Thursday, March 15, 2018

DRAMATIC ACCOUNT OF DARWIN BOMBING /TRAGIC DEATH OF AMERICAN AIRMEN

The  bombing of  Darwin and  subsequent war  years  are  covered  in depth  in the  latest edition of Progenitor, journal  of the  Genealogical Society of  the Northern  Territory . It makes use of documents  from  the  wide ranging collection  of   public servant  and  researcher,  the late  Vern  O'Brien .
 
Of particular  note  is the account  written  in 1980  of the   "Darwin Blitz" of February  1942  by Lieutenant  Commander  T.F. Roberts , captain of HMAS Vigilant at the time of the Japanese attack . His version  started  off   by listing   books on  the subject . Only one of these ,  Darwin 1942, published in l980,  had access to official  reports  of  the   attack .  The inference seems to be that the part played by  his  vessel on that terrible day  did not receive a mention .  His account was not  meant as  a  critique of  the earlier books , but  were  his recollections  at  age 70 . It is slightly abridged, paraphrased .
 
Vigilant, under his command, was based at Darwin in May 1941. carrying out  survey and   patrol duties . The NT Administrator  Charles Lydiard  Aubrey Abbott had  come aboard when  the Vigilant went to the aid of  Karu, a government vessel ,  when it became stranded   north  of Bathurst Island  and had to be towed  back to Darwin .
 
In January l942 , the ship had carried  depth  charges  to HMAS Deloraine  after it sunk a  Japanese  submarine , mines  laid  by the submarine washed up at Gunn Point , one of which had  been made safe and  flown  to  Flinders  Naval  Depot  in Victoria   for  examination  by  experts.
 
Soon after , at night , Captain  Roberts had piloted  into port the 12,000 ton  passenger liner  SS President Grant, fleeing from Manila , the  skipper having no charts for Australian  waters .  Author Douglas Lockwood , in  Australia's Pearl Harbour, wrote that a map from a  National Geographic  Magazine  had  assisted the vessel  make  Darwin . The  vessel then  evacuated  women and children  to  Brisbane .  
  
 A few nights before the first  raid on Darwin , the Vigilant had taken up a position to  assist a returning  convoy led by USS  Houston  .  When  the Japanese attacked on February 19, Captain  Roberts was aboard   HMAS Platypus and quickly returned to  his    ship  to find it  ready  for action  and ordered it  to move  from  the  mooring  buoy.

At full speed , it headed for open water, as bombs exploded "everywhere". He shouted down the voice pipe  for the wireless telegraphist in the wheelhouse to enter  everything  he  said   in  the ship's log book.

Where possible , this included   compass bearings on  ships burning and sinking. This record, he wrote, was probably the most comprehensive account of what  happened  in the harbour . At the time of  recalling the  raid ,  he thought  the ship's log book  had subsequently been used at a Navy  inquiry , if not  at the  Royal Commission  conducted by  Judge Lowe.  The log book "cannot now be   found  in  the  Naval Archives ."  

 The Progenitor article  includes details of the  Vigilant   going to the aid of  the badly damaged and shot up  US transport   Port Mar   .  Captain Roberts  suggested  the stricken vessel  beach on the leper island . With the assistance of   HMAS Deloraine , all hands , including dead and  wounded were   removed.  Stretcher cases had been  transferred to the  hospital ship  HMAS  Manunda   and walking wounded and  corpses landed at  the  boom  jetty .

By 10pm, Captain Roberts was totally exhausted  after  12 hours on  the bridge . The next morning he  was directed to fix the positions of wrecked ships - British Motorist, Meigs, Mauna Loa , Zealandia and others : "I could not locate the USS Peary , which had been literally murdered  by the dive bombers  and sank stern first in a lake of burning oil , the  gunners on  the  foredeck  going down fighting in  the tradition  of  Sir Richard  Grenville  in  the  Revenge ."

Captain Roberts was  then  directed to  the   US freighter Admiral Halstead which lay at anchor   loaded with 14,000  drums of  high octane  fuel  which had been  deserted  by most hands  except for the master and  mate . Steam was raised , and Captain Roberts  piloted the vessel  to the boom jetty where   the cargo was discharged and American trucks  took it away .

Commenting on the fact that Darwin  had not reacted to a warning message from the Bathurst Island  Mission  that a large flight of planes was heading towards Darwin , he said   had  the alert been  given ships in the harbour could have raised steam , gun crews  made ready .  Instead  ,  Darwin  had been caught  pants  down, as at  Pearl Harbour . He was critical that the  hospital ship Manunda   had been placed in the middle  of  the warships  anchorage , because of this blunder  it had sustained   considerable  damage  and  casualties .

Again from the Vern O'Brien papers  is the  substantial   diary  kept by the Mayor of Darwin ,J. B. Burton , from the first  raid on February 19,l942  through to  the last one on November 12, l943. 
Japanese salvage operations in Darwin .
Included are newspaper cuttings  about the  terrible ordeal   of  US airmen  who survived the crash  in the Gulf of Carpentaria  of   a  B-24 Liberator  bomber   returning to Australia from   a  raid   on  the Japanese , only  to  die  gradually  in  the outback ,staggering about seeking safety .   Staff Sergeant  Grady  S.  Gaston  was    found  five months  after the  crash  in a  pitiful state   near  Borroloola in the   NT  , taken on horseback to  Seven Emu station homestead  where  he was brought  back  from  the  brink  of  death .