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Goodenough Island

Goodenough Island in the Solomon Sea, also known as Nidula Island, is the westernmost of the three large islands of the D'Entrecasteaux Islands in Milne Bay Province of Papua New Guinea. It lies to the east of mainland New Guinea and southwest of the Trobriand Islands.[1] It is roughly circular in shape, measuring 39 by 26 kilometres (24 by 16 mi) with an area of 687 square kilometres (265 sq mi) and a shoreline of 116 kilometres (72 mi). From a coastal belt varying in width from 2 to 10 kilometres (1.2 to 6.2 mi) in width, the island rises sharply to the summit of Mount Vineuo, 2,536 metres (8,320 ft) above sea level, making it one of the most precipitous islands in the world.[2] The small outlier Wagifa Island lies to the south-east of the island, and is included within Goodenough's administration.

Goodenough Island
Goodenough Island
Geography
LocationMelanesia
Coordinates9°22′S 150°16′E / 9.367°S 150.267°E / -9.367; 150.267
ArchipelagoD'Entrecasteaux Islands
Area687 km2 (265 sq mi)
Highest elevation2,536 m (8320 ft)
Highest pointMount Vineuo
Administration
Demographics
Population20,814 (2000)

Climate and vegetation

Like much of New Guinea, the climate is tropical with high temperatures and humidity throughout the year. The northwest monsoon season lasts from December to March and brings sudden rain squalls. From May to October southeasterly winds are cooler and more gentle. Tropical cyclones are infrequent. Rainfall varies between 1,520 mm and 2,540 mm per annum. Serious droughts occur once or twice a decade. Rushing streams with waterfalls drain water from the central mountain. Rain forest cloaks the higher elevations with secondary forest, grassland and native gardens on the lower slopes and coastal plains. Soils are acidic.

A rare edible citrus plant, Citrus wakonai (Citrus warburgiana; locally called "kakamadu", a name shared with other citrus species),[3] grows on Goodenough Island.[4]

History

The D'Entrecasteaux Islands have probably been inhabited for several thousand years, the people being related to mainland Papuans.[5] The first sighting of the archipelago by a European was by the French mariner Joseph Antoine Bruni d'Entrecasteaux in 1792[6] but it remained unexplored by Europeans until 1874 when Captain John Moresby, commanding HMS Basilisk, landed on the westernmost island and gave it a European name after a British naval colleague, Commodore James Graham Goodenough.

The impact of western culture after Moresby's visit and before World War II was limited to missionaries, ethnographers and traders seeking whales, pearls or gold. In 1888 William MacGregor visited the island in his role as administrator of the newly proclaimed British New Guinea. In 1891 the Methodist Church of Australia established a mission station on Dobu Island (between Ferguson and Normanby Islands) under the direction of William Bromilow. From there mission stations were established in strategic centres in the D'Entrecasteaux and Trobriand Islands and the Louisiade Archipelago.[7] In particular, in 1898 a mission station was established in Bwaidoga, Mud Bay, Goodenough Island. By that time traders had already created a regular demand for steel tools, cloth, and twist tobacco and the Dobu mission was recruiting natives to work in gold mines and copra plantations. These activities, and indeed the farming and hunting activities of the traditional people, were confined to localised areas on the fringing plains of the island. The mountainous hinterland remained entirely unknown and unpopulated above 1,100 m.

World War II

On 25 August 1942, a Japanese convoy of seven motorised landing craft (MLC) with 353 marines of 5th Sasebo Special Naval Landing Force stopped to rest at the south end of Goodenough Island. They were led by Commander Tsukioka and were bound for Taupota and participation in the Battle of Milne Bay. They became stranded when their MLCs were destroyed by No. 75 Squadron RAAF Kittyhawks.[8]

On 22 October 1942 the Australian warships HMAS Stuart and HMAS Arunta disembarked 640 soldiers consisting of the Australian 2/12th Battalion, of the 18th Brigade from Milne Bay.[8] They landed on both sides of the island's southern tip during the night. Intense fighting occurred during 23 October and during the night a successful rescue mission evacuated about 250 Japanese soldiers by submarine to Fergusson Island, where they were taken by cruiser to Rabaul.[8] The remaining Japanese defenders were mopped up and the island declared secured by 27 October.[8]

