The Aleutians
The Lands of 50 mph Fog
A SOLDIER’S FLAG
Home From Attu After 60 years!
Introduction by Russ Marvin
Stratford, CT
ramarvin@yahoo.com
In August of 2000, having recently returned
from my visit to Attu, I spotted an item for sale
on eBay which I thought had great historical
interest - a signed Japanese flag from the
Battle of Attu. I successfully bid for the flag.
This flag had been brought back from Attu by Edwin Trebian of La
Mesa, California, who was stationed on Attu right after the Battle of
Attu ended. In a telephone conversation with Ed, he told me that he
had always wanted to have the writing on the flag translated, and
see if the flag could be returned to the family of the Japanese
soldier. The years went by, and he just never got around to it. He
finally decided to sell the flag to raise money for the local Shriners.
(Photo #1: The Flag)
I contacted the Museum of the Aleutians
in Dutch Harbor to see if they would be
interested in adding the flag to their
collection. They agreed. The donation of
this flag to the Museum set in motion an
amazing series of events. Rather than
attempt to tell the story of this flag
myself, I am presenting an excellent article from the Dutch Harbor
Fisherman. To describe events in Japan, I am including an email
from Mr. Satomi Yamamoto, who was instrumental in the efforts to
locate the widow, and arrange for the return of the flag. (Photo #2:
Presentation Ceremony - Dutch Harbor, June 12, 2002 - photo
courtesy of Anne Rowland Feb. 2001,)
The efforts of many people were
involved in this project, and I would
like to express my thanks to Edwin
Trebian, Anne Rowland, former
Curator of the Museum of the
Aleutians, Dr. Rick Knecht, Director
of the Museum, Mya Renken, Director
of the Unalaska Convention and
Visitors Bureau, Satomi Yamamoto of Marketing Garden, Ltd.,
Captain Shirakawa of the Nippon Maru, and the many other
dedicated employees of the Mitsui OSK Passenger Line, Ltd. (Photo
#3: Presentation Ceremony - Dutch Harbor - photo courtesy of Anne
Rowland. left to right: Yoshi of Westward Seafoods, Captain
Shirakawa of the Nippon Maru, Katherine Grimnes, Edwin Trebian,
Chief Pursor Ichiro from the Nippon Maru, and Unalaska Mayor Pro-
Tem Paul Larson.
The following article by Sarah Burridge is from the Dutch Harbor
Fisherman, Feb. 21, 2002, and is reproduced with permission of the
Editor, Mr. Jeff Richardson.
Rising Sun, flag of honor and luck, to return home to family of slain
soldier
Carried by a Japanese soldier at the Battle of Attu, a simple silk flag,
white with a brilliant red disk in the center, bore witness to one of
the bloodiest battles of the Pacific theater during World War II. A
symbol of luck and honor, the flag fulfilled its promise as the
Japanese held on to the forbidding island of Attu far longer than
anyone anticipated. In the end, those still standing chose to commit
suicide rather than die with dishonor.
The man who carried the Japanese flag, Tadashi Kikuchi (see note
1), died sometime during the nearly three weeks the battle raged. His
flag, taken by a souvenir right after the battle was over , went home
with an American soldier.
Sixty years later, thanks to a rather amazing series of twists of fate,
the flag will be returning to his widow and daughter in Akita, Japan
this August.
The flag had been in possession of Edwin Trebian of La Mesa, Calif.
since the war. Trebian had been a Navy supply clerk who landed on
Attu just after the battle concluded.
"There was a lot of that stuff around," Trebian said in a telephone
interview Monday. "They all wore them around their waist. U.S.
soldiers would just strip it right off 'em. Didn't really mean nothing to
them at the time - just a souvenir, you know ?"
Trebian's memories of Attu are still vivid.
"It was so dang cold up there," he said. "At first we had tents, and
then they built us these 12 to 13 man Quonset huts. That was better.
