Sunday November 11th 2018 saw more than 120 people gathered in the Taiwan Prisoner of War Memorial Park - the site of the former Kinkaseki POW Camp in Jinguashi, to take part in the year's Remembrance Day event.
It was the 100th Anniversary of the Armistice that ended World War I on the day, and a special service of commemoration was held to mark that special historical event. For a change the weather was beautiful - a lovely autumn day under cloudless blue skies
The Taiwan POW Camps Memorial...
L/Bdr. George Harrison, a medical orderly attached to the 5th Field Reg’t. Royal Artillery, was truly one of the heroes of the Kinkaseki and Kukutsu POW Camps. Working alongside the doctors and the other orderlies in the camp, and also as the only medic down the mine at Kinkaseki, he helped save the lives of many of the men who otherwise might have died from accidents, unattended injuries or disease.
Following our first meeting at the big Kinkaseki POW reunion in the UK in 1999 we became close friends and kept...
An article by Lawrence Repeta in the Asia-Pacific Journal Japan Focus - July 22,...
Over the past number of years many articles have been written about the Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo and of Japanese prime ministers visits to honour Japan's war dead and particularly the 14 Class A war criminals enshrined there as 'gods'. These visits have caused much controversy and also angered the governments and the people of China and Korea particularly, due to the enormous atrocities that those war criminals and their armies carried out in their countries - and all across Asia, in WWII.
The only photos I have ever seen of the...
FEBRUARY 14TH 1945 - THE DAY THE WAR IN ASIA COULD HAVE ENDED!
World War II could have ended in February 1945 – even before the Germans surrendered in May – read on……
DID YOU KNOW? - February 14, 2015 is the seventieth anniversary of the day that the senior Japanese statesman Prince Konoe Fumimaro presented a report to Hirohito in which he told the emperor that after a continuous string of defeats the war was irrevocably lost and that he should surrender unconditionally immediately.
Hirohito’s fateful negative response was that they...
In August 2014 I received an email with a story about a B-29 bomber crew on a mission to mine the waters off Kyushu Island Japan and who were forced to bail out after their plane was hit by flak. The men landed in the countryside and here is the account of one of those men, Sgt. Clarence L. Pressgrove – the last surviving member of the crew. “I hit the ground running so I wouldn’t break my legs. I drew my chute in and hid it...
Many times over the years as I have worked on this wonderful Taiwan POW project, people have asked if I had any family connections to the Far East POWs, if I had any relatives who were prisoners of war, and why I was doing so much to try to tell their story. I always replied that I did not have any relatives who were Far East POWs, and that all my relatives were involved in the war in Europe - as most of the Canadian servicemen were. The reason...
From the Spring – Summer 2014 Society Newsletter
For the past two years we have been trying to obtain a photo of the last American war grave we needed to complete our Taiwan POW War Graves Photo Project in the Honour Roll on our website. On Saturday morning January 25th 2014 we received an email that ended more than four years of work and two years of searching for a last Taiwan POW's grave photo.
As our readers will know, we have tried without success to get a photo of the grave...