I recently wrote a blog
about Corfu Island, a small but important location in WWII. Reader
Marcia Lahti commented that Wake Island had an important and
interesting history as well. Intrigued I went to my computer and
started digging. I was astounded at what I discovered.
Originally annexed in 1899
for a cable station, Wake Island is an unincorporated territory of
the United States. One of the most isolated atolls in the world, it
is administered by the Air Force under an agreement with the
Department of the Interior. Did you know that? I certainly didn't!
That fact sent me digging further to see just how many more
territories I didn't know about. Turns out there are sixteen-perhaps
that will be another blog.
The Battle of Wake Island
occured simultaneously with the attack at Pearl Harbor. On December
8, Japan hit the island with thirty-six bombers then returned on
December 11 with a naval force. The U.S. Marines and the civilians
constructing the air base successfully defended the coast for twelve
days. They managed to sink two destroyers and a transport, but on
December 23 Japanese reinforcements came from Pearl Harbor and
over-ran the island.
As a result, over 1,600
Americans were captured and sent to POW camps. The island remained
under Japanese occupation for the duration of the war, and nearly 100
American civilians were held on the island to perform forced labor.
On October 5, 1943, the occupiers realized an Allied invasion was
imminent and excecuted the civilians. During the event one of the
prisoners escaped and carved a memorial into a large rock: '98 US PW
5-10-43.' He was later caught and executed.
People worldwide continue to
remember the Texas Alamo as a heroic struggle against impossible odds
— a place where men made the ultimate sacrifice for freedom.
“Remember the Alamo.”
I say we should also
remember Wake Island.
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