The
Landing at Saidor (Operation
MICHAELMAS) was an Allied amphibious landing at Saidor, Papua New Guinea
on 2 January 1944 as part of Operation Dexterity during World War II. In Allied hands,
Saidor was a stepping stone towards Madang
, the
ultimate objective of General Douglas MacArthur's Huon Peninsula campaign.
The
capture of the airstrip at Saidor also allowed construction of an
air base to assist Allied air forces to conduct operations against
Japanese bases at Wewak
and Hollandia
. But MacArthur's immediate objective was to
cut off the 6,000 Imperial Japanese
troops retreating from Sio in the face of the Australian advance
from Finschhafen
. Following the landing at Saidor, the
Japanese elected to retreat rather than fight, and withdrew over
the foothills of the rugged
Finisterre
Range. For the Japanese soldiers involved, the march was a
nightmare, as they struggled through the jungles, across the
swollen rivers, and over cliffs and mountains. Men succumbed to
fatigue, disease, starvation, drowning, and even exposure, the
nights in the Finisterres being bitterly cold. Hampered by the
rugged terrain, inclement weather, signal failures,
misunderstandings, over-caution, and above all the resolute and
resourceful Japanese, US troops were unable to prevent large
numbers of the retreating Japanese from slipping past them. After
considerable construction effort in the face of wet weather, the
air base was completed and proved useful. Whereas the base at
Nadzab was surrounded by mountains and was therefore unsuited for
missions that had to take off after dark, there was no such problem
at Saidor.
During March 1944, B-24 Liberator bombers staged through Saidor
for night attacks on Hollandia
.
Background
Fighting
in the South West Pacific
Area in late 1943 and early 1944 was dominated by General Douglas MacArthur's Operation CARTWHEEL, a
series of operations directed at isolating and neutralising
Rabaul
, the main base of the Imperial Japanese
forces in the South West Pacific area.
MacArthur's original ELKTON
III plan called for Australian troops to capture first Lae
, then
Finschhafen
, and finally Madang
with a
combination of airborne and amphibious assaults. However, it
was a long way from Finschhafen to Madang — . Thinking in terms of
a shore-to-shore operation, which would be limited in radius of
action to the distance that
landing
craft could sail in one night, the Commander of Allied Land
Forces,
General Sir
Thomas Blamey recommended in August 1943 that
an intermediate objective be seized first. Saidor was chosen as it
had accessible beaches, a harbour, and a pre-war airstrip, and was
allocated the GHQ codename
MICHAELMAS.
It was recognised that
the capture of Saidor might make that of Madang unnecessary, as
both could cover the Dampier and Vitiaz Straits
, and both would provide air bases close to the
Japanese base at Wewak
. For
the time being though, both were considered objectives.
The
Battle of Finschhafen
prevented the early occupation of Saidor. The Japanese wrested back
the initiative and threatened to derail MacArthur's strategy, but
ultimately failed to dislodge the
Australian 9th Division or prevent
the occupation of the Finschhafen area. With the battle of
Finschhafen won, the 9th Division initiated a pursuit of
Lieutenant General Hatazō Adachi's retreating
Japanese Eighteenth Army on 5
December 1943. Adachi was now in a difficult and precarious
position, attempting to conduct a fighting withdrawal with his
inland right flank vulnerable to attack from the
Australian 7th Division in the Ramu
Valley and his seaborne left flank open to amphibious assault. That
he had an opportunity to destroy Adachi's army was not lost on
MacArthur, who decided on 10 December that Saidor should be seized
on or about 7 January, provided that
Operation
BACKHANDER was proceeding satisfactorily. On 17
December,
Lieutenant
General Walter Krueger, the
commander of the
ALAMO Force,
received orders setting a target date for Saidor of 2 January
1944.
Preparation
General
Krueger selected the 32nd Infantry
Division for the Saidor operation as it was at Goodenough
Island
but no longer required for the New Britain campaign. The
assistant division commander,
Brigadier General Clarence
A. Martin was appointed commander of
MICHAELMAS Task
Force, which was built around the
126th Infantry Regimental
Combat Team.
The 126th Regimental Combat Team had been
rebuilt after the Battle of Buna-Gona
and had received six weeks' amphibious training in
Australia and a further three weeks' training at Milne Bay.
