Chronology of Events Related to Stanley Civilian Internment Camp: View pages

The British Army Aid Group's digest of information, Waichow Intelligence Summary No. 16, bearing today's date carries this passage on page 3:

J. D. S. ((almost certainly the HKU Vice-Chancellor, more usually D. J. Sloss)) is returning to Stanley this afternoon after staying out in the F. ((=French= St. Paul's, Causeway  Bay)) Hospital, for over four months.

Sloss has revealed medicines urgently needed in Shamshuipo, especially diphtheria anti-toxin.

The information about Sloss has come to the BAAG in a letter signed PREST. They don't know who this is at this stage, but it's Preston Wong, formerly a teacher at St. Paul's College, who will continue to send information until he's caught and executed with 32 others on Stanley Beach on October 29, 1943.

Source:

The Ride Papers, held at the Hong Kong Heritage Project


The Senate of Hong Kong University meets.

Source:

The minutes of the meeting of February 23, 1943 (see Chronology) were confirmed on this day:

http://www.impact100.hku.hk/wp/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/World-War-II.jpg


Maryknoll Sister Mary Clement, who was guaranteed out of Stanley on June 5, leaves Hong Kong. The Maryknoll authorities in the USA have ordered all sisters to return home or go to Free China - they've heard 'harrowing tales' from those repatriated on the Gripsholm. All will be gone by the end of January.

As Mary Clement and her colleagues leave the harbout, they pass another boat-  they think it's the Asama Maru-  a troop ship, and it's carrying a draft of Canadians from Shamshuipo to 'an unknown destination' - in fact Japan:

As we stood on the deck our last wave of farewell was to those brave boys to whom Hong Kong had given such an unfriendly welcome.

 

In fact the ship they passed wasn't the Asama Maru - which had been used in the June 1942 repatriation of Americans, but it ssiter ship the Tatuta Maru, which was carrying 1,176 POWs to labour in Japan. This draft - the third - was the first to include Canadians. The ship was a luxurious one, and some lucky POWs were assigned cabins, but most men are crammed into the hold - 'four airless steel walls with a bare steel floor' - and don't have enough space to lie down at the same time. Luckily it's a short voyage and they disembark at Nagasaki on January 22nd.

Sources:

Maryknoll: Cindy Yik-yi Chu,editor, The Diaries of the Maryknoll Sisters in Hong Kong, 1921-1966, 2007, 134-135

Draft: Tony Banham, We Shall Suffer There, 2009, 19-22 January 1943.


E. D. Sykes, head of the Eurasian Welfare Association, is arrested.

The reason for his arrest is unclear, but he's asked if his Association is receiving funds from Dr. Selwyn-Clarke or the British Government. He denies this and claims that he's kept the Association going by claiming rations for 250 fictitious members and then selling the extra food. He's accused of defrauding the Japanese Government and eventually given a ten year sentence.

Source:

Hong Kong Sunday Herald, January 5, 1947, page 2

Note:

Sykes was believed by the British Army Aid Group to be involved through a Welfare Committee with Dr. Selwyn-Clarke in 1942, but it's not known what contact if any he had with him at the time of his arrest. Selwyn-Clarke's 'protector', the senior Japanese Medical Officer Colonel Eguchi, was still in Hong Kong, so the Kempeitai, who believed the doctor was the leading British spy, seem to have been operating on the understanding that they could only take him into custody if they could get plausible evidence against him from others - after his escape in October 1942 Dr. Fehilly told the BAAG that the Kempeitai were questioning those people they arrested about Selwyn-Clarke. Eguchi left Hong Kong in late April and the doctor's arrest followed on May 2.

For something of this story see the Chronology entries for: February 10 and 11, 1943 and May 2, 1943 and following.

 


The only meeting of the Council of Hong Kong University during internment takes place. It's held in the British Community Council Office and its first business is to welcome Franklin Gimson to the Council. It moved on to note deaths of University staff and students and to express sympathy for their relatives.

 

An article in the Daily Express (page 3) casts light on the anxieties of loved ones in the United Kingdom, and on the fate of Japanese people there. The story's about 15 Japanese released from internment as 'friendly aliens'. Even though they want to do war work to help the British, no-one is willing to employ them because of the degree of hostility this would arouse from other employees. One worker tells the reporter 'We don't want any Japs working here' while pointing to a 'Remember Hong Kong' notice on the wall. (See entry for March 26, 1942.) It seems, partly through a slogan launched by the Express itself, that 'Hong Kong' has become synonymous with atrocities.

