Source: E-mail from
Leading Stoker Black's son, Derek Robertson; 11 Jan 2009
My grandfather was from Airdrie in
Scotland and joined the navy in the late 30's. He was a stoker on the HMS
Exeter when she was sunk and survived incarceration
by the Japanese, dying in 2006 aged 88.
Ginger Hair and an Orange
By Andrew Black
John Dalziel Black came into this world on 23 May 1917. Born in
Airdrie, Scotland the fifth child of Alexander and Margaret Black.
Eventually they had 16 siblings and his father became the provost of
his home town. In the mid thirties John decided to leave the
overcrowded house and joined the Royal Navy, marrying Jean Wright, they
eventually were parents to five children.
John was a leading stoker on HMS Exeter
in 1942 when the Exeter and a number of other allied ships were engaged
in battle with a Japanese fleet in the Java Sea. The Exeter was sunk
and thus began a 3 and a half year period of captivity as a far east
prisoner of war.
Like many other men who survived that brutal period he spoke very
little of his war experiences and subsequent captivity. In 1945 he was
in Fukuoka #2 camp near Nagasaki and witnessed the dropping of the ‘A’
bomb by the Americans on the city.
These are the stories that have been gathered from the snippets of
information that he did relate to the family over the time of his
release to his passing away. A span of over 40 years. Consideration
must be taken that as in all stories that were never written down at
the time of telling the passing of time may have blurred some issues
and some facts may be distorted. However, the essence of these
recollections are to preserve the memory of a strong-willed,
determined, hard working yet very humorous man who fought for his
country in her hour of need.
One comment on the Exeter was
that she had a good captain. Having to spend many months at sea would
cause sailors to play games for amusement. One favourite was ‘follow
the leader’ if you did not do what the leader did then some form of
punishment would befall you. Sometimes they would go into the captain’s
quarters when he was asleep and the leader would shout out in a loud
voice. Of course the others had to follow up to 12 at a time. The
captain would not be amused however the sailors suffered his wrath just
for the entertainment value.
Once having been ashore and, typically, drinking houses visited one man
was so drunk that he was unconscious. They put him in his hammock
covering his chest with tomato puree and put a white sheet over him as
if he was dead. They got dressed in parade uniform with one rating
acting as a priest. After much prompting he awoke, pulled the sheet off
his face, saw all the guys with sad faces, the priest, asked what was
happening, saw the ‘blood’ on his chest and duly fainted.
The Battle of the Java Sea has been well
documented, my fathers comments on this was regarding the noise on
board the ship when the guns fired and the Japanese shells exploding
near the ship. When the ship was hit by an exploding shell the noise
was horrendous and in later years this was attributed to his bad
hearing.
Many may ask why the captain did not go down with the ship, my father
explained that the captain, too, had family and it was his wish to see
them again. The survivors of the battle were left to cling on to
anything that would float and according to my father were some were not
picked up, by the Japanese, for three days. The men would encourage
each other to “hang on”. One can only assume that this was a very
stressful time.
Eventually picked out of the seas they crew were taken to Celebes and
marched barefoot from one end of the island to the other, on
sun-drenched roads and given very little water. Their new horror was
just beginning. The prison camp had a “hospital” hut which was just a
bare room and no medical equipment. Malaria and dysentery was rife and
when men were too sick to work they were thrown into this hut. Some
were left to die in these stinking disease ridden huts. My father was
put there but managed to survive, how, must be put down to his strong
will.
After years of abuse men would lose their minds and crawl in a corner
to sleep and never wake up. Eventually my father was too weak to carry
on and when as part of forced labour working in the shipyard in
Nagasaki he too chose his spot to die. He was woken by a Japanese woman
forcing an orange into his mouth. This kind and brave act gave him the
will to live on.
The naval records describe him as having a “fresh” complexion. This was
because he had very ginger hair and pale skin. The Japanese were
fascinated by this and of course this made him stand out from the
crowd. Not a good thing in a very hostile situation. The camp had a box
made from corrugated iron where captives were randomly punished by
being locked inside during extremely hot days and my father was chosen
to suffer this torture. Marching him to his fate he tripped over and
fell into some mud which caused his captors great delight to see his
ginger hair covered in mud. They laughed so much that it was decided to
let him go back to the ranks. The guards would given men a beating for
no apparent reason. The Exeter
had an officer from Liverpool who stood over 6’5” who would plead with
them to leave the men be and to beat him. He survived.
After the dropping of the bomb in Hiroshima the prisoners noticed a
marked change in the guards and after the Nagasaki bomb they abandoned
the camp completely. The prisoners began receiving air drops however
the were concerned about what could happen to them and barricaded
themselves in the camp.
Americans eventually released them from their captivity and he was
taken to Hawaii, eventually Vancouver, Canada. A five day train ride
across that vast country to Halifax Nova Scotia were he boarded an old
French ship to take him to Southampton and eventual reunion with his
wife in Glasgow. The round the world took 5 years.
John Dalziel Black
passed away on Easter Sunday 2006.
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