Rabaul Explained

Rabaul
Pushpin Map:Papua New Guinea New Britain and Ireland
Coordinates:-4.2°N 163°W
Pushpin Label Position:right
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:Papua New Guinea
Subdivision Type1:Province
Subdivision Name1:East New Britain
Subdivision Type2:LLG
Subdivision Name2:Rabaul Urban LLG
Population Total:3,885
17,044 (1990)
Population Density Km2:auto
Demographics Type1:Languages
Demographics1 Title1:Main languages
Demographics1 Info1:Tok Pisin, Kuanua, English
Demographics1 Title2:Traditional language
Demographics1 Info2:Kuanua
Established Title:Established
Established Date:1878[1]
Postal Code Type:Postcode
Postal Code:611
Timezone1:AEST
Utc Offset1:+10
Blank Name:Climate
Blank Info:Af

Rabaul is a township in the East New Britain province of Papua New Guinea, on the island of New Britain. It lies about 600 kilometres to the east of the island of New Guinea. Rabaul was the provincial capital and most important settlement in the province until it was destroyed in 1994 by falling ash from a volcanic eruption in its harbor. During the eruption, ash was sent thousands of metres into the air, and the subsequent rain of ash caused 80% of the buildings in Rabaul to collapse. After the eruption the capital was moved to Kokopo, about 20km (10miles) away. Rabaul is continually threatened by volcanic activity, because it is on the edge of the Rabaul caldera, a flooded caldera of a large pyroclastic shield.

Rabaul was planned and built around the harbour area known as Simpsonhafen (Simpson Harbour) during the German New Guinea administration, which controlled the region from 1884 and formally through 1919. Rabaul was selected as the capital of the German New Guinea administration in 1905, and the administrative offices were transferred there in 1910.[2] Rabaul was captured by the British Empire during the early days of World War I.[3] It became the capital of the Australian-mandated Territory of New Guinea until 1937, when it was first destroyed by a volcano.[4] During World War II, it was captured by Japan in 1942 and became its main base of military and naval activity in the South Pacific. Settlements and military installations around the edge of the caldera are often collectively called Rabaul, although the old town of Rabaul was reduced to practical insignificance by the volcanic eruption in 1937.

As a tourist destination, Rabaul is popular for its volcanoes, scuba diving and for snorkelling sites, spectacular harbour and other scenery, World War II history, flora and fauna, and the cultural life of the Tolai people. Before the 1994 eruption, Rabaul was a popular commercial and recreational boating destination; fewer private small craft visit now, but 10 to 12 cruise ships visit Rabaul each year, including the Queen Elizabeth, carrying up to 2,000 passengers. Tourism is a major industry in Rabaul and East New Britain generally.

History

Rabaul's proximity to its volcanoes has always been a source of concern. In 1878, before it was established as a town, an eruption formed a volcano in the harbour.

For other eruptions, see Rabaul caldera.

Colonial period and aftermath

In 1910 the German colonial government during the administration of Governor Albert Hahl moved offices, the district court, a hospital and customs and postal facilities from Herbertshöhe (today's Kokopo) to Simpsonhafen. That settlement was thus substantially enlarged with official buildings and housing and renamed Rabaul, meaning mangrove in Kuanua (the local language) as the new town was partially built on a reclaimed mangrove swamp.[5]

At the outset of World War I,, at the behest of Great Britain, Australia – as one of the Dominions of the British Empire – defeated the German military garrison in Rabaul and occupied the territory with the volunteer Australian Naval and Military Expeditionary Force. Following Germany's defeat at the end of the war, the occupied territory was delegated in 1920 to Australia as a League of Nations Mandate (Class C).[6] Rabaul became the capital of the Territory of New Guinea. Visits to and stays in Rabaul during this period were amply described in books by many authors, including Margaret Mead.

Gunantambu, the famous house of "Queen" Emma Forsayth and her husband, contained furniture previously owned by Robert Louis Stevenson and left to her family in Samoa.[7] Destroyed in the 1937 volcano eruption, its remains became a tourist attraction after World War II and remained so until the 1994 further volcanic destruction of Rabaul.

In 1929, Rabaul was the site of the Rabaul Strike, the first industrial strike in Papua New Guinea.

