Borneo was a critical strategic target for Japan with its rich oil fields – essential for the Japanese war machine. It was the third largest island in the world, with a population of up to three million people – Borneo is one of the most culturally diverse islands in the world, home to a ‘mosaic’ of over 200 distinct ethnic sub-groups. The indigenous populations are known as ‘Dayak’ – a collective term for over 50 distinct ethnic groups (with sub-groups exceeding 200) primarily inhabiting the interior and riverine areas. In the 1940’s there was a growing Chinese community as well as Malays, along with the Dutch East Indies and British citizens. Coastal Borneo was developed, however the central area was not.
Prisoners at this camp endured extreme forced labor, starvation, and disease as POWs and civilians did throughout Borneo.
Batu Lintang housed both POWs and civilian internees (British, Dutch and women/children of other nationalities).
Of about 2000 British POWs incarcerated here, 2/3rds died.
The 2nd Battalion, 15th Punjab Regiment was sent to Sarawak to defend the territory arriving December 1941 from Singapore. The battalion consisted of approximately 1,000 men, including Punjabi Muslims, Sikhs, Khattacks, and Jats. These troops would be no match for 10,000 Japanese troops.
‘Sarfor ‘ ‘The defence plan for British Borneo, which had been devised in Singapore, was not afforded a high priority in terms of resources. Initially an infantry brigade was laid down as the minimum requirement for a successful defence, but finally this formation was reduced to one battalion with a few supporting engineers and artillerymen. It was decided not to defend North Borneo but to prepare a static defence around Kuching and its airfield in southwestern Sarawak. The Brunei and Miri oilfields were to be demolished before an enemy landing could seize them intact. Although Labuan Island was an important cable and wireless station, no attempt was made to defend it.
The 2nd Battalion of the 15th Punjab Regiment was selected to be the principal unit in Sarawak Force which was referred to as Sarfor. Besides the Punjabis, and the sappers and gunners Sarfor would contain the four local Sarawak state forces:
· The Sarawak Coastal Marine Service · The Sarawak Rangers · The Sarawak Armed Police · The Sarawak Volunteer Force
It was envisaged that Brunei, as part of Sarfor, would produce a unit of Volunteers. SARFOR was not allocated any dedicated air or naval units. Liaison with the Dutch forces across the land border was made but without much commitment from Singapore, despite the Dutch possessing military aeroplanes and vessels as well as ground forces.’
Borneo’s Key Oil Field Locations: and the British in Singapore did not believe it was worth protecting??
Tarakan (Northeast): A small island with high-quality oil that could be pumped directly into warships.
Miri (Northwest/Sarawak): One of the oldest oil fields, with about 300 wells.
Seria (Northwest/Brunei): Located 32 miles north of Miri, this was a major production site.
Lutong (Northwest/Sarawak): Contained the refinery centre for the Miri and Seria fields.
Balikpapan (East/Dutch Borneo): A major port and refining centre with advanced improvements made by the Dutch.
By 1943–1944, Borneo became one of Japan’s main sources of fuel, with Balikpapan providing 3,900,000 barrels (620,000 m3) of fuel oil to the Japanese war effort in 1943 alone.
Impact: Allied intelligence estimated that the Balikpapan refineries were producing half of Japan’s aviation fuel at that time.
Flying distances too great for bombing raids
Balikpapan facilities were heavily damaged by the Dutch pre 1942 Japanese invasion, and later by Allied bombing raids in 1943–1944, before Australian forces officially retook the area in July 1945.
Smaller fields included Tarakan and Seria, with the latter becoming the largest in the British Commonwealth by 1950.
The first successful bombing raid flying over 2,600 km took place August 13, 1943, with twelve US B-24 Liberators from the 380th Bombardment Group. Prior to this time, the distance was too great.
Batu Lintang Barracks was constructed 1940-41 for accommodatiion for the 2/15th Punjab Regiment and was completed by August 1942.
Japan’s invasion of North Borneo began in 19 January 1942 however they had earlier arrived 16 Dec 1941 at Miri, Sarawak. The Miri and Seria oilfields in Sarawak and Brunei were captured without much fuss in less than a fortnight of their initial landings off the north-west coast of Borneo in mid-December 1941. By the end of January 1942, the Dutch oilfields at Tarakan and Balikpapan were under Japanese control. By 1943 Bornean oil was contributing to the Japanese war effort.
The well regarded Punjab Regiment of 1,000 men fought against 10,000 Japanese soldiers 16 December 1941 at Miri.
The Japanese were able to capture Sarawak on Christmas Eve and those of the Punjab Regiment who survived were imprisoned at Lintang Camp, subjected to Japanese brutality from Kempetie. Camp 2 at Lintang Camp is significantly small for the Indian POWs however many of the Punbjab Indian POWs were sent out of Kuching on working parties, such as the photo below this group, which was sent to Balikpapan where large numbers perished.
Below: L to R: JEMADAR NAZARI SINGH; SUBADAH LABH SING and HAVILDAH BALIVANT RAI – 2/15TH POWS
Below: Pubjab soldiers formerly POWs at Balikpapan providing details to Australian forces.
BALIKPAPAN, BORNEO, 1945-08-07.
SIAR GUL, OF 2ND BATTALION, 15TH PUNJAB REGIMENT AND EX POW OF JAPANESE. THIS INDIAN UNIT FOUGHT AT KUCHING GARRISON UNTIL CAPTURED BY THE JAPANESE WHO SENT THEM TO BALIKPAPAN FOR MANUAL LABOUR IN 1943-06. SIXTY EIGHT MEMBERS OF THE UNIT ARE NOW WAITING AT 2/2ND CASUALTY CLEARING STATION FOR MEDICAL INSPECTION AND TREATMENT
Following the surrender of Borneo, the Japanese immediately proceeded to enlarge Lintang Barracks to accommodate up to 3,000 prisoners both military and civilians. The huts were palm-thatched buildings 98 feet long set in rows on low stilts surrounded by rolls of barbed wire. Each hut housed between 30-100 people.
Lintang was also the HQ for the Japanese prisons in Borneo. The Camp Commandant Lt. Col Suga Tatsuji, was in charge of all POWs in Borneo. Suga is regarded as lenient, sometimes even kind, especially to the children. He lived in a private house at Nanas Road, Kuching. The second in command is Lieutenant (Later Captain) Nagata who is very unlike Suga and was known for his brutality.
The main Japanese HQ for the 37th Army in the northwest was located at Jesselton (Kota Kinabalu, Sabah) led by Lieutenant-General Masao Baba. Other key Japanese command centres were located in Samarinda and Balikpapan in the south/east, where Vice-Admiral Michiaki Kamada commanded the forces.
Above: SAMARINDA, BORNEO. 1945-09-13. THE JAPANESE HEADQUARTERS BUILDINGS ON THE BANKS OF THE RIVER. (We acknowledge and thank AWM for these photographs)
BALIKPAPAN, BORNEO, 1945-09. AERIAL VIEW OF BALIKPAPAN HARBOUR OUT TO BALIKPAPAN POINT SHOWING DAMAGE TO THE WHARVES AND SHORE AREA (DONOR: MUSEUMS AND ART GALLERIES OF THE N.T.)
Above: KUCHING FORCE. LINTANG PRISONER OF WAR BARRACKS. PHOTOGRAPH TAKEN FROM CAMP GUARD HOUSE LOOKING UP THE ROAD TO THE ADMINISTRATIVE BUILDINGS. (Thanks to AWM)
There were 9 individual Prisoner groups accommodated in this complex which covered 50 acres and included Japanese HQ in Borneo. The numbers varied regularly with the movement of work parties.
There were prisoners of many nationalities: British, Australian, Dutch, Indian, Chinese and Indonesians captured either Java or Singapore. There are also civilian prisoners (mostly European) including women and children. There was total of 280 women internees of which 160 are nuns, 85 lay women and 34 children. Boys 10 years and over are sent to adult male prison. Each prisoner has an area of 6ft X 4ft for their themself and their possessions.
All prisoners were answerable to their appointed camp master or mistress who in turn liaised with the Japanese Commandant.
The Japanese separated the Australian Officers from their soldiers of ‘B’ and ‘E’ Forces at Sandakan POW Camp and sent to Kuching to Camp 7 Batu Lintang arriving 22 October 1942. Kuching is 22 miles up the Sarawak River and the men were taken by truck to their camp Their journey on a steamer was relatively comfortable compared with other journeys. Seven Australian officers were originally shipped from Sandakn to Kuching, including two officers from 2/4th – Johnny Morrison & Brian Walton. Both survived to return home. The numbers of Australian officers POWs would increase with time. At the end of war, there were 178 Australian Officers.
Below: Group of Australian Officer POWs at Kuching.
The one thing all the prisoners suffered at Batu Lintang is a very grave shortage of food, becoming less and less as the war dragged on resulting in terrible illnesses and deaths.
Below: Sandakan and Berhala Island. The local European men and women arrested by the Japanese were imprisoned on Beharla. This is where the Underground Radio operated to assist Australian POWs of ‘B’ and ‘E’ Forces.
‘E’ Force was accommodated at Berhala for about 6 weeks waiting for their Sandakan camp accommodation to be completed. During the first few weeks two Australian groups successfully escaped Berhala. These escapes were entirely due to the essential assistance of the Sandakan underground Group. Both groups reached the Philippines.
Above: The wharves Sandakan pre WW2
Above: Government House Sandakan, constructed 1907. This is where the European women and their children, including internationally known author Agnes Newton Keith and her young son, gathered here waiting for the Japanese to arrive – who when they walked in immediately began taking their watches and personal items. This procedure was widespread.
Above: Aerial photo taken Sept 1945 of Lintang Barracks built over 50 acres.
Above: This majestic home once belonged to the late Tan Choon. Between 1942-1945 it became Kempetei’s HQ in Kuching.
Following the Japanese invasion at Sandakan the European civilians, families with children included, were incarcerated on Berhala Island where they were never supplied sufficient food. Berhala was 8km from Sandakan – small forested island of 5 hectares with prominent cliffs at the northern end) guarded by local constabulary and Japanese soldiers. It continued to be used as a leper colony.
A local Sandakan secret society organised to regularly send food, medicine and necessities. At the top of this organisation was Australian-born Dr. James Taylor, chief medical Officer, Sandakan Hospital and his wife Celia Taylor – who were not initially incarcerated at Berhala however they were sentenced to Outram Road Gaol, Singapore at the trials Kuching for their roles assisting local civilians on Berhala and Australian POWs.
Other players in the clandestine group included Mr. G. Mavor, Manager and Chief Engineer of the Sandakan Electric Supply and his wife, both confined to the powerhouse bungalow by the Japanese. Also Mr. A. E. Phillips, Manager of the British North Borneo Trading Company and his Malayan wife who were permitted to carry on with their lives as usual, Dr J.F. Laband, Dental Surgeon, Jewish-German refugee from Nazi Germany, Dr. ‘Val’ Stookes, local GP and his sister Dr Stookes (Val Stookes was murdered by Japanese 6 July 1945 – one of the Keningau’s Brave Five Please read further)
Amongst those incarcerated on Berhala:
Major Rice Oxley, who was also Chief of the Volunteer Forces and was Chief of Police, requested the three junior officers to communicate with Dr James Taylor. Rice Oxley also asked them to communicate with POWs interned at Mile 8 POW Camp (‘B’ Force).
Below: Major Alan Rice-Oxley with his son.
When construction of Batu Lintang was completed, the citizens taken prisoners were moved from Berhala Island to the other side of Borneo in January 1943, they continued to be separated, i.e. the men and women’s Huts/Camp. The women to Camp 1 and the male civilians to Camp 4. Lintang covered more than 50 acres of land and also accommodated up to 3,000 POWS
At No. 1 Camp there where 280 women, including 180 nuns from Kuching and approximately 250 male civilian internees (excluding Roman Catholic Mission personnel) were accommodated separately.
The following information is from the book ‘Three Came Home’ by Agnes Newton Keith who wrote a very true and often detailed account of her life and that of her very young son George – first at Berhala Island, Sandakan and then Lintang. She was constantly looking for food for young son. George was not even two when he and his mother became POWs. Agnes Keith and mothers worried about the physical development of their young children receiving so little food. The women were sent daily to labour in the fields outside the camp where the Japanese planned to grow food. The work was demanding.
Her husband Harry Keith was interned in the men’s camp. The men/husbands were only rarely allowed to meet with their families, and then it was a very short time.
Harry Keith was sent to the Lintang Camp ‘gaol’ for an unknown misdeamor. It was here Harry like other prisoners were locked into cages. This would put the wives through terrible emotional turmoil because they would hear about it via the ‘grapevine.’ Many men sent to the camp ‘gaol’ perished.
Initially the Camp Master for the women’s camp was Sister Bernadine from the Kuching convent. This fragile looking English-born woman was in charge of the entire female community. The Sisters were disciplined, well organised and ‘outwardly’ accepted the Japanese with good grace and more obedience than any civilian woman. Even better the Sisters acted as if they took the Japanese seriously.
Another women was elected to support Sister Bernadine was Dorie Adams from Jesselton, wife of the British Commandant of Armed Constabulary – Borneo’s only armed constabulary. Dorie was particularly shy and quiet. Most importantly she was a great humanitarium.
Sadly Sister Bernadine became ill (and never returned to her role). She was permitted by Col Suga to return to her Kuching Convent, where she could be looked after by the Chinese nuns. Col Suga brought her back to Lintang for one occasion to spend time with the Sisters of her convent, on the date of The Feast of Assumption, then she was returned by Suga and his car to the convent.
Dorie Adams then became Camp Master for a short time before the Japanese installed a spy as Camp Master. The only other woman permitted to deal directly with the Japanese was Dr. Gibson (a female medical doctor).
Below: Freedom at last – Australian soldiers marching at Kuching.
Above: KUCHING, SARAWAK. 1945-09-18. AUSTRALIAN SOLDIERS ASSISTING A GROUP OF NUNS ABOARD AN RAAF DOUGLAS C47 DAKOTA AIRCRAFT. THE NUNS, ALL EX INTERNEES OF THE JAPANESE, WERE BEING EVACUATED TO LABUAN.
Below: Kuching being visited by Australian troops
Above: Japanese preparing to depart Kuching with many interested and probably happy locals looking on.
Above: camp commander, Lt.-Col. Tatsuji Suga (right) with Brigadier Thomas Eastick (left) and Lt.-Col. A. W. Walsh (centre) shortly after the liberation of Batu Lintang on 11 September 1945. Suga killed himself five days later.
Following the unconditional surrender of Japan 15 August 1945, Lintang camp was liberated on 11 September 1945 by the Australian 9th Division. The camp population was 2,024, of whom 1,392 were POWs, including 395 male civilian internees and 237 were civilian women and children.
The first Allied prisoners held in the camp were about 340 British and Indian soldiers who were interned there in mid-March 1942. In time, it held both Allied POWs and Allied civilian internees. Local Sarawakians including ethnic Chinese were not interned in the camp, although some were imprisoned in Kuching jail. Allied civilian prisoners came almost exclusively from different territories on Borneo: from North Borneo (now Sabah), from Brunei, from the Straits Settlements island of Labuan, and from Sarawak, all of which were under British control, and from Dutch Borneo (now Kalimantan). In contrast, the POWs were brought to Batu Lintang from places such as mainland Malaya and Java as well as from Borneo. Many spent time at transit or temporary camps, such as the one at Berhala Island, North Borneo, prior to their transfer to Batu Lintang.
KUCHING, SARAWAK, BORNEO. 1945-09-22. KUCHING FORCE. AT BAZAAR WHARF. IN THE FOREGROUND ARE JAPANESE AND AUSTRALIAN TROOPS. NATIVES CROWDED THE NEARBY WHARF TO SEE THE DISARMING AND SEARCHING OF THE JAPANESE BEFORE THEY WERE ALLOWED TO PROCEED UPSTREAM TO BAU. (PHOTOGRAPHER SERGEANT F. A. C. BURKE)
Below: Map of Borneo showing Kuching, Jesselton, Tarakan, Sandakan and Balikpapan.
JESSELTON
ABOVE: POW accommodation Jesselton
BELOW: Jesselton Pre WW2
BALIKPAPAN
BALIKPAPAN, BORNEO. 1945-07-01. FROM A GUN EMPLACEMENT ON A HILL OVERLOOKING THE RUINS OF THE FORMER DUTCH BARRACKS, AN AUSTRALIAN SOLDIER ARMED WITH AN OWEN SUB MACHINE WATCHES JAPANESE POSITIONS. IN THE BACKGROUND MANY OF THE LANDING CRAFT INVOLVED IN THE LANDING LIE OFF-SHORE. (NAVAL HISTORICAL COLLECTION)
This is the story of two young men who in the face of danger committed themselves to the secret Sandakan underground network providing food, medicines and necessities firstly to the incarcerated Europeans on Berhala Island and then to the Australian POWs.
In July 1943 the network was betrayed.
The Kempetei vigorously pursued and arrested those they considered guilty inside the POW camp and those guilty residing amongst the population of Sandakan’s civilians and Constabularly. They also harassed and threatened their families and children.
Those arrested were questioned, brutally tortured and beaten on a daily basis using the Kempetei’s specialised methods for three months, after which they were shipped, many in small cages to Kempetei HQ, Kuching, Sarawak where their treatment of daily torture and beatings continued until they faced the military Japanese court.
It was here, Captain Lionel Matthews, Australian POW found guilty was sentenced to death – was executed on 2 March 1944. The remaining Australian POWs were sentenced to Outram Road Gaol, Singapore.
Also on 2nd March 1944 the following eight young and brave men faced execution by their Japanese captors. Those not executed were either sentenced to Outram Road Gaol, Singapore or sent to the gaol at Kuching where another five men died.
The “Heroes’ Grave” plaque reads:
IN MEMORY OF EIGHT GALLANT MEN OF ALL RACES WHO, LOYAL TO THE CAUSE OF FREEDOM RENDERED ASSISTANCE TO ALLIED POWs AT SANDAKAN CAMP, AND THE FIVE WHO DIED IN PRISON FOR THE SAME REASON.