Source:

Lindsay Ride, in Clifford Matthews and Oswald Cheung (eds.), Hong Kong University During The War Years: Dispersal and Renewal, 1998, 18.

 


Death of Brian Anthony Willey, aged two years.

Source:

Geoffrey Emerson, Hong Kong Internment, 2008, 186


From today's Daily Mirror:

Pilgrims at grave of nurse who died for patients

NURSES interned in Hong Kong have visited the grave in a monastery garden of their colleague, Miss Irene Brenda Morgan, of Leeds, who was killed in action.

Her name heads the War Office casualty list published today.

Miss Morgan was one of eleven members of Queen Alexandra's Imperial Military Nursing Service who stayed with their patients when Hong Kong fell,

All swore they would take their own lives rather than be outraged by the Japanese infidels, and all carried loaded revolvers. Brenda Morgan died like a heroine. Shepherding her patients to safety from bombs, she was killed by a shell just outside her Quarters.

Her home is at Wayside, Horsforth, near Leeds.

Last November her only brother, Lieutenant Brian Morgan, R.A., was killed.

Source:

Daily Mirror, January 27, 1943, page 2

Note:

This is an interesting and rather puzzling story. As far as I know, after some doubt as to their civilian status, the military nurses were sent into Stanley in the summer of 1942. I’m not aware of any other cases of internees being allowed out to visit graves even of family members, and I’m not sure how the paper would have found out about it if it had happened. Either the family or the War Office seem to be the source of the story. My guess is that it came originally from an escaper and that the visit took place before the nurses were sent to Stanley.

For other accounts of the death of Brenda Morgan see: http://gwulo.com/node/10235


The Hong Kong University Court meets for the only time during internment. It receives the minutes of the Council meeting of January 23, 1943 and expresses deep regret at the deaths on active service of two of its members, Lt-Colonel G. D. R. Black and the Hon. T. E. Pearce.

Source:

Lindsay Ride, in Clifford Matthews and Oswald Cheung (eds.), Hong Kong University During The War Years: Dispersal and Renewal, 1998, 18.


On or about this date what was sometimes called the 'Reign of Terror' begins. Today's entry discusses the meaning of the phrase and its appropriateness. For incidents related to this theme see e.g. the entries for February 10, February 11, February 18, February 20, February 23, May 2-7, October 29 (all 1943)

The phrase ‘Reign of Terror’ is used half-ironically by Emily Hahn (China To Me, 1985 ed., 387). It seems to have been current in Hong Kong at the time (China Mail, December 25, 1945, page 2). It refers to a period which saw the Japanese military police, the Kempeitai ‘strike back’ against all forms of ‘illegal activity’ by arresting and excuting as man of those involved as they could (Philip Snow, The Fall of Hong Kong, 2003, 185). This began in February, 1943 and, as far as the British communities went, ended in January 1944 with the arrest in Stanley of 3 (or possibly 4) of the formerly uninterned bankers.  

 It was prompted by the success of the various resistance organisations - the British Army Aid Group, the communist East River Column, and the Nationalist underground led by Sun Bonian -  in creating networks to send illegal messages to and from the camps, to help escapers, to pass military information to the Americans, and so on. People left outside Stanley had long been operating illegal systems of humanitarian aid, and these too were to be destroyed by the Kempeitai in the coures of their campaign, although they're unlikely to have been what really concerned them. 

The phrase 'reign of terror' in describing this campain - obviously based on events in France in 1792-1795- is justified in that the Kempeitai arrests, which resulted in imprisonment in appalling conditions, sometimes (although not always) in brutal torture and occasionally in execution, certainly struck terror into the ‘stay-outs’ and, after it arrived in Stanley on June 28, into the internees. And, in percentage terms, the number of ‘stay-outs’ who were arrested, executed or  who died in prison was high.

But Philip Snow is quite right to point out that the suffering undergone by the ‘white’ British community was much less than that of the Chinese and other ethnic groups. By my count, the number of Britons executed was slightly higher than Snow’s figure of 10 – it was 11, plus one American and one Canadian; but the near contemporary figure he cites of 10,000 Chinese executed would suggest – roughly adjusting for population size – that the Chinese were judicially killed at about 3-5 times the rate of the British. And there are much higher estimates: Snow quotes a Chinese source that suggests 50,000 deaths resulted directly and indirectly from the activities of George Wong, a single Chinese collaborator with the Kempeitai. (Snow, 2003, 402.)

