Faha Massacre Site

Off Rt. 4, S of Pigua R., Merizo, Guam. County/parish: Guam.

Added to the National Register of Historic Places August 27, 1991. NRIS 91001091.

1 contributing site.

Also known as:

  • FAHA (66-06-1077)

From Wikipedia:

Faha Massacre Site

The Faha Massacre Site is located several hundred meters behind the Catholic cemetery in the village of Merizo on the United States island of Guam. The site is in a small grove of trees at the top of the rise behind the cemetery, demarcated by a perimeter of concrete pickets formed and painted to look like wood. An unmaintained trail leads to the site. A metal plaque mounted on a concrete block commemorates the thirty native Chamorro men who were slaughtered here on July 16, 1944, by members of the Imperial Japanese Army (IJA) during the Japanese occupation of the island during World War II. The IJA routinely forced Guam's native population to work on its construction projects. The men who were killed here were rounded up for a work crew; why they were killed is unclear, as there were no survivors. The massacre took place one day after the Tinta Massacre (in which 46 were killed), and about one week before the liberation of the island began.

The site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1991.

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National Park Service documentation: https://catalog.archives.gov/id/131517981