Key PNG issues 3: Education & training
Key PNG issues 4: Region, defence & China

The Battle of Rabaul: 23 January 1942

BY KEITH JACKSON

ON 6 NOVEMBER 1941, a month before the attack on Pearl Harbour, the Operational Order of the Japanese South Seas Force directed that, after securing Guam, it would occupy Rabaul.

By mid-December Japanese scout and reconnaissance aircraft were frequently spotted over Rabaul.  And, in early January, the Japanese had reasonable knowledge of Australian troop deployments in and around the town.

The first bombs fell on 4 January 1942 at 10.35 am, killing twelve people and wounding thirty. Most of those who died were from the Trobriand Islands; people having their first meal following rescue after six weeks lost at sea. The bombing continued for the next three weeks until Rabaul was invaded.

On 8 January, Malaita left Rabaul with Japanese internees and a few remaining European women. The last plane from Sydney arrived on 16 January.

2-22-lark-force The commander of Lark Force, Colonel J J Scanlan, had based the defence of Rabaul on the assumption of the availability of a brigade group that never eventuated. He made no plans for retreat or withdrawal.

Indeed, on Christmas Day 1941, he issued the grim order that “there shall be no faint hearts, no thought of surrender, every man shall die in his pit.”

The raid by Japanese carrier-based aircraft on 20 January was the beginning of the end for Lark Force. In an engagement with 80 bombers and 40 fighters lasting less than ten minutes, three of RAAF 24 Squadron's eight remaining Wirraways were shot down, one crashed on take-off and two were damaged in crash-landings.

Wing Commander Lerew had famously signalled RAAF HQ in Melbourne with the motto, Nos Morituri Te Salutamus (‘we who are about to die salute you’), the phrase uttered by gladiators in ancient Rome before entering combat.

“For sheer, cold-blooded heroism I have never seen anything to compare with the pilots of those Wirraways”, Sergeant FS Smith, AIF, said later. “They knew they were doomed but they had all the guts in the world.”

At the end of the attack, Herstein, on which Acting Administrator Harold Page had hoped civilians might be embarked, had been torn from its moorings and lay burning in the harbour. Thirty of the crew, mostly Norwegian, were later captured by the Japanese. Most were lost on Montevideo Maru later in 1942.

The next day - 21 January - reports were received in Rabaul that a large convoy was approaching from the north-west. It was a Japanese naval taskforce of eight cruisers, twelve destroyers, nine submarines and two aircraft carriers with 171 aircraft.

On this day there were also air strikes on Bulolo, Salamaua and Lae, the administrative centre since September when Administrator Sir Walter McNicoll moved there because of volcanic activity in Rabaul.

McNicoll, a very sick man, realised a Japanese invasion was approaching and handed responsibility to the New Guina Volunteer Rifles before leaving for Port Moresby and Australia.

Civil administration of the Mandated Territory effectively ended as the Japanese occupied Rabaul on 23 January and formally ceased in Papua on 14 February 1942. The separate Papuan and New Guinea administrative units were combined in April into the Australian New Guinea Administrative Unit (ANGAU).

By the evening of 21 January all Rabaul civilians had either taken shelter in a nearby precinct, called Refuge Gully, to await the Japanese, or had left town by vehicle for distant plantations.

The next day, 22 January, Rabaul was bombed by fighters and dive bombers. No RAAF aircraft were available, the indigenous population was terrified and the troops apprehensive. Rabaul had all but fallen.

The invasion fleet carrying Major-General Tomitaro Horii’s 5300 strong South Seas Force, a brigade group based on the 55th Division that had also taken Guam, arrived off its anchoring points at 11.40 pm.

Jap_Marines_Rabaul Soon after midnight on Friday 23 January, Major Bill Owen’s A Company heard the hum of an approaching aeroplane and watched as a parachute flare illuminated the harbour.

Owen’s 90 AIF and 50 NGVR troops had taken defensive positions along the harbour shoreline north of Vulcan volcano.

The transports launched landing barges, each holding between 50 and 100 men, at six points around the harbour. At 1 am landing craft were seen heading towards Matupit Island.

