Japanese Air Raid near Mossman
on 30/31 July 1942
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visits since 22 October 2000 |
Sub Lieutenant Mizukura made the final raid on what they thought was Cairns after seeing some lights. At 3.30 a.m. on 31 July 1942 Mizukura reported that he dropped 8 bombs. Where these 8 bombs fell has never been established. However one bomb fell that same night on a sugar cane farm at Saltwater, 16 kms from Mossman. It exploded about 50 meters from a galvanised shed owned by Selice Zeillo. His two and a half year old daughter received a wound to the head from shrapnel which pierced the house and smashed a number of windows. She was in her cot at the time.
The bomb left a large crater seven metres across and one metre deep. Metal fragments from the bomb were later found with Japanese markings on them. Mikukura arrived back at Rabaul at 10.10 am after a 17 hour flight.
The little girl grew up to become Mrs. Carmellia Emmi, of Albany Creek in Brisbane, Queensland. She was reported in the Sunday Mail in 1989 as follows:-
"My mother said it was bright moonlit night and very cold. She said the blast woke her and she saw I was covered in blood. She thought I had been killed and started screaming. I know I'm a unique part of Queensland history, but it's something I could have done without."
She spent 3 months recovering in hospital. She has been left with a large scar under her hair.
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Sub Lieutenant Kiyoshi Mizukura flew an Emily flying boat on two raids against Townsville and another near Mossman |
Sub Lieutenant Kiyoshi Mizukura in Japan many years after the war |
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Japanese Air Raids in Australia
REFERENCE
"The Hidden Chapters, Untold stories of
Australians at war in the Pacific"
by Robert Piper
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© Peter Dunn 2005 |
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This page first produced 22 October 2000
This page last updated 07 November 2005