Above, the three Hario Wireless Towers near Sasebo City in 2007. Photo by Armand Vaquer. |
Back in April 2007, I made a tour of kaiju sites in Kyushu that included Mount Aso Volcano National Park, the Saikai Bridge near Sasebo, Fukuoka Tower and Fukuoka Yahoo! Dome.
Mount Aso and the Saikai Bridge were featured in the 1956 Toho production, Rodan.
While I was at the Saikai Bridge (that crosses the Hario Straits), I also saw the nearby Hario Wireless Towers. Those were also shown in Rodan.
Above, the Hario Towers are shown in "Rodan" with one of the Rodans flying in the background. Toho Co., Ltd. |
The Mainichi Daily News reported that one of the three Hario Wireless Towers is now open to the public for tours:
SASEBO, Nagasaki -- One of three antique radio towers here that played a small but important role in the beginning of Japan's war against the United States was opened to visitors on June 9.
The radio towers, known as the Hario broadcasting station and named an important cultural asset by the government in March, were part of the former Imperial Japanese Navy's communications network, and are thought to have broadcast the code phrase "Niitakayama nobore" ("climb Mount Niitaka") to launch the 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii.
The towers, each 136 meters tall, form a triangle 300 meters on a side with telegraph wires strung between them.The Hario Wireless Towers and the nearby Saikai Bridge are spotlighted in The Monster Movie Fan's Guide To Japan on page 48.
To read the full Mainichi article, go here.
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