1. JEMADAR OJAGER SINGH
2. ALEXANDER CLARENCE LEONARD FUNK (see Funk Family below)
3. SERGEANT ABIN
4. ERNESTO LAGAN
5. HENG JOO MING
6. WONG MOO SING
7. FELIX AZCONA (Jnr) Supplied Radio parts
8. MATUSUP BIN GUNGAU (aka MUTUSUP GUNGAU)
DIED IN PRISON.
1. SOH KIM SENG
2. AMIGO BIN BASSAN
3. KASSIM BIN JUMADI
4. P.C. KASIU
5. SIDIK BIN SIMOEN.
Their names are listed on the “Heroes’ Grave” plaque at St. Joseph’s Church Cemetery in Kuching.
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JEMADAR OJAGER SINGH
(Warrant Officer SINGH )
‘The Forgotten Lion of Sandakan’
EXECUTED KUCHING
February 2, 1944.
Sikhs first began arriving North Borneo beginning 1882, usually serving in the then British North Borneo Armed Constabulary. Some served as prisons warders and Commandants at Sandakan, Tawau and Jesselton prisons. Some were tortured brutally and killed during the Japanese occupation period.
Although a minority, the Sikh community has contributed significantly to North Borneo/Sabah’s history and development.
Kota Kinabalu: Borneo’s oldest Gurdwara Sahib temple built exactly 100 years ago in 1924, opened by British North Borneo Governor, Major General Sir William Henry Rycroft.
Below: As seen today.
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Above: JEMADER UJAGAR SINGH & his children.
JEMADER UJAGAR SINGH…. a very tall Sikh was a proud man was fiercely loyal to the British. So was his father Pal Singh, who had come out to British North Borneo with his brother Chanda from their home village of Mannan, India. Both men had joined the constabulary in Jesselton, where Pal had married Sant Kaur the daughter of another policeman, Sadhu Singh, whose son, Dial, was also in the Police force. Pal’s second son, Ojagar, born in Mannan where he spent his childhood, arrived in Borneo at the age of ten. By the time he was eleven he, too, had joined the Constabulary, as a bugler.
He was the father of eight children, five daughters and three sons. Raised in a family with a highly developed sense of duty, Ojagar would have wished for nothing more than able to fight for the King and to defend the country and empire that he loved.
Jemadar Ojagar Singh’s home was on top of a hill near the Police Headquarters at Bukit Merah, near to Kinabatangan and Kota Kinabalu about 100 km to Sandakan. From his house he could see what was happening out at sea.
Because all the European Police Officers had been interned on Berhala Island, the local policemen at Sandakan were led by three local junior officers : Inspector Samuel Guriaman,Sergeant Major Yansalang and Warrant Officer Jemadar Ojagar Singh. The Japanese believed these men were loyal to them, instead the three remained loyal to their European officers and the Allied cause.
Major Rice Oxley – Sandakan’s Commissioner of Police and Senior Officer of the Voluntary Force was amongst those interned at Berhala Island. Rice-Oxley requested his three junior officers to coordinate with Australian born Dr James Taylor, local doctor in charge Sandakan hospital who headed the humanitarian underground group outside the POW compound and in time with Australian POW Capt Matthews with 500 POWs of ‘E’ Force who originally arrived Berhala Island 15 April 1943 until 5 June 1943, then moved to 8 Mile camp with ‘B’ Force was their contact inside the Mile 8 camp. Taylor had not been interned and remained free to carry our his hospital duties.
The civilians and constabulary at Sandakan had already been secretly and actively sending vital foods, drugs and money and other necessities to Berhala Island soon after the Europeans were incarcerated. (there were initially 45 European men, 24 Wives and 11 children) with the men and women living separately in very primitive conditions.
Their existence was due partly to Dr Laband and partly to Ernesto Lagan an ex employee of Harrison and Crossfield and a member of the volunteer force until moved to Batu Lintang, Kuching in Sarawak in January 1943.
Below: Ernesto LAGAN, also executed.
The same group developed close links with Chinese, Malay and other native people who opposed Japanese occupation such as the families of Funk, Azcona, Lai, Apostol, Cohen, Dick Majinal, Pop Wong, Matusup Gungau and others. Together, they became a larger movement known as a local assistance group. Free men and women smuggled foods and medicines to their families and friends interned on Berhala Island. All racial groups were involved in the underground: Europeans, Chinese, Indians and Locals.
Jemadar Ojagar Singh was stationed at 8 Mile police station. As officers, he and Inspector Guriaman were responsible for the area in the vicinity of the POW camp. He was also responsible, along with other junior officers, for providing guards for the civilian internment centre on Berhala Island. (And the 500 Australian POWs with ‘E’ Force who were on the Island from 15 March 1943 to 5 June 1943 – before moving to POW camp at 8 mile with ‘B’ Force). The underground was active in assisting the Australians escape Berhala to Philippines in the early days on Berhala.
The Constabulary was closely connected with Ernesto Lagan, who was now working as a detective for the Japanese. Shortly after the civilians were sent to Berhala, he had received a message from Major Alan Rice-Oxley who had served as Commissioner of Police/Commandant of Police in Sandakan during the early part of World War II. He was interned on Berhala Island from where he managed a clandestine operation to support Allied prisoners of war (POWs).
Rice-Oxley was also seeking financial assistance for himself and two other officers, Captain HB Rowland and Lieutenant MG Edge. The note had been passed from Salleh to Sergeant Ikes and Corporal Koram. Corporal Koram passed the note to Lagan who canvassed those he was sure he could trust and appointed Sergent Yusof Basinau to begin collecting whatever money anyone could spare. (Money was scarce during war-time-there were few jobs)
The contributors were Inspector Samuel Guriaman, Sergeant Major Yansalang, Sergeant Abin, Corporal Koram, PC Kai, Damudaran, Lumatop, Kassiu, Gorokon, Mohamed Tahir Matusin and Jemadar Ojagar Singh.
They ensured only trustworthy men were rostered for guard duty at Berhala. The most loyal and sympathetic policemen were allocated to duties that took them regularly to Berhala Island and mile 8 station. With reliable men in place, food and medicine and monies were smuggled in from the mainland to the civilian internees and a group of POWs on Berhala Island (at that time, ‘E’ Force for six weeks prior to moving to Sandakan Camp). Supplies were also made available to POWs at mile 8.
After Major Rice Oxley and all the European prisoners were moved to Kuching January 1943, Ojagar and his men on Major’s instruction, were nominally placed under the charge of Captain Lionel Colin Matthews, the main contact person with Australian POWs 8 Mile Camp and to assist Matthews carrying out underground activities.
Initially their goal was humanitarian however expanded into smuggling food/medicines, smuggling of radio parts, collecting of money, gathering of intelligence and eventually military. The underground turned into a dangerous organisation. With the help of these and other courageous locals, a cache of small arms was organised including some British equipment – mostly weapons brought in from the Guerillas in Philippines. There were about a hundred weapons including three machine guns, hidden about three kilometres from the camp near mile 6. The plan was to use these weapons as part of a general prisoners insurrection to either seize the camp and town or undertake a mass escape of all prisoners and become guerrilla fighters.
As well as the plan for insurrection, was the building of a transmitting radio. This would be used to contact American Guerrillas in Philippines and submarines with a view to obtaining more arms and other support. This development was not just about escaping; it was a challenge to the Japanese position in North Borneo, and one that inevitably would invoke most violent Japanese response.
The first and second team of allied POWs from ‘E’ Force accommodated on Berhala Island for 6 weeks prior to moving to Sandakan, escaped from the Island.
Ujagar was also involved in helping eight Australian ‘E’ Force POWs escape from Berhala Island.
The first team comprised R.K. McLaren, Private R.N. Butler and R.J. Kennedy. They arrived at Batu Batu, Philippines 13th June 1943 and were greeted by Guerila Colonel A Suarez.
The second team, who miraculously remained hidden on Berhala Island while Kempetei searched for more than a week (at times they hung off cliff edges) included Lt. Rex Blow, Lt. L.N. Gillon and Sgt. W. Wallace, Captain R.E. Steele and Lt. C.A. Wagner arrived Tawi Tawi, Philippines on 30th June 1943 and were all integrated into the Philippines guerrilla forces.
Their escape from Berhala Island was successfully executed by members of the underground intelligence organisation directed by an intelligence officers, POW Captain Lionel Colin Matthews and Dr Taylor. They were responsible with the delivery arrangement of food, medical supplies, maps and money to the POWs. Matthews introduced secret radio links with the outside world and organised the British North Borneo Constabulary for armed uprising against the Japanese.
The Japanese had ordered their guards in combination with the local Police Force to search for the escaped Australians, hunting frantically all over the island but could not locate them. The Japanese military police offered enormous sums of money as rewards for the recapture of the Australians.
(The successful Australian escapees were able to send messages from Philippines to inform Matthews their escape was successful and they were fighting with guerilla forces)
In July 1943 the underground movement was betrayed to the Japanese. Matthews was arrested by the Kempeitai and was subjected to brutal treatment. He refused to implicate anybody else. Several senior Australian Officers were also arrested refused to implicate anybody else.
The Japanese arrested all who were involved in the Underground movement. Those captured included many international groups – Chinese, Europeans, Eurasians, Kadazan, Sikh, Murut, Filipinos, Suluk, Javanese and ‘Ma’ Cohen a wealthy Jewish women, who was extremely generous providing the largest amount of money, together with 19 Australian POWs and five civilians and their wives.
Ojagar Singh was involved in helping the eight Australian POWs escape from Berhala Island. People attributed the escape to Corporal Koram but Ojagar was the man in charge of the police detachment on Berhala allowing Rex Blow, Ray Steele and possibly Red Butler and six others to escape to Tawi Tawi. He was also one of the major contributors to a fund that assisted the POWs to escape. Butler died the following year fighting with the Phillipine Guerillas.
Above: Rex Blow
Above: Cpl Koran executed.
Others in the Constabulary including Detective Ernesto Lagan and Corporal Abin who also gave money to the fund.
Ojagar assisted in mapping possible escape routes by providing a map taken from the Constabulary office by Abin. The map was passed to Matthews showing Sandakan’s main installations and buildings.
Jemadar Ojagar Singh was especially targeted by the Japanese and received horrific beatings and interrogations. Police friends warned him his name had been revealed by others under interrogation to Kempetei. His pregnant wife pleaded with him to escape however Ojagar would not, believing the Japanese would harass his family and worse, hold them to ransom.
The Kempetei came for him.
Ojager remained calm, telling his wife to look after the children. The Japanese ordered his daughter Biba to taken them to the chicken coop which was further up the hill. They knew what they were looking for. Letters sent by POW Rex Blow requesting help for his escape. The Kempetei then searched the house, taking gold jewelry, cash, Ojager’s pistol and ammunition. They left the Singh family without any means of support. Mrs Singh and children moved into the police barracks.
Ojager was severely tortured and his hand broken before leaving Sandakan for Kuching. There was no medical attention for these prisoners.
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Major Rice-Oxley was appointed Superintendent of Police, Adjutant, and Superintendent of Prisons, in Jesselton in 1929. His career continued apace and he attained the position of Commissioner of Police. On 12 November 1936 he officially changed his name from Alan Rice Oxley to Alan Rice-Oxley by deed poll.
Below: Major Alan Rice-Oxley with his son. The Rice-Oxley’s were on leave in England when war was close. Major Rice-Oxley’s wife remained in England and he returned to Sandakan.
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FUNK FAMILY
Brothers Johnny, Alexander and Paddy.
ALEX FUNK, the youngest brother was executed Kuching, 2 February 1944
No family gives so much to the cause, in blood and money …….
From ‘Sandakan’……by Paul Ham
The Funk family is one of the most distinguished and richest in Sandakan. Family members served in various prominent local roles. Their father was the first non-white magistrate.
The Funk brothers – Johnny, Alexander and Paddy are of Eurasian descent, strikingly handsome with beautiful wives. All are highly educated and fearlessly dedicated to the resistance. (from Paul Ham’s ‘Sandakan’ Page 147) The boys were members of the pre-war North Borneo Volunteer Force. The large Funk family home was near where POWs of ‘B’ Force were interned from July 1942 enabling the brothers to establish secret contacts with POWs which saw them providing help and serving as conduits between POWs and Sandakan hospital.
Alex supplies the critical maps (from WO Singh) of Sandakan marking out Japanese barracks, machine-gun and communication posts. The Funk family have the extremely dangerous job of collecting and hiding smuggled arms in a cache outside of town.
All weapons and ammunition had been supplied from the Philippine Guerillas, hidden in small boats and sent to Sandakan.
When their activities were betrayed to the Japanese in July 1943, the brothers were arrested and severely punished by the Japanese Kempetei; Alex was executed while Johnny and Paddy suffered great physical and psychological torture.
The brothers first came into contact with Australian POWs in September 1942. Alex the youngest, also made the initial contact with Captain Lionel Matthews, the POW officer who was the camp’s intelligence officer.
Matthews had requested assistance in food, medicine, money and radio parts. With radio parts supplied by Johnny and others mostly acquired from the Azcona’s Radio Shop from Felix (Snr) and Felix (Jnr) in Sandakan a radio was assembled by the Australian POWs and put into operation.
The Funk brothers were also instrumental in establishing links between POWs and Dr V. Stookes, a World War I British fighter pilot. After completing his medical studies, Stookes came to North Borneo to work as an estate doctor on the Kinabatangan River. He owned a seaplane which he built, and used for his medical services. Stookes’ with his colleague Dr Wands and nurse Phoebe Lai’s help, more medicines were made available from Sandakan Hospital to the POWs.
Above: Alexander Funk – the youngest brother. Executed Kuching 2 February 1944.
Above: Paddy Funk
Below: Johnny Funk
Above: Dr Stookes (holding can) WW1 fighter pilot & Dr who decided the only way to escape future wars was to come to Borneo. However, another war caught up with him. He is seen with his sea plane that he bought after meeting filmakers Martin and Osa Johnson during their 1935 visit. He used the plane to start a flying doctor service in Kinabatangan, possibly the first in the world.
It was Alex who collected the medicines from Stookes before passing them over to the POWs.
POW Escapee Sgt W Wallace
Among those involved in helping the POWs was Heng Joo Ming who was an overseer at the airstrip which the POWs and the locals were building. One day in 1942, Heng Joo Ming confided to Johnny that he was harbouring a POW escapee, Sergeant W. Wallace. Johnny provided food and money to Wallace, who was moved to wait outside of the Australian camp on Berhala before the escape party met him and later managed to escape to Tawi-Tawi where he joined the Filipino guerrillas.
In January 1943, Johnny was approached by Ernesto Lagan, a police detective who was then working under the Japanese. Lagan wanted to obtain a plan of the former quarters of the Europeans now in Japanese hands. Apparently this was required in connection with a planned general escape from the camp. On another occasion, Johnny and Alex went to the POW camp and met with Corporal Abin of the North Borneo Constabulary. They were trying to smuggle a Lee Enfield 303 rifle into the camp. The rifle had earlier been issued to Alex by the Volunteer Force, but Alex did not surrender in to the armoury after the Japanese had landed. Alex also supplied Captain Matthews with a 38 revolver. This was the main offence which eventually resulted in Alex being executed.
Early 1943 the Japanese suspected the existence of a radio in the POW camp and began to investigate. In April 1943, the Japanese arrested Dr Stookes’s wife for allegedly helping to spread news obtained from her husband.
After interrogation and torture, they released her as they could find no evidence against her. Johnny Funk was later arrested accused of the same offence and for providing radio parts to the POWs. Johnny was tortured and interrogated for a week before being released.
Together with Johnny and his brothers, 102 people (55 civilians and 47 POWs) were arrested by the Japanese over the issue of assisting the POWs. They were transferred to Kuching on 25 October 1943. After four months of continual interrogation and torture, Alex was condemned to death along with eight others.
Mohd Tahir was a constable at Sandakan. He decided to join the underground that was being formed within police circles and took part in assisting a group of Australian POWs to escape from Berhala. This endeavor earned him severe beatings and a 3-year prison sentence from the Japanese.
All hell broke loose when the Japanese discovered the radio in the Australian POW camp. Many were arrested and, as interrogations went on, more names were revealed. Mohd Tahir and a whole team of Constabulary members, including Jemadar Ujagar Singh, Corporal Abin, Ernesto Lagan, Yansalang, Agus, Angkai, UsopBasinay and Corporal Koram were arrested.
During the interrogation, Tahir was placed in a cell with Captain Lionel Matthews, who was the main contact person in the POW camp. Matthews asked Tahir not to tell the Japanese anything. During interrogation, Tahir was beaten many times, mainly on his back. He managed to see many of his friends as well as others he recognised. On one occasion, he was interned with Wong Moo Sing, the Filipino Chinese agent. Tahir felt that Wong was resigned to his fate as he had been arrested as a spy and was bound to be shot.
After three months of interrogations Tahir was transferred to Kuching with the rest of the prisoners in October. At Kuching, they were interned at the former post office while awaiting trial.
At Kuching, Tahir was interned with Ujagar Singh. Ujagar’s hand had been broken by the Japanese during interrogation at Sandakan but he received no medical treatment. In March 1944, the men were taken to court and sentenced. Tahir’s involvement was regarded to be minimal and he was sentenced to three years’ imprisonment with hard labour. However Ujagar Singh, was sentenced to death.
Jemadar (warrant officer) Ujagar Singh or Ojagah Singh was a member of the North Borneo Armed Constabulary. He was executed by the Japanese at Kuching. When the Japanese took over Sabah, European control over the Armed Constabulary also came to an end. Major A. Rice-Oxley, the pre-war commandant, was interned by the Japanese on Berhala island along with the civilian internees.
With the absence of European officers, the local policemen at Sandakan were led by three local junior officers: Inspector Guriaman, Sergeant Major Yansalang and Jemadar Ujagar Singh. The Japanese believed that these men were loyal to them. Instead, they remained loyal to their European officiers and the Allied cause.
While detained at Berhala, Major Rice-Oxley requested the three to co-operate with Dr James Taylor, the principal medical officer who was allowed to remain free in order to carry out his duties at the Sandakan civilian hospital.
One of the primary tasks of Jugara and Guriaman was to place trusted men on guard duty so that they would be able to assist POWs and the civilian internees without being exposed to Japanese informants and collaborators. The Japanese had already put in place a network of spies and informants, including some in the Constabulary. Thus when Ujagar and Guraiman organized the roster, they ensured only the most loyal and sympathetic policemen were allocated to duties that look them regularly to Berhala Island and the Mile 8 station. These included Corporal Abin, Corporal Koram, Corporal Usop Basinau, Police Constable Mohd Tahir Matusin and several others.