But the soldiers just had tents. They had a little stove to warm the
tent - it would be all muddy around the stove inside their tents. It
was pretty rough up there for some of them guys. Them soldiers
went through the dickens up there."
Trebian also remembered the dead.
"There were so many of them. The Army just cut a path with a
bulldozer and then shoved 'em in," he said. "There were so many.
What else could they do ? It's something I wouldn't care to go
through again."
And the flag haunted him.
"For so many years I always meant to contact the Japanese
embassy and find out about it. But you know how the years go by,
and you just never do some things," Trebian, now 80, said. He
eventually sold the flag to help raise money for the local Shriners.
The man who bought the flag was Russell Marvin. He felt the flag
would be better served on display in a museum rather than
languishing in private hands, and donated the flag to the Museum of
the Aleutians.
Museum staffers wondered about the writing on the flag, hoping it
might disclose its history. But the writing was in a form of Japanese
no longer used, and translation was difficult.
"A Japanese sailor happened along and came into the museum in
the summer of 2001," said Museum of the Aleutians Curator Anne
Rowland. "He translated the 1940's Japanese, and we had a name
and address."
Rick Knecht, the Museum Director, took the information to the World
War II Commemorative Commission to see if they might undertake
finding the family. The word about the flag was beginning to spread.
Mya Renken, Director of the Unalaska/Dutch Harbor Convention and
Visitors Bureau, was now aware of the flag. She was contacted by a
woman in Japan who was involved in the marketing of a Japanese
cruise ship, the Nippon Maru, which is scheduled to be in port here
in July, and Renken mentioned the flag. The woman's sister and her
husband just happened to live in Akita Japan, the very town noted
on the flag as where the dead soldier was from.
The couple in Akita went to their City Hall to check records. They
could not find the name. Then Renken forwarded images of the flag
via email. The name had been mistranslated. Another trip to City Hall
in Akita turned up not only Tadashi Kikuchi's widow, but a daughter
and several of the people who actually signed the flag as well.
In one final bit of fate, the cruise ship Nippon Maru is scheduled to
sail into Akita, Japan one month after calling at port here. The
captain of the ship said he would be honored to accept the flag on
behalf of the 78 year old widow, and would personally present it to
her in Japan.
"The way this has come together, it's just meant to be," said Renken.
"Mrs. Kikuchi and her daughter are really excited about it. They are
showing pictures of the flag to everyone."
The flag, known as a bunn-tchokyu in Japanese, was a standard part
of every Japanese soldier's kit. Of the 2,700 Japanese men
entrenched in the caves and tunnels above Massacre Bay
throughout the Battle of Attu, only 28 survived. At least one of those
said the only reason he was alive was the failure of the grenade he
held to his chest that day to explode.
There were more than 3,800 American casualties during the invasion
of Attu. The American dead numbered 549., while the extreme cold
took down 1,200 more. On the Japanese side, American burial
parties counted 2,351. Hundreds more were presumed already
buried. Only the battle for Iwo Jima had a higher percentage of
casualties.
The battle for Attu was supposed to take just a couple of days.
American soldiers landed at the beachead with just one K-ration
meal for a single day. They had been trained for war in North Africa,
a half a world away and in a climate as opposite the Aleutians as
possible. As their artillery and jeeps sank into the muskeg, it quickly
became a battle fought one man at a time. American forces, further
hampered by the lack of cover and persistent fog, slowly crawled up
Massacre Valley toward the Japanese, entrenched at the top.
Life at the top of the valley equally miserable. On May 22, the
Japanese commander learned that there was no hope of a rescue or
reinforcements from Tokyo. The next morning, he launched a
desperate charge of every man left standing straight down the
mountainside. The plan was to reach U.S. artillery near the bottom
and turn it against the American forces. If successful, it might buy
them time for a retreat or reinforcements.