Units
assigned to the task force were at Goodenough Island
, Milne Bay, Oro Bay
, Lae
, Finschafen
, Port
Moresby
, Kiriwina, Arawe, Cape Cretin, and
Australia.

Principal Operations in the South West
Pacific, January 1943 – January 1944.
The mission of
MICHAELMAS Task Force was to (1)
seize the Saidor area; (2) establish facilities for a fighter
group; (3) assist in the establishment of air forces in the area;
(4) assist in the establishment of light naval forces in the area;
and (5) construct minimal port and base facilities. Notably, it did
not contain any explicit instruction to fight the
Japanese.
Report of MICHAELMAS Operation,
pp. 1–2
Lieutenant
General Frank Berryman's
Australian II Corps would cooperate by
exploitation along the coast, while the Australian 7th Division
would contain Japanese forces in the Bogadjim are by fighting
patrols.
Maps were supplied by the
Australian Survey
Corps.
Report of MICHAELMAS Operation,
p. 1 There was insufficient time and opportunity for ground
reconnaissance, so three beaches, codenamed Red, White, and Blue,
on the west shore of Dekays Bay were chosen from aerial
photographs. They proved to be "narrow, rocky and exposed to heavy
seas".
The intelligence staff at GHQ in Brisbane
believed that there were no more than 4,500
Japanese forward of Sio, and only 1,500 more between there and the
Madang area. They estimated that it if the Japanese decided
to counter-attack at Saidor, they would take a week to bring up
3,000 men. Accordingly, General Martin elected to dispense with a
preliminary aerial bombardment. Removing this requirement permitted
a dawn landing.
The assault troops with their supplies and equipment had to be
loaded on board the ships on 31 December 1943, just five days after
the assault on cape Gloucester.
Rear Admiral Daniel E. Barbey's VII Amphibious Force allotted 6
Landing Ships, Tank (LSTs), 10
High speed transports (APDs)
and 17
Landing Craft Infantry
(LCIs).
Report of MICHAELMAS Operation, p. 5
A last minute hitch developed on 30 December when it was discovered
that only nine APDs would be available. New embarkation tables were
drawn up, shifting personnel not required in the assault waves to
LCIs, and the landing schedule was revised in the light of the
reduced number of landing craft.
Report of
MICHAELMAS Operation, p. 7
The difficulty of simultaneously supplying operations at Saidor,
Arawe, Long Island, and Cape Gloucester was sufficiently daunting
for General Krueger to request for a postponement of the Saidor
operation. But the commander of the Allied Naval Forces and the
United States Seventh
Fleet,
Vice Admiral
Thomas C. Kinkaid assured MacArthur that enough
supplies would be delivered, and MacArthur overruled Krueger. "I am
most anxious that if humanly possible this operation take place as
scheduled," MacArthur informed him, "Its capture will have a vital
strategic effect which will be lost if materially postponed."
Operations
Landing
The ships and landing craft arrived in Dekays Bay before dawn on 2
January 1944 to find the shore obscured by low hanging cloud and
drizzling rain. Admiral Barbey postponed
H-Hour from 0650 to 0705 to provide more light for
the naval bombardment, and then to 0725 to allow the landing craft
more time to form up.
Destroyers fired
1,725 5-inch rounds, while rocket equipped LCIs fired 624 4.5-inch
rockets. There was no concurrent aerial bombardment, but
Fifth Air Force B-24 Liberators,
B-25 Mitchells and
A-20
Havocs bombed Saidor airstrip later that morning.

Rear Admiral Daniel E.
Barbey, Brigadier General Clarence A.
Hopkins observe the landing at Saidor.
The first wave reached the shore at about 0730. The first four
waves of landing craft — LCP(R)s from the APDs — arrived over the
next 15 minutes. Each of the six LSTs in the assault towed a
Landing Craft Mechanized
(LCM) of the 2nd Engineer Special Brigade; two carried bulldozers,
two carried rocket equipped DUKWs, and two carried spare
diesel fuel. The LCMs beached shortly before
0830 and the LSTs soon after. The Shore Battalion, 542nd Engineer
Boat and Shore Regiment laid Australian ARC
mesh to provide a roadway across the beach for
vehicles. All six LSTs were unloaded were unloaded by 1145. There
was little opposition. Eleven Japanese soldiers were killed by the
naval bombardment or assault troops. Perhaps as many as 150
transient Japanese troops were in the Saidor area. all of whom fled
into the interior. American D-Day casualties came to one soldier
killed and five wound, and two sailors drowned. Nine Japanese
Nakajima Ki-49 (Helen) aircraft,
escorted by up to twenty
A6M Zero (Zeke)
and
Kawasaki Ki-61 (Tony) fighters
bombed the beach area at 1630. There were three more air raids
during the night, and 49 over the course of the month, but most
were small.
