More online articles involving internees

Following are some more 2017 articles involving former civilian internees of the Philippine prison camps. Click the title to link to the full text:

Some 2017 articles involving former civilian internees

Following are some 2017 articles involving former civilian internees of the Philippine prison camps. Click the title to link to the full text:

Only by the Grace of God now available!

Only by the Grace of God

Now available!

Former internee, Pamela Brink, has announced that her new book, Only by the Grace of God, is now available.  She and her family were interned in three camps during the War: Cebu, Santo Tomás , and Los Baños Internment Camp.

Pamela was only eight-years-old when first interned, but the book also includes the memoirs of her late brothers, Robert and John Brink. The family all survived the War and were repatriated on the M.S. Torrens, arriving in San Francisco on 15 May 1945.

The announcement at Amazon.com has this to say about the book:

Three siblings from the Philippines wrote down what they remembered about being imprisoned by the Japanese during World War II.

Pamela J. Brink, Robert A. Brink, and John W. Brink all survived the ordeal, but only one of them–Pamela–is still alive today. She shares their experiences in this memoir that recounts the horrors of war as seen through the eyes of children.

At age thirteen, John W. was the oldest when they were captured, and his account is likely the most accurate of all three.

Robert and Pamela’s versions are different as they saw everything through younger, more fearful eyes. All three, however, remember being overjoyed when they were rescued from the Los Baños prison camp.

When they were freed, everyone wanted to hear about atrocities, but their slow starvation could not compete with the horrors that Jews suffered in Nazi Germany. Most ignored their tales, and over time, they stopped telling them.

Three adults look back at their childhood experiences as prisoners of war, how they survived, and how they continued on in Only by the Grace of God.

Jim Crosby relates his STIC memories

Former child internee, James Crosby, talks about his Santo Tomas Internment Camp memories in a recent San Diego Union-Tribune article titled Internee has different memories of war. Jim was 9-years-old when he and his parents, Ralph and Flora, were interned. Ralph was a mining company executive who stayed after Liberation to help rebuild the destroyed mines.

According to the article,

Within three weeks, the interned schoolteachers set up classes again in the university’s chemistry labs. Every subject was taught except American history, which was forbidden by the Japanese.

Crosby didn’t much enjoy going to school, but it passed the time. He said he often despaired that the internment would never end. For distraction, he and his buddies played cops and robbers for hours.

“We didn’t have any guns, so we’d take the long beans from acacia trees and cut them up into little pieces and throw them at each other,” he said.

The article includes two contemporaneous photos of Jim and his family. The full article is available on the San Diego Union-Tribune website.

Hell to Happiness — another former internee perspective

Hell to Happiness, by Patricia V.C. DennisIn late 2015, Australian Patricia V.C. Dennis released her memoir, Hell to Happiness : A Concentration Camp Childhood to a Life of Abundance. Patricia was known as Patricia Veronica Jones, when she was interned with her family in Santo Tomas. Currently available in a Kindle edition, the “book is a true story full of passion, hope and inspiration. International author Patricia Dennis shares what it was like to spend three and a half years growing up in a Japanese concentration camp in the Philippines. Having miraculously survived, she went on to achieve great personal and business triumphs. Patricia’s amazing story provides beautiful lessons on how trust, faith and self-belief can take you from Hell to Happiness.”

Patricia and her family were repatriated to Australia on S.S. David C. Shanks, leaving Tacloban, Leyte, on 26 March 1945, arriving in Townsville, Australia, on 5 April 1945.

Thomas Grover with granddaughters Patricia and Jacqueline Jones, who were released with their parents Australia, 1945

Thomas Grover with granddaughters Patricia and Jacqueline Jones


(courtesy of Argus Newspaper Collection of Photographs, State Library of Victoria)

More articles involving former internees

Following are some 2015-2016 articles involving former internees of the civilian Philippine camps:

A Little-Known STIC Episode, by Martin Meadows

Accounts of the travails of WWII prisoners of the Nipponese always (and understandably) emphasize the obvious subject of food shortages. Such accounts rarely devote much attention to shortages of other kinds of things, and this is a brief attempt to rectify that deficiency. Toward the end of 1944, after nearly three years as Nipponese guests, STIC internees were (needless to say) running short of all kinds of supplies besides food. The focus here is on one of the problems that confronted the STIC central kitchen: it was running out of firewood for cooking the internees’ meager rations. As a result, camp leaders decided to seek unexpected and unusual sources of wood within the camp. And it so happened that room 43 in the Main Building, where I lived along with ca. 60-70 other male inmates, contained a (relatively) bountiful supply of wood.