With these men in place, food and medicine were smuggled to the civilian internees and the POWs on Berhala Island as well as providing and equipping the escape groups with money, maps, eqiupment & food. Supplies were also made available to the POWs at Mile 8 (Sandakan POW Camp).
Ujagar was also involved in helping eight Australian ‘E’ Force POWs escape from Berhala Island.
KENINGAU, BRITISH NORTH BORNEO 23RD SEPTEMBER 1945. TAKING THE SWORD OF SURRENDER FROM THE SENIOR JAPANESE OFFICER AT THE KENINGAU CAMP ARE (L. TO R.) FLIGHT LIEUTENANT (ACTING SQUADRON LEADER) E.V. (VAL) WALLIKER AND MAJOR J. IRVING. 2/9TH CAVALRY COMMANDOS.
The following is of little comfort for the wives, mothers, siblings and children of the above men and women who had worked so hard to undermine the invading Japanese and tragically lost their lives.
Throughout the war the Japanese military tried to convince Japanese people that complete loyalty and obedience would make Japan invincible. Japan’s early victories seemed to prove this, but U.S. victory at Midway Island in June 1942 was the beginning of the end – cutting them off from desperately needed raw materials. It would however, take at least three years to defeat the Japanese – during these years they unleashed terrible conditions, punishments, starvation and wrath on the populations of S.E. Asia.
August 1942–February 1943: Guadalcanal Campaign. In their first major offensive on land by Allied Forces saw a Japanese withdrawal from the Solomon Islands, halting Japanese expansion.
June 19–20, 1944: Japan’s loss duringBattle of the Philippine Sea saw Japan’s naval air capablity severely depleted.
July 1944:Fall of Saipan: The capture of this island allowed US bombers to reach the Japanese home islands. The defeat led to the resignation of Prime Minister Hideki Tojo.
Battle of Leyte Gulf 23-26 October 1944 was known as the largest naval battle of WWII resulting in a decisive Allied victory that crippled the Japanese naval power forever. The Japanese navy was destroyed.
March 9–10, 1945:Firebombing of Tokyo killed about 100,000 civilians, destroyed 16 square miles of the city and crippled Japan’s urban industrial base.
Feb 19–March 26, 1945 / April 1–June 22, 1945:Battles of Iwo Jima and Okinawa. These final island battles resulted in heavy losses for the US, but confirmed Japanese home islands were within reach, leading to heavy, and brutal, casualties.
The End: August 1945 – collapse of the Japanese empire in August 1945 was driven by a combination of:
the atomic bombs
the Soviet invasion
and the blockade
When this was followed by massive bombardment from the air over Japan and the final blow of the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japanese invincibility was proven to be a myth. At the end of the war, the Japanese nation was not only starving and devastated by the bombing, but bewildered and shocked by the defeat.
Japan’s defeat, combined with the sound of Hirohito’s voice announcing the war was over (Hirohito did not say Japan had surrendered) also shocked many Japanese troops who had been kept in the dark about Japanese losses. Troops broke down and wept.
AUTRALIAN POWS SENTENCED at KUCHING’s JAPANESE HQ TRIALS FOR ESCAPING SANDAKAN OR INVOLVEMENT IN UNDERGROUND RADIO
nearly 200 Australian POWs and civilans and members of the Sandakan Constabulary who were sentenced at Kuching
Arrived 11 March 1944
OUTRAM ROAD PRISON, SINGAPORE WW2
Outram Prison was one of the earliest prisons in Singapore. Originally known as Pearl’s Hill Prison before being called Outram Prison or Outram Road Prison.
For a group of POWs at Sandakan POW camp, British North Borneo, (originally shipped from Singapore, known as ‘B’ Force and later joined by ‘E’ Force) – their crime against Japan centred around an ‘underground radio’. Found guilty at Sandakan and later trials held by the Japanese at their HQ Kuching on 29 February 1944. Most were sentenced to years of solitary confinement, some with hard labour to Outram Road Prison – a hell-hole. A miserable prison for the worst crimes committed by POWs and citizens.
One of the Australian POWs who arrived in Sandakan POW camp to work on the airfield in July 1942 was CaptLionel Colin Matthews. (Below)
WX12404 Lt Col Roderick Graham Wells enlisted 23 Nov 1939 grew up near Tatura on a Dhurringile dairy farm. He was commissioned on 1 November 1940 and posted to 8th Division Signals. Wells had been a school teacher when he enlisted.
He served as a radio operator with 8th Division Signals in Malaya and Singapore.
His first duties were associated with high frequency radio sets fitted to Army vehicles. Later during the Malaya campaign, Wells worked in radio detection operations searching for clandestine radios sending messages to the Japanese.
When Singapore fell to the Japanese Wells became one of thousands of Australians to become a POW of Japan.
On 7 July 1942, along with 1,494 other ‘B’ Force POWs, he left Singapore on Japanese ship Ubi Maru, arriving in Sandakan Harbour on 18 July 1942.
At Sandakan, Wells became active in a clandestine underground network with some of the other officers, including Captain Lionel Matthews.
Using local Chinese contacts to collect parts, Wells organised to build a radio receiver and transmitter. Lt Weynton with the help of Corp Rickards NX68389 from 2/3 and Sgts Small and Mills built the set which was operational on 4 November 1942.
The Kempetei had received information about the underground activity from their spies and unfortunately a disgruntled local. They immediately swooped on the POW Camp and conducted a major search. A list of radio parts was discovered. The list was linked to Wells whose detailed diary they found and when confronted by Captain Hoshijima, he eventually led the Kempetei to the transmitter, leaving the receiver in its hiding place.
He was immediately arrested, paraded to the camp and transported to Kempetei headquarters in Sandakan and eventually to Kuching, where he was joined by others arrested for their part in the Sandakan underground.
Wells and those arrested endured daily horrific cruelty from the Kempetei including starvation, no water, endless torture, broken bones and solitary confinement at Sandakan, Kuching and Outram Road Gaol, Singapore. At one point the Kempeteis pushed/hammered a bamboo skewer into one ear which exited the other side of Wells head. He suffered all his life from this barbaric act. At Outram Road, when Wells was eventually too weak to walk, he was sent to Changi hospital in the expectation that he would die there. Fortunately, the war ended before he did.
The Kempetei were particularly spiteful towards two members of local constabulary and Sandakan civilians arrested. They threatened and carried out arrests of their family members – their wives, and worse, involved their children.
All those arrested were brutally tortured daily for three months at Sandakan as the Japanese tried unsuccessfully to extract information. The torture continued at Kuching while waiting trials.
Matthews, Wells and Weynton these men are with Signals 8th Division – reveal nothing, never revealing any name or piece of information other than what the Japanese already had. They were able to message each other and others by tapping their fingers without the Japanese ever knowning. The accused group were shipped to Kuching, most in 4ft x 4ft bamboo cages where men were unable to stand or stretch out and were forced to squat or sit.
In February 1944, the accused were tried by court martial and found guilty. On 28 February 1944, Lt Wells and Capt Matthews were both sentenced to death.
Japanese HQ, Kuching sent a signal to Japanese command in Saigon requesting permission to execute two Australian officers. The reply from Saigon only authorised one execution; after the war it was discovered that this was a simple typographical error in Saigon. Wells should have been executed along with Matthews.
Both men were brought before the court again on 29 February 1944. Matthews was sentenced to death along with two members of the British North Borneo Constabulary and six other local Sabahans. They were immediately excecuted.
ARRESTED AND TRIED AT KUCHING, SENTENCED TO DEATH (SHOT BY FIRING SQUAD 2.3.1944) :
Abin, Sergeant
Azcona, Felix Junior
Funk, Alexander
Matusup Gungau
Lagan, Detective Ernesto
Matthews, Captain Lionel
Heng Joo Ming
Jemadar Ojagar Singh Mannan
Wong Mu Sing
As the court did not have authority to execute Wells, he was sentenced to 12 years penal servitude in solitary confinement. Wells was nailed into a crate, loaded into the hold of a ship and transferred to the infamous Outram Road Jail in Singapore.
Meanwhile, Wells and 18 others were sentenced to Outram Prison. Wells was extraordinarily lucky man!
Wells was sentenced to 12 years solitary confinement, said goodbye to Matthews with a handshake and a few personal message from Matthews to his wife.
Two days after departing Kuching, Wells arrived in Singapore where he had been captured two years before.
In Singapore, he was imprisoned at Outram Prison and here is his account as recorded by Christoper Somerville’s Our War: Real Stories of Commonwealth soldiers during World War II.
“on entering the prison I found the most terrible sights of dejected people with absolutely no will to live, just slowly walking around. From the back you could see their reproductive organs hanging down between their legs. There was no flesh on them. It made sitting very hard. The hip bone would be pressing into bare skin. But you had to just sit up and put up with the pain.
Everything was done to order. No talking was allowed. When no order was given you were silent and just stayed in the same position you were in when the last order was given. At nine o’clock at night you were sent back to your cell. There was a light on all night in the cell, so there was not a second in the twenty four hours you were in darkness. This went on for me twenty three months, including my period in Kuching. Twenty three months in solitary.
Meals were roughly 5 oz cooked rice and a bit of stewy water with a bit of weed in it, green gassy stuff. Tea – that was like a 100 to one whisky and water, pale discoloured stuff that was always cold when you got it.
The little pair of shorts you had on had your number on them. 641 that was me! You had to learn that in Japanese pretty quick, because that was your name and address and everything else. I lost all identity. I was no longer a POW – I was a criminal, just a number. That was the worst thing of the lot, just a number.”
He was finally released in August 1945 having endured 21 months of brutal and cruel treatment from his Kempetei jailers.
Below: Some of the arrested Japanese jailers.
We wish to acknowlege much of the information we have gleamed from ‘The story of Rod Wells’ author Pam Wells taken from the Dairy News
The people of Sandakan were not only brave but knew their actions endangered the lives of their families to risk supporting the Australian POWs, and to help civilians imprisoned on Berhala Island. It is so very important to acknowledge them, their bravery and their generosity. They were able to smuggle into camp medicines, foods as well as radio parts.
Above: Capt Matthews
The following eight men aside from Capt. Matthews, are condemned to death by firing squad 2nd March 1944. Most were married with young families. We acknowledge and thank these brave men and their families for all they did for the Australian POWs. We salute them!
ERNESTO LAGAN (Snr)
HENG JOO MING
SGT. AHBIN
ALEXANDER CLARENCE LEONARD FUNK
FELIX AZCONA (Jnr)
JEMADER UJAGAR SINGH
WONG MU SING
MATUSUP BIN GUNGAU (aka MUTUSUP GUNGAU)
Their names are listed on the “Heroes’ Grave” plaque at St. Joseph’s Church Cemetery in Kuching.
Below: Wife and young son of Matusup Bin Gungau
Jesselton, North Borneo. October 1950.
Informal portrait of Halima binte Binting, widow of Matusup bin Gangau, holding their child. Matusup, who was part of a local assistance group, had been executed in Kuching, along with other civilians, for helping the prisoners of war in Sandakan Camp. Halima had also acted as a go-between for her husband and VX24597 Captain (Capt) Lionel Matthews, the camp-appointed intelligence officer. On one occasion Halima was caught talking with Capt Matthews and was interrogated and tortured by the Japanese but was later released. For her husband’s assistance Halima was rewarded by the representatives of the Australian-British Reward Mission. In 1946 the Mission led by V18803 Major (Maj) H. W. S. (Harry) Jackson, Australian Government representative, was joined by Maj. R. K. Dyce, representing the British Army, and two journalists from the ABC, Colin Simpson and William McFarlane, travelled to North Borneo to investigate, report and reward the assistance provided to Australian and British prisoners of war (POWs) by local natives. In 1942, 1800 Australian and 600 British POWs were sent to Sandakan from Singapore and Java. Those prisoners still alive in the Sandakan POW Camp in January 1945 were forced to help evacuate the Japanese Imperial Army from Sandakan to Ranau in three brutal death marches where the men were forced to march the 150 miles to Ranau. Any POWs still alive after the last march, were killed. Only six prisoners, who had all escaped during the death marches, were still alive at the end of the war. POWs had made pledges to the local people who had assisted them and the Australian Government decided that these obligations should be investigated and rewarded. (Donor H. W. S. Jackson)
Above: JEMADER UJAGAR SINGH…. a very tall Sikh was a proud man was fiercely loyal to the British. So was his father Pal Singh, who had come out to British North Borneo with his brother Chanda from their home village of Mannan, India. Both men had joined the constabulary in Jesselton, where Pal had married Sant Kaur the daughter of another policeman, Sadhu Singh, whose son, Dial, was also in the Police force. Pal’s second son, Ojagar, born in Mannan where he spent his childhood, arrived in Borneo at the age of ten. By the time he was eleven he, too, had joined the Constabulary, as a bugler.
As a Jemadar (Senior Warrant Officer), he was the father of eight children, five daughter and three sons, the youngest of whom was Anup. Raised in a family with high developed sense of duty, Ojagar would have wished for nothing more than able to fight for the King and to defend the country and the empire that he loved.
Jemadar Ojagar Singh’s house was on top of a hill near the Police Headquarters at Bukit Merah. From there he could see what was happening out at the sea and on the Island of Berhala.
In the absence of European officers, local policemen at Sandakan (imprisoned Berhala Island) were led by three local junior officers : Inspector Samuel Guriaman, Sergeant Major Yansalang and Warrant Officer Jemadar Ojagar Singh. The Japanese believed these men were loyal to them. Instead, the three remained loyal to their European officers and the Allied cause.
Major Rice Oxley, who was Chief of the Volunteer Force and Police Force was interned at Berhala Island, requested the three junior officers to corporate with Dr James Taylor the principal medical officer who was allowed to remain free in order to carry out his duties at the Sandakan civil hospital. Rice Oxley also asked them to cooporate with POWs interned at Mile 8 POW Camp.
The civilians and constabulary at Sandakan have been secretly and active sending the foods, drugs money and other necessities to Berhala Island. Dr Jim Taylor headed a humanitarian underground assistance group. The group existence was due partly to Dr Laband and partly to Ernesto Lagan an ex employee of Harrison and Crossfield and a member of the volunteers, who was married to Pedro Dominic’s granddaughter Katherine Neubronner.
The same group developed close links with Chinese, Malay and other native people who opposed Japanese occupation such as the families of Funk, Azcona, Peter Lai, Apostol, Mrs ‘Ma’ Cohen, Dick Majinal, Pop Wong, Matusup Gungau and others. Together, they became a larger movement known as a local assistance group. This free men and women smuggled foods and medicines to their families and friends interned on Berhala Island. All racial groups were involved in the underground : Europeans, Chinese, Indians and Locals. All groups are represented.
Jemadar Ojagar Singh was stationed at mile 8 police station. As officers, he and Inspector Guriaman were responsible for the area in the vicinity of the POW camp. He was also responsible, along with other junior officers, for providing guards for the civilian internment centre on Berhala Islands.
The Constabulary was closely connected with Ernesto Lagan, who was now working as a detective for the Japanese. Shortly after the civilians were sent to Berhala, he had received a message from the Constabulary’s Commanding officer, Major A Rice Oxley, seeking financial assistance for himself and two other officers, Captain HB Rowland and Lieutenant MG Edge. The note had been passed from Salleh to Sergeant Ikes and Corporal Koram. Corporal Koram passed the note to Lagan who canvassed those he was sure he could trust and appointed Sergent Yusof Basinau to begin collecting whatever money anyone can spare. The contributors were Inspector Samuel Guriaman, Sergeant Major Yansalang, Sergeant Abin, Corporal Koram, PC Kai, Damudaran, Lumatop, Kassiu, Gorokon, Mohamed Tahir Matusin and Jemadar Ojagar Singh.
They ensured only trustworthy men were rostered for guard duty at Berhala. The most loyal and sympathetic policemen were allocated to duties that took them regularly to Berhala Island and mile 8 station. With reliable men in place, many activities started to take place. Food and medicine were smuggled in from the mainland to the civilian internees and a group of POWs on Berhala Island (at that time, ‘E’ Force). Supplies were also made available to POWs at mile 8.
After Major Rice Oxley and Governor were moved to Kuching, Ojagar and his men, on Major’s instruction, were nominally placed under the charge of Captain Lionel Colin Matthews, main contact person with Australian POWs and to assist Matthews carrying out underground activities.
Initially their goal was humanitarian however expanded into smuggling food/medicines, smuggling of radio parts, collecting of money, gathering of intelligence and eventually military. The underground turned into a dangerous organisation. With the help of these and other courageous locals, a cache of small arms was organised including some British equipment – mostly weapons brought in from Philippines. There were about a hundred weapons including three machine guns, hidden about three kilometres from the camp near mile six. The plan was to use this weapons as part of a general prisoners insurrection to either seize the camp and town or undertake a mass escape of all prisoners and become guerrilla fighters.
As well as the plan for insurrection, was the building of a transmitting radio. This would be used to contact American Guerrillas in Philippines and submarines with a view to obtaining more arms and other support. This development was not just about escaping; it was a challenge to the Japanese position in North Borneo, and one that inevitably would invoke most violent Japanese response.
Berhala Island was where the first and second team of the allied POWs escaped. The first team comprised R.K. Mc Laren, Private R.N. Butler and R.J. Kennedy. They arrived at Batu Batu, Philippines 13rd June 1943 and greeted by Colonel A Suarez. The second team consisted five colleagues Lt. Rex Blow, Lt. L.N. Gillon and Sgt. W. Wallace, Captain R.E. Steele and Lt. C.A. Wagner followed and arrived Tawi Tawi, Philippines on 30th June 1943. They were all integrated into the Philippines guerrilla forces.
Their escape from Berhala Island was successfully executed by members of the underground intelligence organisation directed by an intelligence officer, Captain Lionel Colin Matthews and Dr Taylor. They were responsible with the delivery arrangement of food, medical supplies and money to the POWs. Matthews introduced secret radio links with the outside world and organised the British North Borneo Constabulary for armed uprising against the Japanese.
The Japanese ordered their guards in combination with the local Police Force to search for the escaped Australians, hunting frantically all over the island but could not locate them. The Japanese military police offered enormous sums of money as rewards for the recapture of the Australians.
