1 Dec 1943, Chronology of Events Related to Stanley Civilian Internment Camp

Submitted by brian edgar on Fri, 08/03/2012 - 15:50

Just before 10 a.m. the Gripsholm is guided by tugs to pier F in Jersey City. At 12 noon the passengers start to come down the gangplank, but before they can leave they’re interviewed by military and FBI agents looking for spies and collaborators. The interviews take so long that two hundred passengers, including Emily Hahn and her daughter Carola, have to spend another night on the ship. Thirty repatriates are taken to Ellis Island for further questioning.

Hahn herself is one of those under suspicion: her interrogators want to know why she wasn’t interned like the other Americans, why she received favours from the Japanese and why she fraternised with high-ranking enemy officials.

 

 

The Canadians are kept on the ship waiting for the Canadian authorities, who are finding American security and intelligence hard to deal with. And there are a number of Canadians suspected of collaboration. It takes twenty hours to get everyone off the Gripsholm and on to a sealed train controlled by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.

 

 

Father Charles Murphy is met by a reporter who hands him some cuttings from Canadian newpapers - he modestly disclaims the title 'the hero of Hong Kong' some of them have awarded him. He gives a long interview on his work running a refugee camp for 2,000 Chinese displaced by the fighting. The camp was set up by the Government Medical Department in the grounds of the Maryknoll Mission on December 10 (1941) and all of the occupants quietly slipped away on December 24, as if forewarned.

Sources:

Hahn: Ken Cuthberston, Nobody Said Not To Go, 1998, 278-279

Canadians: Daniel S. Levy, Two-Gun Cohen: An Autobiography, 1997, Kindle Edition, Location, 5583

Murphy: http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1946&dat=19431202&id=RS8rAAAAIBAJ&sjid=zpgFAAAAIBAJ&pg=5523,235264

Note:

See also December 2, 1943

Date(s) of events described