Saturday, 16 June 2007

Civilian Evacuation list

Evacuation of Civilians from Singapore December 1941 - February 1942

Michael Pether has complied a list of Ships/Vessels carrying Civilian Evacuees and the dates of departure from Singapore. He has complied this list only for vessels knwon to be carrying civilians and vessels carrying only servicemen have not been included where known. Michael is keen to add names and details where possible and should you have any further information I would be pleased to put you in contact with Michael.


January 1942;

• 16 Jan. “SS. NARKUNDA” with many passengers including a Mrs. Hosking and her children on board. Reached Australia.
• Some time mid-Jan. a British India steamer with probably over 1000 Japanese women and children internees and some allied civilians including a Miss Norah Inge (a missionary). Went to India.
• 23 Jan. – “ISLAM/ISLAMIC” reported to have reached India ( this could be the ship above)
• 30 Jan. “USS WAKEFIELD” with the “WESTPOINT” and “DUCHESS OF BEDFORD” in same convoy which altogether had 4000 passengers. Including a Mrs. McCormac (wife of “You will die in Singapore” author). Went to Tanjong Priok.
• 30 Jan. “USS WESTPOINT”
• 30 Jan. “SS DUCHESS OF BEDFORD” including Mrs. Pelton and Mrs. Barbara Parnell ( nurse with Malayan auxiliary service MAS in Ipoh)
• 31 Jan. “EMPRESS OF JAPAN “with 1221 evacuees including a Mrs. Dora Gurney plus 3 children, to Tanjong Priok where it left again on 15 Jan.

Some time in either January or February;

• “SS. ANGLO INDIAN” which reached Tanjong Priok on 12 February
• “SS. AUBY” (636 tons) reached Tanjong Priok
• “TIEN KWANG/ TUN KUANG” which had many Government servants on board plus RAF , but was bombed and sunk at Pom Pong Island on 14 Feb along with the “SS KUALA”
• “SS. AQUARIUS”(6094 tons) with 110 passengers but was sunk with possibly only 3 survivors
• “SS. NORAH MOLLER” (4433 tons?) which left with 57 passengers, some were women and children. It was shelled and set on fire. Passengers were rescued by the “HMAS HOBART” and the HMS TENEDOS” ,the latter rescued 28 wounded of whom 6 did not survive the voyage to TP which was reached on possible 4 FEB?
• “SILVER GULL” which was towed from RHIO by the famous Capt Bill Reynolds in his converted Japanese fishing boat (later the “KRAIT”) with women and children (totals vary between 166 and 216people) who were mainly families of Dutch Indonesian garrison soldiers on RHIO; they went to Pom Pong Island and then Rengat
• “MADURA” reported to have later sailed from Batavia (TP) in the last few days of Feb.

February 1942;

• 1 Feb. “ROCHUISSEN” a Dutch cattle boat with no passenger accommodation. Took 200 passengers including 50 Malayan Broadcasting personnel (Enid Innes Ker amongst) and reached Tanjong Priok on 5 Feb.
• 4 Feb. “SEDJATRA” a wooden schooner (30 tons) with 4 civilians on board – later left Tjilitap with 5 civilians and 3 RAF
• 6?? Feb. “SS. CITY OF CANTERBURY” with RAF personnel from 453 sqdn. and women and children
• 7 Feb. “HMS BAN HONG LIONG” (1671 tons) with troops and civilians in company with the “SIN AIK LEE” and reached TP from where it sailed again after two days to an unknown destination
• 8 Feb. “SS. PLANCIUS” which later (15 Feb ) sailed again from Tanjong Priok with 840 evacuees ( principally women and children) from ships that had arrived from Singapore, possibly for South Africa according to some, but more likely to Bombay.
• 8 Feb. “SS. MONARCH” sailed for New Zealand
• ?? Feb. “DOMINION MONARCH” for New Zealand
• 8 Feb. in the evening “FELIX ROUSSEL” (Free French ship) with 110 passengers mainly women and children including Mrs. Marjorie Hudson and Mrs. Dorothy Fawcett.
• 10 Feb. “SS. SILVERLARCH” which reached Java
• 10 Feb. “SS. IPOH” (Straits Shipping Co) left with 200 women and children (many were wives of Survey dept. personnel) plus 300 RAF and reached TP on 14 Feb.
• 10 or 11 or 12 Feb. “BULAN/ BULANG” which arrived TP and then went on to Ceylon
• 11 Feb. “AGAN” (244 tons) with 150 civilians including women and children – it either reached Palembang at midday on 13 Feb. or was sunk with the survivors being picked up by the “TENGORRAH”
• 11 Feb. “GIANG BEE” (1200 tons) a Chinese owned coaster with 200-300 old men, women and children on board. It was sunk by Japanese navy and 200-240 passengers were killed or drowned after getting in lifeboats
• 11 Feb. “PING WO” a pre War Yangste steamer of 200 feet in length and with only a 6 foot draft. Had 200 civilian passengers and ended up towing the destroyer “VENDETTA” all the way to Freemantle where it arrived on 4 March.
• 11 Feb. “KLIAS” which reached Palembang