The underground movement was soon discovered by the Japanese. Matthews was arrested by the Kempeitai and was subject to brutal treatment and starvation. He refused to implicate anybody else.
The Japanese arrested all who were involved in the Underground movement. Those captured included many international groups – Chinese, Europeans, Eurasians, Kadazan, Sikh, Murut, Filipinos, Suluk, Javanese and Ma Cohen a wealthy and very generous Jewish women, (who gave the largest financial commitment to the Australian Underground movement) together with 19 Australian POWs and five civilians and their wives.
Ojagar Singh was involved in helping the eight Australian POWs escape from Berhala Island. People attributed the escape to Corporal Koram but Ojagar was the man in charge of the police detachment on Berhala allowing Rex Blow, Ray Steele and six others to escape to Tawi Tawi. He was also one of the major contributors to a fund that assisted the POWs to escape.
Others in the Constabulary including Detective Ernesto Lagan and Corporal Abin who gave money to the fund.
Ojagar assisted in mapping possible escape routes by providing a map taken from the Constabulary office by Abin. The map passed to Matthews showing the main installations and buildings in Sandakan.
Copied from Borneo History https://borneohistory57.blogspot.com/p/homepage.html
Above: Heng Choo Ming
Lt Wells was one a number of Australian POWs from Sandakan to survive. Tragically some POWs died at Outram Road Gaol. WA Goldfields boy Ted Keating of 2/5th, died of injuries received whilst at Kuching awaiting trial.
After the war, Wells studied at Melbourne University, graduating with a BSc and Dip Ed. In 1951, he was again commissioned into the Army, rising to the rank of Lieutenant Colonel, before resigning in 1960 to work in communications and engineering in the Australian Public Service.
VX28397 Lt Gordon Alexander Weynton, 8th Division Signals – Survived, returned to Australia and later became a Councillor of Castlemaine, his hometown. Weynton was listed as having been
“the Ex-gaolbird Mayor, guest of his imperial highness Hirohito in the infamous Outram Rd Gaol, Singapore”
where he was sentenced first to death, then to 10 years imprisonment.
Lt Weynton attended the War Trial in Tokyo joining Brigadier Arthur Seaforth, VC, much admired Lt.Col ‘Bertie’ Coates, 8th Division, POWs in hospitals were suffering ulcers requring amputation and endless tropical illnesses. Capt Viviene Bullwinkel, from ‘Vyner Brooke’ sinking who survived the murder of a large group of Australian nurses on Bangka Island.
WX227 SGT ALFRED STEPHENS 2/4th MGB, 8th division was sentenced to foour years Outram Road Gaol for his role in the ‘underground radio’. Alf returned to his hometown in Western Australia.
Most of the Europeans were sent to Berhala Island by the Japanese – except for those with essential jobs such as Dr. James, Gerald Mavor, A.E. Phillips, General Manager North Borneo Trading Company, Dr J.F. Laband, Dental Surgeon and refugee from Nazi Germany, Dr. ‘Val’ Stookes, local GP.
Below: Local Sandakan doctor and hero, Australian born surgeon general and principal Medical Officer James Taylor is sentenced and survived Outram Road Gaol.
Gerald Mavor, Chief Engineer & Manager, Sandakan Light & Power Company was also sentenced to Orchard Road. He died 5 May 1945.
Mrs Ceila Taylor was also sent to Outram Road Prison with Mrs Mavor – they shared a cell with an Asian woman whom they believed was placed with them to listen to their conversations an report to the Japanese.
Below: former POWs from Sandakan and Outram Road Gaol return to Australia Sept 1945 or death details.
FIVE MEN (B Force) FROM 2/29TH ATTEMPTED ESCAPE
They survived for almost six months on the run in the jungles of Borneo, moving only late at night and eating “things that creep and crawl”.
The five men were recaptured just as they secured a boat and supplies from a local member of the underground with a promissory note for 200 pounds.
The Australian government would honour that debt to Tek Sing at the end of the war.
The government honoured that note at the end of the war because of the assistance he gave to the soldiers.
Private Norman Morris, Pte Bruce McWilliams, Pte Allan Minty, Lance Corporal Fred New and Corporal William Fairy of the 2/29 Battalion.
VX56828 Cpl. W. Fairey 2/29th from Victoria died at Outram Road Gaol. William Fairy died on 5 April 1944.
VX56725 Pte Allan Roy Minty 2/29th of Essendon sentenced to 6 years Rigorous Imprisonment at Outram Road Gaol, served 2 years and 7 months of which the first 13 months were in Solitary Confinement in a small cell. Minty lead an escape of five AIF POWs from Sandakan, capital of British North Borneo.
Other escapees in the party who survived were: L/Cpl. New QX23995; Pte. Norman Stanley Morris VX59433, and Pte. Bruce McWilliams VX39255 who is believed to have left in the ‘Duntroon.’
Above: Minty
The following is from Courier-Mail (Brisbane, Qld. : 1933 – 1954), Thursday 27 September 1945, page 3
‘Interviewed while in bed, too ill to walk, Pte. Minty told of privations which caused him to lose nearly five stone in weight. Captured in Singapore on February 15, 1942, he was taken to Sandakan in July. With four other 2/29th men he escaped 18 days later. They trudged down the coast, hiding from Jap patrols, and eluded capture for six months, living on what food they could get out of the jungle.’
After being sentenced in Borneo they were taken to Outram Road Gaol in a bamboo cage, 10ft. by 8ft., into which eight men were jammed, in the hold of a captured Dutch tramp steamer. Minty endured the first 12 months of his term in solitary confinement, locked in a cell 10ft. by 5½ft.’
The ‘Three Musketeers’ from Western Australia and 2/5th Field Artillery, sailed to North Borneo with ‘E’ Force:
WX8818 Edward James (Ted/Teddy) KEATING who died of illness and injuries received during months of torture and beatings at Sandakan and Kuching.
WX9682 Carl Edgar ‘Snowy’ Jensen – the only survivor.
WX10932 Don Marshall who died of illness at Outram Road Gaol.
We know the names of several other POWs sentenced to Outram Road:
Northern Queenslander 19 year old HERB TRACKSON escaped 8 mile camp with his mate former dairy farmer MATTHEW (MATT) CARR. They had run their escape past two officers and waited until a stormy night. Apparently another group of four POWs also broke out and were caught 3-4 days later. Trackson said Bill Sticewich (then living outside the compound) said he would assist them, held up the wire for them, said he would delay the role call to give them time. Trackson said Sticewich had not done this. He believed he was in cahoots with the Japanese. Trackson also believed Sticewich assisted the Japanese to recapture the group of 4 POWs.
Trackson and Carr were recaptured 3-4 weeks later and returned to Sandakan. They were sent to Kuching with the others and sentenced to Outram Road Gaol.
NX40325 JIMMY DARLINGTON who tried to protect an older POW from being pushed around and beaten in the cookhouse, received such horrendous beatings and torture over several days before being thrown into Sandakan prison with BILLY YOUNG. It was Billy YOUNG who looked after the very poorly Darlington and possibly saved his life. They were both sentenced at Kuching to Orchard Road Gaol.
In early 1943, Billy Young one of the youngest men in the camp, was working at the drome and at lunchtime was looking around at what he could scrounge. An unexpected roll call found him missing. Having witnessed what had happened to Jimmy Darlington, Billy Young and his companion were terrified and decided they could not go back. They were quickly captured.
NX32348 Pte JOHN ALLAN MACMILLAN was sentenced to 18 months imprisonment Outram Road. He had been jailed for obtaining radio parts and medicine at Sandakan. When released from Outram Road, his weight had dropped by half.
Below: John Allan MacMillan
Others to be Sentenced
FIFTEEN YEARS
1. Damodaran, Mr M
2. Yangsalang, Sgt. Maj.
3. Yusop (Usop) Basinau, Sgt.
TWELVE YEARS
1. Lai, Peter Raymond Kui Fook
2. Mohammed Salleh Bin Madang
3. Wells, Lt. Roderick (sent to Outram Road Goal Singapore)
Below: Peter Lai
TEN YEARS
1. Apostol, Lamberto
2. Ng Ho Kong
EIGHT YEARS
1. Amigau Bin Bassan (Died at Kuching)
2. Chin Piang Syn @ Chin Chee Kong @ Edmond Kong
3. Guriaman, Inspector Samuel
4. Soh Kim Seng (Ah Tu) (Died at Kuching)
5. Weynton, Lieutenant Gordon (sent to Outram Road Goal Singapore)
SEVEN YEARS
1. Peter Leong
2. Dick Majinal
Below: Dick Marginal
SIX YEARS
1. Chang Tiang Kiang, Henry
2. Funk, Patrick H (Paddy) (escaped from penal servitude)
3. Chan Tian Joo
4. Kassiu, PC (Died at Kuching)
5. Richards,Cpl. J. (sent to Outram Road Goal Singapore)
6. Stevens, Sgt. Alfred (sent to Outram Road Goal Singapore) from 2/4th MGB.
FIVE YEARS
1. Foo Seng Chow
2. Jakariah
3. Sidek Bin Simoen
FOUR YEARS
1. Funk, John Simon Jr (Johnny)
2. Gorokon, PC
3. Lumatop, PC
4. Marshall, Sapper Donald (sent to Outram Road Goal Singapore)
5. Chan Ping (Ah Ping)
6. Felix Tang
THREE YEARS
1. Aruliah, Samuel
2. Martin, Private Frank (sent to Outram Road Goal Singapore)
3. Phillips, Mr A.E. (Manager North Borneo Trading Coy).
4. Tahir, Mohammad PC
TWO AND HALF YEARS
1. Lau Bui Cheng (Bueh Ching)
2. Ngui Ah Kui
TWO YEARS
1. Davis, Private Stanley G. (sent to Outram Road Goal Singapore)
2. Western Australian Jensen, Sapper Carl (sent to Outram Road Goal Singapore) Photo Below.
3. Kassim Bin Jumadi @ Mandor (Died at Kuching)
4. Mills, Corporal Cyrill (sent to Outram Road Goal Singapore)
5. Suratmin Bin Jumadi (escaped from Kuching Goal)
6. Sastroh (Died at Kuching)
ONE AND HALF YEARS
1. Blain, Sergeant Alister M. (sent to Outram Road Goal Singapore)
2. Davis, Sapper Roy 2/12th Field Company, RAE (sent to Outram Road Goal Singapore)
3. Graham. Cpl Thomas G. (sent to Outram Road Goal Singapore)
4. Holly, Sgt Ray B. (sent to Outram Road Goal Singapore)
6. McMillan, Corporal J (sent to Outram Road Goal Singapore)
7. Roffely, Cpl L.A.D. (sent to Outram Road Goal Singapore)
8. Small, Cpl Arnold (sent to Outram Road Goal Singapore)
ONE YEAR
1. Allan, D R
2. Amat
3. Goh Tiek Tshi (Teck Chai)
4. Dahlan
5. Kai, PC
6. Laband, Dr J F
7. Rice Oxley, Major
8. Goh Tiek Soong (Teck Sing)
TEN MONTHS
1. Yong Cha Ming
SIX MONTHS
2. Mc Donough, Sergeant William J. (sent to Outram Road Goal Singapore)
3. Rumble, Private Thomas H. (sent to Outram Road Goal Singapore)
“Sandakan should be remembered because it was more than a battle between nations and more than a battle between conflicting ideologies; it was a war between human decency and human depravity. The victims [of the Death March] were as much casualties of evil as those who died in the Nazi death camps in Europe. ”
by Paul Keating
Lest We Forget
Below: September 1945l. Lt S.G. Weynton of Castlemaine describes his sentence in Outram Road Gaol in a tiny cell with Japanese convicts, Eurasion women and Malayans. Weynton was sentenced to 12 years gaol with hard labour. He said ‘coloured’ women over 70 years were often painted and powdered to make them look younger before being taken out and raped by the Japanese.
‘Interestingly! their ‘old’ chief of 8th Division’ Bennett was at the wharf to greet their return (Bennett was dreaming! – he received mixed reaction because many men were pretty disgusted with his early departure from Singapore – it was reported some former POWs brown-eyed him – not necessarily from this ship load of POWs.)
Below: Sept 1945 Lt Weynton
Below: Sandakan’s Johnny Funk visits Victoria. He had met with Gordon Weynton, Castlemaine the previous day. Funk and Weynton had share a barred ‘monkey cage’ with two other POWs at Kuching, North Borneo awaiting trial for their roles in the Underground Radio. A cage so small the men could not stand or stretch out in. A favourite cruel act of the Japanese at Sandakan!
Above: Sandakan Japanese accused of war crimes awaiting trial at Labuan.
AT SANDAKAN IN RETALIATION OF A SUDDEN AND UNEXPECTED THREE HOUR ALLIED AIR & NAVAL ATTACK BY U.S. & AUSTRALIA ON THE MORNING OF 27 MAY 1945
RESULTED IN THE DEAHS OF MORE THAN 28 SANDAKAN COMMUNITY LEADERS (INCLUDING 24 CHINESE CITIZENS) EXECUTED 27 May 1945.
This atrocity occurred during the same time of the infamous Sandakan Death Marches (January to August 1945), during which approximately 2,400 Australian and British Prisoners of War (POWs) perished due to starvation, disease, and execution. Local villagers often risked their lives and their families to provide food and assistance to the POWs, and many were executed if caught by the Japanese……
On 27 May 1945 at 6 am nine American PT boats, supported by RAAF Kittyhawk fighters and US Navy PBM Mariner bombers entered Sandakan harbour and attacked Japanese targets for about three hours. The Japanese were enraged, particularly the Kempeitai (military police). Sadly for the local population, the Americans and Australians departed and did not return. In retaliation at least 30 of Sandakan’s prominent persons were almost immediately executed.
27 of the victims were already in custody of the Kempetei – mostly leading members of Sandakan’s Chinese community and prominent citizens. Many were part of an underground movement or had pre-war roles in anti-Japanese fundraising efforts (such as the China Relief Fund).
Yau Kam Chung, Kwan Loke Ming , Kwan Yun Hin, Ho Shou Fah and Ng Seah Wah were the prominent Chinese merchants in Sandakan, and they were also leaders of the Chinese community. They were the main promoters of various fundraising activities in the local Chinese community to support war resistance in China against the Japanese, and they were also the ones who contributed the most money. These five along with other civilians were murdered by the Japanese, angered by the American PT boat attack on 27 May 1945.
At 10 o’clock, Yau Kam Chung saw the Americans PT boats appearing in the harbour and he thought that the war was over. However, the Americans did not land and soon sailed away. Following this event, the Japanese Kempeitai came to Yau Kam Chung’s home and asked him to come to the “meeting”. Yau was allowed to lunch with his family and children and changed his clothes before the Kempetei took him away in the afternoon.
Yau Kam Chung was executed together with another 27 community leaders of Sandakan on that night. The massacre took place nearby the headquarters of the Kempeitai at Mile 1.5.
Other leading citIzens were called to the Kempeitai HQ on the pretext of a meeting. The Japanese assumed the local Chinese community was assisting the Allies. On the basis of alleged confessions, they were convicted in absentia by the District Court of Sandakan.
The victims were taken to a ravine near Kempeitai HQ, shot in groups, and buried in nine pre-dug pits. Some sources indicate victims may have been beheaded.
Included was an unnamed Indian doctor. Not all those executed are known by name and it is generally believed the number of victims is far greater than the recorded list of names on the memorial stone.
After the war, the Sandakan Chinese Chamber of Commerce recovered the remains and reburied them at a memorial site near the Chinese cemetery on Red Hill. The memorial is located near the entrance to the Sandakan Chinese Cemetery.
The Japanese captain in charge, Nakata Shinichi, was later tried as a war criminal and executed by hanging in 1947.
Hakka people form the largest Chinese dialect group in Sabah (formerly North Borneo), with roots tracing back to late 19th-century migration from Guangdong, China, organized by the British North Borneo Company to develop agriculture and infrastructure. First arriving in Kudat in 1883, they established strong community, agricultural, and religious (Basel Christian) roots in areas like Kota Kinabalu, Tenom, and Sandakan.
The Basel Christian Church in Sabah (now known as the Basel Christian Church of Malaysia – BCCM) began with the migration of Hakka Christians from China in the late 19th century, sponsored by the Basel Missionary Society. This missionary work, which focused on both Chinese immigrants and later indigenous populations, was deeply rooted in German-Swiss Protestant tradition.
The Basel Mission (Evangelische Missionsgesellschaft in Basel) was historically a very wealthy and economically powerful organization, particularly from the mid-19th to the early 20th century, due to its unique combination of evangelical work and commercial enterprises.
CIVILIANS EXECUTED 1.5 MILES OUT OF SANDAKAN May 1945:
CHAN TECK WAH (Clerk Harrison & Crossfield)
THOMAS CHAN (former Chinese Consulate staff & Firewood Merchant)
CHONG WAI CHO (Basel School Teacher & Editor Chinese Overseas Daily)
PONGOLO, STANISLAUS DOMINIC(Retired Deputy Assistant Commissioner of Customs)
FUNG BAK MING (Member China Relief Fund)
ALFRED FUNK (co-owner of Radio & Sons)
K.A. GEORGE (Inspector Sandakan Sanitary Board and Town Council Leader.)
HO SHU FAH (Merchant & Member China Relief Fund)
JAPPAR (Trader)
YAU KAM CHUNG/CHENG ALSO KNOWN AS KHOO KIM CHUNG/CHENG
YAU KAM CHENG/KHOO KIM CHENG, a Teochew, was one of the Sandakan community leaders before and during the war. Owner, Chip Loong & Company. Following Japan’s invasion of China 1937, he was the Chairman of the China Relief Fund set up by the Chinese Chamber of Commerce of Sandakan which raised money for the Chinese war effort.
After Sandakan was taken by Japan 19 January 1942 Japanese Command issued a direct to the leading Chinese merchants in Sandakan to raise $400,000 for their war effort. They threatened to destroy Sandakan and its population if the Chinese leaders fail to raise specified sum. The committee in Sandakan comprised leaders of the Sandakan Chinese Chamber of Commerce:
Yau Kam Chung, Kwan Yun Hin, Kwan Loke Ming, Ho Su Fah (Ho Siew Wah) and Chan Tian Joo.
