Friends and relatives of 14 American airmen captured and executed by Japanese forces in Taiwan near the end of World War II gathered to honor them yesterday at the site of a notorious Japanese prison where they spent the final months of their lives.
Retiree Charles Parker of Gainesville, Florida, came to the event to commemorate his brother John and 13 other airmen who were executed by a firing squad on June 19, 1945, when the island was a Japanese colony. "It's a very tough thing for me to do but it's necessary," Parker said.
...On Saturday June 20th 2009, a memorial dedication service was held at the site of the former Taipei Prison to honour and remember the 25 American airmen who were captured by the Japanese when their aircraft crashed or were shot down over Taiwan in the fall of 1944 and the spring of 1945.
These men were not considered to be POWs but rather 'war criminals' and as such were held in the old Taihoku (Taipei) Prison, often in solitary confinement. They were starved and beaten and suffered great hardships. On May...
Early on the morning of June 19th 1945 – 14 young American airmen were led out of their cells in the infamous Taihoku Prison and ushered into a small courtyard. There, they were lined up against a wall and shot to death by a Japanese Army firing squad. Their crime - doing their duty for their country and freedom!
Taihoku Prison - scene of the POW murdersThese young men - ranging in ages from 19 – 24, were US Army Air Force and US Navy fighter pilots and bomber...
2020 was the 75th anniversary of the end of World War II and also that of the needless murder by the Japanese of 14 American airmen who were being held inside the walls of the Taihoku (Taipei) Prison. In all 25 airmen who had been shot down or crashed during allied air attacks on the island from October 1944 to May 1945 were held in the infamous jail.
On May 29th 1945, 14 of them were taken before a Japanese War Tribunal, accused of 'indescriminate bombing' and with no defense, were...
During World War II, more than 4,350 British Commonwealth, American, and Dutch POWs spent time in Japanese prisoner of war camps on Taiwan. Some stayed only a few months before being moved to other camps in Japan or elsewhere; while others were on Taiwan for the duration of the war.
On September 5th, 1945 - three weeks after the Japanese surrendered on August 14th, Allied ships began evacuating approximately 1,300 POWs that had survived the war in Taiwan. It took four days for the US and British Royal Navy to evacuate...
FEPOW (Far East Prisoner of War) Day was first conceived in 2007 in the UK and is a concerted drive to have August 15th designated as a day to especially remember all those – military and civilians, who suffered imprisonment by the Japanese during World War II. The movement is spreading worldwide and for the first time ever in 2008 the event was celebrated in Taiwan.
Organized by the Taiwan POW Camps Memorial Society and co-sponsored by the Department of Cultural Affairs of the Taipei City Government, the event was held at...
After five years in the works, a memorial to honour the American and British POWs who were held in the Toroku POW Camp from November 1944 to April 1945 was dedicated on Saturday June 6th 2009. The memorial is located inside the grounds of Gou-Ba Elementary School in the village of Gou-Ba - a suburb of Douliou City in South-Central Taiwan.
Until 2003, two of the former old Japanese school buildings which the POWs inhabited still stood on the grounds – they were thought to be the last remaining POW buildings...