The occupation force remained on the island until 28 December 1942. During that time they used deception and camouflage to make the Japanese believe that a brigade sized force was occupying the island. They fabricated a 'ghost force' of dummy structures, including a hospital, anti-aircraft guns constructed of logs pointed at the sky, and barricades of jungle vines which looked like barbed wire. They also lit fires to appear as cooking fires for large numbers of soldiers, and sent messages consistent with what a brigade of soldiers would be expected to send.[9]

During that time an American airfield engineer reported that a temporary airfield could be constructed for emergency use on the site of an existing mission airstrip on the northeastern plain near Vivigani. He also recommended that a permanent 6,000-foot-long (1,800 m) airstrip be constructed.[10]

The Fifth Air Force directed the RAAF's No. 9 Group to attack enemy bases in New Britain. To facilitate this, General Headquarters Operations Instructions No.31, dated 11 March 1943, set out that Goodenough Island, which was garrisoned by an Australian infantry battalion group with attached service groups and two Radar stations, was to be reinforced and prepared as an air force operating base with two landing strips, initially suitable for fighters, but with one being upgraded to handle heavy bombers. The fighter strip was available on 15 June. By the end of July, there were 3,614 RAAF personnel on the island.[11] The bomber strip was completed on 20 October,[12] although it is recorded that the first offensive use of the airfield was on 17 May by Beauforts of No. 100 Squadron RAAF.

As a part of Operation Cartwheel, Vivigani Airfield became an important staging point for Australian and American operations in the South West Pacific Area, an objective of which was to attack Rabaul in New Britain, the stronghold of Imperial Japanese forces.

RAAF Units active on Goodenough Island[13]

Squadron Aircraft
6 General reconnaissance/Bomber Squadron Hudson Beaufort
8 Bomber Squadron Beaufort
22 Bomber Squadron Boston
30 Attack Squadron Beaufighter
75 Fighter Squadron Kittyhawk
76 Fighter Squadron Kittyhawk
77 Fighter Squadron Kittyhawk
79 Fighter Squadron Spitfire
100 Bomber squadron Beaufort
8 Communication Unit Tiger Moth, Boomerang, Dornier Do 24, Vengeance, Walrus, Catalina, Beaufort, Beaufreighter, Beaufighter

RAAF logistics units active on Goodenough Island[14]

Squadron
4 Mobile Works Squadron. (Renamed 4 Airfield Construction Squadron July 1944)
5 Mobile Works Squadron. (Renamed 5 Airfield Construction Squadron July 1944)
7 Mobile Works Squadron. (Renamed 7 Airfield Construction Squadron July 1944)
26 Air Stores Park
16 Stores Unit. (Renamed 6 Stores and Shipping Unit April 1943)
7 Transportation and Movements Office
10 Repair and Salvage Unit
26 Repair and Salvage Unit
2 Medical Receiving Station
6 Medical Receiving Station

Culture

The four languages of Goodenough (Bwaidoka, Iduna, Diodio, and Buduna or Wataluma) belong to the Milne Bay Family of Austronesian languages. The dominant language, Bwaidoka, was adopted as a lingua franca by the Wesleyan (Methodist) Mission at the turn of the century. At the 2000 census the population was 20,814.[15]

List of villages working clockwise around Goodenough Island starting at Vivigani Airfield on the northeast coastal plain, as shown in Google Earth.

  • Vivigani (this is not an actual village per se, although there are several in the vicinity of the airstrip)
  • Bolubolu (the administrative centre)
  • Mataita
  • Faiava
  • Wailagi (United Church mission station and 1–6 Elementary School)
  • Wagifa
  • Kilia
  • Lauwela
  • Auwale
  • Debenefue
  • Diodio
  • Tatala
  • Waibula
  • Ufaufa
  • Wataluma Mission and Plantation
  • Ulutuya Mission

Protected area

The Oya Madawa Wildlife Management Area in the centre of the island has an area of 22,840 hectares (56,400 acres). It provides a critical landscape function with a relatively high number of endemic, endangered and vulnerable species. The small black dorcopsis (Dorcopsis atrata), the only wallaby known to be endemic to a Pacific island, is endangered and needs careful management.[16] Another species, the agile wallaby (Macropus agilis), was abundant but cannot be found today.[17]