“The fighting was effectively over within a few hours,” says Australian historian, Emeritus Professor Hank Nelson. “Probably less than 100 Japanese and Australians died in battle.

The Australians were too few to oppose most landings, they were quickly divided, communications between companies and headquarters were lost early. Those Australians who fought stubbornly were bypassed and naval and air-power directed against them.”

By 8 am the main body of the occupation force was mopping-up and Rabaul town was occupied. Soon after 9 am, Lark Force headquarters received reports that the Japanese were coming “in their thousands” and could not be held.

At about 11 am, Colonel Scanlan gave the order “every man for himself”. No further defence was feasible. The Australian forces withdrew and broke into small parties. Men tried to escape to the north and south coasts of New Britain, struggling through unknown country without maps, medicines and stores. In all, only 450 soldiers and civilians managed to escape.

At 11.30 the Japanese naval force moved up the harbour in line. By noon, the Gazelle Peninsula was in the hands of the invading force. Naval combat troops captured Vunakanau airfield at 1.10 pm. The invasion of Rabaul was complete.

Photos:   Upper - 2/22 Battalion on the march.    Lower - Japanese marines invade Rabaul

Comments

Feed You can follow this conversation by subscribing to the comment feed for this post.

Bob Piper

It would appear that many of the Army problems lay with Colonel Scanlan. Lack of preparation and no planned escape route with supplies.

Wonder what happened to him Keith.

WGCDR John Lerew was a personal friend and what he wrote in late years and told me saved all but four of the RAAF personnel. In fact he was brilliant. On the escape some of his men were discarding equipment which he would pick up and then catch up to them and hand it back.

I still have some of John's original letters to me.

Leadership in crisis is a rare diamond.
_________

In June and July 1942 two drafts of Australians captured on New Britain embarked for Japan. One draft, containing about 60 officers and 19 Australian women (including 6 Army nurses) led by Colonel J J Scanlan, reached Japan safely.

Scanlan, along with other officers from the POW camp, were later taken to Nisi Asi-Betu on Hokkaido to work in a coalmine.

Post-war, in 1946, Scanlan took up the position of governor at his former workplace, the Hobart Gaol, a position to which he was appointed while a prisoner of war. He died of a stroke on 6 December 1962 in hospital at Kingston, Tasmania.

[Information from Australian War Memorial & Wikipedia]

David Symons

Thanks for this information, Keith.

My father was Ron Symons, a machine gunner with the 2/22 at Rabaul. He escaped along the north coast with others whose names I do not know.

I would like to learn who they were, as Ron was very ill with malaria during the weeks and months after the escape and survived thanks to their help.

Ron died on August 1 1996.

Andrea Williams

Remembering the men who were lost 69 years ago...thank you Keith.

Paul Oates

If there is only one lesson to be learned from this debacle, it’s summed up by that old saying, ‘a stitch in time saves nine’.

Canberra had been warned for at least two years previously that PNG remained grossly under-defended from a potential Japanese attack. It did nothing but declare that the Territory’s miniscule defence was ‘adequate’.

Given the expenditure of probably billions of dollars and a huge cost in Allied dead and wounded which was needed to reclaim PNG, those in Canberra who sat on their hands in 1939, 1940 and 1941 and declared PNG’s defence ‘adequate’, ought to have been those who ended up being shot. Instead, they probably died of old age.

In the past 70 years, what have we learned? 3/5’s or 5/8’s of SFA.

“There are none so blind as those who will not see!”

Verify your Comment

Previewing your Comment

This is only a preview. Your comment has not yet been posted.

Working...
Your comment could not be posted. Error type:
Your comment has been saved. Comments are moderated and will not appear until approved by the author. Post another comment

The letters and numbers you entered did not match the image. Please try again.

As a final step before posting your comment, enter the letters and numbers you see in the image below. This prevents automated programs from posting comments.

Having trouble reading this image? View an alternate.

Working...

Post a comment

Comments are moderated, and will not appear until the author has approved them.

Your Information

(Name and email address are required. Email address will not be displayed with the comment.)