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    Bataan march survivor, 92, passes

    Bataan march survivor, 92, passes

    By R. E. Sepears III| Suffolk News-Herald, Suffolk, Virginia

    Published Thursday, March 12, 2009

    Half a century after the horror ended, the
    physical wounds had healed, but Senior Master
    Sgt. Norman R. “Jack” Matthews still struggled
    with the bitterness that he felt inside.

    “War is terrible,” he told a Lakeland High School
    U.S. history student during an interview for a school project in 2000.

    Sgt. Matthews, who died Sunday at the age of 92,
    knew better than most just how terrible war could be.

    A World War II veteran of the U.S. Army Air
    Corps, Sgt. Matthews spent 41 months as a
    prisoner of war in Japanese prison camps,
    including one where he saw his own brother die of starvation.

    But none of Sgt. Matthews’ war experiences
    affected him quite so strongly as the Bataan Death March.

    Trained as an aircraft gunner, he found himself
    stationed with others in Manila in late 1941,
    awaiting the arrival of their airplanes, when the
    Japanese army invaded. He and the other members
    of the Air Corps were put into service as
    infantrymen, despite their lack of experience, training or proper equipment.

    “We never got credit for the good fighting we did
    with what we had to fight with,” he told Suffolk
    author Ben Plewes while Plewes was researching
    his book “Suffolk Went to War: World War Two Remembered.”

    Still, the U.S. troops could not hold back the
    Japanese advance, and they were surrendered by
    Gen. Edward King. More than 70,000 U.S. and
    Filipino soldiers, already weakened after months
    of short rations, were then forced to march more
    than 90 miles from Mariveles to Camp O’Donnell.

    It was a brutal march, and the Japanese captors
    were ­ by all accounts ­ merciless to their prisoners.

    “When these fellows would, uh, go off the road to
    get some water, the Japanese would shoot ‘em.
    Immediately,” Sgt. Matthews said in the 2000 interview.

    Prisoners marched for a week in tropical heat,
    and those who were unable to continue for any
    reason were viciously killed, according to
    historical accounts. More than 600 Americans and
    as many as 10,000 Filipinos are thought to have died on the march.

    For Sgt. Matthews’ brother, Edward Matthews Jr. ­
    who enlisted in the Army the day after Jack
    Matthews and served in the same squadron as his
    brother ­ the harsh treatment at the hands of the
    Japanese proved too much. He died in captivity in October 1942.

    “It made me bitter, and it made me hate the
    Japanese,” he matter-of-factly told another student interviewer in June 2007.

    “Jack was not vague,” Plewes confirmed in a
    telephone conversation Wednesday. “He was very
    open. He was a pretty interesting man.”

    Sergeant Matthews received the Purple Heart for
    wounds received on the day of Gen. King’s
    surrender to the Japanese, according to his
    obituary. He also received the Bronze Star for meritorious achievement.

    After 27 years in the Air Force, Sgt. Matthews
    retired and returned to Suffolk, where he worked
    for many years as a building inspector until he retired from that career.

    He was a member of Liberty Spring Christian Church.

    Sgt. Matthews will be buried at 9 a..m. March 25
    in Arlington National Cemetery. His family, which
    includes two living daughters and grandchildren,
    will receive friends in the R.W. Baker & Co.
    Funeral Home near downtown from 4 to 6 p.m. today.

    #2
    interesting video. A U.S. army doctor said he and a Sgt. were struck in the face with a rifle butt by a Japanese Soldier but that since no one but the three men were there and no one else was looking they they hit him back and jacked him up pretty good then dumped him into some bamboo.

    And here I thought only Japanese did the hitting and assorted abuse.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qq2a-...eature=related

    W.

    Comment


      #3
      From the veterans that I have spoken with it seems as if the ones that were in the Pacific Theater of Operations held on to their feelings of dislike for the Japanese quite a bit more than the ones that fought the Germans.
      50 years later the PTO vets still hated the Japanese with a passion while the ETO vets seemed not to bear a grudge.
      I suppose it had something to do with the way the Japanese treated prisoners. An Allied soldier had a slim chance of survival if captured by the Japanese but a pretty good one if captured by the Germans.
      Denny

      Comment


        #4
        Cannot blame them a bit when you study how they treated POW's and how they fought.

        W.

        Comment


          #5
          May this brave soldier rest in peace, I'm sure memories of those days were with him until he passed away.

          My Uncle Pvt. Omar McKenney, was captured at Bataan and died in a Jap prison camp a few months later. His mother, my great grandmother, never got over the fact that her son endured such horrors and died a miserable death in the POW Camp. She lived until her 90's, imagine her torture.

          Thank you,
          Mike

          Comment

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