Historical information
Sketch Map of Bulldog-Wau Road New Guinea drawn to scale by 2/1 Aust Fd Coy dated 23.7.43 and signed by soldiers together with related newspaper article. Hand sketched by Peter Muncey VX10042 a Draughtsman who served in the Middle East Ceylon and New Guinea with the 2/2 and 2/1 Field Coy Royal Australian Engineers.
The sketch contains 26 signatures including:-
S/Sgt Raymond Hector Ibbotson NX14112 who served in the Middle East and New Guinea
Lt Col Jack Graham Wilson NX 130646
Significance
Bulldog Track also known as Bulldog-Wau road was longer, higher, steeper, wetter, colder and rougher than Kokoda Track. In 1943 Australian Army engineers; the 2/1 and 2/16 Field Company RAE, 9th Australian Field Company (AIF), veterans of Syria, Palestine, Egypt, Greece and Crete, the 1st and 3rd Australian Pack Transport Companies and local Papuan labour cut the road with pickaxes and dynamite over a period of eight months. During five months of operations over seventy per cent of the 2/1 Australian Field Company contracted malaria.Seventeen bridges were constructed; mostly single, but at least one with multiple spans. More than two thousand Australian army personnel and over two thousand Papuans and New Guineans were involved during nine months of construction. Thus the road, acclaimed as the greatest military engineering feat ever, was completed and for the only time in history motor vehicles crossed the high rugged mountains of Papua New Guinea.
Physical description
Carved brown timber frame with cream mount containing hand sketched map with soldiers signatures and two newspaper articles.
Inscriptions & markings
Sketch Map of Bulldog-Wau Road
23.7.43 2/1 Aust Fd Coy
Newspaper - Diggers pushed on with pick and shovel
Subjects
References
- Wau-Bulldog road, New Guinea Depicts part of the Wau-Bulldog Road passing over the top of a rock face between Secombe Camp and Herring Gorge.