Report of MICHAELMAS Operation,
p. 16
General MacArthur announced the landing in his communiqué the next
day:
Japanese response
Since October 1943, the Japanese strategy had been to conduct a
fighting withdrawal in the face of Macarthur's advance that would
"trade position, to the end that the enemy offensive will be
crushed as far forward as possible under the accumulation of
losses".
At General Hitoshi Imamura's Japanese Eighth Area Army
headquarters at Rabaul
, the staff
debated whether the 20th and 51st Divisions should
attack Saidor or slip past it and join up with the rest of the
Eighteenth Army at Wewak
. In
view of the poor condition of the 20th and 51st Divisions, Imamura
relieved the Eighteenth Army of responsibility for the Sio area and
ordered Adachi to withdraw to Madang.

Saidor Operation, January 1944.
General Adachi had flown from Madang to the 51st Division's
headquarters at Kiari in late December, and he received word of the
landing at Saidor shortly before heading overland to the 20th
Division's headquarters at Sio, where he received Imamura's orders.
He placed
Lieutenant General
Hidemitsu Nakano of the 51st Division in overall command of the
forces east of Saidor and ordered the 41st Division to move from
Wewak to Madang to defend that area. He then departed for Madang by
submarine. To harass Saidor, he withdrew eight companies from
Major General Masutaro Nakai's force
facing
Major General
George Vasey's Australian 7th
Division in the Finisterres. The Nakai force deployed along the Mot
River around Gambumi. It succeeded in repelling American attempts
to cross the river until 21 February, when it withdrew, its mission
complete. However, weakening the Finisterres front provoked an
Australian attack, resulting in the loss of the entire Kankirei
position.
General Nakano organised the withdrawal of his force. He chose two
routes, one following the coast and the other running along the
ridge lines of the foothills of the Finisterres. Initially, the
20th Division was to take the coastal route while the 51st and some
naval units took the inland one, but this was changed at the last
minute and both divisions took the inland route. Additional rations
and supplies were to be delivered by submarine. However, the 51st
Division elected to move out rather than wait for the submarines
and risk exhausting its rations through waiting. The 51st Division
had experience crossing the mountains before, and Nakano was
confident of its ability to negotiate them. In the event, one
submarine was discovered by Allied aircraft and failed to reach its
objective, while a second was discovered and sunk. A third got
through but it was a small type that was only able to carry five
tons of supplies. These supplies were theregore distributed among
units of the 20th Division.
The difficulty of the march had been underestimated, and sick and
wounded men had to make their way through trackless regions.
Lieutenant General Kane Yoshihara, the Chief of Staff of the
Eighteenth Army, recalled the march:
The first troops reached Madang on 8 February, and the whole
movement was complete by 23 February. Eighteenth Army anticipated
that units reaching Madang, would probably have lost much of their
equipment, as was indeed the case, so stores were gathered together
from distant Wewak and Hansa, and collected together near Madang.
In addition emergency articles such as some food, shoes and
clothing were collected near the mouth of Minderi River, supplied
by the Nakai Detachment.
Junction with the Australians

Australian and American troops meet
near Saidor on 15 February 1944.
In his report, Krueger stated:American patrols which attempted to
reach the track in the Sindaman area encountered aggressive
Japanese patrols.
Report of MICHAELMAS
Operation, pp. 12–16 An observation post in the mountains at
Mambit counted 965 Japanese troops passing through Yagoyoga between
6 and 10 February and 2,613 between 11 and 23 February. Perhaps
another 1,000 passed through before 6 February. From prisoners of
war, the Task Force built up a fairly complete and accurate picture
of the identity and strength of the opposing Japanese
forces.
Report of MICHAELMAS Operation, p.
