World War Ii

Download When Singapore Fell: Evacuations and Escapes, 1941–42 by Joseph Kennedy PDF

By Joseph Kennedy

This ebook examines the plight of British and Allied civilians as their troops fought with the japanese military for the keep watch over of Singapore. this is often the tale of the determined efforts made to flee, via ocean-going ships, small craft or taking walks during the Malayan jungle.

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Extra resources for When Singapore Fell: Evacuations and Escapes, 1941–42

Sample text

There it was scuttled to avoid capture, but the ship's company was still able to continue to Batavia by train and ferry. Within about 24 hours of these journeys, Japanese troops were in control of the Palembang area and the Japanese navy was patrolling the Bangka Strait. Already, evacuee ships had been bombed and sunk at no great distance south of Singapore. Among these were the Kuala and the Tun Kuang (Tien Kwang), both sunk off the sm all island of Pom Pong, but it was in the Bangka region where the casualties were to be greatest.

It had held Captain Capon and 38 other people from the stricken ship. There was another kind of evacuation, involving ocean-going shipping from Singapore. Miss Norah Inge was a teacher at a longestablished mission school in central Singapore (Church of England 32 When Singapore Fell Zenana Missionary Society) when she was called upon by the Deputy Inspector-General of Police to help look after Japanese women and children who were being rounded up for internment purposes following the Japanese invasion of Malaya.

Muriel Reilly's travels were not at an end in Colombo, for the Orcades was promptly required to take Australian troops back to defend their homeland; these were units which had been recalled from North Africa at the urgent insistence of the Australian government. The ship's captain granted Mrs Reilly's re quest to stay on board and sail to Australia, where she was destined to spend the rest of the war years (see Chapter 2). Chris Noble was an Australian who worked in the Malayan Survey Department in Kuala Lumpur and happened to be on leave with his wife and children in Tasmania when the Japanese invaded Malaya.

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