Read Ship of Ghosts Online

Authors: James D. Hornfischer

Ship of Ghosts (75 page)

BOOK: Ship of Ghosts
5.81Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads
CHAPTER 39 (pp. 267 to 269)


The prisoners worked in a rather foolish fashion
…”: Charles D. Smith, “USS
Houston
(CA-30) and Experiences,” 19.
Planes over Thanbyuzayat
: Varley, diary entry for March 1, 1943.

CHAPTER 40 (pp. 270 to 274)


We’d get in there, and you’d hit one
…”: Charley L. Pryor, UNT interview, Jan. 22, 1973, 102. “
An elephant’s a smart bugger
…”: Ibid., 113.
Spider rigs
: Pryor, UNT#3, 41,
and
death of Japanese engineers
: Luther Prunty, UNT interview, 114 and Donald Brain, UNT interview, 165. “
It seemed impossible, but it worked
…”: Prunty, 115.

CHAPTER 41 (pp. 275 to 282)


As we would go into a new working camp
…”
and

We kept our structure. We had our officers
…”: Otto C. Schwarz, interview with the author. “
If a passing fly chose to step into your rice ration
…”
and

There were times when most of us felt
…”: Searle,
To the Kwai—and Back
, 122–123. “
They would either die from the jolting about
…”: Varley, diary entry for April 10, 1943. “
Major General Sasa has visited camp
…”: Varley, diary entry for April 14.
Higuchi

knew nothing of medicine
…”: Fisher, “Medical Experiences,” 52.
Pryor as

nothing but the skin stretched over the bones
”: Charley L. Pryor, UNT interview, Jan. 22, 1973, 107–110. “
It looked like an Army field hospital
…”: James Gee, UNT interview, March 19, 1972, 68–69.
Red Cross inspection of Thanbyuzayat
: Varley, diary entry for April 26, 28–30, 1943; Gee, 69; and Fisher, “Medical Experiences,” 61. “
Bless ’Em all
”: Otto C. Schwarz, interview with the author, and Rivett,
Behind Bamboo
, 192.
Deaths at 80 Kilo Camp
: of Lawrence F. Kondzela, March 13, 1943; James H. White, April 13, 1943; and Sgt. Joe Martin True Lusk, April 28, 1943. “
I’m glad I’m sick because I’m not going to work
…”: Benjamin Dunn, UNT interview, 151–152. “
Then he became depressed again
”: Fisher, 150. “
He had tried to be tough with the guards at work
…”: Ibid.
USMC Service Records for H. H. Dupler:
NARA II.
Dupler’s burial
: Varley, diary entry for May 15, 1943. “
They were some of the biggest, strongest guys
…”: John H. Wisecup, UNT interview, 90–91.

CHAPTER 42 (pp. 283 to 290)


It is as if the Wet were a baying animal
…”: Parkin,
Into the Smother
, 87. “
The J. will carry out schedule and do not mind
…”: Varley, diary entry for May 18, 1943. “
I don’t remember any storms; I just remember rain
…”: Howard Brooks, interview with the author. “
Within the first day and then with ever-mounting zeal
…”: Rivett,
Behind Bamboo
, 195. “
It’s awesome to hear a huge tree
…”: Ilo B. Hard, UNT interview, 163. “
I remember on one occasion that a bridge had washed out
…”: Melfred L. Forsman, UNT interview, 170. “
Finally they gave up on this truck thing
…”: Donald Brain, UNT interview, 181. “
You would work whatever they decided you would work
…”: Otto C. Schwarz, interview with the author. “
There seemed to be no bottom to the mud
…”: Charley L. Pryor, UNT interview, Feb. 20, 1973, 6. “
That word ‘Speedo’
…”: Howard Brooks, interviewed in video, “Secrets of the Dead.”
80 Kilo established as a “hospital”
: Hamlin, “Statement,” 5; Pryor, 7; and Smith, “USS
Houston
and Experiences,” 20. “
The least sick of the stretcher cases
…”: Smith, 20. “
I looked in that hut, and I couldn’t believe
…”
and

You know he’s not going to live very long
…”: Dunn, 170; see also Luther Prunty, UNT
interview, 141.
A jungle clearing,

the worst I have ever traveled on
”: Varley, diary entry for June 4, 1943. “
These poor devils do not appear to receive any treatment
…”: Ibid. “
My fears expressed so often during the past three months
…”: Varley diary, entry for June 4, 1943. “
It got cold about five o’clock each morning
…”: Clyde Fillmore,
Prisoner of War
, 78. “
Everybody died there. That was my station
”: Red Huffman, interview with the author.

