Description
Title: Heroes of F Force – Honours over one thousand Australians who died and medical personnel who prevented cholera taking a greater toll.
Author: Wall, Don
Condition: Near Mint
Edition: 1st Edition
Publication Date: 1993
ISBN: 0646160478
Cover: Soft Cover without Dust Jacket – 170 pages
Comments: This book describes the suffering of 3600 Australians and 3400 British Prisoners of War who marched 300 km at night through the jungle to the most isolated locality of the Burma/Thailand Railway. Within eight months 2000 British and 1000 Australians had died. The losses would have been far greater if not for the medical staff.
“F” Force was a working party of prisoners of war of the Japanese. It consisted of 7,000 men, of which 3,662 were Australians, the others British. The purpose of this working party was to assist in the construction of the Burma/Thailand Railway linking Bangkok with Rangoon. The force was formed at Changi and the first of thirteen trains left Singapore on April 18, 1943. Each train contained approximately 600 men crowded into rice trucks, 28 men to each truck. The last train departed on April 26, 1943. Each train took five days to make the journey, Singapore to Bam Pong, Thailand.
Most of the 2/30th travelled in Train 5, which departed Singapore on 23/4/1943. After arrival at Bam Pong, they were then marched 330km to various camps north. The men from Train 5 arrived in Shimo Sonkurai on 18/5/1943. The main camp for the Australians was Shimo Sonkurai (No 1 Camp) and Changaraya (No 5 Camp). These camps were located in the centre of the cholera belt. Consequently, the Australians were to lose 1,060 men from various diseases, mainly cholera, in the period April to November 1943.
In mid-November 1943 “F” Force was transferred south by train, to Kan Buri Hospital Camp, about 80 km from Bangkok.
Most of the members of “F” Force arrived back in Changi on 17/12/1943.
Includes Nominal Roll of “F” Force members