By Tom Dare
INCREDIBLE COLOURISED PHOTOS showing the lengths American soldiers went to to capture several Pacific Islands from the Japanese during the Second World War have been published today, on the anniversary of the USâs drive across the region.
Images from Americaâs successful assault and capture of the Tarawa Atoll in November 1943 show troops trudging through the ocean in full kit as they make their way toward shore, while another sees a group of soldiers taking cover behind a tank.
Further pictures, restored by colouriser Royston Leonard, show a soldier crouching down next to the tanks of a track to give a small kitten who was hiding nearby a drink of water, with further pictures showing American troops holding their rifles after capturing several Japanese prisoners.
The Gilbert and Marshall Islands campaign, of which the battle of Tarawa was a large part, was the name given to a series of battles which took place between America and Japan across the Pacific between November 1943 and February 1944.
The assault on the Tarawa Atoll by the Americans was the first offensive they undertook in the Pacific region, capturing the islands after three days of intense fighting between November 20 and November 23.
Tarawa was actually one of the less heavily defended islands the US attacked that year, with a tactical ploy by the leadership ensuring that the Japanese stationed far more men at other islands in the area.
Knowing this, the Americans targeted the islands with air strikes, artillery and a land invasion, making significant gains and forcing the Japanese from the islands one by one as they made their way across the area. It was not without loss, though, with the Japanese dogged in their fighting.
They fought almost to the last men, with just one officer and 16 troops of the 3,500 plus enlisted men surrendering. Of the 1,200 Korean labourers forced to help erect defences on the islands, only 129 survived. America also paid a heavy price for their victory, too, with over a thousand killed and two thousand wounded.
âThese images show the moments in time when madness took over the world,â Royston, a 55-year-old Electrician from Cardiff, said.
âTarawa is the place that Marines learned the hard lessons that would help them later in the war.
âAmerica knew that the cost in lives of every island was going to be high, but I donât think they quite expected this. And it only rose more as they got closer to mainland Japan.
âBattles like this serve as a reminder to the world that something like this should never happen again.
âAt the same time, though, images like the marine feeding the cat shows that there can be hope even in the hell of battle.â
Colourised pictures such as these are featured in author Michael D. Carrollâs new photo-book Retrographic, which is available to buy from Amazon for ÂŁ16.85.
For more information, visit: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Retrographic-Historys-Exciting-Images-Transformed/dp/1908211504