Marus" offshore but never got the chance.

                An Aleut friend of my Dad's once took a seining boat out to the island of Atka which is roughly adjacent to Attu and Kiska, and took quite a pounding going out that far. Being on the Alaskan high seas in Fall is not exactly a good time. Atka was overflown by a Japanese E7Y1 Reconnaisance plane at the time of the Japanese raid on Dutch Harbor in 1942 which immediately preceded the Japanese conquest of Attu and Kiska, however Atka itself was never invaded.
                The US Navy meteorologists on Attu in 1942 along with all the native islanders were interned in Japan and many of the Aleut died.

                My Dad's friend's parents were originally from a tiny native village called Chignik but were moved to Kodiak Island, nearer mainland Alaska, by the US Government in 1942, away from the Japanese. Neither parent ever went back to where they were from.

                Best,
                Gunnar
                Last edited by ketoujin; 07-25-2007, 03:42 AM.

                Comment


                  #9
                  I stumbled across this thread and thought I would add this interesting article about a flag returned to the widow of a Japanese soldier killed on Attu:

                  http://www.hlswilliwaw.com/Aleutians...diers-flag.htm

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Some on WAF will remember that my father-in-law was an IJA artillery officer on both Attu and Kiska. He only said it was "Sugoku taihen" (very terrible) and cold. But he was evacuated.

                    I've also posted on WAF about my copy of "Mein Kampf" (in Japanese) that was captured on Attu. Its Japanese title is Waga Tōzō.

                    吾が闘争
                    真鍋良一訳『吾が闘争』(興風館、1942年)
                    Waga Tōzō [Our Struggle] Hmmmm .... It's normally written as が闘争

                    Looks like only this translator, Manabe Ryoichi, used "" for "Waga," all others used 我が or わが .







                    --Guy

                    Comment


                      #11
                      For a hefty price, you can go check out the battlefield sites with this tour group:

                      http://www.valortours.com/ITINERARYAleutian2015.pdf




                      Tom

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Was Mien Kamp mandatory reading for Japanese soldiers? I wonder how that copy ended up in the Aleutians

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Originally posted by keith View Post
                          Was Mien Kamp mandatory reading for Japanese soldiers? I wonder how that copy ended up in the Aleutians
                          You know ... I have no idea! I would think the average "Joe" would not find it interesting at all.

                          --Guy

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Doubt it was " mandatory"

                            Comment


                              #15
                              It was "heavily encouraged" if not outright mandatory for German citizens to own a copy of it. Just wondering if some of the more fanatical Japanese officers "encouraged" it.....

                              Comment

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