- the next group of ships probably left in the major convoy of up to 40 vessels which actually departed from Singapore harbour (perhaps in groups according to their speed) early on 12 February ,

• 11 Feb. “SS. JALAVIHAR/ JALIBAHAR” ( 5330 tons) suffered heavy bombing through the Durian straits but passed through TP and finally reached Colombo
• 11 Feb. “SS. JALAKRISHNA” sailed at 1700 hours, possibly clearing the harbour on 12 Feb, in the convoy with the “DELAMORE”, “EMPIRE STAR”,”JALIBAHAR” and “LI SANG”. It was damaged by bombing in the Sunda Straits and via TP reached Colombo. Some reports say it carried no passengers but there was a Mrs. Francis Clarke who, with other evacuees from Singapore later boarded the “PLANCIUS” from TP.
• 11 Feb. “EDANG” left with 11 other vessels to form the slower part of the convoy heading for TP
• 11-12 Feb. “LI SANG” sailed about 1730 hours on 11 Feb (might have actually cleared the Harbour on the 12 Feb.)
• 11-12 Feb. “SS. JALRATNA” (3942 tons) sailed on the night of 11 Feb. and reached Tjilitap from where it left again on 19 Feb.
• 11-12 Feb. “ SS. GORGON’ ( 3533 tons0 a Blue funnel Line ship with 358-380 passengers ( the same convoy as the “DURBAN’, “KEDAH”, “STRONGHOLD”, “EMPIRE STAR” and “YOMA”)and reached TP and later Freemantle, Australia.
• 11-12 Feb. “SS. HONG KHENG” ( 6167 tons) which sailed on the night of 11 feb
• 12 Feb. SS. EMPIRE STAR” with 2000 RAF ground crew and service families, it reached Batavia (i.e. TP) on 15 Feb and then sailed on to Freemantle.
• 12 Feb. at daybreak, “HMS. SCOTT HARLEY” with 170 women and 30 men on board including,
o Michael Ashe
o Roland Braddell
o Miss Linda Brash
o Mrs. Annie L Clark ( wife of Norman Clark engineer Govt. Rice Mills)
o Mrs. Elliott / Mrs. Sharpe – Elliott ( a canteen worker with MAS whose husband was a engineer at the Naval Docks)
o Mrs. W.F. Joyce Fitzpatrick ( husband with Singapore Cold Storage)
o Eliza Martin / Mrs. Eric Martin
o Mrs. Enid Miller
o Mr. & Mrs. Pery
o Nessie Rhodes / Mrs. “Dusty” Rhodes of KL
o Winifred Sinclair
o Dr. J. W. Scarff, his wife, two daughters (Elizabeth and Jopin) and 2 boys
o Joan Winchester / Mrs. V. A. Winchester (wife of a vet and whose brother in law was a doctor)
o A Russian mother and daughter (the latter had a hairdressing shop in Raffles Hotel, Singapore)
o The Secretary to the Governor of Singapore – she is described as about 35 years and 16 stone.
o A naval policeman
o Plus possibly a Mr. Potts, Melvin Thompson, Mrs. Duke, and Mrs. Ray “..of the Municipality” and one child
- most of the “SCOTT HARLEY” European passengers on shipped from Batavia on 21 Feb. to Bombay on the “PLANCIUS”. Some then went on to Australia on the “JOHAN DE WITT”. For a full story of the “SCOTT HARLEY” see the item on the COFEPOW website.
• 12 Feb. “SS. REDANG” (531 tons) of the Thai Navigation Co. with 89 passengers including 6 women and 3 children. It was shelled in the Berhala Straits and sunk – some 30 passengers including 4 women and 2 children got away by boat but were captured by the Japanese.
