Missing Believed Killed

Missing Believed Killed

by JohnBaxter (Author)

Synopsis

In 1942 corporal John Baxter, a royal engineer, was captured by the Japanese in Indonesia. For the next three years he was held as their prisoner, during which time he was starved and beaten and contracted malaria, dysentry and diphtheria, for which he received no treatment. At one point he was given a fifty-fifty chance of surviving and moved to an isolation cell where he was kept awake at night by the sound of coffins being made for fellow prisoners who had not been so 'lucky'. He spent the last two years of the war working in the hard labour mines in Kyushu, from where he witnessed the dropping of the atomic bomb on Nagasaki 40 miles away, and felt the scorching wind from the blast. Remarkably John Baxter survived these experiences and made it back to Britain - a journey which was an adventure in itself. In February 2009 he celebrated his 90th birthday. Having written up his diaries from this time, he has now decided to tell his story. It is a story not just of survival but of ingenuity, resourcefulness and quiet heroism. Using his training as a heating engineer, he found numerous, subtle ways of helping to disrupt the Japanese war effort, for example by sabotaging mining machinery and the rifles the guards had given him to repair. He also built radios to enable the prisoners to stay in touch with events in the wider world; cooking and lighting equipment to make their lives more comfortable; and artificial limbs for amputees. The book also offers revealing insights into the complex relationships between the prisoners and their guards, insights which overturn many of the stereotypes we are often presented with. For example John managed to befriend one of the guards, Hirano, who risked his life to bring him extra food rations. Written without a hint of bitterness, this is a fascinating and moving account of how one man managed to survive some of the harshest conditions faced by prisoners in the Second World War, while doing his bit to help the war effort. Illustrated with contemporary photographs and artefacts from his time in the camps, this book will be of interest to WW2 historians and the general reader alike.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 288
Publisher: Aurum Press Ltd
Published: 25 May 2010

ISBN 10: 1845135385
ISBN 13: 9781845135386

Author Bio
John Baxter was a Corporal in the Royal Engineers during the Second World War. In 1942 he was captured by the Japanese in Indonesia, and held as a prisoner of war under brutal conditions for the next three years. After his release, John Baxter spent several years recuperating and receiving treatment at Papworth Hospital in Cambridgeshire, where in 1948 he met and married his wife, Lilian. He later resumed his pre-war career as a plumbing and heating engineer, becoming a manager of a heating company in Trowbridge in Wiltshire, and retiring in 1974. John, who still lives in Trowbridge, has two sons and a daughter and two granddaughters. He continues to be actively involved in organisations such as FEPOW (Far East Prisoners of War), COFEPOW (Children and Families of Far East Prisoners of War), and the Java 42 Club. He has taken part in a number of VJ Day anniversary events and stays in contact with his old prison guard, Hirano, who in 2009 sent John a 90th birthday card.