Kokoda (80 page)

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Authors: Peter Fitzsimons

Tags: #Non-Fiction, #History, #War

BOOK: Kokoda
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Watson, Major Bill, 154, 175, 180–182
Wavell, General Archibald, 81
White, Osmar, 92–95, 132, 136, 200, 245, 273–274, 280–282, 311, 319, 330, 342–345, 358, 458
Damien Parer, journey with, 137–140, 145–147
Eora, at, 348, 351–352
Kokoda Track, at, 249–251
Mount Tambu, at, 171
Port Moresby, at, 240
Whitehead, General Ennis, 249
Wilkinson, Warrant Officer Jack, 160, 195, 205
Williams, Private ‘Bluey’, 227
Willoughby, Major General Charles A., 163, 173
Wilmot, Chester, 30, 273–274, 280–282, 311, 319, 330, 342, 358, 366, 377, 409–411, 454
arrival in New Guinea, 245
Blamey’s speech, 422
career following war, 454, 457
Damien Parer, friends with, 31
death of, 458
disaccredited, 416–417
press conference of Thomas Blamey, 384–386
Prime Minister Curtin, meeting, 410
Wilson, Tom, 326
Wirraways, 72
Women
breasts, 80
comfort women, 101–103, 280
feared rape of, 101
jugun ianfu
, 101
native women, 80
Woods, Private Jimmy, 295
World War I
Australian losses in, 83
commencement, 2
World War II
declaration of, 13–14
surrender of Japan, 453
Wright, Lieutenant Commander ‘Bull’, 151–154
Yamamoto, Admiral Isoroku, 98
Yanagiba, Yutaka, 407–408
Yodda Valley, 184, 458
Yokoyama, Colonel Yosuke, 183
Yorktown
, 134
Yosuke, Foreign Minister Matsuoka, 25–26
Yule, Lieutenant Charles, 65
Zeros, 72, 84, 112, 114

 

A view of Imita Range and Ioribaiwa near the start of the Kokoda Track, showing range after range of jungle terrain.

 

 

 

The small village of Kokoda sits on a plateau in the Owen Stanley Range. It was the key strategic possession for both the Japanese and Australians, with the only airfield within four days march in any direction.

 

 

 

Members of 12 Platoon, B Company, 39th Battalion, gather for a meal. The young men of B Company were the first Australian troops to set off on the Kokoda Track.

 

 

 

‘Uncle Sam’—Captain Sam Templeton, the commanding officer of 39th’s B company.

 

 

 

Members of the 39th Battalion prepare for action, including Joe Dawson’s mate, Ray Phillips, at the front. The 39th were a militia battalion with little training and no real fighting experience.

 

 

 

Joe Dawson and his girlfriend, Elaine, at Camp Darley, the 39th’s training ground in Australia.

 

 

 

These steep stairs, known as the ‘golden stairs’, were made after the first troops had departed. For the 39th, there was no help up the track.

 

 

 

‘The bloody track.’
Members of the 39th Battalion trudge through mud and slush up part of the track.
(Negatives by Damien Parer.)

 

 

 

 

 

A patrol from the 39th looks over the Uberi valley at the beginning of the track.

 

 

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