I am sure a lot of students have visions of having teachers
locked up. My 5th grade
teacher was a POW during World War 2 and I
recently got my hands on a book he wrote of his experiences. In my blog are a number of stories of my
year with Mr. Biggs at Bradley Creek Elementary School. A good place to start reading about them is a
post I made shortly after his death. To read this post, click
here.
The cover photo is of the author He's dressed in his cold weather uniform |
Chester M. Biggs, Behind
the Barbed Wire (1995, Jefferson, NC:
McFarland & Co, 2011), 224 pages, some photos and maps.
On the morning of December 8, 1941, the Marine guards at the
American consulates in Peiping (Beijing) and Tientsin, China woke up behind
enemy lines. Overnight (on the other
side of the International Date Line), the Japanese had attacked Pearl
Harbor. The Japanese had invaded China
several years earlier and the American consulates were now inside territory
held by the Japanese army. Although it
was a tense situation in the Far East and war was not out of the question, the
marines were caught unaware. They were
in the process of packing up and were days away from being withdrawn from China
(many of the military members and diplomats of other nations such as Britain
had already been withdrawn). As the war
began, the ship sailing to North China to pick up the Marines turned south and
those left behind were prisoners of war.
They would spend the entire war as POWs.
One of these Marines, PFC Chester Biggs, the author of this book, was
also my fifth grade teacher. Mr. Biggs would
spend 20 years in the Marine Corp (1939-1959).
The latter half of his life he spent in education. Mr. Biggs died a few years ago, but from what
I learned about him, until his death, he would spend time
teaching and answering questions for each of the Special Forces POW classes taught
at Fort Bragg. He died in December 2011 at the age of 90.
The book begins by describing the events of December 8,
1941. Only hours before the Marines
awoke, Japan had attacked Pearl Harbor.
The Marines had no idea what was happening or that the day meant war as
the Japanese surrounded the compound, disarming the sentries, and forcing their
surrender. Biggs, a young man of 20,
finds himself as a POW. The next two
chapters, Biggs described life in Peiping before the war. China had been at war with Japan for years
and the area of the consulate had been securely controlled by the
Japanese. The situation in the
countryside, where there were Chinese guerrillas fighting the Japanese, was
tense and movement by American personnel there was limited. However, inside the
city, where there was quite large contingent of foreigners, life continued as
normal. Peiping, at least in the
international section, was a cosmopolitan city with Europeans, Russians and Americans living there.
During this time, there were fancy parties and even premiers for movies
such as “Gone with the Wind.” There were
some tension with Japanese soldiers, but with the exception of a few incidents,
it appears much was done on both sides remain calm. After the one incident, US military personnel
were restricted to a few clubs near the compound.
At first, after the surrender, the main change that the
Marines noticed was a loss of freedom of movement, the loss of their Chinese
workers (they had Chinese laborers that did many of their task from laundry to
manicures) and a reduction in food. Even
though they were confined to the compound, one Marine who had girlfriend in the
city slipped out and then came back undetected.
The NCOs tried to impress upon
the Marines of the serious of such actions, but two others slipped out and were
caught. Although the Japanese had said
anyone caught attempting to escape would be shot, they were not. As Biggs noted, the Japanese could and would
be brutal, but their behavior wasn’t always consistent. Although they were often brutal, at times
they surprised everyone. At the end of
January 1942, the Marines in Peiping were transferred to Tientsin and were
later transferred to a POW camp near Shanghai.
Before the transfer, the Japanese allowed a Marine from Tientsin requested
to marry his English fiancé before they were moved to Shanghai. His request was granted. During Christmas
1942, the Japanese allowed an American restaurateur who ran a famous establishment
in the city to prepare a Christmas dinner for the POWs. But this was the last great meal they enjoyed
for before the next Christmas, all expats in the city including this man were
confined into concentration camps by the Japanese.