15 On 12 January, Martin received intelligence from
ALAMO Force to the effect that the Japanese were
concentrating around Sio, and would attempt to force their way
through to Madang. In response to a request from General Martin for
reinforcements, the 1st and 3rd Battalion Combat Teams of the
128th
Infantry were sent to reinforce Saidor, arriving on 16
January.
Report of MICHAELMAS Operation, p.
12 Martin came to believe that an advance to the east and an attack
on the withdrawing enemy would "provide an opportunity to destroy
the Japanese before they could organise an attack on the Saidor
position",
Report of MICHAELMAS Operation,
p. 13 but General Krueger did not immediately give General Martin
permission for such an operation. There was still the possibility
of Japanese attack, and the 32nd Infantry Division was required for
the upcoming
Hansa Bay operation. On 20
January, a visiting staff officer from
ALAMO Force
was asked to raise the possibility with Krueger. However, on 21
January Martin received a letter stating that the mission of the
Task Force remained unchanged and a
radiogram was received on 22 January to the effect
that this was not consistent with Krueger's wishes. On 8 February,
Martin received a garbled radiogram from Krueger that indicated
that the earlier restrictive message of 22 January had itself been
garbled, and on 9 February a radiogram was received authorising
offensive action. Plans were immediately made but on 10 February
contact was made with elements of the
Australian 5th Division, which had
relieved the 9th Division on 20 January. This closed the gap on the
east flank.
Report of MICHAELMAS Operation,
p. 14
Base Development
With a large construction programme, engineers made up 29.3% of
MICHAELMAS Task Force. An Engineer Section
headquarters was organised on 24 December 1943, only nine days
before D-Day, consisting of five officers and five enlisted men.
Later a
jeep and a driver were borrowed from
the 114th Engineer Battalion to provide transportation. The
officers did not know each other and therefore were unaware of each
other's capabilities. As it turned out, none of them had experience
with amphibious operations, and only one had experience in airbase
construction, although this was to be their most important
task.
Saidor had an existing grass civilian airstrip. Before they had
abandoned Saidor in 1942, Australian troops had sabotaged the
airstrip by digging trenches across the runway. These were quickly
filled in, and the overgrown Kunai grass was knocked down by
driving
2 1/2-ton trucks over it. By the
afternoon of 4 January, of runway was ready for use. A
Piper Cub took off from it the next day. The 863rd
Engineer Aviation Battalion arrived on 9 January and improved the
strip, permitting twelve
C-47
Skytrains loaded with ammunition to land on 11 January.
ALAMO Force wanted an all-weather runway by ,
preferably where a second, parallel runway could be constructed if
need be. Construction of the second runway was requested by the
Fifth Air Force on 24 January. The
8th Engineer Squadron survey detachment laid out a new runway
oriented about 10° from the existing airstrip. The Task Force
engineer had the entire site stripped, leaving the
subgrade exposed. This was a serious error, as from
10 to 31 January there were only three days during which it did not
rain, and of rain fell over the period — quite normal for the time
of year. As a result, construction was delayed. Gravel was taken
from the Nankina River which was laid up to deep and topped with
crushed aggregate. The rains, and frequent rolling, gave a good
water-bound surface. Part was sealed with
Bitumen but delays caused by the weather prevented
it all being sealed before being overlaid with
Marston mats. The runway was declared ready for
emergency landings on 4 February but the surface deteriorated under
use. The runway was finally completed on 6 March.Constructed of the
taxiways and dispersal areas continued through April, the airbase
being complete and in operation on 7 May.
On 5 March, the engineers began construction of the bulk petroleum
installation. Storage was provided for of
avgas in one tank and five tanks. A fuel jetty was
constructed, allowing tankers to discharge into a pipeline which
ran over a catwalk to the storage tanks. Work was completed on 8
April. Considerable effort had to be expended on road construction.
The 808th Engineer Aviation Battalion had to be assigned to road
work, the task being beyond the resources of the Shore Battalion.