See also

References

  1. ^ http://islands.unep.ch/IHD.htm#850
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on 23 December 2010. Retrieved 10 March 2016.
  3. ^ Paul I. Forster & Malcolm W. Smith (2010), "Citrus wakonai P.I.Forst. & M.W.Sm. (Rutaceae), a new species from Goodenough Island, Papua New Guinea" (PDF), Austrobaileya, 8 (2): 133–138, JSTOR 41739123
  4. ^ Mike Saalfeld. "The_Quest_for_Wakonai page19". homecitrusgrowers.co.uk.
  5. ^ "history and cultural relations - Goodenough Island". Retrieved 10 March 2016.
  6. ^ Bruni d'Entrecasteaux
  7. ^ "Bromilow, William Edward (1857–1929)". Biography - William Edward Bromilow - Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. Retrieved 10 March 2016.
  8. ^ a b c d Dunn, Richard L. "September 11th, 1942 – The Rest of the Story". j-aircraft.com. Retrieved 29 June 2014.
  9. ^ Elias, Ann,"Camouflage Australia: Art, Nature, Science and War".(Sydney: "Sydney University Press"., 2011), pp. xix, 155–162.
  10. ^ "Pacific Wrecks". Retrieved 10 March 2016.
  11. ^ "Home - Australian War Memorial" (PDF). Retrieved 10 March 2016.
  12. ^ "5ACSGOODENOUGH". Retrieved 15 December 2018.
  13. ^ http://ajrp.awm.gov.au/AJRP/remember.nsf/709e228818bdf765ca256a9a001dad4d/e3366413732a55fcca256b5a0018e722?OpenDocument&Highlight=0,goodenough
  14. ^ http://ajrp.awm.gov.au/AJRP/remember.nsf/709e228818bdf765ca256a9a001dad4d/733fe68936726620ca256b5a001955cc?OpenDocument&Highlight=0,goodenough
  15. ^ "Travel and Tourism in Papua New Guinea". Retrieved 10 March 2016.
  16. ^ Leary, T.; Wright, D.; Hamilton, S.; Singadan, R.; Menzies, J.; Bonaccorso, F.; Helgen, K.; Seri, L.; Allison, A.; James, R. (2016). "Dorcopsis atrata". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2016: e.T6794A21952571. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-2.RLTS.T6794A21952571.en. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
  17. ^ "404". {{cite web}}: Cite uses generic title (help)