• 12 Feb. “SING WO” a Yangste river boat (2500 tons) left with 230 passengers including Rohan Rivet who authored “Behind Bamboo” ,it was bombed and ran aground at Muntok where passengers were taken prisoner.
• 13 Feb. “FANLING” a motor launch with 47 passengers which was sunk with only 4 survivors in the Banka Straits
• 13 Feb. “HMS CHANG TEH” sunk in the Durian Straits
• 13 Feb. “SS. KUALA” (at the same time as the “MATA HARI and the “VYNER BROOK” mentioned below) with about 500 people on board including a large group of nurses who had been ordered to leave Singapore. It was sunk on 14 Feb at anchor off Pom Pong Island. The following were on board,
o Nurse Brenda Macduff (who today lives in NZ)
o Nurse Jean Smith
o Nurse Edith wood
o Nurse Olive MacFarlane (killed whilst the ship was at anchor in Singapore)
o Nurse “Paddy” Corke (killed in the bombing at Pom Pong Island)
o Nurse MacPherson (who left Pom Pong Island on the “TANJONG PINANG” which was sunk on the way to Sumatra with almost total loss of life)
o Matron Margot Turner
o Nurse Paddy Clarke
o Nursing Sister Marjorie de Malmanche
o Mary Cooper (Irish)
o Mrs. Doughty
o Miss Doughty
o Jenny Doughty (27 years who lost her leg in the bombing and died later in Padang)
o Dr. Elsie Crowe (Singapore Obstetrician)
o Dr. Marjory Lyon (Johore Government Obstetrician and Surgeon)
o Mrs. Madden
o Olga Neubronner
o Mr. Bruce – Smith (a NZer)
o Group Capt. Nunn and his wife (later died in the sinking of the “ROSENBOOM”)
o Mr. G. T. O’Grady a Public works engineer
• 13 Feb. “SS. SING KHENG SENG” of the Straits Shipping Co with 45 crew from the “EMPRESS OF ASIA” and unknown others.
• 13 Feb. “MATA HARI” with 320 passengers including a large group of nurses. It was captured by the Japanese in the Banka Straits and taken into Muntok harbour. Passengers included Nurse Phyllis Briggs who lives today in the UK.
• 13 Feb. “SS. VYNER BROOK” with 200 evacuees, mainly civilians and nurses. Attacked and sunk in the Banka Straits with heavy loss of life. A large group of the nurses were later murdered by the Japanese on a beach with only Vivian Bullwinkle surviving..
• 13 Feb. HONG KWANG” later abandoned in Java on 9 March
• 13 Feb. a small coaster with 12 British men and a woman named Mary Jenkins
• 13 Feb. in the evening “RELAU” a palm oil tanker of the Straits Shipping Co (75 tons) with 66 passengers. It picked up shipwreck survivors along the way ( including 13 from “SCORPION”) but was captured by the Japanese
• 13 Feb. in the evening “BLUMUT” a small craft of the Johore Marine Dept. with 29 passengers. It was captured by the Japanese off Banka around 16-17 Feb.
• 14 Feb. in the early hours, “HMS. KEDAH” a small costal ship of the Straits Shipping Co. with possibly about 750 men, women and children. It reached Batavia. Mrs. Muriel Reilly, a cipher officer to the Governor, was on board.
• 14?? Feb. “SS. BARLINE / BARLANE” with ships named “BARRIER” , BARRICADE” and “FASTNET” – this one may be an inaccurate piece of info .

58 comments:

Anonymous said...

Dear sir, where can one find the passenger list for the Narkunda please?

Unknown said...

Hello,

I have been investigating my girlfriend's family history for her, and they were involved in the evacuation.

