As Sombreru Pillbox I | |
Builder: | 48th Independent Mixed Brigade; 29th Division |
Added: | March 4, 1991 |
Area: | less than one acre |
Refnum: | 88001883 |
As Sombreru Pillbox II | |
Coordinates: | 13.5061°N 144.7967°W |
Added: | March 4, 1991 |
Area: | less than one acre |
Refnum: | 88001864 |
As Sombreru Pillbox III | |
Coordinates: | 13.5056°N 144.7969°W |
Added: | March 4, 1991 |
Area: | less than one acre |
Refnum: | 88001887 |
The As Sombreru Pillbox I, As Sombreru Pillbox II, and As Sombreru Pillbox III are three historic defensive fortifications on Guam, near Tumon, that were listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places in 1991. They are pillboxes, a type of defensive fortification, built by the 48th Independent Mixed Brigade; 29th Division of the Imperial Japanese Army during 1941-1944, between Japan capturing Guam on December 8, 1941 from the United States and the U.S. recapturing Guam in 1944.
"As Sombreru Pillbox I" has also known been known as As Sombreru Point Japanese Fortification. Its precise location is not disclosed by the National Register; it is listed as "Address Restricted".
"As Sombrero Pillbox II" is a 2.4x pillbox located 7m (23feet) in from the high tide line on the south shore of Tumon Beach in Tumon Bay. Its roof slab is about 0.45m (01.48feet) thick.[1]
"As Sombrero Pillbox III" is located on Matapang Beach west of Matapang Park, about 9m (30feet) in from the high tide line. It is a 4x two-room pillbox with a "complex configuration" of six walls; its west-facing wall is 0.45m (01.48feet) thick and has a gun port commanding the center of Tumon Bay. Entrance and an air vent come through the east wall. It was built of steel-reinforced concrete including beach rubble, and, as of the NRHP listing date, was in "excellent" condition. There are "impressions of tabi prints and a possible Japanese character" in the cement roof, which is about 0.25m (00.82feet) thick.[2]
It is not clear whether any of these pillboxes engaged directly in the 1944 battle for Guam. These pillboxes were clearly designed to repel invaders coming from the sea. The U.S. invasion beginning on July 21, 1944, however, was further to the south and west; the area of these pillboxes was over-run by U.S. forces coming from the south, on about August 2, 1944.