External links

Coordinates: 9°22′S 150°16′E / 9.367°S 150.267°E / -9.367; 150.267

goodenough, island, confused, with, goodenough, island, this, article, uses, bare, urls, which, uninformative, vulnerable, link, please, consider, converting, them, full, citations, ensure, article, remains, verifiable, maintains, consistent, citation, style, . Not to be confused with Goodenough s Island This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as Reflinks documentation reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Goodenough Island in the Solomon Sea also known as Nidula Island is the westernmost of the three large islands of the D Entrecasteaux Islands in Milne Bay Province of Papua New Guinea It lies to the east of mainland New Guinea and southwest of the Trobriand Islands 1 It is roughly circular in shape measuring 39 by 26 kilometres 24 by 16 mi with an area of 687 square kilometres 265 sq mi and a shoreline of 116 kilometres 72 mi From a coastal belt varying in width from 2 to 10 kilometres 1 2 to 6 2 mi in width the island rises sharply to the summit of Mount Vineuo 2 536 metres 8 320 ft above sea level making it one of the most precipitous islands in the world 2 The small outlier Wagifa Island lies to the south east of the island and is included within Goodenough s administration Goodenough IslandGoodenough IslandGeographyLocationMelanesiaCoordinates9 22 S 150 16 E 9 367 S 150 267 E 9 367 150 267ArchipelagoD Entrecasteaux IslandsArea687 km2 265 sq mi Highest elevation2 536 m 8320 ft Highest pointMount VineuoAdministrationPapua New GuineaDemographicsPopulation20 814 2000 Contents 1 Climate and vegetation 2 History 2 1 World War II 2 1 1 RAAF Units active on Goodenough Island 13 2 1 2 RAAF logistics units active on Goodenough Island 14 3 Culture 3 1 Protected area 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksClimate and vegetation EditLike much of New Guinea the climate is tropical with high temperatures and humidity throughout the year The northwest monsoon season lasts from December to March and brings sudden rain squalls From May to October southeasterly winds are cooler and more gentle Tropical cyclones are infrequent Rainfall varies between 1 520 mm and 2 540 mm per annum Serious droughts occur once or twice a decade Rushing streams with waterfalls drain water from the central mountain Rain forest cloaks the higher elevations with secondary forest grassland and native gardens on the lower slopes and coastal plains Soils are acidic A rare edible citrus plant Citrus wakonai Citrus warburgiana locally called kakamadu a name shared with other citrus species 3 grows on Goodenough Island 4 History EditThe D Entrecasteaux Islands have probably been inhabited for several thousand years the people being related to mainland Papuans 5 The first sighting of the archipelago by a European was by the French mariner Joseph Antoine Bruni d Entrecasteaux in 1792 6 but it remained unexplored by Europeans until 1874 when Captain John Moresby commanding HMS Basilisk landed on the westernmost island and gave it a European name after a British naval colleague Commodore James Graham Goodenough The impact of western culture after Moresby s visit and before World War II was limited to missionaries ethnographers and traders seeking whales pearls or gold In 1888 William MacGregor visited the island in his role as administrator of the newly proclaimed British New Guinea In 1891 the Methodist Church of Australia established a mission station on Dobu Island between Ferguson and Normanby Islands under the direction of William Bromilow From there mission stations were established in strategic centres in the D Entrecasteaux and Trobriand Islands and the Louisiade Archipelago 7 In particular in 1898 a mission station was established in Bwaidoga Mud Bay Goodenough Island By that time traders had already created a regular demand for steel tools cloth and twist tobacco and the Dobu mission was recruiting natives to work in gold mines and copra plantations These activities and indeed the farming and hunting activities of the traditional people were confined to localised areas on the fringing plains of the island The mountainous hinterland remained entirely unknown and unpopulated above 1 100 m World War II Edit On 25 August 1942 a Japanese convoy of seven motorised landing craft MLC with 353 marines of 5th Sasebo Special Naval Landing Force stopped to rest at the south end of Goodenough Island They were led by Commander Tsukioka and were bound for Taupota and participation in the Battle of Milne Bay They became stranded when their MLCs were destroyed by No 75 Squadron RAAF Kittyhawks 8 On 22 October 1942 the Australian warships HMAS Stuart and HMAS Arunta disembarked 640 soldiers consisting of the Australian 2 12th Battalion of the 18th Brigade from Milne Bay 8 They landed on both sides of the island s southern tip during the night Intense fighting occurred during 23 October and during the night a successful rescue mission evacuated about 250 Japanese soldiers by submarine to Fergusson Island where they were taken by cruiser to Rabaul 8 The remaining Japanese defenders were mopped up and the island declared secured by 27 October 8 The occupation force remained on the island until 28 December 1942 During that time they used deception and camouflage to make the Japanese believe that a brigade sized force was occupying the island They fabricated a ghost force of dummy structures including a hospital anti aircraft guns constructed of logs pointed at the sky and barricades of jungle vines which looked like barbed wire They also lit fires to appear as cooking fires for large numbers of soldiers and sent messages consistent with what a brigade of soldiers would be expected to send 9 During that time an American airfield engineer reported that a temporary airfield could be constructed for emergency use on the site of an existing