CHAPTER 43 (pp. 291 to 295)


Any way you could slow the Japanese down
…”: Melfred L. Forsman, UNT interview, 144. “
I know we Marines had a code among us
…”: H. Robert Charles, UNT interview, 107. “
The idea was that we’d crawl under there
…”: Ibid., 108. “
We agreed not to place the burden of secrecy on anyone
…”: Charles,
Last Man Out
, 135. “
I don’t know how many it hurt or mangled
…”: Charles, UNT interview, 108; and
Last Man Out
, 134–136.

CHAPTER 44 (pp. 296 to 300)

Americans join H Force
: Reminick,
Death’s Railway
, 84; Crayton Gordon, UNT interview, 100. “
What we lost on that railroad
…”: John H. Wisecup, UNT interview, 63.
The embankment at Kinsayok
: Rod Beattie, quoted in “Secrets of the Dead: The Bridge on the River Kwai” (video). “
The road had petered out as the undergrowth changed
…”: Searle,
To the Kwai—and Back
, 105–106. “
This period of movement must mean something big
…”: Parkin,
Into the Smother
, 107. “
The head of the man holding the drill
…”: Parkin, 121, 123. “
Occasionally we caught glimpses
…”: Searle, 108. “
The daily blasting along this section is terrific
…”: Parkin, 167.

CHAPTER 45 (pp. 301 to 308)


The radios were dismantled and smuggled
…”: Melfred L. Forsman, UNT interview, 166–167. “
I lived day by day
…”: Roy M. Offerle, UNT interview, 126. “
Jane, you’ve got a funny-looking thing here
”: Jane Harris, interview with the author. “
You come home from the station or airport
…”: quoted in Yellen,
Our Mother’s War
, 13–14. “
Such a statement is either a deliberate evasion or
…”: Hodge, “Exchange of Information Sheet for Relatives of Personnel Attached to the U.S.S.
Houston
, Lost in Sundra Straits [sic], February 28, 1942,” undated, revised to V-J Day, 1946. “
It is impossible to estimate the value of Mr. Hodge’s work
…”: Smith, “Where Is the Crew of the Ghost Cruiser Houston?”
The Oregonian
.
Lieutenant Hodge’s fate
: Statement of Leon W. Rogers, in dispatch from United States Naval Liaison Office, Calcutta, India, Enclosure a(2). “
One thing that has always discouraged me
…”: Edith Rooks to Hart, April 16, 1943, 8. “
Probably I should not have passed to you that rumor
…”: Hart to Edith Rooks, May 5, 1943. “
I must say more and more I feel the promise
…”: Edith Rooks to Hart, May 21, 1943, 2.

CHAPTER 46 (pp. 309 to 313)

Lieutenant Weiler’s ring
: Mintzer, “The Long Journey Home: Fran Weiler’s Ring Returns to Annapolis,” 10. “
There has got to be another way out
…”:
Parkin,
Into the Smother
, 101.
Flora and fauna of the railway
: Parkin, 72, 92–93, 111. “
The thing eats faster than a cancer
…”: Charley L. Pryor, UNT interview, Feb. 1973, 3. “
Had we known…that they’d wind up in a damn slop-hole grave
…”: Crayton Gordon, UNT interview, 141. “
At first we made individual graves
…”: John Wisecup, UNT interview, 83. “
I never will forget this
…”
and
Wisecup’s breakdown
: Ibid., 84–85.

CHAPTER 47 (pp. 314 to 317)


Nippon tearing Asia up into strips
…”: Dunlop,
War Diaries
, 221.
Jim Gee’s hallucination
: Gee, UNT interview, March 19, 1972, 58. “
This dream gave to me the strength
…”: Ibid. “
Thank you for asking me to sponsor the USS
Rooks
…”: Edith Rooks to Frank Knox, Dec. 7, 1943.

CHAPTER 48 (pp. 318 to 322)

Bombing of Thanbyuzayat
: Varley, diary entry for June 12, 1943; Rivett,
Behind Bamboo
, 199–200.
Varley injured
: Varley, diary entry for June 15.
Life in the monsoon
: Benjamin Dunn, UNT interview, 143; Charles D. Smith, “Experiences,” 20. “
No medical officer or orderlies ever had to contend
…”: Lionel de Rosario,
Nippon Slaves
,
www.ean.co.uk/Bygones/History/Article/WW2/Death_Railway/html/songkurai.htm
(last viewed by the author on March 10, 2005). “
Nagatomo was astonished
…”: Varley, diary entry for July 1, 1943.
55 Kilo as “one of the worst, if not the worst camp
…”: Fisher, “Medical Experiences,” 8.
Aircraft of “a type not seen before
”: Varley, diary entry for July 9–12, 1943. “
He was as regular as clockwork
…”: James Gee, UNT interview, March 19, 1972, 52. The Tenth Air Force’s 80th Fighter Group flew P-38s over Burma starting in December 1942;
www.talkingproud.us/HistoryBansheesE.html
(March 16, 2005). “
I guess they’re going to wait for the rains
…”: Gee, UNT interview, 52.

