GENERAL DOUGLAS MACARTHUR at the later battle of Inchon in the KOREAN WAR. |
H.M.A.S. Warramunga( I ) |
On Wednesday, 15th August, 1945 the Feast of the Assumption of Our Lady, I can recall be roused from bed by the sound of the elder daughter of our friends across the street calling out at the back flyscreen door. I got to the door at the same time as my Mum who had been busy elsewhere in the house.
The young Judith Dryden called out joyfully "The War is
Over!" -I was 5 years old . I was not impressed. "I know that", I said, "It happened a long
time ago "
- "No! That was the Germans! Now the Japanese have
surrendered and it is all over!"
The
interesting thing about this very clear memory, to me at any rate, is
that I knew enough about what was going on at age 5 for the German
surrender to register, but not enough to know that the Japanese were yet
to be brought to heel.
The
actual formal surrender of the Japanese took place on 2nd
September,1945 in Tokyo Bay aboard the mighty battleship U.S.S. MISSOURI
which enjoyed the nickname "Big Mo", also present was H.M.A.S.
WARRAMUNGA which had been part of MISSOURI's destroyer screen. She was
irreverently dubbed "Little Mo"by the Aussies.
The
imposing figure of General Douglas Mac Arthur - not a perfect man - but
one of my heroes nonetheless, accepted the Japanese surrender. He later
ruled Japan absolutely under an Allied mandate, and did so with noble
distinction, concluding with the transfer to democracy he had
engineered. One needs to be very discerning in reading about General MacArthur in American publications , as his life has become highly politicised .To those Left inclined he is a diabolical figure.
2nd September,1945 - Japanese Surrender aboard U.S.S. MISSOURI in Tokyo Bay. |
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