Life in japanese pow camps

    • [DOC File]Forsythe_Frank_Profile

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      life in japanese pow camps After serving in Shanghai where the Fourth Marine Regiment had been protecting the area as an international settlement, Frank S. Forsyth, a Marine from Massachusetts, was sent to Corregidor and there became a prisoner of the Japanese when Corregidor fell in May of 1942.

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    • [DOC File]The US Navy Japanese/Oriental Language School Archival …

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      The Japanese POW appeared unescorted one morning, trimming his moustache with a small pair of scissors, coming up behind me as I sat alone in our G-2 section translating a description of Tinian’s water supply. As it turned out, I was not killed with my own weapon. He only wanted some help with an Aussie phrase that appeared in a P.G ...

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    • [DOC File]HOTEN CAMP MUKDEN MANCHURIA

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      One Aussie POW George Harriss (VX 63990 2/10 Field Park) spent time in the “Jug”(gaol). Apparently he was both the first and the last inmate who spent time in the “Jug”. The Japanese brought a propaganda unit into the camp on occasions. The POWs were ordered to play sport and were permitted to have a concert.

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    • [DOC File]POW Camps in Japan Proper

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      As the POW camps were established, new laws to control the POWs such as “Regulations of the Treatment of the POWs” and “Detailed Rules” were enacted. The Japanese Army was responsible for the administration of the camps, but the Japanese Navy wanted to interrogate pilots they captured in an attempt to improve their naval intelligence.

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    • [DOC File]Document Repository

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      Mar 06, 2013 · Nearly all the original Japanese companies that used POW slave labor still exist and often continue to operate facilities at the same sites associated with their assigned POW camps. Thus far, there have been three trips: 2010, 2011, and 2012.

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    • [DOC File]Japanese Internment Camps

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      Living in interment camps was a hard life to live. Many families were forced to live in cramped quarters with ten other families sharing one stove. Some camps such as Slocan city; didn't have the recourses to house the huge amounts of people coming into the camps. Many Japanese were placed in tents until there were houses available.

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    • [DOCX File]General Topics for all three time ... - History with Halkuff

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      - Life as a POW - Allied POW Camps - Central Powers POW Camps. LIFE IN THE TRENCHES. Western Front Warfare. ... Executive Order 9066 and the Japanese. Non-Jewish victims of the Holocaust. Warsaw Ghetto and the Polish Uprising. Resistance Movement. ... POW camps after the war . Prisoners of War. Propaganda. Radar. Resistance movements. Rockets ...

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    • [DOC File]CHAPTER 25: AMERICANS AND A WORLD IN CRISIS, 1933-1945

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      The Internment of Japanese Americans. 37,000 Issei, first generation and 75,000 Nisei or second generation Japanese were interned. This reflected the deep-rooted hatred and discrimination towards Japanese Americans. EXECUTIVE ORDER 9066 – Feb. 1942 – it authorized the removal from military areas of anyone deemed a threat.

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