Initially, Yau and the four committee members could only raise $200,000, half of the total amount. This was contributed by all the other leaders of the Chinese Chamber of Commerce. Therefore there was an urgent need to increase the amount by $200,000. The five committee members mortgaged their personal properties and put up the properties of the Chinese Chamber of Commerce as cash certificates. Cash certificates were issued as normal currency in the exchange of goods in Chinese shops.
Lt. KONG SU EN – chief clerk, Medical Department, British North Borneo & Lieutenant North Borneo Volunteer Force before the war in Sandakan (capital of British North Borneo.) He was earning a comfortable salary of $110 a month at the Sandakan Hospital In 1937, he met Rose Kong, then aged 17 years and a belle of Sandakan. He married Rose and in time they had three children.
In 1939, Kong Su En joined the North Borneo Volunteer Force. Later promoted to rank of lieutenant in Volunteers in 1941. The “B “Company in the Volunteer Force based in Sandakan was under the command of Capitan H.R. Parnell. When the Japanese invasion began in 19 January 1942, the Volunteer Force were ordered with the North Borneo Armed Constabulary, not to resist and immediately disband.
At Sandakan Kong Su En and members of the Volunteers surrendered. Although he was allowed to return home and resume his civil occupation at the hospital, he was always under rigid surveillance by the Japanese “gestapo” (Kempeitai) because he had been a lieutenant in the Volunteer Force. The Japanese thought Kong was a British spy but they did not arrest and execute him in May 1945.
KONG SU LEONG (Wireless Operator)
KWAN LOK MING – was one of the Sandakan community leaders before and during the war. He was the wartime Chairman of the Chinese Chamber of Commerce of Sandakan. He and his cousin, Kwan Yun Hin who was the pre-war chairman of the Chinese Chamber of Commerce were members of the Man Woo Loong & Co.
KWAN HUN HIN (Member of Legislative Council & Partner Man Loong & Co).
LEE SENG LOK (Trader)
LEW KEW KONG
LINCK, Mrs (a Jewish German refugee and wife of local pharmacist) **
LEE SAH CIE, Dr (Japanese Language Censor, Chungking News) and prominent Sandakan citizen.
NG SHEA WAH – Chinese Secretary at Harrison & Crossfield. He was active in Sandakan Chinese Chamber of Commerce and a member of the Standing Executive Committee. He was Vice Chairman of China Relief Fund which supported war resistance following the 1937 increased Japanese aggression. On 25 August 1940, the Chartered Company set up North Borneo Spitfire Fund to collect donations for two units of the British Spitfires which bore the name North Borneo I & II. Ng Seah Wah was one of the five members of the fund.
Ng Shea Wah was one of the 28 prominent citizens taken by the Kempetai following a visit to his home leaving a wife and children. He was one of 28 citizens executed the night of 27 May 1945. Nine graves had been dug up earlier in the day and Ng was buried in the seventh grave.
NG TAI YONG (Building Contractor)
PANG THAU FEN/PANG TAO PEN (Government Clerk)
PATAL, M. S. (Pharmacist & Manager Sandakan Dispensary).
TAM (Wireless Operator)
STELLA TAO (Chinese Teacher from Shanghai)
VOON THAU YIN (Teacher, St Michael School)
VOON YIN CHONG (Chief Clerk, Public Works Department)
UNIDENTIFIED INDIAN DOCTOR
DR LEE VOO YIN
** Mrs. Linke, Mrs. Preuss (an Australian) and a ‘Eurasian woman’ named Ma Cohen (Bagdadhi Jew) were all arrested as part of the Japanese crackdown.
Stella Tao, the Chinese teacher from Shanghai was deeply involved in Sandakan’s civilian resistance, particularly operating an underground radio to send vital intelligence to the Allies.
CIVILIAN EXECUTION AT MILE 1.5 SANDAKAN, 28 May 1945:
Foo Chi Ming
Pereira, Andrew Justin – Government printer under British admin. pre-war. He was son-in-law of Pedro Dominic Penghol and the adopted son of William Burgess Pryer.
Following the capitulation to Japan of the Dutch East Indian army, Pereira kept his role until there was no further work at the printers office. The Pereiras left their home at Jalan Leila for 13 Mile.
Captain Nakata Shinichi, Commandant of the Sandakan Kempeitai ordered his subordinate Sergeant Major Matsui Shintaro to arrest and execute Andrew Pereira and two residents of Sandakan, Richard Watson and Foo Chee Ming (Foo Chee Kong). At the same time, Matsui also received a direct from Lieutenant Fuji, the Security officer of the Japanese unit under Colonel Mitsugi Otsuka to arrest and execute another two.
Watson, Richard (Accountant)
After the end of war Japanese Matsui Shintaro was put on trial for the murder of the three men and sentenced to 18 months.
CIVILIAN EXECUTION: SHOT AT SANDAKAN BY KEMPIETAI ON NIGHT 27 MAY 1945:
Sui Chong **
Ten Pek
**. Sui Chong was a prominent Chinese community leader in Sandakan arrested and executed by Japanese Kempeitai on night May 27, 1945(Sandakan, not Kuching). He was one of 28 prominent local Chinese leaders who were executed in retaliation for Allied naval and aerial attacks on Sandakan harbour that day.
The massacre took place near Kempeitai HQ at the 1.5-mile point outside Sandakan town. The bodies of the victims were exhumed and properly buried at a memorial site after the war ended.
In addition to the Chinese victims, other nationalities were among the victims:
M S Patel, the owner of a pharmacy in Sandakan.
Mrs. Linck, the wife of the German pharmacist employed there.
Chong Wai Cho, was a Wu Hwa-Hakka born from Guangdong province in China where he received education before taking up an appointment as a schoolmaster of Sung Siew Secondary School which was a English medium Basel Mission school in Sandakan
Chong was the father of Chong An Min, the former Manager of Tractor Malaysia and Chong Jiu Si and other siblings
In 1938, Chong started the Chinese newspaper called ‘The Sandakan Overseas Chinese Daily’ providing news of the Sino-Japanese war in China. He was editor, reporter, manager, printer and distributor of his paper. Most of the news was obtained through radio broadcasts from Chongqing, the wartime capital of Kuomintang ruling China. His newspaper also carried anti-Japanese cartoons.
Chong and his newspaper was welcomed by the Chinese community in Sandakan.
When the Japanese Army occupied Sandakan in 1942, Chong’s newspaper ceased operation.
Above: Foo Chi Ming – Executed 28 May 1945 Sandakan.
Kwan Choo (Chue) Ming and his brother Kwan Ming Ming were later arrested and taken to the Kuching camp. They were released when Japan surrendered 8 months later. Ming Ming who had contracted several illnesses, died soon after. Choo Ming credited his survival to drinking his own urine.
He was later awarded by the Australian Govt for his efforts on the part of the Aust POWs
Members of the Australian 9th Division finally liberated Sandakan on 19 October 1945. The children of Yau Kam Chung had survived, however after the war, they learned their father had been executed. Alex Khoo, the son of Yau Kam Chung was a five year old when his father was taken away by the Kempeitai. He also lost his sister and mother in the Allied bombing in 1944.
WAR TRIALS
On 27 May 1945, WO Kosaka Shigeo and Captain Nakata Shinichi led the killings of 28 leading Sandakan residents, who were suspected of espionage activities.
At Jesselton where the war trials were being held Kosaka and Captain Nakata Shinichi were both charged on 24 and 25 January 1947 with committing war crimes related to May 1945 killings.
Captain Nakata was sentenced to death by hanging.
Warrant Officer Kosaka Shigeo was sentenced to 20 years imprisonment.
SANDAKAN, NORTH BORNEO 26 OCT 1946. IDENTIFICATION PHOTOGRAPH OF SUSPECTED JAPANESE WAR CRIMINALS.
LEFT TO RIGHT: CAPTAIN NAKATA SHINICHI; WARRANT OFFICER KOSAKA SHIGEO; SERGEANT MAJOR EHARA KESAO; AND SERGEANT MAJOR MATSUI SHINTARO.
Sergeant Hosotani Naoji of the Japanese Kempeitai served in Sandakan. During the day of 27 May 1945, Sergeant Naoji shot two Chinese near Kempeitai HQ at Mile 1.5 where the Japanese executed 28 persons.
Besides that, he also killed two Australian POWs who attempted to escape from him during the second death march.
Following the liberation of Sandakan Sergeant Naoji was interrogated by Squadron Leader F.G. Birchall of the RAAF Missing Servicemen Section and Sergeant Mamo, a United States Army nisei member of the Allied Translator and Interpreter Section attached to the Australian 9th Division. He confessed to shooting two Australian POWs and five Chinese civilians. He was subsequently tried as the war crime at the Australian Military Court held at Labuan on 29 December 1945. He was found guilty and sentenced to death by shooting. He was executed by firing squad on 6 March 1946.
SANDAKAN, NORTH BORNEO 26 OCT 1945 IDENTIFICATION PHOTOGRAPH OF SUSPECTED JAPANESE WAR CRIMINAL 1ST CLASS PRIVATE MATSUI MITSUGI.
Following the liberation of Sandakan, Sergeant Naoji was interrogated by Squadron Leader F.G. Birchall of the RAAF Missing Servicemen Section and Sergeant Mamo, a United States Army nisei member of the Allied Translator and Interpreter Section attached to the Australian 9th Division. Sgt Naoji confessed to shooting two Australian POWs and five Chinese civilians. He was subsequently tried as the war crime at the Australian Military Court held at Labuan on 29 December 1945. He was found guilty and sentenced to death by shooting. He was executed by firing squad on 6 March 1946.
HARRISON & CROSSFIELD LTD & ASSOCIATED COMPANIES 1844-1995.
The following is a brief overview of the company.
(Daniel & Smith Harrison and Joseph Crosfield entered into partnership January 1844 to trade as tea and coffee merchants at 6 Temple Street, Liverpool, under the style Harrisons and Crosfield. They moved July 1854 to 3 Great Tower Street, London, becoming from 1860s one of the largest tea traders in Britain.)
The company took on additional partners and became increasingly involved in rubber and plantation estates in the mid-20th century, acquired shareholdings, often acting as agents and secretaries, in a number of plantation companies. By the late 20th century, Harrisons and Crosfield managed nearly half a million acres of tropical crops in Sri Lanka, Malaysia, Southern India, Indonesia and Papua New Guinea. The firm became a limited company under the name Harrisons and Crosfield Limited in May 1908.
Most of the company’s interest in tea was disposed of in 1916 with the formation of Twining, Crosfield and Company Limited. As well as diversifying into rubber plantation Harrisons and Crosfield Limited had interests in timber (through its stake in British Borneo Timber Limited, later called Sabah Timber Company), and especially from the 1950s, palm oil, speciality chemicals and other estates agency work, including the related business from insurance and shipping. They established offices in many countries.
BORNEO: The company operated through a subsidiary company Harrisons and Crosfield (Borneo) Ltd, registered 1918 in Sandakan (Ms 37541-61). See also records of Sabah Timber Company Ltd (Ms 38103-78).
From 1960’s onwards the company has been through many changes and directions with companies merging, being sold, etc. The firm became a public limited company in 1982.
Late 1997 the firm started disposing of all its timber and building supplies and food and agriculture divisions, to concentrate on speciality chemicals. From January 1998 the firm has been known as Elementis Plc.
This is the story of two brave and strong women from Sandakan WW2
Jewish-born Mrs Cohen was born Singapore with Iraq ancestry & Agnes Newton Keith born in California.
‘Ma’ Cohen – a significant & exceptionally generous benefactor to Australian POWs at Sandakan, WW2 – local businesswoman who never turned any request away, helped Sandakan’s European civilians banished to Berhala Island, providing food, medicines & essentials
‘MA’ MOSELLE & MR MENAHEM COHEN – SANDAKAN, BRITISH NORTH BORNEO, WW2
Above: Menahem Cohen (was from Yemen) and Ma Cohen.
BAGDADDI JEWS
Following Britain’s founding of Singapore in 1819, a small number of traders from Baghdad (originally from Iraq) were attracted by commerce opportunities and relative religious freedom, began arriving in Singapore.
They initially spoke Arabic or Hindustani and wrote in Hebrew. Their style of dress was Arabic, they smoked the hookah (a tobacco pipe), and without formal accountancy training, wrote business accounts on their shirt cuffs.
Singapore’s Jewish community was a thriving, mostly Baghdadi Sephardic group, growing from a handful in the 1830s to about 1,000 by the late 1930s, built on trade establishing key institutions including the Maghain Aboth & Chesed El Synagogues.
A number of Singapore Jewish traders m2oved to Sandakan. Sandakan and North Borneo was made up of many cultures and nationalities, including Chinese.
Maghain Aboth Synagogue, Singapore. Built in 1878, it is the oldest and largest Jewish synagogue in Southeast Asia and the second largest in Asia itself, outside of Israel.
Above: we wish to acknowledge Jewish Welfare Board Singapore for the above photo.
Sir Manasseh Meyer: Was a major businessman and philanthropist who funded both main synagogues and was knighted by King George V for his contributions to Singapore.
Chesed El Synagogue, Singapore which opened in 1905.
For more information about he Bagdadi Jewish population https://rememberbaghdad.com/history
By 1939, the Singapore population reached around 1,000, a significant increase from just 9 traders in 1830, with later arrivals including Ashkenazim Jews from Europe. Jews and Arabs, were major property owners in the city by the 1930s and were mostly involved in trade.
Whilst predominantly a Shephardic community, they welcomed European Jews. It was a diverse yet tight-knit group.
‘Baghdadi, Sephardi and Ashkenazi Jews were integral to the development of Sabah or North Borneo and were pioneers, planters, merchants, political refugees and prisoners of war.’
The Singaporean Bagdadhi Shephardic Jewish community were mostly traders and had often had businesses or business dealings in British North Borneo as well as Penang, Hong Kong, China etc. establishing vast merchant networks, notably through families like Sassoon and Kadoorie and linking the Middle East, India, Southeast Asia, and China in major enterprises like opium, banking, and real estate. They were instrumental in leveraging Singapore’s strategic port status.
They had become significant property owners prior to the Japanese occupation, many of the men were away on business trips as usual when war came, so women and children often left for India during this time.
Many of those left behind were imprisoned by the Japanese in Singapore (because Japan was allied with Germany). The Jewish community did receive better treatment than most civilian POWs and in fact a number were never imprisoned.
‘Ma’ Cohen was free to move about as she liked in Sandakan, British North Borneo. That was why she became the most generous person to give to the POWs and local civilians sent to Berhala Island.
Above: 1890 Mr Menahem & Mrs Moselle Cohen, Purveyors, Sandakan with mostly Jewish identities advertising. We thank and acknowledge Rosalie Corpuz – a relation to information about ‘Ma’ Cohen for the above and below photos.
Typical Sandakan wedding – with Mrs Cohen in attendance (circled) provided by Rosalie Corpuz.
We have found some family history about Moselle Cohen from extended family members including Eliora Frankel Mordecai.
Moselle was the daughter of Ezra Messiah (b. Bagdad) and his first wife Habiba (known as Nani) – other siblings were Simon and Moshiach. Ezra then married a second time to Khatun known as Kitty. Their four children were Sophie, Monty, Meda and Jospeh.
We believe Moselle married at Singapore to Menahem Cohen who was born Yemen, they had a family of three children in Singapore however, the couple seemed to spend much of their time at Sandakan, North Borneo. We believe their children were with them when young. Their eldest child and only son became a prominent surgeon in Singapore.
‘Yahya Cohen was senior surgeon at the Singapore General Hospital and a former president of the Singapore Medical Council. Born in Singapore on 1 April 1920, he was the son of Menahem Cohen, a Yemeni merchant and Mozelle née Ezra who was from Iraq. The eldest of their three children, he was the only son. When he was eight or nine years old, his father had to have an operation and he later wrote that visiting him in hospital inspired his commitment to surgery. In Singapore, he was educated at Raffles Girls’ School, St Andrew’s School and Raffles College before attending the King Edward VII College of Medicine in 1938 where John Kirkpatrick Monro was professor of surgery. His medical education was interrupted by the Japanese occupation of Singapore from 1942 to 1945. As Jews they were interned in Changi jail (as was John Monro) and Cohen’s parents died on a boat to Kuching which was bombed, possibly by the Americans. He recalled that he lost a lot of Chinese friends and classmates who were decapitated by the Japanese.’
‘Ma’ Cohen was known for her cooking and generosity. She owned a clothing store in Sandakan. The Japanese did not consider her British and therefore she was not arrested. She was free to roam and this she did, looking after her many friends who had lost their freedom in internment camps – providing them with foods, medicines and essentials. She became an important source of funds, in fact the largest source of funds for the POWs – providing them with means of survival, foods and medicines and radio parts. She bravely became part of the resistance movement against the Japanese and with the so called ‘underground radio network.’
A driver for the Sandakan Residency Governor Mr Habib Omar from Tanah Merah, Sandakan was identified as a member of the Kempei Tai (Japanese secret police) and responsible for the betrayal and death of Mr & Mrs Cohen, traders in Sandakan.
His actions were witnessed by Gani (Kg Sumiang), Abdullah Sali (Labukan) and Detective Osman (Libaran).
Agnes Newton Keith, author ‘Three Came Home’ included in her book her story of Mrs Cohen whom she said she had known a long time. ‘Ma’Cohen was a patient at Sandakan Hospital when she, Agnes and her young son George were also patients with malaria.
Agnes Keith described Mrs Cohen…
‘she was glorious in being and soul with an Oriental splendour of face, hair and hands. Her eyes were melting, her features were fine, her expressions dramatic, her tears quick and her emotions real. She loved bright colours especially the varying reds of hibiscus blooms and she wore gowns in these shades cut Mother Hubbard style, fitted to her bosoms and flowing from thence downwards. From her handsome head flowed chins and bosoms, from bosoms flowed draperies and from draperies showed bare feet and when she moved she flowed along the floor.
Her heart like her body was large, soft and lovable. No one ever asked for something and was refused: time, sympathy, money or help. They all came to her for help, Eurasions, Chinese, Malays, housekeepers, kept women, nurses, coolies, myself.
Her pocket-book was under her pillow and she had constant recourse to it. The first thing she did was to press ten dollars into my hands.
