Charles Patrick (Teddy) WOOD

WOOD, Charles Patrick

Service Number: QX13460
Enlisted: 27 June 1940, Kelvin Grove, QLD, Australia
Last Rank: Private
Last Unit: 2nd/26th Infantry Battalion
Born: Paddington, Queensland, Australia, 14 March 1915
Home Town: Teneriffe, Brisbane, Queensland
Schooling: Not yet discovered
Occupation: Labourer
Died: Killed in Action (POW of Japan - Rakuyo Maru), South China Sea, 12 September 1944, aged 29 years
Cemetery: No known grave - "Known Unto God"
Burial at sea. Officially Commemorated: Panel 15, Labuan Memorial (within Labuan War Cemetery). Roll of Honour: Bribie Island - Woorim, Moreton Bay Region, Qld.
Memorials: Australian War Memorial Roll of Honour, Ballarat Australian Ex-Prisoners of War Memorial, Labuan Memorial, Labuan Federal Territory, Malaysia
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World War 2 Service

27 Jun 1940: Involvement Australian Military Forces (Army WW2), Private, QX13460, 2nd/26th Infantry Battalion, Malaya/Singapore
27 Jun 1940: Enlisted Australian Military Forces (Army WW2), Private, QX13460, Kelvin Grove, QLD, Australia
30 Jul 1941: Embarked Australian Military Forces (Army WW2), Private, QX13460, 2nd/26th Infantry Battalion, Embarked: 30/07/1941, Melbourne, VIC, Australia. Ship: HMT "EE" [HMT EE, Marnix Van St Aldegonde]. Disembarked: 23/08/1941, Singapore. (NAA, Pg-4).
15 Feb 1942: Imprisoned Malaya/Singapore, "A Force" (NAA, Pg-4).
6 Sep 1944: Embarked Australian Military Forces (Army WW2), Private, QX13460, 2nd/26th Infantry Battalion, Embarked with(1318-POW'S) Ship: "Rakuyo Maru", Singapore; Japanese - Convoy of ships: "HI-72"; Destination: Mainland of Japan - mines; Date and Location of Disaster: 12/09/1944, Off east coast of Hainan Island, Sth China Sea; Cause of Disaster: Unmarked Japanese Transport Ship, "Rakuyo Maru" was torpedoed by USA-submarine - "Sea Lion"

WWII -TODAY- Follow the War as it Happened ...

THE HELL OF A JAPANESE PRISON SHIP

The Notu Maru, one of the Japanese freighters used as prison ships, otherwise known as the ‘Hell Ships’.
On the 29th October 1942 Arthur Titherington found himself somewhere in the South China Sea, destination unknown. He had been captured at Singapore and was now amongst the thousands of Prisoners of War who were being despatched to a variety of locations around the south east Asia to work for the Japanese.

On the 25th October, at the Singapore dockside, he and around a thousand other PoWs had been loaded aboard the England Maru, an old freighter with the most basic facilities. They were to spend most of the journey in the bare hold:

We were not allowed on deck until the ship was well out to sea, and then only for 15 minutes. This was the routine during the next few weeks, just a quarter of an hour each day in the fresh air, the rest of the day being spent consigned to the stinking holds below.

Part of this small but invaluable daily break on deck could be used to visit the very primitive toilets, nothing more than a large box arrangement with a hole in the base, the whole thing being suspended over the side ofthe ship. Without a doubt it was the most frightening method of going to the toilet imaginable; certainly nothing in my life had ever equipped me for such an experience.

The alternative facilities were buckets in each hold. When the bucket required emptying it had to be lifted out ofthe hold on the end of a rope. One unsteady pull meant, at best, that the contents were deposited on the floor of the hold. A panic-stricken spell in the box hanging over the side of the ship was preferable to a floor where we lived that was strewn with faeces.

For the next few days the ship battered its way through the South China Sea, pitching and rolling in a most alarming way. We listened to the ancient plates and timbers creaking around us and, at times, mused on the irony that this vessel in which we were travelling to an unknown destination had been built, many years before, on the banks of the Clyde.

At times the stench was almost overpowering, and to add to the general misery more and more men were going down with dysentery.

It was during this voyage I really learned to overcome any squeamishness I might still have had. With my shoulder against a bulkhead, and one leg braced against an upright to counter the rolling of the ship, I sat eating one of our twice daily portions of boiled rice, while at the same time watching a man who was obviously in the throes of dysentery.

