I had exactly the same question back in may when walking here. Luckily I was with a friend who was more persistent than me - he decided it was a ventilation shaft, and looked around for evidence.
If you look down over the front of the railing, the evidence is clear! Here's the view into the structure. You can see the square opening in the ceiling at the back, which leads up to the filled-in block you saw up on top.
Here's the view from the doorway showing the trench, then a little way along the trench there is a small trench to the right, then there's the view looking back towards the door.
'Not the slightest chance' has an entry for 6:30am on 19 Dec 1941. It describes two platoons of the Winnipeg Grenadiers heading towards the summit of Jardine's Lookout. They fight the Japanese and take the hill, but are eventually beaten off by further Japanese attacks. It doesn't mention anything about who was manning this structure before that time though, which seems strange.
At about 0800 hrs [on 19th Dec] all communications with RA Central at Wong Nei Chong were cut. [...] Lt B E Platts who had been manning an Observation Post in the area of Jardine's Lookout was also killed in this vicinity.
This is also reported in the 08.00 entry for 19 Dec in Not The Slightest Chance. I wonder if the Observation Post mentioned here is the structure at the summit of Jardine's Lookout?
We walked past here last weekend, and stopped for a short while to take a few more photos. First is the view from inside, looking out. You can see that the original neat opening had been blown in:
Tom Marsh was one of the Canadian soldiers who defended this hilltop. Chapter 4 of his memoirs describe that time in detail, including the explosion that likely made the hole in the front wall shown in the photo above:
Suddenly there came a terrific explosion. They had scored a direct hit on the pillbox. I was blown into the connecting tunnel flat on my face. I felt someone rush over me as I crawled out into the main trench. When I reached the end of a small branch trench I lost consciousness.
[...] I again passed out and remembered no more until I awoke to a fine drizzle of rain in the darkness.
There was no movement from the pillbox. All was quiet. Only the dead remained. There was just enough light for me to see my way around. I sat up. It was cold. This and the rain had no doubt revived me. I found that I had little or no use of my left arm. Later I learned it had been broken when I was blown out of the blockhouse. After a while, when the sky became a little lighter, I struggled to my feet and made my way back into the pillbox. It was deserted and partly collapsed.
The layout he describes, including the exit trench and small side trench, are all still clearly visible today.
The other thing I noticed on this visit was the front corner:
Whereas the pillboxes have stones embedded in gravel as a form of camouflage, this building has raised bumps of concrete. The other place we've seen this is on the observation post at High West. I guess that the pillboxes and observation posts were either built at different times, or by different contractors. So in future if we see this 'raised bump' appearance, we can guess it is one of the Royal Artillery's observation posts we're looking at.
Hi all. Very interesting input. I have been down the historical trail past JL01/2, but have never been to this AOP. To get to this AOP, do I just take a right at the fork past the old anti-aircraft battery, instead of going down the historical trail on Jardines Catchwater?
It's up on the peak of Jardine's Lookout. Both the Wilson Trail and the Hong Kong Trail use the same path up to the top, so follow the signs for either of those.
Comments
Observation post at Jardine's Lookout
Hi T,
I had exactly the same question back in may when walking here. Luckily I was with a friend who was more persistent than me - he decided it was a ventilation shaft, and looked around for evidence.
If you look down over the front of the railing, the evidence is clear! Here's the view into the structure. You can see the square opening in the ceiling at the back, which leads up to the filled-in block you saw up on top.
Here's the view from the doorway showing the trench, then a little way along the trench there is a small trench to the right, then there's the view looking back towards the door.
'Not the slightest chance' has an entry for 6:30am on 19 Dec 1941. It describes two platoons of the Winnipeg Grenadiers heading towards the summit of Jardine's Lookout. They fight the Japanese and take the hill, but are eventually beaten off by further Japanese attacks. It doesn't mention anything about who was manning this structure before that time though, which seems strange.
I'm guessing it was an observation post, like the one on the slope of High West.
MrB
Jardine's Lookout
The Royal Artillery's war diary mentions:
This is also reported in the 08.00 entry for 19 Dec in Not The Slightest Chance. I wonder if the Observation Post mentioned here is the structure at the summit of Jardine's Lookout?
Observation post at Jardine's Lookout
We walked past here last weekend, and stopped for a short while to take a few more photos. First is the view from inside, looking out. You can see that the original neat opening had been blown in:
Tom Marsh was one of the Canadian soldiers who defended this hilltop. Chapter 4 of his memoirs describe that time in detail, including the explosion that likely made the hole in the front wall shown in the photo above:
The layout he describes, including the exit trench and small side trench, are all still clearly visible today.
The other thing I noticed on this visit was the front corner:
Whereas the pillboxes have stones embedded in gravel as a form of camouflage, this building has raised bumps of concrete. The other place we've seen this is on the observation post at High West. I guess that the pillboxes and observation posts were either built at different times, or by different contractors. So in future if we see this 'raised bump' appearance, we can guess it is one of the Royal Artillery's observation posts we're looking at.
How to get to this AOP
Hi all. Very interesting input. I have been down the historical trail past JL01/2, but have never been to this AOP. To get to this AOP, do I just take a right at the fork past the old anti-aircraft battery, instead of going down the historical trail on Jardines Catchwater?
Thanks
It's up on the peak of
It's up on the peak of Jardine's Lookout. Both the Wilson Trail and the Hong Kong Trail use the same path up to the top, so follow the signs for either of those.
The OSM map gives a clearer view of the paths:
http://gwulo.com/node/2347?u=1#15/22.2626/114.1983/Map_by_OSM-Markers/100
Thanks for the help! Im going
Thanks for the help! Im going to visit the Japanese tunnels above Jardines picnic bungalow, then maybe get up to the AOP this weekend.
--Hopefully I can visit the Shouson Hill AA battery as well and make a post on it as you mentioned before.
Thanks
Aidan