She was a force in Sandakan Asiatic life, she was the core of Eurasion society, business and commerce. No wedding or funeral or birth was complete without her.
Daily her Arab boys came from the shop to bring her delicious kosher cooking which shared with all of us. She and George sat crosslegged on the floor together eating, she rolled the rice into balls, native style and popped these into his mouth. George would eat until he was in pain, then she rubbed his stomach, massaged him and sang to him until he went to sleep. When he awakened they began eating again.
If George was naughty and I scalded him, I was the one rebuked. She would engulf him into the folds of her bosom, kiss him, tell him stories and mesmerise him into passivity.
She was having injections in the hospital for skin problems and was expecting to remain a week longer. One afternoon Mr Cohen arrived begging her to come back to the shop to save him from the Japanese soldiers. He was older than Mrs Cohen, a small man badly crippled by diabetes and systemic poisoning and Mrs Cohen stood like a mountain between him and the world.
Mr Cohen said the Japanese were demanding goods at half price from the store and when he refused to sell they stole the stuff and beat him up. Mrs cohen had her own system in dealing with the soldiers . She combined collaboration, coercion, bribery and betrayal. She hid all the store better goods, sold inconsequential gifts to them for what they would pay, donated worthless souvenirs, gave them coffee and let them confide in her. Meanwhile she gained friends amongstthem to help her smuggle to the European prisoners.
She didn’t want to go back to the shop and leave hospital, principally, I believe because she hated to leave George. But Mr. Cohen was as helpless as George, so she folded up her Mother Hubbard dresses, her several chins and bosoms and went back to the shop. She left throwing kisses to George, calling advice to the nurses, waving at me and weeping. With her departure ribald and gaiety was gone. After she had gone I found 50 dollars under my pillow to be delivered by me to her friends on Berhala.’
She came several times after that to visit us against the orders and warnings of the Japanese military police bringing with her biscuits, sweets and clothes for George. I told her I was frightened for her. She said
‘You are my friends, I am sad to see you need things, I must help you. I am not worried for myself and I am not afraid of these Japanese. But the old man is sick and cannot take care of himself. Also he must have brown wheat for his diebetes and Kosher food. If I get put in gaol he will die.’
Agnes Keith never saw Mrs Cohen again. Sometime later she was accused of conspiracy in connection with the escape of some Australian POWs. She was imprisoned for a long time but finally released. She was later taken back into custody and Agnes Keith believed, Mrs Cohen was executed by the Japanese around Armistice Day.
There are several stories about the Cohen’s death. The most probable one is Ma Cohen was arrested and together with her husband and with other prisoners placed on a ship to sail to Kuching for a Japanese military trial. Their transport ship was hit by Allied torpedoes and sank with total loss of life.
Another theory: A driver for the Sandakan Residency Governor Mr Habib Omar from Tanah Merah, Sandakan was identified as a member of Kempei Tai (Japanese secret police) and responsible for the betrayal and death of Mr & Mrs Cohen, traders in Sandakan.
The driver’s actions were witnessed by Gani (Kg Sumiang), Abdullah Sali (Labukan) and Detective Osman (Libaran). This information is from North Borneo Historical Journal written by Avtar Singh.
Above: The Keith family home was totally destroyed in bombing raids. They had this house built with the same plans in 1946. Today it is a museum.
Above: Seated Agnes and her husband.
****** Please go to bottom of page to read further about Agnes Keith and Colonel Suga.
Unfortunately this large, diverse and very brave group of locals risked their lives for many months – but were given away to the Japanese Kempetei by a disgruntled local Chinese man & other locals who were spies for Japan.
In July 1943 the Japanese Kempeitai wasted no time rounding up those they considered to be the ringleaders – Dr. Taylor, Australian POWs – Captain Lionel Matthews, Rod Wells and Gordon Wyneton, Detective Lagan and Corporal Abin were taken for questioning to Kempeitai HQ in the town of Sandakan. This was just the beginning of brutal interrogations and horrific torture – Kempeitai style, including water-boarding. Please read further
2/4th’s Alf Stevens was also arrested and subjected to terrible torture. (He was sentenced to 4 years solitary confinement in Outram Road Prsison, Singapore)
Another 100 were rounded up suspected of being involved. For three months they were relentlessly beaten, questioned and tortured to reveal the names of co-conspirators. With military precision the Kempeitei had meticulously searched every inch of the POW camp and through personal belongings in an attempt to identify those involved in building the radio transmitter and for possible links to the underground. They also targeted and terrorised the wives and children of those civilians and locals who were arrested.
Ma Cohen’s name was included on the list the Japanese had access to. She was arrested and was the only woman amongst about 250 local men, as well as Australian POWs. The Japanese were unable to prove her guilt – and those arrested would not give her away. She was released after some six months. She was later fined $1,000 – which is quite a lot of money.
The Japanese were brutal with their interrogations and torture, in the most horrific conditions, particularly towards the Australian POWs with many placed in cages unable to stand, continual torture, no food or water.
Those kept captive by the Kempetai were forbidden to talk amongst themselves. Capt Matthews and most of the Australian POWs unknown to the Kempeitei used morse code to communicate with each other – enabling them to keep abreast of the amount of knowledge Kempeitei knew and how much each POW revealed.
In late October 1943 more than 200 prisoners were placed on a old ship to sail to Kuching, where they faced further interrogations, torture and finally a Japanese Military Court to face charges. Every word was spoken in Japanese and every document written in Japanese. The accused were never offered interpreters.
The Japanese would not have given up on ‘Ma’ Cohen so easily. She was again arrested and one story is she was sent with her husband on a boat to Kutching for trial. Her ship was hit and sunk by a torpedo from a US submarine. Another story was the Japanese killed her by placing her in a barrel and rolling it about. It is a tragic ending for a brave and generous lady.
The Cohens had three children, two daughters and the eldest was a son named Yahyah Cohen born 1920 who became a highly regarded surgeon in Singapore.
The following is a brief overview of the Bagdadhi Jewish population and their movement from Iraq & the Jewish population of Yemen. It is not a study of religion, rather the journey of the Cohen family’s ancestors.
The Jewish population of Yemen was one of the longest-standing in the Arab world, plying its trade of silversmithing for hundreds of years. It was believed small populations remain in northern Yemen.
Menahem Cohen came from Yemen, probably to Singapore where he married Mozelle, before moving to Sandakan.
Yemen: Synagogue, al-Hajjarah, Haraz Mountains of Yemen.
Above: Yemenite Jews.
Jewish population leave behind their home countries of Iraq and Yemen
Iraqi Jews were airlifted to Israel in 1950 and 1951. Known as Operation Ezra and Nehemiah. More than 120,000 Jews left Iraq, leaving only a small number behind to continue the community’s 2,600-year-old presence, from the Babylonian exile around 586 BCE.
This had been one of the oldest and most significant Jewish communities thriving in Mesopotania until 1941 and the Farhud program, followed by mass migration in 1949 to 1952. Many Iraqi Jews did not want to leave Iraq, they saw Iraq as their home.
Below: Al-Uzair (Ezra) Mosque and Holy site in Al-Uzair town, south-Iraq.
Al-Uzair (Ezra) Mosque was originally a major Jewish Synagogue and pilgramage site dedicated to the biblical prophet Ezra who is buried there. Following the mass exodus of Iraqi Jews in the 1950s, the site was transformed into a Islamic landmark.
The Meir Taweig Synagogue in Bagdad is the last remaining Jewish Synagogue in this city.
Above: Sasson Synagogue, Mosul – damaged by recent war.
Below: Just Surviving – evidence of interior of Sasson Synagogue, Mosul.
In 1948 the Yemeni population was estimated to be about 50,000. There was a small population in northern Yemen – however today, their safety is unknown.
Following several waves of persecution the vast majority of Yemenite Jews emigrated to Israel with the Operation Magic Carpet between June 1949 and September 1950. Smaller communities chose to emigrate to US and elsewhere.
The Jewish population of Yemen is one of the longest-standing in the Arab world, having plied its trade of silversmithing for hundreds of years.
The Grand Synagogue of Aden also known as the Magen Avraham Synagogue or Shield of Avraham Synagogue, was located in Aden, Yemen.
The Great Synagogue of Aden (Al-Milama’l-kabira, Magen Avraham), built around 1858 in Yemen, was a prominent, large-scale structure known for its traditional architectural style. It served as a central community hub until 1944 and was demolished shortly after 1999.
It was a cornerstone of the Adeni Jewish community until their emigration.
Adeni Jews lived in a distinct Jewish community in the British controlled Port of Aden, Yemen from 1839 – 1967. It was a flourishing, cosmopolitan and trade-oriented society under British rule. Due to their unique, Western-influenced, and prosperous culture, they distinguished themselves from mainland Yemenite Jews. Following the 1947 riots and later 1967, the community emigrated primarily to Israel and London.
Aden’s Grand Synagogue was abandoned during the 1947 anti-Jewish riots in Aden and destroyed in 1994, during the Yemeni civil war.
Below: There appears to be little or no surviving pictures/photos of the Grand Synagogue. These show the interior only.
INDIA’s JEWISH POPULATION
The history of Jews in India dates back to the ancient times. Judaism was the probably the first foreign religion to reach India. An extreme minority, they lived peacefully with the local population for centuries.
The first group of Jews arrived in the Cochin region of Kerala long before the birth of Christ and known as the Cochin Jews.
Next came the Bene Israel (literally meaning the Children of Israel) Jews, who were considered as descended of the lost tribes of Israel. They arrived more than three centuries ago and settled along the west cost of India.
At the end of the nineteenth century came the Baghdadi Jews, who, as the name suggests, are of Iraqi origin. They were a flourishing business community and settled in business centres like Calcutta and Bombay.
Above: Mercy Synagogue in Mumbai, India aka Shaar Harahamim and Juni Masjid. This is the oldest Synagogue in Mumbai and one of oldest in India. Originally built 1796, it was rennovated, rebuilt and moved to its present location in 1860. It can hold 300 persons.
Above & Below: Paradesi Synagogue, India showing entrance before and after restoration.
Below: Hebrew inscription tablet Kochangadi Synagogue, in the courtyard wall of the Paradesi Synagogue.
1968 the Paradesi Synagogue celebrated its 400th anniversary. The ceremony was attended by the Indian Prime Minister, Indira Gandhi.
There were three classes of Synagogue members:
White Jews were full members. White Jews or Paradesi Jews were recent descendants of Shephardim from Spain, Portugal and the Netherlands.
Black Jews or Malabari Jews were allowed to worship but were not admitted to full membership. These Cochin Jews were the original Jewish settlers of Cochin.
Meshuchrarim – a group of freed slaves and their descendants brought by the Shephardim. They had no communal right and no synagogue of their own and sat on the floor or on steps outside. In the first half of the 20th century, Abaraham Barak Salem, a meshuchrarm, successfully campaigned against this discrimination.
Above: Keneseth Eliyahoo Bagdadhi Synagogue, Founded 1884 Mumbai.
Below: Interior of Keneseth Eliyahoo Synagogue which is has water damage from decades of monsoons & neglect. It requires restoration. The roof, ceilings and walls are damaged, some areas of the floors are sinking and parts of the Victorian stain glass window require replacement.
Keneseth Eliyahoo Synagogue is one of two Baghdadi Jewish synagogues in Mumbai. Funded by the Sassoons, a prominent Jewish family of entrepreneurs and philanthropists, it was built in the classical revival style with a double height prayer hall. According to experts, it has some of the finest stained glass in all of Mumbai.
Above: detail and beauty of Synagogue windows and walls.
In Bombay Jews flourished under the leadership of David Sassoon, a prominent Baghdadi Jew, who settled in Bomaby in 1832. The Baghdadi Jews, while retaining their Iraqi Jewish culture, also went on to establish themselves as wealthy businessmen and philanthropists in Mumbai. Soon their business flourished and the Bagdadi Jews of Mumbai started settling in the posh Byculla area of south Mumbai.
While at Berhala Island Agnes saw Colonel Suga. He called her to his office, Agnes always took her young son George with her. Suga informed her he had read her book ‘Land Below the Wind’ translated into Japanese, adding that he liked it. He informed her he attended University of Washington in the US, and asked Agnes why Americans were prejudiced against the Japanese. She always avoided answering this question which came up again several times in future meetings at Kuching.
ALL POWS ON BERHALA MOVE TO KUCHING.
Suga wanted her to write a book for him, which he would censor. Agnes responded she did not have time with the jobs she had to tend to daily. (All POWs worked, including the women – usually in the fields) Most importantly she did not have anything to write with.
Agnes saw Colonel Suga at Kuching, where he again asked her to write for him. Suga was based at the Japanese HQ at Kuching.
Finally she was called into Colonel Suga’s office where he produced an American copy of her book, which had her name inside and had been taken from her house by Mr. Maeda. Suga asked her to give the book to him by writing his name inside the cover. Suga pulled her husband Harry’s fountain pen out of his top pocket and handed it to her! (He had obviously acquired the pen and book from Mr Maeda).
Suga’a orderly then produced pineapple, biscuits and very sweet coffee for her and George. Then Suga broke the news – “You are going to write the ‘Life and Thoughts of an Internee” for me in your spare time. This is an order. After a little more time when Agnes said she had not the time with her camp duties, no equipment and said he ‘could not order her what to say!’
All right! He said. And walked out.
He gave her pen, ink, pencil and paper and ordered the office to release a confiscated typewriter for her use and ordered her to go.
Agnes was sleepless worrying about how she would cope, she was dealing with the camp Commandant Suga, the man who was in charge of the all POWs on Borneo/Sarawak. The women’s Camp was already short of able-bodied women to work and she knew she could not do both, work and writing.
The next day she was informed by her camp master she was to bereleased from community camp work by Suga’s order. The Japanese office was to pay $3 a month into the community fund as her salary. She was to continue doing part time work in the camp as a substitute for women who became ill.
Agnes Keith, her son George and her husband Harry Keith survived Kuching. The numbers of of death had been enormous due to malnutrition. There was such a shortage of food, the women would cut grass to give to their children with the minimal food provided.
At the time of liberation on September 11, 1945, the camp held 2,024 survivors, including 1,392 POWs and 632 civilian internees.
It is believed Between January 1945 and the Japanese surrender on August 15, 1945, over 500 POWs died, often at a rate of two or three per day due to dysentery and starvation.
The camp had a fluctuating population reaching up to 3,000 prisoners (including civilians). Reports indicate that of the approximately 2,000 British POWs held there, over 1,300 died, or roughly two-thirds of that population.
Below: Lintang Barracks, Kuching 1941-45. (We wish to acknowledge this map was copied from ‘Kuching in Pictures 1841-1946’ – having been unable to find another map anywhere!)
Above: Agnes with Australian Officers following Surrender.
Above: Aerial photo of Lintang Barracks, Kuching.
Above: Some of the children imprisoned at Lintang – now Free!
WX5123 Pte JOHN STANLEY PASS b. 1899 England enlisted 1940. He joined 2/4th’s 11 Platoon.
And yes! His nickname in 2/4th was ‘KYBER’, Kyber Pass.’
He was WIA at Ulu Pandan 11 Feb 1942 Singapore receiving a shrapnel wound to his right heel. He was awarded in Oct 1942 an ‘E’ Medical Classification from the Japanese and remained in Singapore throughout the war. Please read further about Ulu Pandan
Prior to leaving England, Pass has served with the Royal Marine Artillery from 1916-1923 and on HMS HOOD. This would have been an exciting time for young John Pass – as well as a lot of work.
John Stanley died in New Zealand14/7/1976 aged of 88 years.
Above: HMS Hood
‘HMS Hood had Royal Marine Artillery (RMA) personnel on board who served as gunners for the ship’s anti-aircraft guns. Prior to 1923, the Royal Marine Artillery and Royal Marine Light Infantry were separate corps, but they were amalgamated into a single Royal Marines force. Therefore, while the ship had RMA members as part of its crew, the term ‘Royal Marine Artillery’ would have referred to the specific branch of service that its gunners belonged to before the 1923 amalgamation.
Members of the Royal Marine Artillery served on HMS Hood as a component of the ship’s overall crew, operating specific weaponry as part of their duties.’
HISTORY OF HMS HOOD
The battlecruiser was commissioned after WW1 era and did not participate in any combat. Hood was launched on August 22 1918, just months before the Armistice. She was the largest war ship in the world at that time and the most powerful war ship during the interwar years. Hood was a British ambassador sailing the world showing the Union Jack at every harbour.
HMS Hood was built at John Brown, Clydebank. There were several design flaws which the Admiralty knew of. There were modifications made over the years but not sufficient to keep abreast of world shipping.
‘However during these 20 interwar years Hood was the queen of the Royal Navy, the “mighty hood” for the press and general public, the uncontested knight champion of the oceans and guarantee that the Empire were well protected. She was regarded by all admiralties, including the USN, as THE finest-looking warships ever built, and in the end in her role as an ambassador, symbolising the might of the British Empire itself.’
Reports made clear Hood’s condensers were in bad shape and leaking. The output from the fresh-water evaporators was severely reduced, resulting in no water left for the crew to wash and bathe or even heating the mess decks. Steam pipes were really worn out. This steam output reduction has another consequence, leaving the ship unable to reach her designed speed anymore, which gave her no advantage in return for her weaker protection.
German battleship Bismarck and heavy cruiser PrinzEugen sailed from Kiel in the Baltic on 18 May 1941. Their plan was to break out into the Atlantic and head towards British shipping. While refueling near Bergen, the two vessels were spotted from the air. The British could not allow their shipping to be threatened and launched a massive air and sea operation.
They were next spotted in the Denmark Strait on 24 May where they engaged with battle-cruiser Hood and the new untried battle ship Prince of Wales, so new that she still had civilian workmen on board.
A shell from Bismarck hit Hood near its ammunition magazines. This caused a catastrophic explosion breaking the ship apart. Hood sank in just 3 minutes. Only three of her 1,418 crew members survived.
Below: Denmark Strait – between Greenland and Iceland.
Hood blew up and sank, Bismarck had also been hit losing 1000 tons of fuel oil stored in a forward tank.
On 25 May, German ships Bismarck and Prinz Eugen separated. Prinz Eugen vanished in the Atlantic while Bismarck headed for shelter to Brest and to rectify her fuel problem.