Room 43 in fact contained perhaps a week’s supply of kitchen firewood; that is because it had been constructed to serve as a U. of Santo Tomás science classroom — likely a chemistry classroom, judging from the following facts. First, at the side of the room adjoining the third-floor hallway, there was an elevated wooden platform, from which professors were able to profess. Second, at one side of the elevated structure was a sink (which, it is worth noting, was extremely convenient for the room’s residents, since we could wash, brush our teeth, etc., without having to trudge to the normally crowded lone third-floor men’s bathroom, which was located at the other end of the building). Third, the room’s concrete floor was visible only around the raised platform, because the rest of the floor was covered by rows of wood flooring, each successive row higher than the one ahead of it (as in a theater, for example), so that all students would have a clear view of the platform (where experiments and demonstrations were performed).

Here it might be of interest to point out the main consequence of living in a room with such flooring. Because of the many raised rows (there must have been around ten of them), for most of the residents’ cots the legs at one end of each cot had to be placed on blocks, so that the cot would be level rather than inclined downward toward the platform. The only exceptions to that were the relatively few cots placed on the very last (highest) row, which was wide enough that cots placed upon it were level without the need for blocks. I was fortunate to have a cot on that top row, thus I did not need to always check to make sure that the cot was not about to slip off a block. (My cot, incidentally, was located by the wall on the left side of the room as one entered from the hallway; the room itself was a large one that had two entrances.)

Sidebar: As best as I can recall, there were three other teen-agers in room 43. Two of them, Harry and Tommy Robinson, were located on the other side of the room; the third, my good friend Eric Sollee, was on my side of the room. Parenthetically, Eric and I played a long-running game of Casino, so long-running that eventually we each had run up a cumulative total score of thousands of points. (Note: Eric, who died in 2008, later became an All-American fencer at Harvard, and a famed fencing coach at MIT.) But I digress. Around the time of the episode at issue, Eric and I were considering the feasibility of victimizing a most annoying person, a noisy chap who constantly coughed and sneezed. We thought about placing his cot on the very edge of one of its blocks, assuming that, at night, his heavy coughing and loud sneezing would shake his rickety cot enough to cause it to slip off its blocks and topple over. (First we made sure that his mosquito netting was not attached to the lines holding up our own netting, otherwise his cot’s fall would also pull down the netting on our end of the room.) But, no doubt fortunately for us, before we could get up the nerve to carry out our plot, the developments described next prevented us from doing so. By the way, I would have preferred to victimize the obnoxious and bedbug-ridden “Skipper” Wilson, about whom I have written before, but his cot was on the top row next to mine and thus did not rest on blocks. And now, boys and girls, as the radio serial announcers used to say, back to our story.

Because of the aforementioned need for firewood, the decision was made to tear out all the wood in room 43 for kitchen use. Our room monitor, Henry Pyle, informed us that, on the scheduled date, we were to arise early and move all of our belongings into the hallway (not a difficult task, involving just a cot and whatever few items were stored underneath it; mosquito nets hung out of the way and thus did not have to be removed). On the appointed day we dutifully did as we had been instructed, causing quite a mess in the hallway and making it nearly impassable, as well as greatly annoying residents of the adjacent rooms. The squad of internees assigned to the job, unshirted and sweating profusely, then spent much of the day ripping up the wood floors and the platform, then hauling off the wood to the kitchen storeroom.

The resulting shambles in room 43 was a sight NOT to behold: clouds of dust filled the air as decades worth of dirt, dead bugs and live insects, spiders, etc. were exposed to the bright light of a sunny day. Most notable of the lot were myriads of cockroaches scurrying and fluttering around; they might have made a nourishing meal had they not been squashed during the proceedings. It is no wonder that, often at night, I had heard cockroaches flying around the room and crashing into my mosquito net. (I am referring to economy-sized Asian roaches, of course, not to the small(er) ones familiar to Americans.)

Another sidebar: I am reminded of the time that my family and I moved into our assigned house upon arriving at the U. of Sierra Leone in 1968; the house had been vacant over the summer, and when I opened a closet door I was met by an incredible torrent of king-size cockroaches. As they sought to flee the closet, I had my hands, or rather feet, full stomping on them.

