Stolen Years: Australian prisoners of war
At risk at sea
All through the war, groups of prisoners were transported around Japan’s captured territories, usually in small, slow, overcrowded merchant ships. Conditions aboard them were appalling. Even worse, over a thousand Australian prisoners of war died when ships carrying them were torpedoed by Allied submarines. The Japanese did not mark their ships or advise the Allies of their movements. The ships sunk included the Montevideo Maru (July 1942), the Kachidoki Maru and the Rokyu Maru (September 1944).
The band of the 2/22nd Battalion on ANZAC Day 1941, at Rabaul. Most of
these men, Salvation Army bandsmen, would be dead before the end of 1942,
either killed at Tol or when the Montevideo Maru was sunk. Of the 24
men who enlisted in the band, only one survived the war.
P02328.004
Prisoners of war are rescued from the South China Sea in September 1944.
P02018.326
An oil-soaked and sun-burned but relieved prisoner is hauled from the sea
by American sailors after spending three days in the water following
the sinking of the Rokyu Maru off China in September 1944.
305634

Death certificate(180Kb PDF file)
This is one of the death certificates issued for prisoners of war who
died when the transport Tamahoko Maru was torpedoed off Nagasaki on 24
June 1944. Private Gregory Wardlaw, 2/40th Battalion, from Tasmania, was
killed when a torpedo from an American submarine hit the ship: “The
ship immediately foundered; rescue impossible, he drowned”.
RC01185