At first the Marines who had been on diplomatic duty were
hopeful they would be exchanged and freed. The diplomats in China were exchanged six
months into the war. Such hope began to
wane as they were placed into a POW camp in Shanghai that included Marines and civilian
contractors from Wake Island and British sailors on a ship captured in a
Chinese port at the beginning of the war among others. Interestingly, in 1943, they were joined by
Italian Marines stationed in China. They
had been left along as they were part of the Axis, but once Italy surrendered
and then declared war on Germany, members of the Italian military in China
found themselves as POWs and bunking with Americans and British POWs. In the Shanghai area, the Marines were held
in two different camps. They were worked
hard and the Japanese capturers could be incredible brutal. The POWs did what they could to keep their
spirits up and Biggs tells many incredible and sometimes humorous stories of
survival and endurance. There was even a
radio which provided a little news of the war (which was spread via rumor for
no one was to know about the radio).
In 1945, the POWs were locked into rail cars and shipped
north and then down through Korea. The
travel was hard. In Pusan, they were
placed on a ship bound for southern Japan.
Once on Japanese soil, they were shipped by train north. Although they could see only a little (the
Japanese had covered the windows) they were able to see the devastation done to
Japanese cities from American bombing as they moved north. They knew the war couldn’t last much
longer. The Marines were taken to Hokkaido,
where they were put working inside coal mines.
This was brutal work and from the book I have the sense it was the worse
of Biggs entire imprisonment. The
Americans were split up and sent to smaller camps where they worked in teams
with a Korean miner underground. After
the Japanese surrender, the POWs stayed at the camp as American planes dropped
supplies. It was well into September
that Biggs had his first airplane flight in his life as he was being moved from
Hokkaido to Yokohama. However, bad weather
forced the plane to turn back. He would
later take a ship south and then on to Guam where the POWs were seen by doctors
and navy intelligence officers who record their experiences. From Guam, they were flown across the Pacific,
with stops for hospital visits at Honolulu (to be checked for infectious
diseases and parasites) and then on to a hospital in San Francisco.
Mr. Biggs was 18 when he left his home in Oklahoma for the
Marine Corps training base in San Diego.
He was 24 when he returned home on an extended leave after having been a
POW for over 3 ½ years. I found this
book to be well written and to give great detail of everyday life in a POW
camp. I wish I had read it while Mr.
Biggs was still alive.
Sounds like an insightful book, specially if you know the author personally
ReplyDeleteSadly, I never saw him after I left elementary school
DeleteWow! How fascinating that he was your teacher. I'm sure I wouldn't have appreciated his story though, as a fifth grader.
ReplyDeleteHe quit teaching elementary school the year after we were there and moved to the Jr. College level. We bragged that the Japanese couldn't break him, but we could! He didn't tell us a lot about his experiences, from what I remember.
DeleteThat's interesting that you knew this author. I bet it was a fascinating read for you, knowing that the author was your teacher.
ReplyDeleteThat link, him being my teacher, made it more interesting. I wish I had read this before being in China--some of the areas he told about visiting during the period 1939-41, before becoming a POW, I have also visited.
DeleteI suspect that knowing him made the story all the more interesting. I doubt any of my teachers have written books, but maybe I ought to investigate that. I had a cousin who was a POW in Germany. He wouldn't talk about his time there until he was about 65.
ReplyDeleteInterestingly, Mr. Biggs was in his 70s when this one was published. He published another book in his 80s.
DeleteYour 5th grade teacher wrote a book? That's cool! I would buy whatever book one of my teachers wrote. But this one is better since it's about his real life. What an honor to be able to read about his experience as a POW. And to know him.
ReplyDeleteHe actually wrote two books. I don't have the second and it is not as personal but about the same subject matter: "The United States Marines in North China, 1894-1942." At some point I may read this as I am curious about his research and how it would take the reader from the Boxer Rebellion to the 2nd World War.
DeleteYour 5th grade teacher wrote a book? That's cool! I would buy whatever book one of my teachers wrote. But this one is better since it's about his real life. What an honor to be able to read about his experience as a POW. And to know him.
ReplyDeleteWhat a fascinating story he had to tell, and you, too! How exciting to have this connection to the history of that time.
ReplyDeleteThe connection does make it special!