Back to STIC: Eventually room 43 was cleared of all debris, and by the time it was dark we had managed to move back into our assigned places. At first it seemed a bit strange to be on a level and all-concrete floor, but we quickly got used to the change and greatly enjoyed the room’s improved “quality of life,” although it no longer afforded the opportunity to attempt pranks such as the aborted one described above. — MM

Ex-STIC Internee, who became Governor of Indiana, dies at age 98

Edgar Whitcomb in uniform, 1940

Edgar Whitcomb in uniform, 1940

From an Associated Press article, “former Indiana Governor Edgar Whitcomb, who escaped from a Japanese prisoner camp by swimming overnight during World War II and then made an around-the-world solo sailing trip while in his 70s, has died at age 98.

The Republican small-town lawyer, who was quick to veto legislation even though the Legislature was controlled by fellow Republicans, died on Thursday, according to his daughter, Patricia Whitcomb. He began a years long quest around the world in 1987, more than a decade after leaving office, that included seeing his sailboat sink off the coast of Egypt.

“Governor Ed Whitcomb was a great man whose life of courage, service and adventure inspired generations of Hoosiers and he will be deeply missed,” Gov. Mike Pence said in a statement Thursday, adding that the former governor died at his home near the Ohio River community of Rome, Indiana.

Whitcomb was born in the southern Indiana town of Hayden and was a student at Indiana University before enlisting in the Army Air Corps in 1940, becoming a navigator for B-17 bombers.

He wrote in a memoir [Escape from Corregidor] that he was stationed at a base in the Philippines when Japanese aircraft struck there hours after the December 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor. He was among several thousand troops captured and imprisoned on the small island of Corregidor, from which he and another American escaped by swimming overnight more than 2 miles to Bataan only to be recaptured days later.”

Courtesy of Wikipedia.com: Edgar Whitcomb was born on November 6, 1917 in Hayden, Indiana, the second child and first son of John Whitcomb and Louise Doud Whitcomb. An outgoing and athletic youth, he was a member of his high school basketball team. He entered Indiana University in 1939 to study law, but quit school to join the military at the outbreak of World War II.

He enlisted in the United States Army Air Corps in 1940 and was deployed to the Pacific Theater. He was commissioned as a Lieutenant in 1941 and made an aerial navigator. He served two tours of duty in the Philippines and was promoted to Second Lieutenant. During the Philippines Campaign, Whitcomb’s base was overrun; he was captured by the Japanese and was beaten and tortured by his captors, but was able to escape. Recaptured a few days later, he escaped a second time and was hunted for several more days but was able to evade his pursuers. He escaped by swimming all night through shark-infested waters to an island unoccupied by the Japanese army. He was eventually able to secure passage to China under an assumed name where he made contact with the United States Army and was repatriated in December 1943. He wrote a book about his experience entitled Escape from Corregidor, published in 1958. He was discharged from active duty in 1946, but he remained in the reserve military forces until 1977 holding the rank of colonel.

Following the war, he returned to and graduated from Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law. He met and married Patricia Dolfuss on May 10, 1953, and the couple had five children. Served as governor of Indiana from 1969-1973.

Robert Fred Johnson was the alias of Edgar D. Whitcomb, a POW escapee, who was on a B-17 aircrew for the U.S. Army Air Force. See “The Amazing Story of Edgar Whitcomb” which appears in Captives of Empire, 2006, by Greg Leck, page 301. He was repatriated aboard the S.S. Gripsholm in 1943.

See book Profiles in Survival: The Experiences of American POWs in the Philippines during World War II, pages 491-584, by John C. Shively, 2011.

‘In Memoriam’ page updated

The initial In Memoriam page listed over 600 civilian deaths, and included internees and non-internees. The updated page now lists over 800 civilian deaths and draws from the records of Robert Logan Hudson concerning military POW camp records. The following list of men were civilians these men were kept in POW camps, such as Cabanatuan, because they worked for U.S. military, or in the port department. Many of these men had families inside, and outside, of the civilian camps. I am very sorry to have to report these additional deaths, but the aim of this site is to record the fates of all the “enemy aliens.”