Gravel was laid up to thick. By late January, the weather and
damage to the roads by heavy military traffic forced the engineers
to impose a ban on morning road use. By midday the sun had dried
out the roads and traffic could resume. Initially, the Nakina River
could be forded but the heavy seasonal rains turned it into a
fast-flowing torrent. A portable bridge was flown in from Milne Bay
and erected in a day but it too two weeks to construct the
approaches. In the meantime the troops on the other side had to be
supplied by water. To open up the most suitable area for camp
sites, another bridge had to be erected over the Nakina. This was a
permanent bridge with concrete abutments. A rise in the river level
of complicated work, but the bridge opened to traffic on 17
February.
Local labour was supplied by a
Australian New Guinea
Administrative Unit (ANGAU) detachment, initially consisting of
eight Australian Army officers and eleven native police. A week
after the landing, 199 native labourers were brought in from
Lae.
Report of MICHAELMAS Operation, p. 23
Initially, the ANGAU detachment found it difficult to lure the
frightened local people in from the bush, but as the word spread
that there was food and safety to be had within the American
perimeter, large numbers began to walk in. ANGAU established a
native settlement in the Biding River area. By 13 February, 680
native labourers were at work. They constructed camps for the
Americans, carried supplies to units in the mountains and brought
back the wounded, and worked in the hospital. ANGAU also carried
out patrols, providing intelligence on the Japanese
positions.
The amphibian engineers had brought six LCMs on the first day.
These were joined by another six towed by the six LSTs that arrived
on the second day. Unfortunately, within days the rocky beaches and
reefs caused nine to be damaged so badly that they had to be sent
back to Cape Cretin for repairs. Later in January, the rest of B
Company, 542nd Engineer Boat and Shore Regiment was sent to Saidor.
A lighter wharf was begun on 19 January and completed on 5 March.
The unseasoned local timber used in its construction soon took a
battering from heavily loaded barges bumping into them in high seas
and had to be replaced with steel piles. A
Liberty ship wharf was completed on 6 May.
Other construction activities included Jetties for servicing
PT boats, landings for LSTs, a 250–hospital
opened on 11 May, a quartermaster dump, and a staging area for
9,000.
Air Operations
Saidor was soon in used by the
Fifth Air
Force. Its base at Nadzab was surrounded by mountains and was
therefore unsuited for missions that had to take off after dark,
but there was no such problem at Saidor.
During March,
B-24 Liberator bombers staged staged
through Saidor for night attacks on Hollandia
. A raid on Hollandia on 16 April 1944
encountered a weather front that closed Nadzab and the other fields
in the Markham Valley. More than 30 aircraft made their way to
Saidor. An
F-5 Lightning and a
B-25 Mitchell collided on the runway,
and two aircraft cracked up on landing, but the other aircraft that
made it to Saidor eventually returned to their bases.
Conclusion
Krueger reported that "
MICHAELMAS Task Force tried
hard to block these escape routes. But the torrential rain, the
ruggedness of the country with its impenetrable rain forests and
jungles and impassable rivers, and the resistance of enemy troops
pushed forward from Madang to guard the the trails leading
eastward, made this effort fall short of success". Australian
commanders were critical. In a letter to Blamey, Berryman, who had
visited Krueger in an attempt to ensure that the Japanese would not
escape, wrote that "about 8,000 semi-starved, ill-equipped and
dispirited Japanese bypassed Saidor. It was disappointing that the
fruits of victory were not fully reaped, and that once again the
remnants of the 51st Division escaped our clutches." Lieutenant
General Sir
Leslie Morshead of
New Guinea Force reported to Blamey
that
MICHAELMAS Task Force appeared not to have made
"any appreciable effort" to cut off the retreating Japanese. Sadly
for the men of the 32nd Infantry Division, many of these Japanese
would later have to be fought again under less advantageous
circumstances in the
Battle of
Driniumor River. Krueger officially terminated
Operation DEXTERITY, of
which
MICHAELMAS was a part, on 10 February
1944.
Report of MICHAELMAS Operation, p. 1
All that remained now was the final act of the
Huon Peninsula campaign: the capture
of Madang.
Casualties
In the Australian 5th Division's advance from Sio to Saidor between
20 January and the end of February, 734 Japanese were killed, 1,793
found dead, and 48 Japanese prisoners were taken. Australian and
Papuan casualties came to 3 killed and 5 wounded. The US 32nd
Infantry Division at Saidor killed 119 Japanese and captured 18,
while losing 40 killed, 11 wounded, 16 missing.
See also
Notes
References