In Memory of a Hero
On March 21, 1945, Peter W. Hansen,
an American, died in a city on the island of Kyushu in southwestern
Japan, a city called Fukuoka. He died amongst a grove of pine trees
alongside a river at a prisoner of war camp known as Fukuoka
Camp No. 1.
The official cause of his death was recorded as "acute
enteritis," though the real cause was all too familiar with his fellow
POWs -- being forced to do calisthenics while extremely weak and sick,
and being denied the medicines to treat his illness.
Hansen was captured on Wake Island where he
was working for the Morrison-Knudsen Company building an airfield. He
was a civilian, which makes his death even more senseless, for he never
was directly in battle against the Japanese. He was just a worker on a
Pacific island and taken captive only weeks after Pearl Harbor was
attacked.
For three and a half years Hansen suffered at the hands
of his captors. He was involved in construction projects for the
Japanese: for the war effort, against his will, and against the Geneva
Convention. His body, gradually weakened through beatings, forced
exercise, bitter cold, poor diet and debilitating disease, could no
longer take it, and he succumbed, like many others before him, and many
others after him.
He never got to see his dear wife again, nor were his
three children ever to see their beloved father again. His body was
cremated in a small town just next to the airfield, now Fukuoka
International Airport, which he helped build. His ashes are interred at
the Jefferson Barracks National Cemetery in St. Louis, Missouri,
Section 82, Grave 1B-1D.
Gerard
Moran has written an excellent piece on Mary-Anne Stickney's
search for her father, Peter Hansen. You can read The Hansen Story here. For an excellent book on the background of those who worked with Hansen, read Building for War - The Epic Saga of the Civilian Contractors and Marines of Wake Island in WWII by Bonita Gilbert (2012).
And there are other heroes... many others.
The date to remember is May 5th. On
that day in 1945 a B-29 crashed in Taketa, Oita. Six of the airmen
captured from that plane were dissected alive at a university lab in
Fukuoka in the days following that crash. Their story is here
as well. It is a story that has brought this city a notoriety from
which it no doubt would like to distance itself.
This webpage is dedicated to the memory of heroes like
Peter Hansen and those airmen who had to go through more than we could
ever imagine. Some never really knew World War II, for they were
captured from the start. Yet they did not give up, but endured to the
last breath.
The POW story, however, is a complex one -- there is no
way to relate the whole story. These pages tell of only a minute piece
of the whole. I hope that I can in some small way contribute to a
better understanding of what went on at a Japanese prisoner of war
camp, namely Fukuoka POW Camp #1, and help others find out what
happened to their husbands, their fathers, grandfathers, and
great-grandfathers who were at one time interned here.
When you go home,
Tell them of us and say:
"For your tomorrow, We gave our today"
-- Inscription at Kohima Memorial, Burma, 1944
"The
men and women who suffered through the atrocious conditions of
internment deserve our utmost gratitude and respect. Their fortitude
serves as an example of placing the ideals of freedom and
self-government above one's own interests. Many thousands gave their
lives as the ultimate sacrifice, both on the battlefield and in the
deadly prison camps of the Pacific and Europe." -- U.S.
President George W. Bush, 2001
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book is for the generations who have not experienced a world
war (and God willing, never will), and for future generations and
researchers who may want to learn about the price to be paid for
freedom.
There may be value in their knowing
that death marches, the living hell of sealed boxcars, the stench of
death, the green hell of jungle, the mental rot of a jail, and the
unspeakable holds of rusty transport ships can happen -- and that
people survived them. There may be value in knowing how men, women, and
children can endure even the most desperate conditions and, in their
will to retain their humanity, triumph over appalling adversity.
There may be value in knowing how men
and women gave up their lives for their "brothers and sisters." How
they helped each other to live. How where there had been darkness,
there had come forces of light -- where despair, hope -- where fear,
faith -- where hate, love.