Bismarck was attacked that same evening by Swordfish from Ark Royal carrier. 15 aircraft took off at 7.10 pm during atrocious weather. Three torpedoes hit Bismarck with one jamming its rudders. Bismarck could only circle at no more than seven knots.
HUNT FOR THE BISMARCK
The loss of the Hood was a major shock to the Royal Navy. Bismarck was now the largest and fastest battleship in the world and would unleash terror on shipping which Britain was almost entirely reliant on. The loss of Hood fueled the British pursuit of the Bismarck, which was sunk three days later.
Sinking of the Hood was the single worst disaster for the Royal Navy in its four centuries of existence.Hood was a favourite in Britain, and her loss was a terrible blow to British pride.
It was also Bismarck’s only victory.
Three days later, she too lay on the bottom of the Atlantic, a victim of German hubris and British vengeance.
The German battleship Bismarck was sunk by the Royal Navy 27 May 1941, through a combined effort of naval and air forces.
The First phase late on 26 May consisted of air attacks by torpedo bombers from British aircraft carrierArk Royal. Bismarck‘s steering gear was disabled jamming her rudders in a turning position preventing her escape. Now leaking oil, Bismarck was an easy target.
At about 8.45am of 27th May Admiral Sir John Tovey onboard Flag ship HMS King George V joined by HMSRodney sighted Bismarck and opened fire. Those onboard the Bismarck knew they were doomed. By 9.30 Bismarck was no longer firing shots at the British and by 10.15 Bismarck was a burning wreck.
Now short of fuel Tovey turned for home ordering cruiser ‘Dorsetshire‘ to finish Bismarck off with her torpedoes.
Finally
Bismarck was finished off by torpedoes from the British heavy cruiser HMS Dorsetshire.At 10.39 Bismarck sank. There was a false U-boat sighting which curtailed rescue of Bismarck’s survivors. Only 110 men (plus the ship’s cat) were saved.
Twelve months later, the Dorsetshire was sunk after leaving Colombo by a Japanese carrier aircraft on April 5, 1942 500 miles southwest of Ceylon, sinking stern first. The ship disappeared quickly.
It was not so successful in UK possibly due to an mispelling of ship’s name (Bismark) and an incorrrect promotional image showing ‘HMS Prince of Wales’ instead of ‘Bismarck.’
Wanneroo legend 99 year old Jack Le Cras OAM shared his story – a young naval sailor who was present at the signing of Japan’s surrender to MacArthur on board the USS Missouri Sept 1945.
World War II veteran Jack Le Cras OAM has been a driving force behind commemorative services in the City of Stirling and Wanneroo for many years.
As a new and young naval recruit with Royal Australia Navy on HMAS Bataan (he celebrated his 19th birthday the previous day) he was one of three sailors out 350 on board, requested to take an official Australian party across Tokyo Bay in a motor launch to USS Missouri for the signing of the surrender and end of WW2, 2 September 1945.
Their task was to transport the following to Missouri:
Jack said all he was really interested in at that very time was the size of the US ship and the all the weaponry on board – nine 16″ guns. It was only years later he realised the significance of being present for this momentous world event.
In 1921 a memorial stone obelisk was erected in honour of the 9 local WW1 soldiers who lost their lives from Wanneroo. It originally stood outside the Post Office however was relocated twice before its current location.
Well-known local Wanneroo Legend, past President of Wanneroo RSL sub-Branch and past president of the Naval Association of WA Jack Le Gras OAM was guest speaker at today’s service.
In 1945, Jack, then aged 19 years (having just celebrated his birthday the previous day) was a RAN radar specialist and crew member onboard Australian destroyer HMAS Bataan, which was to take Australia’s senior military representatives to USS battleship Missouri in Tokyo Bay for the official surrender ceremony 2nd September 1945.
He and two other sailors got in a motorboat and made the trip with their three passengers :
Australian Army General Sir Thomas Blamey
Royal Australian Air Force Air Vice Marshal William Bostock
Royal Australian Navy Commodore John Collins.
Jack to this very day, hasn’t the faintest idea why he was chosen – and at that time he really did not fully understand the enormity of this pivotal world event marking the end of World War II.
He said he was too mesmerised by USS Missouri – she was the largest battleship in US Fleet being 887 feet (270 metres) long and displacing 58,000 tons. She carried a main battery of nine 16-inch guns, each of which could fire a 2,700-pound (1,200-kg) shell to a range of 23 miles (37 km). Powered by eight boilers turning four steam turbines, each attached to a separate screw, it was capable of speeds in excess of 30 knots (35 mph [56 km/hr]). During the war Missouri was manned by a crew of more than 2,500.
Jack Le Cras was a Royal Australian Navy (RAN) radar specialist who witnessed the Japanese surrender signing on the USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay on September 2, 1945, a pivotal moment marking the end of World War II, and as an elderly veteran, he became a prominent figure in honoring Australian service and sacrifice, often speaking about his unique experience on the surrender ship.
You may well ask yourself how did this occur?
‘Exactly why he was picked to make the trip remains a mystery to him.
“I haven’t the faintest idea,” he said.
“There were 350 men on the destroyer and us three were chosen.
“One of them was a bloke from Mandurah, so there were two West Aussies on that motorboat.”
After the war, Mr Le Cras supported efforts to recover prisoners-of-war in Japan, eventually returning to Perth in December 1945.’
From the crew of the Australian destroyer HMAS Bataan, Mr Le Cras was one of three chosen to take Australia’s senior military representatives to the US battleship for the surrender ceremony.
He and two other sailors got in a motorboat and made the trip with their three passengers – Australian Army General Sir Thomas Blamey, Royal Australian Air Force Air Vice Marshal William Bostock and Royal Australian Navy Commodore John Collins
By Cheryl Mellor, 2/4th Vice President & Historian
This year, I was able to attend the Wanneroo War Memorial for the first time – in recognition of three soldiers from 2/4th MGB – and the only WW2 names listed on the Wanneroo War Memorial.
WX4915 ALBERT ‘BARNEY’ BARNETT FACEY was KIA during the fighting with Japan on Singapore Island. Facey, 23 years old died 15th February 1945 – same day the Allied forces surrendered to Japan. Albert Barnett Facey was the eldest son of A.B.Facey, Author of’ A Fortunate Life’.
WX16407 LACEY GORDON GIBBS was younger brother to Jim Gibbs. Lacey was 27 years old when he was POW on Transport ship ‘Rakuylo’ Maru sailing from Singapore to Japan when they were attacked by American submarines and sank.
WX8958 WILLIAM HERBERT GIBBS, known as Jim. He was 28 years old when he perished in the South China Sea Sept 1944 following the torpedo attack on ‘Rakuyo’ Maru.
The Gibbs brothers were on POW Transport ship ‘Rakuyo’ Maru sailing from Singapore to Japan when she was torpedoed by US Submarines September 1944. Although a small number of POWs miraculously remained alive for 4 days and were saved, Lacey and Jim were amongst the large number of men who perished.
Waneroo mourned the loss of their sons, the families knew each other well. The Community then was considerably smaller.
I was most fortunate to hear Jack le Cras talk of his memories of being on the Missouri during the signing of surrender by the Japanese 3 September 1945 in Tokyo Bay. This year Jack hosted his final services before stepping away from the role, he reflected on an extraordinary journey.
He is a past-president of the Naval Association of WA and a past-president of the Wanneroo RSL Sub-Branch.
HMAS Bataan arrived in Tokyo Bay on August 31 1945, from Philippines in preparation for the formal surrender ceremony. On September 2, 1945, the ship was present at the formal signing.
Following the surrender, HMAS Bataan was involved in rescuing POWs and internees until November 1945, as part of the occupation force.
HMAS Bataan was a Tribal-class destroyer of RAN commissioned in 1945. It was named in honour of the US stand during the Battle of Bataan. It was too late for combat however was present for the end of the war. Bataan later served in Korean War and the British Commonwealth Occupation Force.
Below: From the air, Tokyo Bay with Missouri and small craft carrying Allied dignatories. The larger ship on the right is the Japanese Delegation.
Below: Onboard USS Missouri.
Below: The Japanese representatives arrive at Missouri.
Below: USS Missouri 1944
Jack has dedicated nearly a century of his life serving Australia and the Wanneroo community.
THE ‘THREE MUSKETEERS’ – POWs FROM WESTERN AUSTRALIA
KEATING, JENSEN & MARSHALL – arrested Sandakan sent to KUCHING FOR TRIAL
They were sappers from 2/6th Field Park Company RAE, this RAE unit provided essential technical skills, equipment and materials in support to fighting units such at 7th and 8th Divisions.
They mostly trained at Sandy Creek, South Australia.
Arrived Malaya May 1941 – part of 8th Division during the Malayan Campaign
The company arrived in Malaya in May 1941 as part of 8th Division during the Malayan Campaign and the Fall of Singapore. Those who survived became POWs of Japan following the Surrender in Singapore
As POWs in Singapore the Japanese sent a POW work Party which included the three ‘Musketeers’ to the island of Pulau Bukom where the Japanese were desperate to have the oil depot and tanks in working order.
Instead of placing the petroleum depot in full working order “Snowy” and his mates, using their mechanical knowledge, and managed to sabotage the diesel motors by removing vital parts and making the petroleum, including aviation fuels, impossible to pump.
The Japanese thought the Australians incompetent!
Next, Keating, Jensen and Morrison were sent to maintain the three X 30 foot mainland to Paulau Bukom island supply boats.
They attempted an escape by stealing one but of all the things that could go wrong – they ran aground and had to sneak back to camp making the boat appear to have slipped her moorings. The three had titled themselves as the “The Musketeers” and they were determined to escape home to be with their families once again.
_________________
POWs Singapore – North Borneo
(‘B’ Force Borneo comprising 1495 Australians of which 145 were officers were next to leave Singapore following on from ‘A’ Force Burma (ratio of about one officer to every 10 men is extremely high). They departed Singapore 8 July 1942 on passenger-cargo ship ‘Ume’ Maru to Sandakan)
Jensen, Keating and Marshall went to Berhala Island then Sandakan with ‘E’ Force Borneo from Singapore.
‘E’ Force originally comprised 500 British and 500 Australian POWs, departed Singapore 29 March 1943 sailing on a small cargo tramp ship de Klerk to Kuching (Sarawak) where the Australians remained 8 days, accommodated at the Lintang Barracks. The 500 British POWs disembarked at Kuching.
The 500 Australian POWs were sent to Berhala Island (North Borneo). In early June 1943 ‘E’ Force was moved to Sandakan.
On the ship ‘de Klerk‘ there was a large number of POWs planing-to-escape. There was even talk of taking over the ship until senior officers quashed the idea!
Sapper WX8818 Edward James (Ted/Teddy) KEATING,
Sapper WX9682 Carl Edgar ‘Snowy’ JENSEN,
Sapper WX10932 Don MARSHALL
and another POW named WESTON were onboard.
The 500 Australian POWs next sailed on ‘de Kerk’ to Berhala Island.
During the stopover at Berhala Island, the three musketeers planned to and achieved acquiring local maps and information for their escape.
Any escape had to be run by a senior officer – in this instance they approached Lt. Charlie Wagner who agreed on the plan, in fact he stated he would join them and would lead them.
Unknown to them, Wagner changed his mind and left with Lt Rex Blow in an earlier escape leaving Keating and his mates absolutely fuming. It was a terrible blow for these men who had planned for so long and pursued maps and information.
The seven POWs who escaped were
Capt Ray Steele,
Lts Rex Blow, Charlie Wagner and Miles Gillon
Sapper Jim Kennedy
Privates Rex Butler and Jock McLaren
and the eighth was Sgt Walter Wallace, who had earlier escaped from 8 Mile Camp.
Cpl Koram was one of the guards at Berhala and was contacted by some officers of ‘E’ Force, asking him to bring Wallace to them from the mainland (Sandakan).
The seven escapees met up with SGT WALTER WALACE who was hiding just outside Berhala Island POW camp – and they took him with them. (Walter Wallace with two other Australian POWs escaped 30 April 1943 from the 8 Mile Camp. They had separated – the other two POWs were betrayed by locals and executed, however Wallace was fortunate, the locals he met kept him safe.)
The group of 8 POWs had an adventurous escape and finally made their way by boat to Tawi Tawi, Philippines where they joined a local guerilla group – fighting the Japanese on Mindanao Island. Butler and Wagner were later killed in action. In 1944 Steele, Kennedy and Wallace were evacuated by submarine to Australia. They were able to present to the Australian government the facts and terrible plight of the Sandakan POWs.
Below: Rex Blow from AWM.
Keating had delayed his escape until Blow’s party was able to notify Sandakan of their success in reaching the Philippines. There were numerous parties planning escapes and waiting to depart. (The escape party with Wagner reached Australia).
At Sandakan the Musketeers never gave up on escape ideas.
The collapse of the underground movement resulted in many arrests by the Japanese Military Police, the Kempeitai – included were the Three Musketeers.
Ted Keating, Snowy Jensen and Don Marshall with others, were arrested for being involved in an escape plan.
POWs and at least 50 local civilians were arrested, interrogated and bashed for three months at the Kempeitai HQ located in the town of Sandakan. As well as terrible and serious interrogaton injuries the group received little food and water. Finally they were shipped to Kuching (mostly in small cages unable to stand or stretch out) for a Japanese Military trial.
Tragically it was at Kuching that Ted Keating who was seriously ill, suffering a large ulcer and extensive injuries from his beatings by the Japanese at Sandakan died before he reached his trial.
Western Australian Ted Keating father of two children, aged 36 years died 11 Feb 1944 from excessive beatings and torture received at Sandakan and Kuching Prison whilst waiting for his trial over his involvement in an escape plan at Sandakan.
Below: Capt Matthews would be executed
The trials held 29 February 1944 were spoken and written in Japanese only – they were all found guilty – Capt Matthews (the ring leader) was sentenced to be executed as were several Sandakan civilians and members from the local Constabulary who had assisted the POWs. Their executions took place immediately.
The eight men executed with Captain Matthews were:
Jemadar Ojager Singh
Alexander Funk
Sergeant Abin (of the North Borneo Armed Constabulary)
Ernesto Lagan
Heng Joo Ming
Wong Moo Sing
Felix Azcona
Matusup Bin Gungau (of the North Borneo Armed Constabulary)
Below right: Jemadar Ojager Singh
Above: Alex Funk
Most of the others were given a range of sentences of solitary confinement (in confined area) at the infamous Outram Road Prison, Singapore. ‘Snowy’ was given a two year sentence, Don Marshall 4 years. They were shipped to Singapore. Some POWs and civilians received a surprising light sentence, and other’s for no known reason (except to the Japanese) received harsh sentences.
At Outram Road Prison POWs and civilians alike endured daily/monthly deprivation of food, beatings, psychological taunting and denial of treatment for illnesses.
It was here that Snowy’s mate, Don Marshall born in Coolgardie, died Outram Road Gaol 11 Aug 1944 of illness.
‘Snowy’ was the only ‘Musketeer’ to survive and return home to Western Australia.
__________
Ted Keating WX8808
Above: Enlistment Photo
This story was included in the address by Cheryl Mellor at Boyup Brook Sandakan Service, 2019.
“Ted Keating, father to the late Steffoni Brackenbury, an active, charming and respected member of Ex-POW Association, enlisted from the Goldfields as did Mr Ron Badock from 2/4th MGB who passed away December 2016, just short of his 98th birthday.
Ron was a marvellous source of battalion history. He visited Boyup Brook every year, his children continue the family tradition and we have his daughter Cheryl Johnson and her husband Graeme here today.
Talented footballers, Ron and Ted were part of a large contingent of men boarding the train from their hometown of Norseman to Perth after receiving their ‘Notice to Attend for Enlistment’ advising them to report to Norseman Railway Station 10.00am 8th October 1940.
The train was filling with new enlistments, previously employed in the mines. They all knew each other, or knew of their families, played footy together, drank together, etc.
The train may well have come from as far away as Esperance, through Salmon Gums to Norseman, stopped at Widgiemooltha through to Kalgoorlie and onto Perth.
By the time the train reached Coolgardie, the very thirsty mob had drunk the bar dry.
Of course there was no air-conditioning in 1940 – October weather can be pretty warm and dry in the Goldfields and certainly those small carriages with their hand-push-up small windows were not efficient to cool the carriages when filled to capacity.
As the stream driven train began to pull out of Coolgardie station, Ted Keating, 6’6” tall, a strongly built young man of 16 stone came running down the platform, carrying a 5 gallon keg on his shoulder – his contribution to satisfy the boys on board suffering from dry throats!
Great applause greeted the gregarious and talented footballer from Norseman. The men of the Goldfields showed their appreciation with whistling and loud shouting to honour his amazing effort to keep them supplied in liquid amber.
With a huge smile on his face, Ted was quickly assisted on board the carriage.”
WX9682 Carl Edgar ‘Snowy’ JENSEN, Sapper 2/6th Field Park Coy, RAE
‘Snowy’ was born to Danish parents in Fremantle 1911. His father was seaman from Sonderborg on the island of Als, Denmark and jumped ship at Fremantle. He went prospecting and fortunately found a gold nugget which he sent to Denmark requesting his family to arrange the passage of a young woman known to the family and Snowy. She arrived in Fremantle and the couple married.
They resided in Fremantle and had a large family of three sons followed by three daughters. Snowy was the younger of the three boys. His father who spoke fluent German was the Manager of the German Club. Following the outbreak of WW1 anti German Sentiments were running high. The local police recommended the family leave Fremantle until the war was over. The Club was vandalised.
During this time schoolboy Carl spent time at York and Nannup, developing a love of the outdoors and the land. Carl developed skills and played Aussie Rules Football. He played with the North Fremantle ex Scholars and in 1930s Carl and three seasons with East Fremantle League team including the 1933 premiership win.
At that time and for many years following, football players had to earn their own income.Carl left to go mining in the Goldfields. This was the Depression and work was not easy to find.
Snowy ended up in Geraldton where he drove a provisions truck to the stations and Carnarvon. Between locations, he was a busy man, he captained the Fire Brigade ‘A’ Football team to an undefeated premiership in 1937. He lived at the Esplanade Hotel in Geraldton and it was here he met his future wife Elsie, daughter of the owner.
When Carl returned to Perth Elsie then 21 years old followed and lived with Carl’s mother. Carl and Elsie were talking of marriage. About this time Carl was offered a position with Shell Oil Coy in North Fremantle – the position was for married men only. A wedding was hastily arranged.
