Improvised prisoner's smoking pipe, Lintang Barracks, Kuching, Borneo

Place Asia: Borneo, Sarawak, Kuching
Accession Number REL/01990
Collection type Heraldry
Object type Heraldry
Physical description Wood
Maker Unknown
Place made Borneo: Sarawak, Kuching, Lintang
Date made c 1943
Conflict Second World War, 1939-1945
Source credit to This item has been digitised with funding provided by Commonwealth Government.
Description

Improvised prisoner's smoking pipe, the bowl crudely shaped like an elongated hexagon. The shank has split and there is what appears to be a repair along the split line. The stem is a length of bamboo with a mouthpiece carved into it. This stem appears to be a replacement - its diameter is about half the hole width in the shank and the fit is loose.

The bowl is discoloured around its upper surface and contains slight deposits of burnt tobacco.

The pipe is accompanied by a gummed cut-down address label carrying the number '22'; and by a manila coloured Military History Field Team label.

History / Summary

This collection of pipes (REL/01988 - REL/01995) was collected by the Military History Section Field Team attached to 9th Australian Division Headquarters. Writing on 25 September 1945 to John Treloar, Director of the Australian War Memorial, and describing their activities at the Kuching POW camp, an unidentified officer wrote:

'With regard to the relics, before the Australian officers left on the morning of 13 Sep, I got them to make a selection of personal relics for the AWM. These included improvised comforts, home-made pipes, etc, some of them with a story attached. I left these at the office of the Barracks pending spraying with disinfectant, informing the staff what they were and placing a big notice on top of the box stating that the contents were relics required by the AWM and were not to be touched. You can imagine my feeling on calling back for them to find that a newly-arrived officer had assumed it was rubbish left by the Japs and had had the lot burned. However we were able to duplicate most of the items from other Australian Officers huts.'