Memoir of Hugh King Ashby

Places
Accession Number AWM2019.22.163
Collection number PR03218
Collection type Digitised Collection
Record type Item
Item count 1
Object type Memoir
Physical description 52 Image/s captured
Maker Ashby, Hugh King
Place made United Kingdom: England
Date made c. 1982-1987
Conflict Second World War, 1939-1945
Copying Provisions Digital format and content protected by copyright.
Source credit to This item has been digitised with funding provided by Commonwealth Government.
Description

Memoir relating to the Second World War experience of Hugh King Ashby, Straits Settlement Volunteer Force.

In his memoir, titled “Notes by Hugh Ashby on his experiences as a POW, 1942-1945”, Ashby tells the story of how he became a prisoner of war of the Japanese after the fall of Singapore in February 1942 and occurrences thereafter. His memoir contains details such as being interned at Changi, a crowded train journey to a camp at Ban Pong, Thailand, dysentery, poor rations, working on the Burma-Thai Railway, and interactions with Japanese soldiers and local Thai people. He was then selected to become an assistant cook for a Japanese engineering unit at Kachanaburi, where he was treated relatively well and was able to eat and bathe regularly. Ashby then writes that he became very ill and was moved to a sick camp at Chunkai, where he developed severe ulcers, witnessed many make-do medical procedures, and recovered slowly. Upon his recovery, he was sent to camps at Non Pladuk and Ubon. In these camps, his experiences included secretly hearing outside news of the war, working on the railway, befriending a bird named “Oscar”, working on the camp sanitation team, and being bombed in Allied air raids.

Hugh King Ashby died suddenly on 19 December 1987, leaving his memoir notes incomplete.