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Encyclopedia :
L :
LE :
LED :
Ledo Road |
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Ledo RoadThe Ledo Road was built during World War II so that the Western Allies could continue to supply the Chinese after the Japanese cut the Burma Road. It was renamed the Stilwell Road in early 1945 at the suggestion of Chiang Kai-shek. See also the airlift over The Hump. Before the war the British had prospected the Patkai Mountains for a road from Assam into north Burma and British engineers, had surveyed the route for a road for the first eighty miles. After the British had been pushed back out of most of Burma by the Japanese this became a much more important priority . Building the Ledo RoadOn the December 1 1942, British General Sir Archibald Wavell, the supreme commander of the Far Eastern Theatre, agreed with General Stilwell to make the Ledo Road an American NCAC operation. It was built under the direction of General Stilwell from the railhead at Ledo (Assam, now in Arunachal Pradesh, India) to Bhamo on the Burma Road so that supplies could reach the railhead at Mogaung. It was built by 15,000 American soldiers, (60% of whom were African-Americans), and 35,000 local workers at a cost of US$150150 Million. 1,100 Americans died during the construction and many more locals. As most of Burma was in Japanese hands it was not possible to acquire information as to the topography, soils, and river behaviour before construction started. This information had to be acquired as the road was constructed. General Stilwell had organized a 'Service of Supply' (SOS) under the command of Major General Raymond A. Wheeler, a high profile US Army Engineer and assigned him to look after the construction of the Ledo road. Major General Wheeler in turn, assigned responsibility of base commander for the road construction to Colonel John C. Arrowsmith. Later, he was replaced by Colonel Lewis A. Pick, an expert US Army engineer. Work started on the first 103 mile (166 km) section of the road in December 1942, followed a steep, narrow trail through unsurveyed territory from Ledo, across the Patkai Mountains, and down to Shingbwiyang, Burma. Sometimes rising as high as 4,500 feet (1400 m), the road required the removal of earth at the rate of 100,000 cubic feet per mile (1800 m³/km). Step gradients, hairpin curves and shear drops of 200 feet (60 m), all surrounded by a thick rain forest was the norm for this first section. The first bulldozer reached Shingbwiyang on 27 December 1943, three days ahead of schedule. The building of this section allowed much needed supplies to flow to the troops engaged in attacking the Japanese 18th Division, which was defending the Northern area of Burma with their strongest forces around the towns of Kamaing, Mogaung and Myitluina. Before the Ledo road reached Shingbwiyang Allied troops, (the majority of whom were American trained Chinese Divisions), had been totally dependent on supplies flown in over the Patkai Mountains. As the Japanese were force to retreat south so the Ledo road was extended. This was made considerably easier from Shingbwiyang by the presence of a fair weather road built by the Japanese and the Ledo road generally followed the Japanses trace. As the road was built, two 10 cm (4 inch) fuel pipe lines were laid side by side so that fuel could be piped instead of trucked along the road. After the initial section too Shingbwiyang, more sections followed: Warazup, Myitkyina and Bhamo, 372 miles (600 km) from Ledo. At that point the road joined a spur of the old Burma road and althought improvements to further sections followed the road was passable. The spur passed through Namkham 439 from Ledo and finally at the Mong-Yu road junction, 465 miles (748 km) from Ledo, the Ledo road met the Burma road. To get to the Mong-Yu junction the Ledo road had spaned 10 major rivers and 155 secondary streams, averaging one bridge every 2.8 miles (4.5 km). For the first convoys, if they turned right, they were on their way to Lashhio 100 miles (160 km) to the south through Japananses occupied Burma, if they turned left Wanling lay 60 miles (100 km) to the North just over the Chinese Burma boarder. In late 1944, barely two years after Stilwell accepted responsibility for building the Ledo Road, it connect to the Burma Road though some sections of the road beyond Myitkyina at Hukawng Valley were under repairing due to heavy monsoon water, and it become a highway stretching from Assam, India to Kunming, China 1,079 miles (1736 km) length. On January 12, 1945, the first convoy of 113 vehicles was led by General Pick from Ledo reached Kunming, China on February 4, 1945. Over the next seven months 35,000 tons of supplies in 5,000 vehicles were carried along it. There was a mile sign at the start of the Ledo Road with the following information When flying over the Hukawng Valley during the monsoon, Mountbatten asked his staff what was the name of the river below them. An American officer replied, "That's not a river, it's the Ledo Road." American Army units assigned to the Ledo RoadThe units initally assinged to the initial section were: In 1943 they were joined by: Work continued through 1944 in late December it was opened for the transport of logistics. In January 1945, four of the black EABs (along with three white battalions) continued working on the now renamed Stilwell Road, improving and widening it. The British strategic viewWinston Churchill said of the project "an immense, laborious task, unlikely to be finished until the need for it has passed". The British General William Slim who commanded the British Fourteenth Army to whom the American General Joseph Stilwell reported during the campaign to liberate North Burma, during which the first and most difficult section of the Ledo road was built, expressed the British view on the building of Ledo Road in the definitive book on the Burma Campaign called 'Defeat into Victory, He writes at the start of CHAPTER XII: THE NORTHERN FRONT
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