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The wreck of an American corsair fighter; shown here in the late 1990’s, lies near the B-24 wreck shown earlier.  It is said that the plane crash-landed on the reef near the shore in 1944 before the airstrip was completed.  It was hauled out of the water and moved to its present position in the jungle where it has rested since the war.  Even though it is against the law to remove war relics from the islands of Palau, wealthy outsiders are constantly applying pressure on locals to sell all or part of World War II aircraft wrecks such as this one.  In 1988, pieces of this plane were moved to a nearby site in an illegal attempt to ship them to Australia.
General MacArthur makes good on his vow to return to the Philippines.  Here he wades ashore at Red Beach at Palo just south of Tacloban during the Leyte landing on October 20, 1944.
One day in 1984 a woman digging a garden in her backyard near Tanapag found a human bone.  She called the Saipan Historical Preservation Office, and an archeological excavation was performed.  The remains of eight Japanese soldiers were uncovered, victims of the massive Tanapag banzai charge.  After the attack, the four thousand or so bodies were quickly buried in mass graves by the Americans.  These Japanese soldiers were still wearing their helmets and ammunition belts when the were covered over with sandy soil.  The man on the upper left was an officer, as evidenced by his Samurai sword scabbard still at his left side.
The strange, sad, and the bizarre became everyday occurences as the missions flown from Saipan rolled on.  This particular B-29, or what’s left of it, made it back from a mission over Japan with only two good engines on the left side.  Cannon fire disabled two engines on the right side, causing one of the propellers to spin off and slash a hole in the fuselage.  The crew was still able to fly the crippled plane fifteen hundred miles back to Saipan at about five hundred feet above the ocean.  Seventeen hours after they had taken off, they slammed down on the runway at Isley Field.  The plane immediately lost hydraulic pressure and careened out of control down the runway with no brakes.  It veered to the left, slammed into a parked B-29, and broke in two where the runaway propeller had perforated the fuselage.  As the remnants of the giant airplane ground to a stop, the dazed crew emerged from the wreckage, and later posed for this photo.
Like good tourists, American servicemen were usually up to the task of blending in with the local environment to better experience the authentic flavor of the South Seas.  In this photo, twenty-five year old Corporal Luigi Greasso models his conception of what native dress is all about in the Solomon Islands.
MacArthur’s return to the Philippines is immortalized in these twice-life-sized gilded statues that commemorate his wading ashore.  In this photo the woman is striking a pose popular with Filipino tourists.  Nearby government guards allow a certain amount of this activity before shooing visitors out of the reflecting pool.
Pacific Legacy
Image and Memory from World War II in the Pacific

By Rex Alan Smith and Gerald A. Meehl, Foreword by Joe Foss 
Size: 10 x 10" 
Cloth, 312 pages
500 illustrations, 250 in full color
Published 2002
ISBN: 978-0-7892-0761-6
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An unprecedented chronicle of Americas bitter war against Japanese imperialism a half-century ago, interweaving poignant first-person memories with unique color photography of major battle sites and evocative archival images.

This fascinating, richly illustrated survey of all aspects of the Pacific war, from Pearl Harbor to Japans surrender in Tokyo Bay, offers something unique among World War II histories: an extensive color portfolio of dramatic wartime relics that have survived decades on most of the Pacific island battlefields. Rusting American landing craft and tanks still can be found on the treacherous reefs and beaches where they were tragically stopped by enemy fire so long ago; aircraft of both sides lie hidden in the jungles where they crashed; battle-scarred Japanese pillboxes and artillery emplacements still stand sentinel; and packed-coral landing strips remain as good as new.

Such evocative memento mori have been beautifully captured on film by Jerry Meehl, probably the only photographer to have sought out these far-flung battle sites, many of them still dangerous underfoot and now off-limits to travelers. The authors also searched official archives for pictures that show the real terrors of combat and often found images displaying the very tanks and amtracs now decomposing on distant invasion beaches. They also found captured prewar photos of newly built Japanese pillboxes and gun emplacements, which they contrast with images of their current war-torn condition.

But Pacific Legacy is far from just a "then" and "now" picture book. Each of the more than twenty photo essays of particular battles features a lively narrative that relies heavily on the firsthand accounts of men who were there, archival pictures shot during the actual fighting, and color photographs of the remaining Japanese bunkers and gun emplacements, all of which help the reader visualize what hand-to-hand combat in the Pacific war must have been like.

Rex Alan Smith is a veteran of thirty-six months in the Pacific during World War II and the author of several best-selling books, most notably One Last Look, which deals with the Eighth Air Force in Europe. Gerald A. Meehl, over the past three decades, has traveled extensively in the South Pacific and photographed every major Pacific island battlefield and numerous other World War II sites. Joe Foss, Medal of Honor winner at Guadalcanal, was the Marine Corps Ace of Aces, with 26 confirmed kills, the first American fighter pilot to surpass Eddie Rickenbackers record set in World War I.

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