Kerevat Airfield

Kerevat Airfield (prewar: Tavilo Plantation; variant: "Keravat") was an aerodrome located near Kerevat, East New Britain province, Papua New Guinea. Situated on the northern coast, it was 13 miles south west of Rabaul. The airfield was constructed by the Imperial Japanese in World War II during September 1943. Kerevat Airfield was neutralized by Allied Powers' air bombing from 1944 who ran missions on the airfield between June 20, 1943 and May 16, 1944. The airfield was abandoned after the cessation of hostilities; however, the airstrip is still visible.

Structure
The airfield's single runway was located on Ataliklikun Bay 6 miles east of Vunakanauwas. The runway was 4800 ft long and 400 ft wide and ran parallel to the Keravat River in an east-west direction, to the southwest of Rabaul. It was not an all weather concrete runway. Though the runway was upgraded, it was never fully operational and its use was limited to crash landing as the airstrip, riddled with problems, was generally subject to drainage and other engineering problems, making it difficult for use for regular flight operations.

World War II history
The 552nd Kokutai (D3A2 Val) unit was stationed here from December 18, 1943 to January 25, 1944. There were nine bombings of the airfield during the period June 20, 1943 to May 16, 1944 by American missions; these bombings were on June 20, 1943 by 13th Air Force B-24s; on February 22, 1944 by 13th AF B-24s, with fighter escorts; on February 23, 1944 by ten 13th AF B-25s; April 17, 1944 by ten 13th AF fighter bombers, that pounded the runway; April 18, 1944 twelve 13th AF B-25 and nine fighter-bombers which failed to bomb Rapopo, instead bombing the airstrip at Keravat; April 20, 1944 by forty 13th AF fighter bombers; April 22, 1944 by 13th AF B-25s; and on May 10, 1944 by 13th AF fighters on a sweep, which hit trucks; and on May 16, 1944 by 13th AF fighter bombers which hit trucks and a saw mill was also damaged. The five airports that provided umbrella type defense to the Rabaul airport and the capital town, the stronghold of the Japanese forces during the war, were Kerevat, Lakuani, Vunakanau and Tobera; all of them were frequently bombed by allied forces. Two “Flying Nightmares” PBJ-1s bombed Kerevat and the other airports with 100 pound bombs so that Japanese fighters could not use them.