mission airstrip on the northeastern plain near Vivigani He also recommended that a permanent 6 000 foot long 1 800 m airstrip be constructed 10 The Fifth Air Force directed the RAAF s No 9 Group to attack enemy bases in New Britain To facilitate this General Headquarters Operations Instructions No 31 dated 11 March 1943 set out that Goodenough Island which was garrisoned by an Australian infantry battalion group with attached service groups and two Radar stations was to be reinforced and prepared as an air force operating base with two landing strips initially suitable for fighters but with one being upgraded to handle heavy bombers The fighter strip was available on 15 June By the end of July there were 3 614 RAAF personnel on the island 11 The bomber strip was completed on 20 October 12 although it is recorded that the first offensive use of the airfield was on 17 May by Beauforts of No 100 Squadron RAAF As a part of Operation Cartwheel Vivigani Airfield became an important staging point for Australian and American operations in the South West Pacific Area an objective of which was to attack Rabaul in New Britain the stronghold of Imperial Japanese forces RAAF Units active on Goodenough Island 13 Edit Squadron Aircraft6 General reconnaissance Bomber Squadron Hudson Beaufort8 Bomber Squadron Beaufort22 Bomber Squadron Boston30 Attack Squadron Beaufighter75 Fighter Squadron Kittyhawk76 Fighter Squadron Kittyhawk77 Fighter Squadron Kittyhawk79 Fighter Squadron Spitfire100 Bomber squadron Beaufort8 Communication Unit Tiger Moth Boomerang Dornier Do 24 Vengeance Walrus Catalina Beaufort Beaufreighter BeaufighterRAAF logistics units active on Goodenough Island 14 Edit Squadron4 Mobile Works Squadron Renamed 4 Airfield Construction Squadron July 1944 5 Mobile Works Squadron Renamed 5 Airfield Construction Squadron July 1944 7 Mobile Works Squadron Renamed 7 Airfield Construction Squadron July 1944 26 Air Stores Park16 Stores Unit Renamed 6 Stores and Shipping Unit April 1943 7 Transportation and Movements Office10 Repair and Salvage Unit26 Repair and Salvage Unit2 Medical Receiving Station6 Medical Receiving StationCulture EditThe four languages of Goodenough Bwaidoka Iduna Diodio and Buduna or Wataluma belong to the Milne Bay Family of Austronesian languages The dominant language Bwaidoka was adopted as a lingua franca by the Wesleyan Methodist Mission at the turn of the century At the 2000 census the population was 20 814 15 List of villages working clockwise around Goodenough Island starting at Vivigani Airfield on the northeast coastal plain as shown in Google Earth Vivigani this is not an actual village per se although there are several in the vicinity of the airstrip Bolubolu the administrative centre Mataita Faiava Wailagi United Church mission station and 1 6 Elementary School Wagifa Kilia Lauwela Auwale Debenefue Diodio Tatala Waibula Ufaufa Wataluma Mission and Plantation Ulutuya MissionProtected area Edit The Oya Madawa Wildlife Management Area in the centre of the island has an area of 22 840 hectares 56 400 acres It provides a critical landscape function with a relatively high number of endemic endangered and vulnerable species The small black dorcopsis Dorcopsis atrata the only wallaby known to be endemic to a Pacific island is endangered and needs careful management 16 Another species the agile wallaby Macropus agilis was abundant but cannot be found today 17 See also EditBattle of Goodenough Island List of volcanoes in Papua New Guinea Goodenough Island Rural LLGReferences Edit http islands unep ch IHD htm 850 Papua New Guinea Goodenough Island Archived from the original on 23 December 2010 Retrieved 10 March 2016 Paul I Forster amp Malcolm W Smith 2010 Citrus wakonai P I Forst amp M W Sm Rutaceae a new species from Goodenough Island Papua New Guinea PDF Austrobaileya 8 2 133 138 JSTOR 41739123 Mike Saalfeld The Quest for Wakonai page19 homecitrusgrowers co uk history and cultural relations Goodenough Island Retrieved 10 March 2016 Bruni d Entrecasteaux Bromilow William Edward 1857 1929 Biography William Edward Bromilow Australian Dictionary of Biography National Centre of Biography Australian National University Retrieved 10 March 2016 a b c d Dunn Richard L September 11th 1942 The Rest of the Story j aircraft com Retrieved 29 June 2014 Elias Ann Camouflage Australia Art Nature Science and War Sydney Sydney University Press 2011 pp xix 155 162 Pacific Wrecks Retrieved 10 March 2016 Home Australian War Memorial PDF Retrieved 10 March 2016 5ACSGOODENOUGH Retrieved 15 December 2018 http ajrp awm gov au AJRP remember nsf 709e228818bdf765ca256a9a001dad4d e3366413732a55fcca256b5a0018e722 OpenDocument amp Highlight 0 goodenough http ajrp awm gov au AJRP remember nsf 709e228818bdf765ca256a9a001dad4d 733fe68936726620ca256b5a001955cc OpenDocument amp Highlight 0 goodenough Travel and Tourism in Papua New Guinea Retrieved 10 March 2016 Leary T Wright D Hamilton S Singadan R Menzies J Bonaccorso F Helgen K Seri L Allison A James R 2016 Dorcopsis atrata IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016 e T6794A21952571 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2016 2 RLTS T6794A21952571 en Retrieved 12 November 2021 404 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Cite uses generic title help External links Edit Goodenough Global Volcanism Program Smithsonian Institution Retrieved 25 June 2021 Goodenough Island UN system wide Earthwatch website Jenness M A and Rev A Ballantyne 1920 The Northern D Entrecasteaux Oxford University Press Pacific Wrecks website University of New South Wales News Archived 15 June 2011 at the Wayback MachineCoordinates 9 22 S 150 16 E 9 367 S 150 267 E 9 367 150 267 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Goodenough Island amp oldid 1127532395, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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