From the Introduction of Van
Waterford's
Prisoners of the Japanese in World War II
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Update
Chronology
2002 -- 2003
-- 2004 -- 2005
- 2006 - 2007
- 2008
2009 - 2010 - 2011
- May 14, 2001 -- Posted main pages INDEX HERE
- May 15 -- Roland
book now available! / New links added
- May 16 -- More Additional Documents
added / Saunders'
Report on POW Camps (of special note is Point #7)
- May 17 -- Letters
& Comments section added / Parrott letters put into
TXT file / New info in POW
Statistics section / About Holmes
book
- May 18 -- Retitled section Memorials and added
new photo of Sasebo memorial / Photo of beheading and excerpt
from Craig book
- May 19 -- Excerpt
from Holmes book, and other info / Kyushu Univ. campus photo / Australian POW statistics
/ On being captured
/ Article on war-files
law / Photo of POWs at Changi
Camp
- May 22 -- Article on plight
of POWs
- May 23 -- Langa List
link added
- May 26 -- FASCINATING Diary of Lt. Col. Shreve
and related info on Invasion of Kyushu / Facts
about transport ships by Daws / Strategic
Bombing Survey link added
- May 29 -- Graphic account
by Lt. Col. Schwartz incl. his sketch of Camp #1 / Lester Tenney on
ABC-NEWS
- June 2 -- Hansen
death certificate and record card / Roland article on
vivisections / Dutch Medical
Officer J. F. de Wijn affidavit
- June 5 -- Quotes re invasion of Japan
/ Australian affidavits
/ Novel and possible movie
- June 11 -- Article on former Commandant Shirabe
/ POW lawsuit links
/ Assorted POW statistics
/ Article on Mizumaki
- June 16 -- Photo of Fukuoka
devastation after the Air Raid of June 19th / Affidavits by
U.S. civilian Burns
and British Capt. Wallace
/ Webpages split into total of 9 pages / Quote
by Pres. Bush
- June 19
(Incendiary Bombing of Fukuoka) -- List of Japanese firms named in
slave labor cases / Excerpts from article on June
20 incident / Excerpts from article on bombing of Omuta
and B-29 crash of July 27th
- July 2 -- Affidavit by British
Bombardier Lee describing Kumamoto, Kashii and Mushiroda
locations (note reference to the rainy season) / More excerpts added: August 10 & 15
incidents
- July 11 -- Recent
review of this website in Netsurfer Digest / Article mentioning
Cecil Parrott / New books on Bataan
Death March and Japanese
internment / Excellent
article from Parade Magazine re POW lawsuit and bill
- From CFIR News: "The History
Channel and A & E are doing some important programs. Be sure to
watch these: Sworn to Secrecy - Hirohito, the War Criminal,
(will be released in July or August), and Chemical &
Biological Weapons (aired in May)."
- July 23 -- British
Bombardier Eastham's description of Kumamoto, Kashii and
Mushiroda camps / Book by
Ted Spaulding with excerpt describing his life at Camp #1 / Lawsuit updates
including comment on San Francisco Peace Treaty of 1951
- August 2 -- A very moving article from The Denver
Post on Jesse Miller / Location
of Mushiroda camp pinpointed / Lengthy but
fascinating Review of the
Staff Judge Advocate on the Trial of Masato Hada /
Article by POW who says
A-bomb saved his life
- August 16 -- Australian affidavits, Dilger and French / List of POW and Japanese affidavits
- August 28 -- Australian affidavit, Underwood / Very good
description of Hakozaki camp by Army
Air Force Capt. Goodpasture
- September
15th is National POW/MIA Recognition Day
- September 10 -- Lengthy article from Japanese
newspaper on POW lawsuits,
including related articles on recent apology from Japan
Foreign Minister Tanaka
- October 2 -- A tribute
to all ex-POWs from The Quan: "Your story
must be told!"
- October 9 -- Article
on Dolf Winkler and the story behind the establishing of the
Mizumaki Cross Memorial site: "How one small town in Kyushu is going
out of its way to promote reconciliation between former enemies" /
Company names added to POW
Camps in Kyushu list
- October 21 -- Short section on Aug. 15 beheading
added / Photo of Brazil-maru;
text file on Oryoku-maru story
- November 11 -- Veterans
Day Special: Amazing
story of Rodney Kephart (civilian ex-POW who was awarded the
Purple Heart medal) and his part in making the Victory Flag that flew
over Camp #6, just northeast of Fukuoka.
- November 17 -- Categories added to Memorials section,
including the tragic story of the crew aboard a B-29 that crashed in
central Kyushu as it was on a relief supply mission to a POW camp near
Fukuoka / More info added to B-29
Crashes section / POW
Camps in Kyushu list updated
- November 18 -- B-29 crash memorial sites in other
areas of Japan added to Memorials
section
- November 26 -- Book by Rodney Kephart / Article by Kudo on B-29 crash in
Takachiho / Large
addition of American affidavits: A thru C
- December 3 -- Dec.