NameNationalityCampDate of deathCause
John H. AbbottAmericanLas Pinas POW Camp10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
William AhernAmerican4/3/1944Unknown
Harold N. AndersonNorweigianOld Bilibid Prison12/15/1944Died in sinking of the Oryoku Maru
Ray W. AndersonAmericanOld Bilibid Prison10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Egil AndreassenNorweigianCabanatuan POW Camp 12/15/1944Died in sinking of the Oryoku Maru on 15 December 1944
Leo P. Angardt RussianCabanatuan10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Horatio B. ArnoldCabanatuan Old Bilibid Prison10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Rjarne Asheim NorweigianCabanatuan1/9/1945Died in sinking of the Enoura Maru
Richard G. BaileyAmericanCabanatuan10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Louis L. BaileyAmericanBilibid10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Donald P. BarrAmericanBilibid10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Neville Richmond BaughAmericanOld Bilibid Prison2/11/1945Unknown
John M. BennettAmericanCabanatuan POW Camp10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
John M. BennettAmericanOld Bilibid Prison10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Morris BerkowitzAmericanOld Bilibid Prison10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Henry O. BestAmericanCabanatuan POW Camp2/8/1943Unknown
Fred J. BlackCabanatuan10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Dwight W. BlackmanAmericanOld Bilibid Prison10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Harvey V. BlackmanAmericanOld Bilibid Prison10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Frank O. BloomAmericanCabanatuan10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Margaret Bruel BoguslavAmericanSanto Tomas Internment Camp7/23/1945Died of a stroke, pneumonia
Herald H. BookerAmericanCabanatuan POW Camp10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Ralph H. BoothAmericanBataan-CorregidorUnknown
Sjur BratteteigNorwegianCabanatuan POW Camp10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Harry L. BriggsAmericanClark FieldDied in Ship Sinking or Shot Attempting Escape
Horace B. BrowningAmericanCabanatuan POW Camp10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Richard L. ButtnerAmericanCabanatuan POW Camp10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Jan Vladka BzochCzechCabanatuan POW Camp1/9/1945Killed in bombing of Enoura Maru
Mathew W. CahillAmericanPOW Camp 1 Cabanatuan 1 2 3 Nueva Provinc12/15/1944Died in sinking of the Oryoku Maru
Tracy J. CaldwellAmericanCabanatuan10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Harry R. CampbellAmericanLas Pinas POW Camp12/15/1944Died in sinking of the Oryoku Maru
Leif T. CarlsenNorwegianLipa POW Camp10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Monroe Oliver CarlsonAmericanCabanatuan1/25/1945Died in sinking of the Enoura Maru
Thomas H. CasadAmericanOld Bilibid Prison10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Donald David ChambersAmericanDavao Internment Camp10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Vladimir B. ChurakovskyRussianCabanatuan10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Jim ClampAmericanCabanatuan10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
William K. ColemanAmericanCabanatuan10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Thomas Jeffers CoolidgeAmericanCabanatuanDied in sinking
Lewild O. CorbittAmericanCabanatuan12/15/1944Died in sinking of the Oryoku Maru
Richard C. CorkleAmericanCabanatuan10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Urban L. CorleAmericanCabanatuan10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Floyd F. CottrellAmericanCabanatuan10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Thomas H. CrookBritishPOW Camp 7 Corregidor Corregidor Is Phili10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Chester J. DavisAmericanCorregidor10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Harvey L. DeathridgeAmericanCabanatuan Fukuoka Pow Camp 1 Kashii Pine Tree Camp2/13/1945Unknown
John DelaneyAmericanOld Bilibid Prison12/15/1944Died in sinking of the Oryoku Maru
Merton B. DowneyAmerican12/15/1944Died in sinking of the Oryoku Maru
Kenneth A. DunlopAmericanPort Area12/15/1944Died in sinking of the Oryoku Maru
Frank DurbinAmericanCabanatuan12/15/1944Died in sinking of the Oryoku Maru
Charles A. ElliotAmericanBilibid10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Robert M. Evers AmericanOld Bilibid Prison Cabanatuan POW Camp 10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Norton R. FairlAmericanPOW Camp 8 Bachrach Garage Manila Luzon P1/9/1945Died in sinking of the Enoura Maru
Robert J. Fields AmericanCabanatuan10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Richard F. FlowersAmericanCabanatuan10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Albert FluckAmericanCabanatuanDied at sea