Adolphe Flinter (a diamond merchant in Singapore) left with his daughter Margaret on the 2nd of February 1942. I have no ship name.

His wife Elizabeth left with their younger daughter Eva earlier, arriving in Fremantle, Australia on the 26th of January (again no ship name as I have no access to the detailed records)

They also had two sons, Jack and Edward, who we think had been sent to boarding school in the UK some time before.

Adolphe also had a brother, Moritz, who with his wife Lucy were aboard the 'Kuala' when it was sunk. Lucy was one of those who was killed in the first wave of bombing, but Moritz managed to escape to Pom Pong Island. He eventually made it to the UK on the ship 'Orantes', returning to Singapore in 1946 to resume his diamond business.

Tara said...

Thomas;

I have information on that family - I'm a descendant of Moritz (Flinter) and can help with that part of the tree.. I'd love to collaborate & see what else we can find working together!

Get in touch with me at araT85 [at] gmail [dot] com

Thanks,
Tara

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Nikki said...

Hi, Does anyone have information on a family called Yeomans who left Singapore in 1941 or 1942. The mother Minnie probably got off the ship in Colombo while the children Irene, Enid, Phyllis and May continued onto Durban. The father Samuel Cecil Yeomans was imprisoned in Changi then Sime Road. He then took a ship to Durban. Thank you.

Anonymous said...

The passenger list for the Narkunda can be found online in the Australian archives

pammie24 said...

Could you please put me in contact wiht Michael Pether with regard to civilan evacuation lists. My relatives are Mrs Edna Jackman and Charles Jackman age 5. I am led to believe they were on last boat from Singapore Feb 1942. Also my great uncle Major Charles Jackman was captured in Singapore and was prisoner of war in Burma on the Rail Road and survived.

Anonymous said...

Hello. Does anyone know where I can find the passenger list for the USS WESTPOINT leaving Singapore in January 1942. Many thanks. Nic

Wee Choong Seng said...

My name is Wee Choong Seng. I am one of the passeger onboard the USS West Point 2gether with my father Wee Yong Thye and my mother Lim Swan Eng. My father worked in the Naval Base in the Battery Shed for charging submarine batteries. When the base got bombed, we were
evacuated in Feb 1942. Is there a
pax list to show our names during
the evacuation? I was just more than a year old back then. Thanks

Michael Pether said...

If Nikki would like to contact me on mncpether@xtra.co.nz i will be able to put her in contact with someone who knew the Yeoman family quite well.

Piper said...

Hi!
My grandmother and dad (Mrs. Maurice (Viola) Bellemans and Paul Bellemans, age 5) left Singapore in 1942, arriving in San Francisco around April 1942. My grandfather was a Naval officer. The Oakland Tribune (April 22, 1942) says they came by way of Singapore, Java, Australia and New Zealand. I don't have the ship name but remember a picture from the deck where the life ring said Kobehaven... which I always thought meant it was a Dutch boat. I didn't see anything in your list on that. Anything you can share would be appreciated.

Vincesapplemac said...

Dear Sir,

I wonder if you would be able to help me, my mother was a Civilian Internee of the Japanese in various camps in Sumatra, one such camp was Bangka, as my mother approaches her twilight years she has shown an interest in trying to contact fellow internees of the camps she was held in and as such I am trying to find out sources who may be able to help me assist her in this,

With this in mind I would be grateful if you know of any way I might be able to contact or put my mother in contact with her long lost childhood friends she made in the camps.

My mother will shortly be providing me with a list of the camps she was interned in, which i am more than happy to provide you with if this will help in anyway.

The brief details I have at the moment are :

My mother name at the time of internment : Jane Reid
She was interned with her mother, grandmother and 3 siblings, Dirk, Roy and Erica Reid, sadly her grandmother died in the camps, they were originally captured after the ship that they left Singapore on was attacked/disabled, the ship was the “Mata Hari”, one of the camps they were in was immortalised in Paradise Road with the story of the vocal choir that was formed there. I also believe the surviving Australian nurses of the famous beach massacre at Banka Island were in one of the camps she was interned in.
Some other information i found on the net :
REID Mrs Marie wife of J.H. ‘Jock’ of PWD. Aged 38 in 1942.Palembang
women’s camp 1942. Sumatra internee with 5 children [Erica, Jane. James, Dirk & Roy],
Vyner Brooke survivors. Repatriated on Antenor from Singapore, arriving Liverpool 27.10.45.
To Paisley. Returned to Penang post war.