7 is Pearl Harbor Day -- From article by Hampton Sides
on the Bataan Death March survivors' memories and psychological scars /
Article on Cecil
Parrott / Lawsuit update
/ New book review:
Death on the Hellships / Calendar
of Upcoming Events
- December 14 -- Excerpt
from Sides on annihilation of POWs / Editorial on
lawsuits / More American
affidavits: D thru H
- December 23 -- Another day to remember: Dec. 23,
1945 - Defenders of Wake Island captured,
resulting in the longest captivity for Allied POWs of the Pacific War
/ Comment by Matthew Poole
on treatment of captives / Report
on Omuta Camp #17 / Note on Americans killing
Americans aboard hellships / The
POWs of the "Doolittle Raiders" article with
inspirational Testimony by DeShazer
- December 25 -- A
MUST-READ! Excellent
account of life at Camp #1 by Dutch POW Gerry
Nolthenius, with his straight-forward views on British and
American POWs, the "fate" of interpreter Katsura, and life after
liberation. Read also a section
from his book's Introduction.
- January 2, 2002
-- Images
from a war-time magazine for Japanese children: "Shoot down the B-29!"
/ More assorted
images for children including interesting trivia on former Emperor
Hirohito / More info on Naoetsu
Peace Memorial Park, and related books /
Comprehensive Charts on Fukuoka
Area POW Camps
- January 13 -- Link for amazing photos of Oryoku-maru under attack
/ Photos of Kyushu University
Medical Dept. (where vivisections took place) and Western Army HQ
- January 23 -- More
American affidavits: J thru P / Fukuoka
Fever, Benjo Boogie, Hirohito's Curse: Medical Officer Hewlett's description
of the diseases which afflicted POWs at Omuta Camp #17 / POW Camp Districts:
Number of Sub-Camps, Internees and Deaths / More added to Letters & Comments
- February 5 -- Correspondence from Australian ex-POW Neil MacPherson who
slave-labored on the Burma "Death Railway" / Lawsuit update from The
Quan / Statistics
on the Oryoku-maru, Brazil-maru and Enoura-maru
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EXCERPT
FROM GISHIWAJINDEN -- Himiko,
Queen of Wa: an unedited excerpt from my ongoing research on one of the
earliest Chinese chronicles dealing with the early Japanese, the Wajin
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- February 13 -- Article
from People magazine on Lester Tenney /
New book on the Japanese
hell ship Oryoku-maru
- February 19 -- More links on Jacob DeShazer of the
Doolittle Raiders and his remarkable story / Last of American affidavits: R thru W
- February 26 -- TIF files on the Oryoku-maru story have
been typed up / Visit Mark Kelso's excellent site on the
Oryoku-maru story, dedicated to his grandfather who died in
Kokura Hospital shortly after arriving in Moji
- March 13 -- Japanese
personnel rosters (Fukuoka HQ and Camp #1) typed up and
placed in table / Photo
of Gerry and Hennie Nolthenius, and Gerry's sketch of Camp
#1, Hakozaki / Leaflet explaining contents
of relief supplies / Trial records added to Additional Documents
- April 15 -- Nolthenius letter and article / Fepow Community Top Site Award!
/ Official dates added to Locations
of Camp #1
- April 27 -- Blurb about movie on POWs due
out this fall / MacPherson
and Heron trip to former POW camp in Emukae / In
Memory of Ted Spaulding /
Comments by Utsumi on
treatment of POWs / Image of POW camps in Japan / Article on Parrott and
lawsuits / Info re Main Camp added to Fukuoka Area POW
Camps chart
- May 1
- May 13
- June 11
- November 6 -- After a long break and a move back to
the US.....
Nov.
11 - Veterans Day - A Time to Remember
All EX-POWs have one common goal to
pass along to future generations, REMEMBER THEM. Remember the men who
died in battle, remember the men who marched days upon days with no
food or water, remember the men who were beaten when they worked and
killed when they did not. Remember the men who had to wait to die in
the Zero Ward, remember the men who lost their lives at sea after their
hellship was sunk, and remember the men who survived their 3½-year
ordeal.
All prisoners of the Japanese will tell
you, We can forgive, but we can't forget.
Source: http://www.chinamarines.com/docs/lib.htm
Read this moving article in entirety at the above
source. Entitled Liberation, this article will help
give you a better idea, indeed, a better feeling of what it was like to
be a POW who has suffered, endured, survived, and had his first taste
of freedom after years of internment. Certainly we have not even begun
to appreciate the sacrifices these veterans, veterans of a different
kind of war, had to make.