Even in the period February-July when most of the British arrests took place, the Chinese and other Asians were arrested in much greater numbers. October 29 was one of the blackest days in the history of Stanley: it saw the execution on Stanley Beach of 6 internees, one former internee, the husband of an internee and two people undoubtedly known to many in the camp. Nevertheless, the majority of the 33 people to die were Asian.  

Further, we know that Vandeleur Grayburn and David Edmondston died of malnutrition, in spite of having extra food and vitamins sent in both legally and secretly. Prison rations were not calculated to keep anyone alive for long without extra help, and uncounted poor Chinese must have died of starvation or the diseases of malnutrition.

Finally, the reason why estimates of relative death rates must be very rough is that Hong Kong’s population during the occupation was never static. The Japanese faced a real problem: the numbers in the ‘captured territory’ had been swollen dramatically by the refugees fleeing the fighting in southern China, and feeding so many people was impossible under wartime conditions. But the way the Japanese set about reducing numbers caused massive suffering and death – people were taken to barren islands and left there to eat each other or starve, or dumped on the ‘plague-ridden coast of Guangdong’ (Snow, 2003, 167). Quite rightly much of the evidence at the trial that led to Gendarme chief Colonel Noma’s execution concerned the Kempeitai’s role in this other ‘reign of terror’. At its height, about two thousand people a week – vagrants, poorer workers or the unlucky – were being treated in this manner.

The real ‘reign of terror’ was that aimed at the Chinese. The real indictment of Japanese rule in Hong Kong was the treatment of the Asian majority they claimed to be liberating.

 

 

For an important caveat about the phrase ‘the Japanese’ see

https://jonmarkgreville2.wordpress.com/2012/01/22/reality-check-1-the-j…


What remains of the German Sixth Army surrrenders at Stalingrad. About 91,000 Axis troops are taken prisoner.

About six months of brutal fighting have cost the Russions 750,000 casualties -  killed, captured or wounded - in the city itself; the number of civilians killed in the surrounding areas is unknown.

If the battle had been lost, even if the Germans had eventually been defeated, few internees would have lived long enough to see the end of the war. There's a long way to go, even on the Russian front, but today is one of the days that assures the survival of most of Stanley Camp.


A reshaping of the camp's welfare system has been decided on, and camp secretary John Stericker posts a notice on the board to inform James Ivor Barnes, who's in charge of the storeroom, of the new division of responsibilities and to assure him his work continues to be required and appreciated:

Mr. Bradley has been appointed to receive the Camp stores (i.e., kitchen utensils etc. etc.) and will arrange for distribution of same. Should they arrive late in the evening they will be stored overnight in Dr. Macleod's store. He ((Bradley)) will also be responsible for signing the receiving sheets. It is, of course, necessary to define his duties in order that they in  no way clash with yours ((Barnes's)) which you have carried out so well and so tirelessly since the formation of the International Welfare Committee.

War is full of intended and unforeseeable consequences, many of them grim. This reorganisation of duties will cost Frederick William Bradley his life.

Source:

J. I. Barnes, Hong Kong World War Two and Other Stories, 2005, 25

Note: Mr. Barnes, the Assistant Secretary of the Medical Department, played an important role in the smooth running of medical services during the hostilities. He remained in town and assisted Selwyn-Clarke in the first two months of the occupation. His duties included driving some of the late-comers into Stanley. He entered camp himself - with Douglas and Nina Valentine - in late February 1942 and soon took over the storeroom, sleeping there at nights to act as guard. 

He deposited his account of his wartime experinces with the Imperial War Museum soon after his hundreth birthday.


The first monthly allowance sent by the British Government through the Red Cross is received. It's 20 yen per adult and 15 yen per child - just enough to buy a few items of food at the Canteen.

Source:

Geoffrey Emerson, Hong Kong Internment, 1973, 94


HSBC Banker Charles Hyde is one of the most wide-ranging and courageous of the British Army Aid Group's agents in Hong Kong. He's involved with fund-raising, smuggling money and drugs into Stanley, arranging escapes and gathering intelligence.