In 1941 Carl enlisted with AIF and following several weeks of basic training , he found himself sailing on troopship Zealandia for Singapore. With his blonde hair he soon earned the nickname ‘Snowy’ and quickly bonded with two other Western Australians and Goldfields boys – Ted Keating and Don Marshall. They were inseparable. Don wasn’t married however Ted Keating was father to two young children including a young daughter as was Carl.
When Singapore surrendered they became POWs. The three men vowed to look after each other and were determined to escape.
The three mates were sent with a work party to Palau Bukum Island at the damaged refinery formerly owned by the Asiatic Petroleum Coy. The Japanese were very eager to have Petroleum Coy back in working order and in particular the blending plant to produce aviation fuels. The men sabotaged the diesel engines instead of repairing – removing vital parts so that the refinery would never work. The Japanese believed the Australian POWs were simply incompetent.
They also serviced two motor boats used for transferring supplies from the mainland. Of course they saw it as an opportunity to escape and stole one of the 30 foot boats intent on sailing back to Australia! But they ran the boat aground and were forced to sneak back into camp and hoping it would seem the boat had slipped its mooring!
Some time later the ‘three musketeers’ left Singapore with ‘E’ Force to sail to North Borneo. At Kuching they were able to acquire maps, contact names and information to be used for escaping at Berhala Island before sailing onto to Sandakan. All escape plans had to be approved by an Officer. There were quite a few escape groups waiting their turn to leave. The knew the officer they approached. He appeared to be most happy with their plans and offered to join the escape party, more importantly as their senior officer.
‘Snowy’ was arrested at Sandakan when the Underground Radio was discovered. He was beaten, tortured and finally sent on a ship 17 October with all those the Japanese thought guilty, to the Japanese HQ Court at Kuching. It was here ‘Snowy’ was sentenced to two years at Outram Road Gaol. His Mate Don Marshall was sentenced to four years at Outram Road. Tragically Don Marshall died of illness at Sandakan.
‘Snowy’ Jensen later in life
‘Snowy’ died 9 April 2003.
Below: ‘Snowy’ and his three daughters.
WX10932 DONALD ‘DON’ GEORGE CEDRIC MARSHALL
b. Coolgardie 17 Nov 1906 to parents John and Mary Agnes Marshall (nee Giblett) and he was one of 9 children. When he enlisted Don was 34 years old. His parents were residing 10 John Street, Cottesloe.
His older brother Malcolm Angus Marshall (known as Peter) born in 1911, died as a result of an accidental gunshot in childhood play (at the age of 5 years) in 1916. He is buried in the Kalgoorlie Cemetery, W.A
Another brother Jack, born in 1902 Coolgardie also enlisted and survived to live to 80 years of age. Brother Robert Douglas born 1909 Coolgardie also enlisted. He survived to return home. Neil Ronald Marshall was born in 1904 at Coolgardie. The oldest son Francis Keith was born in 1894. Don had three sisters.
Don’s father died in 1943 and his mother in 1947.
His occupation was recorded as Electricity Welder.
Marshall enlisted with 2/6th field Park Coy where he met up with Keating and Jensen.
At Singapore they became POWs of Japan.
The three men were arrested at Sandakan accused of assisting the ‘Underground Radio’ sent to Kuching where Keating who was very ill died, and Marshall and Jensen were sentenced to imprisonment at the notorious Outram Road, Singapore. Don Marshall was sentenced to four Years at Outram Road Gaol. It was here Don Marshall died 11 Aug 1944 of illness.
Having narrowly missed selection to represent Australia at the Pacific Surf Games in Hawaii in June 1939, and the Olympic Games scheduled for Tokyo in 1940, Blow looked set for further sporting success when World War II intervened. On 3 November 1939 he enlisted in the Australian Imperial Force (AIF) and was posted to the 2/5th Field Regiment, Royal Australian Artillery. Commissioned in July 1940 as a lieutenant, he was transferred to the 2/10th Field Regiment, with which he sailed to Singapore in February 1941. While stationed at Malacca, Malaya (Malaysia), he met Diana Mary Wiseman, daughter of a prominent British expatriate, whom he married on 16 August 1941 at St Andrew’s Cathedral, Singapore. On 8 December Japan invaded Malaya. He saw action there and in Singapore, before becoming a prisoner of war (POW) when the Allied forces surrendered on 15 February 1942.
After spending several months with a POW work party erecting a memorial to Japanese war dead at Bukit Timah. In March 1943 Blow was placed on a draft of about 500 Australians sent to Sandakan, British North Borneo (Sabah). In June he and seven others escaped in boats from a temporary camp at the entrance to Sandakan harbour. They reached nearby Tawi Tawi Island, where they joined United States forces in the Philippines, and engaged in guerrilla warfare against the occupying Japanese. Appointed commanding officer of the 1st Battalion, 125th Infantry Regiment, and then chief of staff in the 108th Infantry Division (Philippine Commonwealth Army), he led many successful actions and, in 1944, was promoted to captain, then temporary major. On 3 April he led an attack that was halted by heavy machine-gun fire from strongly entrenched enemy forces. Exposing himself to fire, he climbed a coconut tree to direct mortar barrages that forced the enemy to retreat. For his courage and inspirational leadership, he was awarded both the Silver Star by the United States Army and the British (Imperial) Distinguished Service Order.
‘In June Rex Blow and seven others POWs including 2/15th Officer Charlie Wagner, escaped in boats from a temporary camp at the entrance to Sandakan harbour.
They reached nearby Tawi Tawi Island, where they joined United States forces in the Philippines, and engaged in guerrilla warfare against the occupying Japanese.
29 April 1945, following the reoccupation of the Philippines by US forces, Blow returned to Australia where, on 7 June, he was seconded to Special Operations Australia, a covert organisation operating behind enemy lines. His first assignment was to attempt to contact surviving POWs at Sandakan camp, thought to have been abandoned by the Japanese in April. The recovery on 14 June of an escaped POW revealed that up to 300 prisoners might still be there.
Six days later he flew to Morotai. In the hope of effecting rescue, he andSignaller Baragwanath Schinckel penetrated the area, about twenty-five miles (40 km) west of the camp.
A villager informed Blow that the Sandakan camp had been completely burnt and that he had seen prisoners marching west in the direction of Ranau. Following the trail for a short distance, he came across several corpses of POWs. Convinced there were no surviving prisoners in the area, he stopped his search and returned to Morotai. None of those left at the Sandakan camp survived the war.
In mid-July he re-entered British North Borneo to collect intelligence until the war ended in August. He then participated in mopping-up operations with local guerrillas. An attachment from late November to the British Borneo Civil Affairs Unit finished when his AIF appointment was terminated on 2 March 1947, and he was transferred to the Reserve of Officers. He was mentioned in dispatches for his service in Borneo.
Subsequently entering the British colonial service (later the overseas civil service), Blow was appointed a district officer in British North Borneo, working at Lahad Datu, Beaufort, Jesselton (Kota Kinabalu), and in the early 1950s at Kota Belud. He died Templestowe, Melbourne, 29 December 2000 aged 83 years.’
(We wish to acknowledge Australian Dictionary of Biography – Prepared by Lynette Ramsay Silver, published online 2023)
Saturday afternoon, 6 September 2025 was a blusty winter’s day at the Dinghy Club, Matilda Bay – everybody arrived with a new hair style – the ‘windswept look’. The Perth Dinghy Club overlooks the Swan River and has to be one of the best venues in Perth. The 2/4th’s relationship with the Dinghy Club goes back decades – to much earlier days when 2/4th Committee’s would hold their meetings at Dinghy Club, then located in Perth. The warm relationship between these two organisations grew to sharing social events – invitations to dances/cabarets, sailing afternoons, etc.
We thank everybody for attending. We believe there were about 130 guests in attendance. For many family members it was possible this was the first time they had ever attended a 2/4th event. It was a sad day to say farewell – espescially for an organisation which has been since holding meetings, organising social events and offering mateship and services for 79 years, since the first meeting in 1946.
There were many books available to purchase with a gold coin donation, and a another larger table contained memarobilia.
Below: Gillian Badock & Sally Rutherford
Above: Gillian Badock, Sharon Shaw on Rt and her daughter Laurinda.
Above: Daughters of Wally Winter. Jam & Julie
Above: Marie Magor & Glenda James
Above Phil Badock acknowledges 2/4th Committee
Above: Pam Dorrizi & daughter Lisa
Below: Pam Dorizzi & Cheryl Mellor
Below: Harry Tysoe, President
Below: Gail Pilmoor
My greatest regret is that I didn’t take more photographs – so if anybody else has done so, please forward to us at our emai: Cheryl Mellor 2nd4thmgb@gmail.com
ANZAC DAY 2025 BEGAN WITH EARLY MORNING RAIN. DUE TO A GAS LEAK AROUND THE AREA OF LONDON COURT, ST GEORGE’S TERACE – THE ORGANISERS INSTUCTED ALL PARTICIPANTS TO RELOCATE TO THE HAY STREET MALL AND WILLIAM STREET CORNER.
TO BEGIN IT WAS ALL A LITTLE MESSY UNTIL THE ORGANISERS COULD RELOCATE THE STAGING POSTS FOR THE VARIOUS AND MANY BATTALIONS TO GATHER AND WAIT TO FOR THE MARCH TO COMMENCE.
Hay Street to Barrack Street, turning left at St Georges Terrace.
Preparing his plans to defend Singapore – General Percival gave the two Australian 8th Division Brigades – 22nd and 27th Brigades -13 miles of mangroves with orders to defend the beaches of north-west of Singapore.
Please read further. An abridged copy of a lecture delivered to the Royal United Services Institute by Major John Wyett A.M., the last surviving Staff Officer of General Gordon Bennett’s H.Q. 8th Australian Division.
Below: Major Wyett
Why did the Australians not tell Percival this was a ridiculous plan? In fact why didn’t Bennett tell Percival? Was he frightened of Percival?
Percival was the commanding officer, but senior officers like Lieutenant-General Bennett,Major General Frank Keith Simmons and Lieutenant-General Heath had significant input on tactical decisions. Other figures such as Brigadier Simson also played a role in trying to influence the outcome.
The most influential were Bennett, Heath and Simmons.
Lieutenant-General Lewis Macclesfield Heathcommanded the III Indian Corps from 1941 to 1942 as part of the Malaya Command and had been entrusted with defending northern Malaya.
Simmons (1888–1952) was Commander of the Singapore Fortress, responsible for the defence of Singapore, the adjoining islands and eastern area of Johor. He was the subject of a biography, The Story of Major General F.K. Simmons, CEB, MVO, MC, a Man Among Men, by Percival. In Percival’s eyes, Simmons had a “particularly tactful and courteous manner which was an undoubted asset in his dealings with the civilians of Singapore. He worked unceasingly for the welfare of the troops in that city”.
22ND BRIGADE was made up of 2/18th, 2/19th, 2/20th and 2/4th MGB became part of East Force together with 11th Indian Division under the command of Brigadier Taylor, Lt. Gen. Heath of the 3rd Indian Corps was in overall command.
The CO of 22nd AIF Brigade was BRIGADIER HAROLD BURFIELD TAYLOR until February 11.
BRIGADIER ARTHUR LESLIE VARLEY replaced Taylor from February 12–15, 1942 as Brigadier Taylor was suffering exhaustion.
Below: Varley
‘The Japanese landed on the Malaya peninsula 8 Dec 1941 (same day as Pearl Harbour, 7 Dec on other side of the International Date Line). The 22nd and 27th Brigades, 8th Division AIF, based in the southern Malayan province of Johor, first encountered Japanese troops in mid-January. The Australians had some success, notably the ambush by 2/30th Battalion at Gemenceh (near Gemas) on 14 January 1942, and the destruction of eight enemy tanks at Bakri by the 4th Anti-Tank Regiment and 2/29th Battalion. But Japanese forces were mobile, they had air support (Japan controlled the sea following sinking of HMS Prince of Wales and Repulse), and they aggressively attacked and pushed through the ill-prepared line of defenders, often outflanking them. This caused panic and confusion among senior commanders, and resulted in a series of withdrawals down the peninsula. The last British Empire troops were evacuated across the causeway from Malaya to Singapore on 31 January 1942’
(The above Information from AWM with acknowledgement and thanks)
‘The Australians became heavily engaged front and rear so on 20 January they began fighting their way south through Japanese positions. Anderson’s men attacked to re-open their escape route, and gained the village of Parit Sulong, but were in a untenable situation. With many of the Australian and Indian troops killed or wounded, and a British relief force blocked by the Japanese to the south, Anderson was forced to order his men to escape in small parties through the countryside, leaving the wounded behind. The Japanese massacred them in a most depraved manner setting fire to their remains. Less than a quarter of the Australians at the start of the battle – escaped, eventually withdrawing to Singapore where they were reinforced. For his valour and leadership, Lieutenant-Colonel Anderson was awarded the Victoria Cross.‘
The Battle for Singapore commenced the night 8/9th February 1942 when Japanese forces launched their main invasion overwhelming the brigade’s defenses in the northwest sector. The 22nd Brigade greatly outnumbered was overrun and forced to retreat.
AIF ‘s 22nd and 27th Brigades were the first British Empire troops on Singapore to meet the Japanese attack. Fierce fighting with hand to hand combat ensured followed by the retreat of 22nd Brigade – greatly outnumbered, the Australians moved back toward the centre of the Island towards Singapore city as all Allied forces also withdrew.
By 15 February the Allied forces had lost control of the island’s reservoirs and Island’s essential water supplies. That day Lieutenant General Arthur Percival, Commander of the British Empire forces in Malaya, accepted the Japanese demand for unconditional surrender.
‘Australian losses during the campaign were severe. Some battalions lost half their strength in the space of a few weeks. In one of the costliest campaigns for Australia in the Second World War, 1789 Australians were killed and 1306 were wounded. In a single week of fighting on Singapore Island, more than 880 Australians were killed. It was one of the few campaigns in which the total dead exceeded the number of wounded. ‘
‘The Fall of Singapore marked one of the darkest periods in Australian history. Within a seven-week period, 22,000 Australians (including 71 nurses from the Australian Army Nursing Service) had the misfortune to become prisoners of war. In addition, 1,500 Australian civilians – men, women and children – were captured or interned across the region.’
(we wish to acknowedge the AWM for this information)
Below: Percival far right at Surrender.
Major General Frank Keith Simmons
The Singapore Fortress was an Army command responsible for the defence of Singapore Island. It was a Major General’s command, and at this time the General Officer Commanding was Major General Keith SIMMONS. It was a static command, so had no operational role during the Malayan campaign. When however the Japanese drove the Allies out of Malaya back onto Singapore Island, this command remained in being taking responsibility for a sector of the island’s defences. The Japanese invaded the island on 8 February, and the command surrendered with the general surrender on 15 February 1942.
In Percival’s eyes, Simmons had a “particularly tactful and courteous manner which was an undoubted asset in his dealings with the civilians of Singapore. He worked unceasingly for the welfare of the troops in that city”.
Major General Frank Keith Simmons, CBE MVO MC (1888 – 1952) was a British Army officer during World War II. He was commander of the Singapore Fortress when it fell to the invading Japanese Army in February 1942. He spent the remainder of the war as a prisoner of the Japanese.
Prior to WW2 Simmons served as a Military Attache to Spain from 1928 until 1936, whereupon he served in British mandated Palestine as Lt. Colonel accompanied by his wife. He was C.O. of British forces in Shanghai in 1939 and 1940 and later the commander of British defences at the Singapore Fortress in 1941, prior to its fall in 1942.
He was an ardent supporter of the concept that defence construction was detrimental to troop morale. Simmons was eventually placed in command of a committee to ascertain the readiness of Singapore’s defences as the Japanese invasion became apparent. He was appointed to “develop” the defence plan by Lt. General Arthur Percival. As the situation worsened for the Allies, Simmons was one of a few commanders privy to Percival’s last-ditch defence plans and his “no surrender” policy of 11 February 1942. During the final days of the battle, Simmons was transferred and ordered to command the British forces in the ‘Southern Area’ of the battlefield, when the decision to surrender became apparent he joined fellow commanders in voicing the opinion that continued resistance was ill-advised.
Simmons spent the next three years as a prisoner of war in Japan, prior to his release in 1945 and retirement in 1946.
Above: Heath 1939
Lieutenant General Sir Lewis Heath, KBE, CB, CIE, DSO, MC, the Commander III Indian Corps during the Battle of Malaya and Singapore. He served from 1905 to 1946 and known for his leadership during the Second World War. Taken POW at Singapore 15 February 1942 he was sent to Changi, removed to Formosa (Taiwan ) then Manchukuo (Manchuria).
‘Piggy’ Heath fought in Egypt and Mesopotamia in WW1 during which time he was injured, losing and eye and permanently damaging his left arm. For his bravery, he received the Military Cross.
After WW1 he continued to serve. He fought in the Third Anglo-Afghan War, East Persia from 1919 to 1921 and held various important roles in India and Afghanistan during this period.
Leadership Roles in India
In 1929 Heath became C.O. of the 1st Battalion, 11th Sikh Regiment. He was sent to the challenging area of the North-West Frontier in India in 1930 and 1932.
He received the DSO in 1933 for his excellent service. In 1934, he became an instructor at the Senior Officers School in Belgaum, India. He then commanded the Wana Brigade in 1936, returning to the North West Frontier in 1937.
In 1939, he was promoted to Major General. He was also awarded the Order of the Bath becoming Commander of the 7th Indian Division in the Deccan District.
World War II: East Africa and Malaya
During WW2 Lewis Heath led the 5th Indian Infantry Division. They achieved success in the East African Campaign and his leadership highly praised.
On May 10, 1941, he was promoted to Lieutenant General. He also received the Order of the British Empire (KBE).
During the Battle of Malaya Heath faced a tough challenge and was unable to stop the advancing Japanese army. His ideas differed about how to fight a war compared to his C.O. Lt-General Arthur Percival.
Percival and all his senior officers became POWs of Japan – all except the very controversial Australian CO General Bennett who managed to escape Singapore back to Australia.
After the end of war Heath retired from the army on April 13, 1946, as a Lieutenant General. Sir Lewis Macclesfield Heath passed away on January 10, 1954.