They came close to succeeding. The Japanese force, in what is now
known as the Bonzai Charge of Attu, came screaming down the
mountain, killing everything in there way. They were finally turned
back by a contingent of Army engineers, the last men to stand
between the Japanese and the artillery.
In a stunning act of defiance and national honor, those Japanese left
committed suicide rather than be taken prisoner. The detention
camp that had been built at Dutch Harbor in anticipation of an
American victory stood empty.
Hundreds of American families mourned their dead. Thousands of
Japanese families mourned their losses. Among them was the
widow and child of Tadashi Kikuchi.
Sixty years later, one small part of history, one small part of a life
lost in a desperate battle over land almost forsaken by the
government that forced that battle will return home. The Rising Sun
will rise once again.
note 1: The name of the Japanese soldier was at first mistranslated
as Masatada Kikuchi. I have take the liberty of correcting the name
as it originally appeared in this article.
The following e-mail message was sent by Mr. Satomi Yamamoto of
Marketing Garden, Ltd., to Mya Renken, Director, Unalaska
Convention and Visitors Bureau on August 6, 2002
I just want to inform you that the
ceremony was very successful. After
the Captain returned the flag to Mrs.
Kikuchi, the press conference started.
We had six journalists from major
newspapers, two journalists from
major news agencies, four film crews
from local TV stations, and one
broadcaster from a local FM station.
Mrs. Kikuchi was wonderful, and well prepared to answer all the
journalists questions. Mrs. Kikuchi said, "First of all, thank you for
coming to the ceremony today, and thank you to everyone who
arranged this ceremony. When I got a call from Yamamoto-san who I
didn't know at all on Feb. 5, and was informed of the flag, I thought it
was a lie. Then I received a photo of the flag, and recognized that it
was not a lie. I felt I was dreaming. I have been thinking of the flag
whether I have been sleeping or waking until today." (Photo #4:
Presentation Ceremony in Akita, Japan - photo courtesy of Mutsui
OSK Passenger Line, Ltd. left to right: Mrs. Kikuchi's daughter,
Suzuki Megumi, Mrs.Kikuchi, Capt. Shirakawa of the Nippon Maru.)
When Mr. Kikuchi left his home for the war, his daughter was just 42
days old. Mrs. Kikuchi told me, wiping tears from her eyes, My
husband held my daughter tightly, and left the house for the war."
Mrs. Kikuchi was informed that her husband had died in the
Philippines, and was sent a bone fragment about the size of a chess
piece. Other than that, she had heard nothing about him. Mrs.
Kikuchi said, "I feel that my husband has finally come back to me."
After the press conference, Mitsui hosted a very nice lunch at a
private room on the Nippon Maru, followed by a tour of the ship. It
took about three hours for the entire ceremony which warmed
everyone's heart.
Mya-san, thank you very much for giving me this opportunity. Even
when I worked for Disney, I could never make someone's dream
come true, but I have helped Mrs. Kikuchi's dream to come true. I
would like to thank you, and anyone else related to this matter.
Satomi Yamamoto
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Photo captions and credits:
1) The Flag - photo by Russ Marvin
2) Presentation Ceremony - Dutch Harbor, June 12, 2002 - photo
courtesy of Anne Rowland
3) Presentation Ceremony - Dutch Harbor - photo courtesy of Anne
Rowland. Left to right: Yoshi of Westward Seafoods, Captain
Shirakawa of the Nippon Maru, Katherine Grimnes, Edwin Trebian,
Chief Pursor Ichiro from the Nippon Maru, and Unalaska Mayor Pro-
Tem Paul Larson.
4) Presentation Ceremony in Akita, Japan - photo courtesy of Mutsui
OSK Passenger Line, Ltd. Left to right: Mrs. Kikuchi's daughter,
Suzuki Megumi, Mrs.Kikuchi, Capt. Shirakawa of the Nippon Maru
Current Update: 28 Apr 2022
Last Updated: 18 Nov 2021
Originally published 17 September 2002