They fought, not on the front lines, but behind enemy
lines... not with weapons, but with a strong will to survive... not
against an enemy at a distance, but with one face to face, daily under
attack... without any way of defending themselves... without any option
of retreat... without proper food, rest or medication.
And they are still fighting today, against both
physical and mental scars, the haunting memories that will never go
away until death takes it from them.
We owe a lot to these veterans of a different kind of
war who gave a lot for their country, for their families, for us. Let
us then, who enjoy the benefits of their sacrifices, do our best to
honor all veterans and do what we can to show our appreciation for what
they have done.
Let us make this Veterans Day 2002
a day of special remembrance and appreciation.
- November 7
- November 30
- December 2
- December 11
- February 1, 2003
- February 3
- February 12
- Japanese-POW
Web Site has been updated
- For a great source of news on upcoming events,
new books, lawsuit updates, etc., see the Center for Internee Rights
newsletter at http://expows.com/news1225.pdf
(PDF file -- Acrobat Reader necessary in order to read this file)
- Book
by Meg Parkes about a POW who spent time at Miyata POW Camp
#9 near Fukuoka
- FINALLY
COMPLETED! --> All-Japan
POW Camp Group History chart -- Excellent resource
for finding which POW camp was where and when in Japan, including the
names of Japanese companies which utilized POW labor
- June 23
- July 8
- July 14
- July 21
- Donald
Hanes profile - POW who died at Camp #1 (this link has many
photos and stories on Bataan and POWs)
- Master Roster updated
- July 28
- July 31
- Links to To
End All Wars movie
- Master Roster updated -- all American rosters
have been added
- August 9
- August 12
- October 3
- October 6
- October 22
- November 5
- November 11
- November 21
- November 27
- December 2
- Visit Michael
Palmer's website on his grandfather, George Palmer,
who served with the Royal Rifles of Canada and was a POW at
Kawasaki/Soeda #5, one of the many coal mining camps in north central
Kyushu. Of special note is the amazingly detailed diary
of Lance Ross and his time
at Camp #5.
- December 9
- December 25
- January 5, 2004
- February 11
- March 10
- March 16
- April 1
For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
April 12, 2004
National Former Prisoner of War
Recognition Day, 2004
By the President of the
United States of America
A Proclamation
Americans look to our veterans as examples of honor and
patriotism. These loyal citizens have risked capture, imprisonment, and
their lives to protect our homeland and advance freedom abroad. As we
observe National Former Prisoner of War Recognition Day, we honor brave
Americans who have demonstrated extraordinary courage in the face of
hardship and terror.
Today, nine out of ten former prisoners of war are
veterans of World War II. These Americans helped to liberate millions
and defeat tyranny around the world, and survived unspeakable horrors
for the cause of freedom. From enduring hard labor in German and
Japanese POW camps to the torturous Bataan Death March, these proud
patriots showed strength of character and incredible resolve in
captivity. Their devotion to duty and love of country stand as a
measure of service few others will attain.
America will never forget these quiet heroes and all of
our former prisoners of war who suffered adversity in Korea, Vietnam,
the Persian Gulf, Somalia, Kosovo, Iraq, and other conflicts. Our
Nation is grateful to our former prisoners of war for their sacrifice
to help protect the democratic ideals that make our country strong.
Because of the dedication of these men and women in uniform, people in
our own country and in lands far away can live in freedom. These
citizens inspire us, and we will always remember their service for
liberty's blessings.
NOW, THEREFORE, I, GEORGE W. BUSH, President of the
United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by
the Constitution and laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim
April 9, 2004, as National Former Prisoner of War Recognition Day. I
call upon all Americans to join me in remembering all former American
prisoners of war who suffered the hardships of enemy captivity. I also
call upon Federal, State, and local government officials and private
organizations to observe this day with appropriate ceremonies and
activities.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this
ninth day of April, in the year of our Lord two thousand four, and of
the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and
twenty-eighth.
GEORGE W. BUSH
- April
15, 2004: Cecil
Parrott, Death March survivor, dies --
Another hero and good friend passes on.
- May 11
- POW Research
Network Japan -- Excellent research group in Japan
working on compiling complete rosters of all POW deaths in Japan. Rosters
are mostly completed for the 1,853 Commonwealth servicemen (United
Kingdom, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, India and Pakistan)
buried at the Commonwealth War Cemetery in Yokohama. A list of American
and Dutch POWs who died at POW camps throughout
Japan will soon be posted. See related article "Japanese
researchers on POWs hope to heal war wounds."
