I have decided to
post a brief history of Kokoda. Everyone has heard of Kokoda (almost) but
probably not that many know the actual story of what happened there. It
really is a significant part of our history.
The track is
about 97 km over rugged and isolated terrain between Owens Corner and
Kokoda.
Before World War
II Kokoda was a track used by European miners to access goldfields. During WWII
it became a battlefield between Australian and Japanese troops.
I have included a
couple of things. A couple of videos which are the first in a series of 8, and
gives you a basic history of Kokoda. These blokes were amazing. Watching
the whole series is absolutely eye opening. What the Australian and Japanese
soldiers went through is unbelievable. The videos show interviews with
soldiers from Australia and Japan as well as the Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels. It's
humbling really.
This is the
second video in the series.
There are six
more, worth watching, you will find them listed on you tube after these two
above.
If you haven't
got time to watch, there is a written history below that will only take a
couple of minutes to read.
This summary is
from ww.ww2australia.gov.au/asfaras/kokoda.html.
More than 600
Australians were killed and some 1680 wounded during perhaps the most
significant battle fought by Australians in World War II.
Forced to repel a
Japanese invasion force, which landed at Gona on the north coast of Papua on 21
July 1942, the Australians fought in appalling conditions over the next four
months. The Japanese objective was to capture Port Moresby, the main Australian
base in New Guinea, by an overland strike across the Owen Stanley Range.
The
most direct way across these rugged mountains was by a jungle pathway known as
the Kokoda Track. During the next four months, until 16 November 1942,
Australian soldiers fought the Japanese, first to keep them from reaching Port
Moresby and then to push them back over the Owen Stanleys to their north coast
strongholds at Buna, Gona and Sanananda.
In late July 1942, as the Japanese advanced towards Kokoda village, they were engaged by forward elements of the Papuan Infantry Battalion and the Australian 39th Infantry Battalion. Despite the Australians’ stubborn resistance, Kokoda fell to the larger Japanese force and by 27 August the Australians and the few Papuan troops who had stayed with them had been forced back to Isurava. Reinforcements were sent from Port Moresby: first the 53rd Battalion, which protected a side-track behind Isurava, and then the veteran 2/14th and 2/16th Battalions, which had previously served in the Middle East.
In late July 1942, as the Japanese advanced towards Kokoda village, they were engaged by forward elements of the Papuan Infantry Battalion and the Australian 39th Infantry Battalion. Despite the Australians’ stubborn resistance, Kokoda fell to the larger Japanese force and by 27 August the Australians and the few Papuan troops who had stayed with them had been forced back to Isurava. Reinforcements were sent from Port Moresby: first the 53rd Battalion, which protected a side-track behind Isurava, and then the veteran 2/14th and 2/16th Battalions, which had previously served in the Middle East.
At Isurava, in
the last days of August, the 39th and the 2/14th Battalions, with support
further back from the 2/16th and 53rd Battalions, were able to temporarily hold
the Japanese during an intense five-day action. Three days into the battle, on
29 August, in the face of yet another enemy assault, Private Bruce Kingsbury,
2/14th Battalion, was killed as he rushed forward with his Bren gun, driving
back the enemy in a determined counter-attack. He was awarded a posthumous
Victoria Cross, the first VC awarded during the New Guinea campaigns.
Throughout
September, the Australian units withdrew down the Kokoda Track, being joined by
the 2/27th Battalion. They made further stands against the Japanese at Eora
Creek, Templeton’s Crossing, Efogi, Mission Ridge and Ioribaiwa. Allied airmen
dropped supplies and made repeated attacks on the enemy’s supply lines. During
those gruelling days, the Papuan men employed as carriers played a vital role
in the battle. They carried supplies forward for the troops and then, as the
number of troops who were wounded or fell sick increased, carried back to
safety those who were unable to walk.
By 16 September,
after more troops had come forward from Port Moresby and dug into a defensive
position at Imita Ridge, the Japanese were exhausted. They had been forced to
fight hard to cross the mountains and had run out of many supplies. Following
setbacks on other battlefields against Australian and American forces, which
robbed them of further reinforcements, the Japanese on the Kokoda Track were
ordered to withdraw. As Australian patrols pushed forward of Imita Ridge on 28
September, they found that the enemy had slipped away.
During the next
six weeks, the Japanese fell back over the mountains. They were pursued by
troops of the 25th Brigade – comprising the 2/25th, 2/31st and 2/33rd
Battalions – and the 16th Brigade – comprising the 2/1st, 2/2nd and 2/3rd
Battalions – along with the 3rd Battalion and men from medical and supply
units. Significant actions were fought at Templeton’s Crossing, where it took
more than a week of hard and costly fighting for the 25th Brigade to push back
the enemy, and at Eora Creek where the 16th Brigade also doggedly attacked
enemy strongpoints to slowly make ground. The Australians were plagued by
supply shortages that increased the difficulties of jungle warfare. Finally, on
2 November, Kokoda was retaken. The Australians had one more tough battle to
fight at Oivi-Gorari, where the Japanese were determined to make another stand,
before they were able to finish the advance over the mountains. By 18 November
the Australians had reached the Kumusi River. The battle for the Kokoda Track
was over.