CHAPTER 49 (pp. 323 to 330)


Fu
-ji-ta. Where is this
Fu
-ji-ta
?”: Frank Fujita Jr., UNT interview, 82; Fujita,
Foo
, 155–156. “
They got mad as hell when I laughed
…”: Fujita, diary entry for June 6, 1943. “
I figured my best bet is to keep my head
…”: Fujita, UNT interview, 84. “
Look what we have here
…”: Fujita, UNT interview, 86; Fujita, diary, June 4, 1943. “
I was bound and determined those sons of bitches
…”: Fujita, UNT interview, 90.
Japanese infantrymen, “small, illiterate, absurd
…”
and

They thanked us with bows
…”: Fillmore,
Prisoner of War
, 85.
Prunty and Worthington “had a testament each
”: Luther Prunty, UNT interview, 129.
Charley Pryor at 80 Kilo Camp
: Pryor, UNT interview, Feb. 20, 1973, 16–18. “
They’d tell you, ‘I’m finished
…’”: John H. Wisecup, UNT interview, 81. “
It was Wisecup, I guess, who would stand back there
…”: Paul E. Papish, UNT interview, 163. “
Look, Charlie, your mind is like the muscle in your arm
…”: Jim Gee as quoted in Charles,
Last Man Out
, 132.
“I don’t have a friend”:
Dan Buzzo, UNT interview, 176. “
Don’t kid me. There are no eggs within a hundred miles
”: Ibid., 171–172. “
Probably no single factor
…”:
Fisher, “Medical Experiences,” 87. “
A figure of six foot three inches emerges
…”: Parkin,
Into the Smother
, 105–106. “
As small a thing as hiding, from yourself
…”: Marvin Robinson, UNT interview, 133. “
It’s people you’ve known, gone to school with
…”: Prunty, UNT interview, 135.
Aborted escape by Forsman, Stensland, and Lattimore
: Melfred L. Forsman, UNT interview, 189–191.

CHAPTER 50 (pp. 331 to 334)

Lumpkin “had the weight of the whole camp on his shoulders
…”: William V. Bell letter to Mrs. Samuel H. Lumpkin, 4. “
It was hard to find anyone with such disregard for his self
…”: C. J. Vidler, letter “to whom it may concern,” April 21, 1947. “
Once the dysentery took a hold of him
…”: Roy Offerle, UNT interview, 135. “
It was almost like a death blow to all of us
…”: Dan Buzzo, UNT interview, 175. “
He didn’t have it left in him
…”: Melfred L. Forsman, UNT interview, 186. “
It was like a ghost town
…”: George Detre, UNT interview, 172.
“You could smell that camp for miles
”: Eddie Fung, UNT interview, 124. “
Suffer
is a dangerous word here
…”: Parkin,
Into the Smother
, 93. “
I find beauty in everything, even in death
…”: Frank Fujita, UNT interview, 53. “
There is a lot to grumble about
…”: Ray Parkin,
Into the Smother
, 134. “
It has become quite an institution
…”
and

They’ll be droppin’ thousand-pounders when they come
…”: Ibid., 215.

CHAPTER 51 (pp. 335 to 339)

Joining of the line at Three Pagodas Pass
: Allen, “The 18th Division Royal Engineers,”
Royal Engineers Journal
.
80 Kilo Camp abandoned
: Smith, “USS
Houston
(CA-30) and Experiences,” 21; Charley L. Pryor, UNT interview, Feb. 20, 1973, 16.
Burials at 80 and 100 Kilo Camps
: Smith, 21. “
They had the bugle going all of the time
…”: Roy Offerle, UNT interview, 120. “
It was more or less like a Toonerville trolley
…”: Melfred L. Forsman, quoted in La Forte and Marcello,
Building the Death Railway
, 256. “
I think we all came to the conclusion
…”: James Gee, UNT interview, March 19, 1972, 79. “
We were lucky
”: Ibid., 62–63. “
In my opinion it is a virtue since ancient times
…”
and

We have exploited untrodden jungles
…”: Nagatomo quoted in Sharp, “Japanese Documentary,” 22–23; see also Fisher, “Medical Experiences,” 46. “
Do you have anything to eat
…?” Houston Tom Wright, UNT interview, 165–166.

BOOK: Ship of Ghosts
5.81Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

My Pirate Lover by Stewart, Lexie
Assassin's Apprentice by Robin Hobb
His Lady Peregrine by Ruth J. Hartman
Whispering Hearts by Cassandra Chandler
Murphy's Law by Jennifer Lowery
Web of Fire Bind-up by Steve Voake
The Angel in the Corner by Monica Dickens
Shatter by Dyken, Rachel van