Rabaul (Tavurvur) volcano: 6 June 1937 eruption

"Rabaul volcano is one of the most active and most dangerous volcanoes in Papua New Guinea."[8] Having erupted and entirely destroyed Rabaul on 6 June 1937, five years before the occupation by Japan, "Rabaul exploded violently [again] in 1994 and devastated the...[city]. Since then, the young cone Tavurvur located inside the caldera has been the site of near persistent activity in form of strombolian to vulcanian ash eruptions. The caldera has an elliptical form (14 × 9 km) and is surrounded by a steep volcanic ridge several hundred meters high."

Under the Australian administration, Rabaul developed into a regional base. Then in 1937, catastrophic volcanic eruptions destroyed the town after the two volcanoes, Tavurvur and Vulcan, exploded. 507 people were killed, and there was widespread damage. Following this, the Australian administration for the Territory of New Guinea decided to move the territorial headquarters to the safer location of Lae. All long-term steps to re-establish the territorial headquarters at Rabaul were forestalled during World War II.

World War II

See also: Japanese occupation of New Guinea. Rabaul was heavily bombed by Japanese aircraft starting from 4 January 1942. On 23 January the battle of Rabaul began and Rabaul was captured shortly thereafter[9] by thousands of Japanese naval landing forces. Rabaul was then bombed by Allied forces later that month.[4] [10]

The military personnel, and most civilians who had remained in Rabaul, were placed aboard the Montevideo Maru, which was sunk off the Philippines in June 1942.[11] [12] [13] About six planters who had remained in the bush were executed in July 1942 after they gave themselves up to the Japanese, while 12 men, who had technical skills, were imprisoned in Rabaul, but were executed at the end of 1944.[12] Four men were found in a camp when Rabaul was liberated.[12] [14]

During their occupation the Japanese developed Rabaul into a much more powerful base than the Australians had planned after the 1937 volcanic eruptions, with long-term consequences for the town in the post-war period. The Japanese army dug many kilometres of tunnels as shelter from Allied air attacks, such as the bombing of November 1943. They also expanded the facilities by constructing army barracks and support structures. By 1943 there were about 110,000 Japanese troops based in Rabaul.

On 18 April 1943, the United States executed Operation Vengeance, in which Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto, the architect of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, was shot down and killed by a United States P-38 Lightning over south Bougainville. Yamamoto had taken off from Rabaul on an inspection tour, and United States Navy cryptographers had intercepted and then decrypted Japanese communications giving his flight itinerary. Because of the need to keep secret the American ability to decrypt Japanese radio traffic, the sensitive information went up the chain of command for a decision as to what actions the units in the field should take; ultimately President Franklin D. Roosevelt was said to have approved the action based on these intercepts, although this is not documented.[15] Sixteen United States Army Air Forces P-38 Lightning fighters took off from Guadalcanal and intercepted and shot down the two bombers of the Yamamoto flight, for the loss of one P-38.

Instead of capturing Rabaul during their advance towards the Japanese Home islands, the Allied forces decided to bypass it by establishing a ring of airfields and naval bases on the islands around it. Cut off from re-supply and under continual air attacks as part of Operation Cartwheel, the base became useless. The neutralisation of Rabaul took until the end of the war and was only completed with the Japanese surrender in August 1945.[16]

Post–World War II until 1994

After the Second World War, western New Guinea (renamed Papua) was returned to pre-war owner the Netherlands, and eastern New Guinea was returned to pre-war administrator Australia, and Rabaul flourished as the principal city and port of the archipelago, with one of the finest harbours in the world.[17] By 1990 Rabaul's population was 17,044.[18] However, Rabaul did not resume its pre-1937 role as capital, which was taken over by Port Moresby for the entirety of the two territories.

Rabaul's magnificent harbour and central position meant it became a trading hub for the lively, and politically and economically developing New Guinea Islands region (East and West New Britain, New Ireland, Manus Island, and Bougainville). It retained that role when Papua New Guinea became independent from Australia in 1975.

1994 eruption

In 1983 and 1984 the town was ready for evacuation when the volcanoes started to heat up. Nothing happened until 19 September 1994, when again Tavurvur and Vulcan erupted, destroying the airport and covering most of the town with heavy ashfall. There were only 19 hours of warning, but the city and most nearby villages were evacuated before the eruption. Five people were killed—one of them by lightning from the eruptive column. The planning and evacuation drills helped keep the death toll low. Most of the buildings in the south-eastern half of Rabaul collapsed due to the weight of ash on their roofs.

