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Texas History Minute

War Department had no idea what had happened to the troops of the Second Battalion or the Houston survivors Communications simply ceased Families and neighbors grieved, worried, and prayed, not knowing what fates awaited their loved ones half a world away The 534 captured of the Second Battalion, along with the Houston, became known as the Lost Battalion and suffered in Japanese prison camps throughout the war

The Geneva Convention of 1929 specified that prisoners were to be given proper shelter and medical care and not to be tortured Nations were also supposed to inform each other of captives Japan refused to ratify the treaty, and during the war resorted to a medieval mentality that surrender was disgraceful and prisoners deserved the worst And the worst they delivered, many later answering for their war crimes

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One group separated during the battle for Java, Battery E, was eventually sent to Japan to work as slave labor in the shipyards and coal mines until they were freed in 1945 Eight of these 99 men died in captivity

Most of the remainder of the Lost Battalion were held for seven months in Java before put to work in their own slave labor camps building the Burma Railway for Japan For nearly a year, more than 66,000 Allied prisoners along with more than 230,000 Southeast Asian civilians were forced to build a 258-mile rail line from Burma to Thailand across treacherous mountain passes and unrelenting jungles The overworked men had little food or water, no medical care, and were beaten or murdered by guards Seventy thousand men died building the railroad

After completion of the “Death Railway” in 1943, the men were sent back to prison camps in the Dutch East Indies Over the next two years, they were sent to various places across Southeast Asia to serve Japanese whims They suffered from poor health, poor nutrition, and beatings In all, 163 men from the Lost Battalion died in Japanese camps

In September 1944, American submarines on routine war patrols came across Japanese merchant ships carrying hundreds of Allied prisoners Once safely back in Allied hands, the POWs began telling how they had worked with survivors of the Second Battalion in Burma News that some of the men were still alive was relayed to waiting families They now had renewed hope, but these hopes were tempered by the knowledge of what the prison camps were like

It would be nearly another year of hard fighting before the Lost Battalion could be rescued. In August 1945, Japan surrendered By this time, most of the imprisoned Second Battalion were in camps in Java and Thailand Two American C-54 transports were brought in to bring them to a hospital in Calcutta, India, before returning home

After some time back in Texas, families organized a welcome home celebration in October 1945. The men formed the Lost Battalion Association and met regularly in the ensuing years In a brutal chapter from a war full of brutality, the men may have been lost for a time but were never forgotten

Howe Mini Storage sell out of warehouse contents

To satisfy landlords’ lien at Howe Mini Storage;

511 N. Denny (Hwy 5); Howe, TX on Saturday November 18, 2017 at 10am

Furniture, Appliances, Tools, Toys, Christmas Decor & Misc

Household Goods

Tenants:

Cathy Marsh #38

Dean Patterson #58

Christopher Sanders #65

Rayna Lane #71

Irene Skirvin #80

Todd Turner #112

Todd Turner #113

Abandoned Contents #115

Abandoned Contents#116

Gabrial Jenkins #137

Fall Festival Photos

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