With his backside on a latrine bucket he was vomiting from his other end into a container, and quite often missing it. With the next roll of the ship he pitched forward, spilling the contents of both containers, and went crashing down on the deck. I put down my rice, wiped up the spillage as best as I could, helped him back onto the bucket and returned to my meal. My sensibilities had been brought to a point of complete numbness.

The paucity of the rations took on a new dimension on board ship but in a sense the obsession over food began to lessen; there were now other problems to concern ourselves with: illness, sea sickness and the future.

I was, at the time, like other men to whom I spoke, prepared to accept the acute shortage of food as a temporary situation. There were, after all, over 1,000 prisoners on board plus a hundred japanese troops, and the ship’s crew. It was a small vessel and rations were bound to be scarce. The problem, I reasoned, would end when we arrived at our destination.

The one thing that never entered my head was that our future was to be one of sheer starvation, in far too many cases resulting in death.

See Arthur Titherington: Kinkaseki: One Day at a Time

Arthur Titherington died in 2010, see Telegraph obituary, having spent the greater part of his life trying to get some form of justice from the Japanese for their treatment of Prisoners of War.

In his memoir Titherington recalls that he was actually quite lucky on the England Maru. Many other Japanese prisoner transports, being unmarked enemy vessels, were torpedoed. The Montevideo Maru was the first but there were many others and Arthur Titherington wanted to ensure that these ships, sometimes known as the ‘Hell Ships’, were not forgotten:

Monteviedo Maru. Sunk by submarine 1 July 1942. Total number of prisoners on board 1,053.
No survivors.

Kachidoki Maru. Torpedoed by aircraft 12 September 1942. Total number of prisoners on board 950. Missing or dead 435.

Tyofuku Maru. Sunk by aircraft 21 September 1942. Total number of prisoners on board 1,287. Missing or dead 907.

Lisbon Maru. Sunk by submarine 2 October 1942. Total number of prisoners on board 1,816. Missing or dead 839.

Nichimei Maru. Sunk by submarine 15 January 1943. Total number of prisoners on board 548.
No survivors

Suez Maru. Sunk by torpedo 29 September 1943. Total number of prisoners on board 548.
No survivors.

Tamabuko Maru. Sunk by torpedo 24 June 1944. Total number of prisoners on board 772. Missing or dead 560.

Haragiku Maru. Sunk by torpedo 26 June 1944. Total number of prisoners on board 720, Missing or dead 177.

Rakuyo Maru. Sunk by torpedo 12 September 1944. Total number of prisoners on board 1,214. Missing or dead 1,179.

Shinyu Maru. Sunk by submarine 17 September 1944. Total number of prisoners 750.
No survivors.

Unya Maru. Sunk by submarine 18 September 1944. Total number of prisoners on board 2,200. Missing or dead 1,477.

Arizan Maru. Sunk by torpedo 24 October 1944. Total number ofprisoners on board 1,782. Missing or dead 1,778.

Oryoku Maru; Enoura Maru; Brazil Maru. Torpedoed by aircraft 9 January 1945. Total number of prisoners on board the three ships 1,620. Missing or dead 1,060.

ORIGIN - VISIT WEBSITE:*** http://ww2today.com/29th-october-1942-the-hell-of-a-japanese-prison-ship ***

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HISTORICAL PLACES - Labuan War Memorial Park

At Labuan War Memorial Park- Along Jalan Tanjung Batu, where locals would pass by indifferently on their tooting motorcycles and zooming cars, lie 3,908 soldiers in perfectly squared platoons, much like how they would stand in salutation when they were alive. These soldiers were from all over: Australia, Great Britain, India, New Zealand and even Malaysia.

The POWs of Sandakan, the perished war heroes of the Australian 7th and 9th Divisions, as well as those of the Punjab Signal Corp and a few locals were all buried here today at the WWII Memorial in Labuan, which was officiated by the Australian government in June 1953. The bodies were shipped in from Sabah, some with their military tags still glimmering around their necks. Of the 3,908 of them, 2,156 were unidentified. The identified burials number 1,752 of which 1,523 are soldiers, 220 airmen, 5 sailors and 4 civilians (consist of 814 British, 858 Australians, 1 New Zealander, 43 Indian and 36 Malayan). Another 34 Indian soldiers, whose remains were cremated, are commemorated on a memorial in the India Army.

