Christmas Eve, we had been, myself with an officer and about
ten men, was sent across a valley, which would have been across
a little bay from Stanley Village and we were supposed to set
up a post there to prevent the Japanese Army from setting up
guns that would shell across the bay into Stanley Village.
And during the night, a Japanese patrol passed by where
we were located. We had, we got there in the middle of the night,
total darkness. We had no idea where we were, what we had
for shelter or anything. In the morning we realized we had no
shelter. We were just on the side of a hill, open hill and we
didn't realize that just over the hill behind us there was
a large Japanese force. About noon, the whole hill just became
alive with small arms fire from every direction, and we had no
cover, and our officer that was with us, I believe it was
Lieutenant MacMillan, he said, "Every, it's every man for
himself. Try and find some cover as best you can." So about
three or four of us jumped, ran to a bit of a cliff and hopped
over and there was such a, a small ledge on it, as we landed
our rifles went out of our hand because we were going down
the hill. We finally got ourselves anchored on this bit of
a ledge, and that's where we were until mid afternoon.
We had, we had no arms now, and we were just about to fall
into a precipice. And we were there for probably fifteen or
twenty minutes, I would say, and there was a voice from across
the valley where we had come from earlier in the night, with a
a megaphone and it was a Japanese officer with a megaphone and
he was saying in perfect English, "The war is over, the governor
has surrendered, I'll give you safe journey across the valley,
come to my post." Apparently he could see us. We had no
idea that he was there and a...
Interviewer: So what's going through your mind at this time?
Well I, personally, and I think everybody else was the same, that
after seventeen days with practically no sleep, and very little
food, I think I had probably two warm meals of stew during
seventeen days and apart from that it was a snack here or there,
whatever you could find. I was so exhausted, I don't think I
contemplated my situation really very well, and so we talked it
over the three or four of us that was there and we decided
what have we got to lose? We had, there was nothing we could do.
So we went over to him, and they treated us reasonably well.
They didn't question us about who we were, what we were doing
there and whatnot. And as we were lined up after we finished
talking, he marched up and down in front of the line of us with
his sword drawn and we weren't quite sure just exactly what our
situation was going to be. But after about a half an hour I
believe it was, he put his sword in the sheath and got a detail
of his soldiers to take us back behind the lines. So Christmas
day, evening or night, we, we were all tied together on
Happy Valley Race Track.
Interviewer: So at this point, you knew you were
heading to war camp?
Yep. Yeah it looked like, we sort of figured, well I guess
they're not going to behead us or shoot us or whatever,
but up to that point we were given to understand that
the Japanese didn't take prisoners.
Interviewer: Pretty scary feeling...
It was a scary feeling but as I say, I was so exhausted
and everybody was so exhausted that what they did
didn't really matter. So it seemed looking back.
Interviewer: It's hard for someone like myself to understand that
Pretty hard for anybody to understand, but on our way being
marched back to Happy Valley Race Track, we, we confronted
some of our men that had been tied together and bayoneted
or murdered. They were actually murdered, 'cause you don't,
you don't tie dead, dead men together, you tie, you tie
live men together and then kill them and that's the way
they were found and we just couldn't quite figure out
whether we were lucky or not.