DeleteWow, 4 years in such a camp. I can imagine he'd have stories to tell. Just wow.
ReplyDeleteAlthough the treatment was horrible, not knowing what was going on in the war would have also been terrible.
DeleteOh wow, I can't even imagine what he went through.
ReplyDeleteI am glad he wrote this book and I was able to become better acquainted with his experience
DeleteI knew a man in Alaska, Guy McGee who had been a civilian contractor working on Wake and taken prisoner. I believe he was with your teacher for that period in China. He also was then sent to Japan where eventually he was repatriated. Guy was a fascinating man, did not talk much at all about his time as a POW.
ReplyDeleteSeveral times he mentioned the civilians from Wake Island who were in the camp but they were kept in different barracks. It sounds like they loaded all the people from Wake on a ship(s) and send them to China. He said those from Wake were hurting for winter clothes. They were allowed to bring a sea bag of clothes, but those from Wake came with what they were wearing.
DeleteDarn it, another book that I'm going to have to get and read. Fortunately I got a gift certificate to Barnes and Noble for my birthday burning a hole in my pocket!
ReplyDeleteIt is an interesting book--he wrote another book on the Marines role in China from 1894 to the war... That also might be interesting.
DeleteKnowing an author personally can make the read much more personal and intense. Interesting post. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteI would probably not have read this had I not known him--as it was I was willing to pay $25 for a paperback to learn about his experiences
DeleteWhat intesresting teacher you had Sage and amazing he wrote a book with his adventures
ReplyDeleteAnd life.
I had some amazing teachers too and sometimes I think why I dont asked them others things?
Nice you have the book of your teacher and this is amazing:)
It is interesting to go from being a Marine to an educator! In high school, our principal was also a former Marine
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteSorry Sage I had a double comment !
ReplyDeleteSorry Sage I had a double comment !
ReplyDeleteNo problem, for some reason this happens on occasion and it seems to happen most often to the same people. I am not sure what causes it.
DeleteGoodness gracious, we've been blogging together for a long time, (and I'm still enjoying every second of reading your posts) I remembered this teacher of yours, and sure enough I clicked on your old post, in December of 2011 and there's my comment. Not my picture there, but you click on my name and presto right to my blog! Thanks for sharing such a wonderful teacher with us.
ReplyDeleteIt's been great having you following my blog for so long! :)
DeleteAmazing that you knew such a man. :-)
ReplyDeletePearl
As a 5th grader, I didn't think so, now I appreciate him a lot more.
DeleteLooks like an interesting read. I've read fiction from people I know in real life--and depending on what they write about, I see a real world connection--but I have yet to read nonfiction from anyone I know well. What an added dimension to one's knowledge of a person. I only had one teacher who said she had written two books, but they were unpublished.
ReplyDeleteI probably know more "non-fiction" writers personally but then they are mostly writing within a particular academic field.
DeleteSo he wasn't in the Philippians, but part of the garrison in China ?.
ReplyDeleteIn my early writings about him, I thought he was in the Philippians, but upon his death, in the obituary, I learned he was in China. That was over 4 decades later. He never said much about his experiences except that he was a POW
DeleteThat was a very interesting post. I bet that the reason why he didn't say much about his experiences is that they must scarred him deeply.
ReplyDeleteGreetings from London.
It sure does bring it home when you know someone who lived through these experiences. As a fifth grader, I'm sure you couldn't grasp it quite like you can these many years later.
ReplyDeleteFantastic story and review. It is remarkable how survivors make it back to "normal" life and thrive--my husband's grandma was a holocaust survivor, after 8 different work camps she was freed by Allied forces--and her stories still make me tremble, but knowing that a person can overcome those horrors and "live" again is humbling.
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing!
Veronica
http://vsreads.com
What a wonderful review of an interesting teacher and book.
ReplyDeleteWhat he must have gone through for those years.
A blogging friends first husband was an English POW.
She has mentioned it a few times.
cheers, parsnip
Wow! The prisoner experience is a side of war that still doesn't get the attention itself. No doubt, your personal connection with the author must have made this all the more meaningful for you.
ReplyDelete