He sends a report that the BAAG believe is written today about developments in occupied Hong Kong: the escape of Kennedy-Skipton, the departure of more POWs to Japan in late January, the arrival of about 30 more beri-beri sufferers in Bowen Road Hospital, and so on.

He comments on his difficulty in persuading anyone to join an escape he's organising with Thomas Monaghan:

God knows what keeps them here...Give me the chance they get and I'd be out of this hell hole in two shakes.

Source:

The Ride Papers, held at the Hong Kong Heritage Project, and kindly supplied by Elizabeth Ride

Note:

Mr. Hyde was presumably unable to leave because of his wife and young son. Two more people were eventually found who wanted to get out of Hong Kong and the three escapers were escorted to safety by BAAG operatives:

http://gwulo.com/node/13618

For more on Charles Hyde's resistance activities see:

https://jonmarkgreville2.wordpress.com/2012/04/20/charles-hydes-resista…


General Alexander Patch declares Guadalcanal, in the Solomon Islands, secure. A series of bitter combined-operations battles that began on August 7 1942 has ended in Allied victory.

The Battle of Midway (June 1942)put paid to Japanese hopes of a quick military victort that would force the Americans to accept a negotiated peace, but the task of actually dislodging the Japanese from the territory they'd occupied during their 'six months of victories' was a mammoth one. The bitter fighting at Guadalcanal, which culminated in a major naval battle in November 1942, marked the first stage in the Allied offensive.


Two Norwegians begin an escape that will lead to the biggest of the 1943 influxes into Stanley. Ragnar Brodersen describes the situation of the Norwegians in town and the lead-up to the escape of February 10 :

Things got worse and worse, and there was every indication that sooner or later we would be interned. Captain Halfdan Kvamso and I knew Mr. Monaghan, a Canadian of Irish descent, who claimed Irish neutrality so that he could accomplish the work as a go-between for people who wanted to escape, and he certainly did a magnificent job. He told us that he could not at that stage give exact details, as it was all hush-hush, but he arranged for a Russian, William Vallesuk, Chief Radio Engineer of China Electric Co. Ltd. (whom the Japanese would have liked to get their hands on because of an important invention he had made), and Kvamso and myself to be met by two Chinese in Kowloon on a certain afternoon in February 1943. We were not to speak to our guides, but to follow them.

After some hair-raising adventures, the party was delivered to a British Army Aid Group Forward Post. But the result was the internment of the rest of the Norwegian community.

 

Dr. K. W. Chaun is 'abducted' after visiting the Medical Department and taken to Central Police Station where he is questioned about the escape of another doctor.

Tomorrow the arrests will get even closer to the Medical Director, Selwyn Selwyn-Clarke.

Source:

Brodersen and Kamvso escape: http://www.galaxylink.com.hk/~john/paul/memoirsxiii.htm

Chuan: China Mail, January 8, 1947, page 2

Note:

Thomas Christopher Monaghan, the pre-war manager of Candian Pacific, who'd avoided internment by claiming to be Irish, was executed for his role in this escape and other resistance activity - see entry for October 29, 1943.

For the interment of the Norwegians, see entry for February 22, 1943


Dorothy Lee is arrested in Queen's Rd. and taken to Central Police Station.

Because she'd carried out social work before the war, Dr. Selwyn-Clarke had asked Ms. Lee to help him look after 40 Chinese wives of British POWs. The purpose of her arrest was to get her to incriminate Selwyn-Clarke, who, the Kempeitai believed, was head of a British spy ring. She's interrogated brutally for a week. Dr. Chaun, who knows her, is in the next cell, and she smuggles bread to him. He hears her asking for treatment for dysentery but this is refused.

She was released on March 13, 1943 having told her interrogators nothing.

Source:

China Mail, January 7, 1947, page 2, and January 8, 1947, page 2.

Note: see also May 6, 1943.

Note: for more information see

https://jonmarkgreville2.wordpress.com/2011/12/10/the-reign-of-terror-3…


Death of Kenneth Sinclair Morrison, former employee of Reiss, Bradley & Co., at the age of 56.

 

Sarah Keir Polson, the widow of Volunteer J. A. Poulson, who'd died of wounds, marries Police Sergeant Osmund Frederick Bower.