George H. FournierAmericanCabanatuan10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Albert J. FoytAmericanOld Bilibid Prison1/9/1945Died in sinking of the Enoura Maru
Matthew C. FunstonAmericanCabanatuan10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Gary G. GanfieldAmericanPasay10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Sigurd GartnerLas Pinas Cabanatuan POW Camp10/11/1944Unknown
Boris Y. GladcoffRussianCabanatuan POW Camp9/1/1944Unknown
Edwin G. GoldsboroughAmericanSanto Tomas Internment Camp Old Bilibid Prison1/25/1944Executed by the Japanese
Albert B. GommCanadianCabanatuan10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
William GrantBritishCabanatuan10/11/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Warren GrayAmericanCabanatuan1/9/1945Died in sinking of the Enoura Maru
Harold W. GraybealAmericanPOW Camp 11 Port Terminal Bldg Manila Luz Cabanatuan1/9/1945Died in ship sinking
Olaf O. HaganNorwegianCabanatuan POW Camp10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Wilbert O. HainesAmericanOld Bilibid Prison10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
John G. HairBritishDied in Ship Sinking or Shot Attempting Escape
James C. HarringtonAmerican10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Louis B. HartAmericanPOW Camp 1 Cabanatuan 1 2 3 Nueva Provinc10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Willard L. HartAmericanPOW Camp 1 Cabanatuan 1 2 3 Nueva Provinc10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Ivan H. HartAmericanPOW Camp 10 Batanges Batanges Luzon Phili POW Camp 1 Cabanatuan 1 2 3 Nueva Provinc10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
William F. HedgesAmericanPOW Camp 1 Cabanatuan 1 2 3 Nueva Provinc10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Leo HermanCzechLas Pinas POW Camp POW Camp 4 O'donnel Tarlac Luzon Philippi Died in captivity
Ben B. HessenbergerAmericanLas Pinas POW Camp10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Charles W. HeydaAmericanCabanatuan10/11/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Winston R. HotsenpillerAmericanCabanatuan10/11/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Jaroslav HrdinaCzechPOW Camp 1 Cabanatuan 1 2 3 Nueva Provinc 1/9/1945Died in the sinking of the Enoura Maru
Carl C. JohnsonAmericanCabanatuan10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Philip J. JoyAmericanCabanatuan Fukuoka Pow Camp 1 Kashii Pine Tree CampUnknown
John JudgeIrishCabanatuan POW Camp10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Audum JuelNorwegianCabanatuan POW Camp10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Raymond KelleyAmericanOld Bilibid Prison10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Fred J. KelseyAmericanPOW Camp 1 Cabanatuan 1 2 3 Nueva Provinc12/15/1944Died in sinking of the Oryoku Maru
William L. KenneyAmericanCabanatuan12/15/1944Died in the sinking of the Oryoku Maru
Burl B. KinderAmericanOld Bilibid Prison10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Ben E. KirkpatrickAmericanCabanatuan1/9/1945Died in sinking of the Enoura Maru
Aaron Kliatchko AmericanCabanatuan12/31/1944Died on the the Enoura Maru
Max KromAmericanCabanatuan10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Arthur G. La CompteAmericanCabanatuan10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Orley Augustus LairdAmericanOld Bilibid12/15/1944Died in sinking of the Oryoku Maru
Jack E. LangleyAmericanOld Bilibid Prison4/30/1943Killed by the Japanese
James V. LashleyAmericanLas Pinas POW Camp10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Robert LeesAmericanCabanatuan12/15/1944Died in sinking of the Oryoku Maru
Fred LenkCzech12/15/1944Died in sinking of the Oryoku Maru
Henry G. LindblomAmericanOld Bilibid Prison12/25/1944Executed by the Japanese
Arthur E. LindstromNorwegianCabanatuan1/9/1945Died in sinking of the Enoura Maru
John H. LongAmericanOld Bilibid Prison6/11/1944Unknown
Thomas T. LynchAustralianCabanatuan12/15/1945Died in sinking of the Oryoku Maru
Albert R. MartinAmericanCabanatuan10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
George N. McKayAmericanPOW Camp 10 Batanges Batanges Luzon Phili Old Bilibid Prison10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Hector D. McLeanAmericanCabanatuan POW Camp Old Bilibid Prison10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
William G. MeeseAmericanCabanatuan12/15/1944Died in sinking of the Oryoku Maru
Frank S. MerrillAmericanBilibid10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Oliver M. MichaelsonAmericanCabatuan10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Thomas L. MitchellAmericanBilibid10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Lynn MonroeAmericanBilibid10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Garnet Green Morris IlCanadianBaguio Internment Camp Old Bilibid Prison1/9/1945Died in the sinking of the Enoura Maru