They were all given a white headstone each with their names, military positions and death ages engraved on it. Poignant messages from their family members still resonate today with heavy heartaches that would dwell tears in the eyes. The 2,156 war heroes were also given a similar engrave of ‘Known unto God’ – while their bravery may not be known on earth, but they never be forgotten in the eyes of God. The Cross of Sacrifice stood in the middle of the memorial ground. Origin of Text:Text taken from LabuanTourism website.

The POWs of Sandakan, the perished war heroes of the Australian 7th, 9th Divisions, Signal Corps and a few locals were all buried at the WWII Memorial in Labuan, which was officiated by the Australian government in June 1953.

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"Rakuyo Maru"

“Rakuyo Maru”
Sank: 12Th September, 1944


On the 4th September, 1944 – a convoy HI-72 sailed from Singapore. Two of these ships, “Rakuyo Maru” & “Kachidoki Maru” carried (P.O.W’s). The Rakuyo Maru carried (1317 – P.O.W’s) & the Kachidoki Maru a further (900 – P.O.W’S). On the 12th September, 1944, the convoy was attacked by USA submarines & both these ships were hit. The Rakuyo Maru was torpedoed by USA submarine “Sea Lion” at 5.00am. The Japanese rescued some of the (P.O.W’s) from these two ships & they continued their journey to Japan on the “Kabitsu Maru”.

Originally Shared by: baznez01

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Showing 3 of 3 stories

Biography contributed by Daniel Bishop

Charles Patrick WOOD (also known: Teddy or Charley)

Born: March 14th, 1915 at Paddington, Brisbane City, Queensland

Biological Father: Charles WOOD and Biological Mother: Alice Josephine (nee-GORMAN) GRAY.

Half-Siblings (Same Father – Charles Wood):  Arthur Charles Wood & Thelma May (nee-Wood) Angles.

Step-Father/Father: Robert William Bishop; Step-Brother/Brother: Eugene William Bishop (Same Mother - Alice Josephine Gorman).

 

Charles Patrick Wood never married I am told by my own Father & his relatives.  More importantly his own father (my Grand Father, Eugene William Bishop), had previously foretold him that Charles (Teddy) was very close to my grandfather Eugene - as 'brothers' and his step-father - Robert William Bishop.

Charles Patrick Wood was also a good pugulist (boxer).

 

He, like so many of his army comrades, had their lives cut short as a consequence of the Second World War (either during or after). I never had the chance to meet my Great Uncle Charles Patrick Wood.

With rank of Private, he was a member of the 2nd/26th Australian Infantry Battalion, he was a Prisoner of War aboard an unmarked Japanese transport ship the "Rakuyo Maru".

 

On initial reading of the events that took place - all the efforts he and his fellow comrades endured and suffered (just to think I was never even told of my great uncle Charles Patrick WOOD, due to these details in our family being that serious that they were kept private) to my fathers’ family (which I respect), however when I read my great uncles tragic story, the suffering in reading this, the few articles I was trying so hard to finish (as the tears stopped me from sleeping at night until I completed reading every word I could possibly find, I read through a lot of pain).

Now I do respect what my great uncle Charles went through as I do for all servicemen and women during any war).  My great uncle Charles Patrick Wood has lead me down a path whereby, at first I found his story in the Second World War very hard and tragic. I have never fought in a war. I have worked in the hospitality and service industry, which is incomparable to the extremes Charles Patrick Wood had to endure.

"A great man of courage, and to all of his fellow man".

 

Charles Patrick WOOD, died on September 12th, 1944 in the South China Sea (off the East-coast of Hainan Island). He was a Prisoner of War on the unmarked Japanese transport ship the "Rakuyo Maru" which was part of a convoy of 10 other ships (2 ships were torpedoed - Rakuyo Maru & Kachidoki Maru).

 

The Rakuyo Maru had 1161, P.O.W. casualties and 157 survivors. the Kachidoki Maru had 380 P.O.W. casualities with 520 survivors.  These ships were torpedoed by US submarines, the "Sea Lion" and the "Growler".

 

This is the story of my great uncle Charles Patrick WOOD thus far and his horrendous outcome in the Second World War. Daniel Bishop (grandson of Eugene William BISHOP and Grand Nephew of Charles Patrick WOOD).

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