The last eruption and continuing low and modest levels of activity prompted moving the provincial capital to Kokopo, the former German Herbertshöhe. Nonetheless, Rabaul is slowly rebuilding inside the danger zone. Vulcan has remained quiet since 1994, but small and large eruptions from nearby Tavurvur occur intermittently, with the most recent of note being on 29 August 2014. A government volcanological observatory was established on the northern ridge of the Rabaul caldera in the 1950s. A team there maintains its crucial watch over the town and the volcanoes until today. They are also responsible for monitoring other volcanoes on New Britain and nearby islands.

Transport

Rabaul Airport was destroyed in the 1994 eruption, and, since the approach involved flying over the Tavurvur crater, it was abandoned. The airport was in the direct path of the falling ash from the nearby vents. A new airport was built at Tokua, about 50 km farther away to the southeast. However, even it has been closed occasionally by ash thrown up by Tavurvur and driven by the northwest monsoon winds.

Rabaul has a large, nearly enclosed harbour, Simpson Harbour. Use of this harbour by the Imperial Japanese Navy was one of the motivations for the Japanese invasion in 1942.

Climate

Rabaul features a tropical rainforest climate, which is constantly hot, humid, overcast and oppressive. Rabaul experiences significant rainfall year-round, and is classified as Af by Köppen and Geiger. The average annual temperature in Rabaul is 26.9 °C and rainfall there averages 2201 mm.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.montevideomaru.info/Montevideo/html/German%20Rabaul.htm History of Rabaul
  2. Web site: Thomas. Gordon . XVI(7) Pacific Islands Monthly . The Story of Rabaul – Thirty-five Years a South Seas Storm Centre (1). 15 February 1946. 29 September 2021.
  3. Web site: Thomas. Gordon . XVI(8) Pacific Islands Monthly . The Story of Rabaul – Thirty-five Years a South Seas Storm Centre (2). 15 March 1946. 29 September 2021.
  4. Web site: Thomas. Gordon . XVI(9) Pacific Islands Monthly . The Story of Rabaul – Thirty-five Years a South Seas Storm Centre (3). 16 April 1946. 29 September 2021.
  5. Schultz-Naumann, Joachim. Unter Kaisers Flagge. Deutschlands Schutzgebiete im Pazifik und in China einst und heute [Under the Kaiser’s Flag. Germany’s Protectorates in the Pacific and China, then and today]. Munich: Universitas Verlag. 1985, p. 96.
  6. Class C mandates were designed for populations considered incapable of self-government
  7. Noel Gash and June Whitaker, A Pictorial History of New Guinea. Milton, QLD, Australia: The Jacaranda Press, 1975, p.42.
  8. Volcano Discovery. "Rabaul (Tavurvur) volcano." http://www.volcanodiscovery.com/rabaul-tavurvur.html Retrieved 26 December 2012.
  9. Gavin Sauter, New Guinea: The Last Unknown (Sydney: Angus and Robertson, 1963) p.174.
  10. Web site: Vider. E. C. . XVI(6) Pacific Islands Monthly . Last Days nn Rabaul. 18 January 1946. 29 September 2021.
  11. Web site: XVI(4) Pacific Islands Monthly . New Guinea's 250 Missing Civilians. 19 November 1945. 29 September 2021.
  12. Web site: XVI(5) Pacific Islands Monthly . Missing From Rabaul. 17 December 1945. 29 September 2021.
  13. Web site: XXXI(1) Pacific Islands Monthly . More Light on the Sacrifice of Civilians In Rabaul in 1942 – And Who Were the Guilty Men?. 1 August 1960. 2 October 2021.
  14. Web site: Thomas. Gordon. XVI(4) Pacific Islands Monthly . How Rabaul's Civilians Met Their Fate. 19 November 1945. 29 September 2021.
  15. Grant, Rebecca. "Magic and Lightning" in Air Force Magazine, March 2006
  16. Book: Shaw Jr., Henry I. . History of U.S. Marine Corps Operations in World War II . Kane . Douglas T. . U.S. Marine Corps Historical Branch . 1963 . II . Epilogue . 10 August 2023 . https://www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/USMC/II/USMC-II-VI-2.html.
  17. "Rabaul." http://www.encyclopedia.com/topic/Rabaul.aspx Retrieved 1 September 2013.
  18. "Rabaul," Encyclopedia.com http://www.encyclopedia.com/topic/Rabaul.aspx Retrieved 6 July 2013.