Description
Title: A Life for Every Sleeper – A Pictorial record of the Burma-Thailand Railway
Author: Clarke, Hugh V
Condition: Very Good
Edition: 2nd Edition
Publication Date: 1987
ISBN: 0049090232
Cover: Hard Cover with Dust Jacket – 114 pages
Comments: The pictorial account of the Burma-Thailand Railroad and the experiences of the Australian and Allied POWs who built it.
The Burma Railway, also known as the Death Railway, the Burma-Siam Railway, the Thailand–Burma Railway and similar names, was a 415 kilometres (258 mi) railway between Bangkok, Thailand, and Rangoon, Burma (now Yangon, Myanmar), built by the Empire of Japan in 1943, to support its forces in the Burma campaign of World War II. The line was closed in 1947, but the section between Nong Pla Duk and Nam Tok was reopened ten years later in 1957.
Forced labour was used in its construction. About 180,000 Asian civilian labourers (mainly romusha) and 60,000 Allied prisoners of war (POWs) worked on the railway. Of these, around 90,000 Asian civilian labourers and 12,399 Allied POWs died as a direct result of the project. The dead POWs included 6,318 British personnel, 2,815 Australians, 2,490 Dutch, about 356 Americans, and about 20 POWs from other British Commonwealth countries (the Indian Empire, New Zealand and Canada).