Remeous MundellAmericanLas Pinas POW Camp10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Peter NathansenGermanCabanatuan Old Bilibid12/15/1944Died in sinking of the Oryoku Maru
Ray E. O'BrienAmericanCabanatuan10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Sergei OlfenieffAmericanCabanatuan10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Arthur G. OwensAmericanCabanatuan10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Marvin B. PadgettAmericanCabanatuan10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Paul E. ParsonsAmericanCabanatuanDied in Ship Sinking or Shot Attempting Escape
Thayer W. PeoplesAmericanCabanatuan Old Bilibid10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
James E. PilandAmericanCorregidor10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Otis O. PorterAmericanCabanatuan Old Bilibid10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
John H. RiggsAmericanOld Bilibid10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Paul D. RogersAmericanPort Area Cabanatuan POW Camp1/9/1945Died in the sinking of the Enoura Maru
Frank Rose Jr.AmericanCabanatuan Osaka Main Camp Chikko Osaka 34 13510/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Jess C. Rowland Jr.AmericanPOW Camp 8 Bachrach Garage Manila Luzon P10/11/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
George D. RoyAmericanCabanatuanDied in ship sinking
Jacob RussbergCabanatuan10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Billy G. SandlinAmericanCabanatuan Old Bilibid10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Warren D. SargeantAmericanCabanatuan 10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Lester L. SchwabAmericanCorregidor10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Alfred T. SmithAmericanPOW Camp 10 Batanges Batanges Luzon Philippines Old Bilibid Prison10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Gordon SnyderAmericanCabanatuan10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Samuel L. SnyderAmericanLas Pinas Cabanatuan POW Camp10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Martin Stefansie Jr.AmericanCabanatuan10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Arno J. StengerAmericanCabanatuan10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Vincent StoutAmericanPOW Camp 1 Cabanatuan 1 2 3 Nueva Province Bilibid10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Orville TaylorAmericanCabanatuan10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Francis S. ThompsonAmericanPOW Camp 11 Port Terminal Bldg Manila Luzon Cabanatuan10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Edward R. TrappAmericanCabanatuan10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Lawrence J. ValleroAmericanCabanatuan10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Josef VarakCzechCabanatuan1/9/1945Died in sinking of the Enoura Maru
Anastasios G. VarelasAmericanCabanatuan10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Charles M. VincentAmericanCabanatuan10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Carl J. ViningAmericanLas Pinas10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Anthony G. VolneyCzechCabanatuan POW Camp1/9/1945Killed in bombing of Enoura Maru
Charles R. WeidlichAmericanBilibid10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Joseph WeismanAmericanPOW Camp 11 Port Terminal Bldg Manila Luzon Bilibid10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Fletcher H. WoodAmericanOld Bilibid Prison1/6/1945Unknown
Howard A. WoodhamAmericanCabanatuan POW Camp10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
Paul WoodwardAmericanPOW Camp 10 Batanges Batanges Luzon Phili Neilsen10/7/1944Unknown
James WylieAmericanPOW Camp 1 Cabanatuan 1 2 3 Nueva Provinc Lipa 10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru
William A. ZeitlinAmericanCabanatuan10/24/1944Died in the sinking of the Arisan Maru

New YouTube videos show different Manila perspectives

Angus Lorenzen in 2015 YouTube video

Angus Lorenzen in 2015 YouTube video

A new video, featuring ex-Santo Tomas internee Angus “Andy” Lorenzen, was recently posted on YouTube. In it, he primarily discusses the liberation of the camp in February 1945. Another former STIC internee, Alix Boisseree Bensen, makes an appearance in the video. The video was produced by Jarel & Betty Wheaton for Peninsula Seniors, of the Palos Verdes Penninsula, in Southern California. To view the video, link to Lorenzen video on YouTube.com.

Evelyn Berg Empie, 2015 YouTube video

Evelyn Berg Empie, 2015 YouTube video

Another video available on the site is A Child in the Midst of Battle, by Evelyn Berg Empie, concerning Japanese-occupied Manila. Evelyn recounts how her German family came to the Philippines and what life was like during occupation outside of Santo Tomas. She describes the Battle of Manila from a 13-year-old’s perspective. Link to the video on YouTube.