June 26, 2005 at 12:34 pm
I have been looking at a couple of pages on Pete Mossong’s excellent website about the wartime RNZAF. These pages are about RNZAF engineer John Armitage, and they include lots of his unique photos. On this page at the bottom there’s a great photo of a slightly submerged Japanese bomber on a beach at Guadalcanal…
http://rnzaf.hobbyvista.com/donserv2.html
I wonder what became of this, would it have washed up and been destroyed? Was it pulled out and melted down? Does it still lie there untouched?
There are several other interesting ‘wrecks’ too.
Other pages with John Armitages’ excellent photos are here
http://rnzaf.hobbyvista.com/donserv.html including his story
and here
http://rnzaf.hobbyvista.com/donserv1.html
By: DocStirling - 28th June 2005 at 10:17
and set up a little museum, which I visited a few years ago -However, there is an American LST (or half of it) which also has a lot of interesting history –
Richard.
Hi,
I visited the same museum when I was there in the 80’s.
Thanks for posting your site and the link to the German diving site.
DS
By: FlyingKiwi - 27th June 2005 at 21:06
Unfortunately no-one started salvaging war artifacts in the Solomons until the 1970s, when an Australian chap suggested to some local villagers that they pull the wrecks out of the jungle and set up a little museum, which I visited a few years ago – even bought a WW2 Coke bottle in mint condition for about $US2! There was also a NZ beer bottle, but it didn’t seem to have the same cachet as the Coke bottle!
Sadly other great stuff has been lost; another Australian dynamited the Japanese submarine sunk by the two NZ Corvettes Kiwi and Moa, which is an amazing story in itself – one of the corvettes, considerably smaller than the submarine, repeatedly rammed it until the submarine’s hull split. They ran the submarine onto a reef just offshore, a wartime photo shows the front 20 feet of the bow sticking out of the water. But as I mentioned it was dynamited to recover the brass and lead. When I dived on it there was little to see.
However, there is an American LST (or half of it) which also has a lot of interesting history – it was torpedoed and the rear half with most of the men on board sank. I’ve had a lot of correspondence with different people who had relatives on the LST or were in some other way associated with it.
Richard.
By: DocStirling - 26th June 2005 at 21:43
It was not a mentioned wreck when I was there – some years ago now – as it would have been a prime diving site. Maybe it was by the beech in a more ‘inhospitable’ part of Gc. Headhunting was still a sport until only a few years ago……. 😮
DS
By: crazymainer - 26th June 2005 at 13:03
Thanks Dave,
It appears to be a G4M and rather complete wonder what the story is behind its little swim.
Cheers
RER