Sources:

Death: Geoffrey Emerson, Hong Kong Internment, 2008, 186

Marriage: Greg Leck, Captives of Empire, 2006, 618


The second British Community Council has its first meeting. Mrs A. Raymond, the representative of the Married Quarters, is the only woman to serve on any of the governing councils.

 

Former internee Alfred James Hall, 56, who'd been a goods inspector with Jardine Matheson, dies in the French Hospital.

Sources:

BCC: John Stericker, Captive Colony, 1945, Chapter IX, page 1

Hall: Greg Leck, Captives of Empire, 2006, 629


Arrest of Hong Kong News staff member C. M. Faure.

He's taken to Happy Valley Gendarmerie and held in a filthy 'cage'.

He's not charged for 6 months, but then is accused of being a spy and threatened with death. Eventually he's sent into Stanley.

 

Today or about this date two other former members of staff of the South China Morning Post, editor Henry Ching and A. M. Omar were also arrested on charges of spying.

 

M. L. Bevan copies into his Stanley diary an advert from the Hong Kong News, now the only English-language paper:

 

GENUINE PREWAR PATENT Medicines incl. Vitamin, Yeast, Calcium, tonics... against malnutrition etc. suitable for internees. List on application. Post Office Box 371 Hongkong.

Bevan makes no comment.

 

Sources:

Faure: Evidence of C. M. Faure at trial of Noma Kennosuke, reported in China Mail, January 3, 1947

Ching and Omar: http://www.scmp.com/article/433573/through-war-years-bloodied-unbroken

Diary: M. L. Bevan, IWM, 5231{BEVAN} 58132

Note: the second source gives the period of imprisonment as three months for all three men. Mr. Ching had to spend two months in the Nethersole Hospital recuperating.


On or about this date, Dr. Harry Talbot is arrested while trying to smuggle 4000 Military Yen into Stanley.

Talbot had been receiving treatment from Dr. Selwyn-Clarke at the French Hospital and Sir Vandeleur Grayburn had asked him to smuggle the money back into Camp - Grayburn later told the Japanese it was to be divided amongst the government nurses.

Talbot refused to say who had given him the money, but, after some days of pressure, including a raid by a naval party on the French Hospital, Grayburn and E. P. Streatfield, also a senior HKSBC manager, confessed to Mr. Oda of the Foreign Affairs Department, who informed the Kempeitai.

For future developments, see the entries for March 17 and April 13.

Sources:

Emily Hahn, China To Me, 1986 ed., 389

Phillip Snow, The Fall Of Hong Kong, 2003, 185

Frank H. H. King, The History of the Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation, Volume 111, 621-622

Notes:

Unfortunately the chronology of these important events is rather confused:

1) Snow states that Grayburn's arrest took place 'two weeks' after Talbot's, which he places in 'early' February - however Grayburn's arrest was on March 17 or March 19. Emily Hahn, who was in Hong at the time, gives no dates, but states that Grayburn went to Oda to confess after 'a few agonizing days' of Kempeitai pressure, and that he and Streatfield were arrested 'shortly afterward' (China to Me, 389). HKSBC historian Frank King is probably Snow's source for Talbot's arrest in 'early' February and he gives the date of the Grayburn-Streatfield confession as February 23, and that of the arrest as March 19. I am inclined, pending further investigation, to tentatively accept King's chronology. This would suggest that Talbot was arrested on about February 20, Grayburn went to Oda on February 23 and he and Streatfield were arrested on March 17 after three and a half weeks.

2) Some sources depict Talbot's arrest as starting off the whole chain of events that led to the arrests of May, June and July in Hong Kong and in Stanley Camp, and ultimately to the executions of October 29, 1943.  I am not aware of any firm evidence that they led to anything for the Allied community but the arrests of Grayburn and Streatfield. However, the circumstances leading up to Selwyn-Clarke's arrest on May 2 are far from certain, so a connection can't be ruled out.  In any case, Hahn records that many of Talbot's Chinese friends and patients were quickly arrested and interrogated by the Kempeitai.

3) Accounts of the exact circumstances of Talbot's search and arrest differ. Some sources place it on the journey down to Stanley, others on attempting to re-enter the Camp. Some claim he was still too ill to hide the money properly, others that he was careless. One source even claims he provoked a thorough search by his rudeness to the Japanese. It seems that the only certainties are that he was searched, the money was found and he was arrested.