- Japan
Times article on recent visit of Australian POWs (Neil
MacPherson, Jack Boon, Jack Simmonds) to Kyushu camp sites at
Saganoseki, Emukae and Omuta. See also related news blurb "Australian
ex-POW revisits WWII detention site in Oita."
- More on the movie, To
End All Wars, "a cross between Mel
Gibson's The Passion and Band of Brothers"
- May 26 -- Memorial Day Special
- Honor Roll
of former POWs who attended the recent ADBC Convention. A
great honor indeed it was to be with these amazing men and listen to
their stories -- the horrendous as well as the humorous -- stories that
deserve to be included in our school's history textbooks, that the
youth of this nation may learn about these heroes of WWII. We all have
so much to learn from these men who endured, who survived, and who
deserve never to be forgotten.
- Song
of Survival -- a remarkable and very moving documentary of
the Australian, Dutch and British women who formed a choir to "sustain
a spirit that refused to accept defeat."
- Commentaries
by Lester Tenney in the Japan Today news
- June 12
-- Flag Day Special
- June 26
- July 8
- More links
on B-29 missions
- New
book out on beheadings and vivisections in Fukuoka -- The
Fallen: A True Story of American POWs and Japanese Wartime Atrocities
by Marc Landas
- July 17
- Pacific
Roster -- Over 18,500 American POWs
listed in camps throughout Asia (large CSV file, 900K)
- August 5
- September 18
- November 28
- New bilingual website -- US-Japan
Dialogue on POWs -- featuring short stories from
POWs and their children, including video interviews and a slideshow on
the POW experience
- December 31
- January 15, 2005
- March 5
- April 25
- POW
Supply Missions to Japan -- 20th Air
Force report on relief supply missions to POW camps at the end of WWII.
Many photos with descriptions of actual camp sites. (NOTE:
These are large pages due to images.)
- April 30
- Prisoner
of War Encampments -- Excerpts from a CINCPAC
report showing maps and reconnaissance photographs taken prior to the
end of World War II in an effort to identify possible sites of POW
camps in the Far East
- May 13
- New account made (home.comcast.net/~japanpow)
- Recovery
and Rescue of POWs in Japan -- An amazing
assortment of photographs taken at various POW camps by the U.S.
Recovery Team in September 1945. (These pages are VERY large
due to images.)
- May 14
-- 4th Anniversary of this website
- World
War II 60th Anniversary Committee -- UPCOMING EVENTS
- May 21
- May 30,
Memorial Day
- June 4
- July 13
- August 7
- October 1
- January 7, 2006
- February 15
- July 18
- Allen
Godfrey Jones webpage -- "A prisoner of war at
Changi, Great World Camp, River Valley Road Camp, Fukuoka #1 and #17"
- September 9
- October 5
- Camp Group Chart satellite updates, including
GoogleEarth placemark sets for Hokkaido
and Fukuoka camp
groups
- October 23
- November 6
- A
MUST-READ! Very well-written document on POW
camps, including information on every camp in Japan: POW
Camps in Japan Proper (link at top of page)
- February
19, 2007
- Launch of EO9066 website, The
Preservation of a People, dealing with the
evacuation and relocation of people of Japanese ancestry during WWII
- May 26
- September 10
- September 25
- January 24, 2008
- April 15
- Complete CINCPAC - CINCPOA document, Prisoner of War
Encampments (June 15, 1945). These are VERY large
pages containing many images, broadband connection recommended.
- February 17, 2009
- March 11
- April 29
- May 5
- November 30
- Camp PDF profiles in Japanese added to Camp
Group Chart
- December 15
- December 19
- April 10, 2010
- April 20
- May 10
- May 27
- June 4
- February 8, 2011
- February 12
- February 15
- April 29
- July 4, 2012 - Case Files for vivisection and Aburayama atrocities
- August 9 - Updated B-29 crashes list for Kyushu
- October 20 - Added new geo-locations to Fukuoka Main Camp for the Western Imperial Army HQ underground evacuation sites at Hirao Caves and Yamae Caves
- November 29 - Added PDF link for Tactical Mission Report on POW Supply missions
- January 3, 2013 - PDF scan of an archival document of March 5, 1946
which shows captured airmen listed as being killed by the A-bomb
in Hiroshima, a ploy used by the Japanese military to cover up the
vivisection atrocities
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