Diary pages from this date

Enter the date (MM/DD/YYYY) and click 'Apply' to see all pages from that date.

The Teia Maru sets sail, having loaded 88 Hong Kong repatriates - 73 Canadian, 13 Latin American and 2 American - and some passengers for the Philipines.

The repatriates include American writer Emily Hahn. Hahn had turned down repatriation in June 1942 so that she could help her POW lover, Major Charles Boxer, but now circumstances are different and she feels the risk to her and her daugher Carola outweighs any advantages in remaining.

Otherwise, most of the repatriates are Canadian, including the Roman Catholic Father Charles Murphy, reluctantly leaving for health reasons. Morris 'Two-Gun' Cohen's on board, eighty pounds lighter than when he entered camp.

Clifton Large, aged 22, refuses repatration because he won't leave Mabel Redwood. Large's parents refuse to leave too, choosing to stay with their son.

One repatriate, Mr. E. D. Robbins, returned to Hong Kong soon after liberation. He told the China Mail that conditions on the ship were worse than at Stanley: the Japanese crew were intent on making as much money out of the passengers as possible, the food was inadequate so the purchase of supplements was essential, but, while those being sent home from Shanghai were provided with 5000 yen, ex-Stanleyites were given only a monthly allowance of 29 yen.

Sources:

http://www.combinedfleet.com/Teia_t.htm

Hahn: Emily Hahn, China To Me, 1986 ed., 421

Murphy: Mabel Redwood, It Was Like This, 2001, 152

Cohen: Daniel S, Levy, Two-Gun Cohen: A Biography, 1997, Kindle Edition, Location 5521

Large: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/stanley_camp/message/1414

Robbins: China Mail, October 1, 1945

(78) Canadians & Am. sailed on Tei-A-Maru

Rain

2 Valentine boys ((John and Stuart)) & PH Potts came from S'hai.

Classical (GoodbanHeasman, - Woods, C. Pudney )

Prince ((????)) of Jap RC, visited Camp

((The following text is not dated:))

Eighteen months later the Canadians left, and once again our hearts ached to be going with them, but as Hong Kong was a British colony, we had to remain until the end.

When the Canadians had left, it gave us a little more space for living in, and the five of us; Mary, Alec, Carmen, Owen, and I moved into a slightly smaller room, but at least we didn't have to share it with anyone else, and we had some privacy.

G 28 today. With her all forenoon shifting cot to Os etc. She left at 12.15pm & so ends a long period of friendship that ran the whole gamut of all feelings & emotions. Goodbye & God Bless you Girlie darling, good luck wherever you go. XX.

Weather improved a little & Canadians went on board at 5pm. Talk with Steve pm. G going has left a big blank in the Camp for me now. Tei-a Maru left at 9.30pm.