I hope this will help in starting to find my mothers dear friends.

Please let me know if you can assist or if you can point me in the right direction.

Yours Sincerly

Vincent Elgey

Anonymous said...

Please can you put me in touch with Michael Pether re lists of evacuees from Singapore?

Bevo123 said...

I am trying to locate evacuation lists. I do not know name of boat the families I know left in 1942 were the Jones and scott families. Does anyone know of a list that includes these names? The ship they were on was headed for India or Ceylon.

Bevo123 said...

I am trying to locate evacuation lists. I do not know name of boat the families I know left in 1942 were the Jones and scott families. Does anyone know of a list that includes these names? The ship they were on was headed for India or Ceylon.

Vincesapplemac said...

Bevo123

You could try searching here

www.malayanvolunteersgroup.org.uk

there are a number of lists on this website detailing Passenger lists and those who were interned by the Japanese, it has been a great source of information for me while researching my mothers history.

regards

Vince

Anonymous said...

Hello

Can anyone help me. My father was stationed in Ceylon in 1942 all the wives and children were put in a convoy of ships I believe there were 12 in total. 11 of them went down but the ship we were on decided to go on its own. We were torpedoed and bombed having to limp to various ports and wait for further transport. The only port I can remember was South Africa along with somewhere where coloured people tried to sell things from small ships. We arrived in Scotland where my mother along with the few survivers were questioned as spies as the authorities belived the whole convoy went down. One time when we were torpedoed the metal doors were closed and all the luggage was lost. I would be very greatful if anyone could help me to find out more about that journey. My parents are dead and now I wish I had asked them more about that trip. I don't have any ship names or dates I'm sorry to say.

Thanks Jill

Anonymous said...

Hello

Can anyone help me. My father was stationed in Ceylon in 1942 all the wives and children were put in a convoy of ships I believe there were 12 in total. 11 of them went down but the ship we were on decided to go on its own. We were torpedoed and bombed having to limp to various ports and wait for further transport. The only port I can remember was South Africa along with somewhere where coloured people tried to sell things from small ships. We arrived in Scotland where my mother along with the few survivers were questioned as spies as the authorities belived the whole convoy went down. One time when we were torpedoed the metal doors were closed and all the luggage was lost. I would be very greatful if anyone could help me to find out more about that journey. My parents are dead and now I wish I had asked them more about that trip. I don't have any ship names or dates I'm sorry to say.

Thanks Jill

sarita said...

Hello
Could anyone give me any information about a Mavis Aline Murphy and her daughter Marlene who were evacuated from Singapore.

I know they traveled to England from Durban South Africa in 1946 but I would like to know how and on which ship they may have been on to make it from Singapore to South Africa at this time.

Thank you

sarita said...

Hello
Could anyone give me any information about a Mavis Aline Murphy and her daughter Marlene who were evacuated from Singapore.

I know they traveled to England from Durban South Africa in 1946 but I would like to know how and on which ship they may have been on to make it from Singapore to South Africa at this time.

Thank you

HobbityDog said...

Hi. I have a copy of the "in memorium" notice my uncles posted on the 10th anniversary of my great-grandmother's death during the evacuation on 12th February 1942. We do not know what ship she was on but she was with one of her daughters. The rest of the family (including my mother) were on a ship that diverted to India. Would it be possible to find out what ship Alice Jane Shelley (great-grandmother) and Anna Gladys de Cruz (grandmother) were on? Many thanks, L. Poyton

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Anonymous said...

I am Dr James Gordon Avery son of James Thomas Avery of P&T Dept KL and a Lieutenant in the FMSVR who died on 'the railway' in May 1943.
My mother Phyllis M Avery, my sister Susan M and I left Singapore on the 'Narcunda' for Fremantle and then by transfer on the Aorangi to Adelaide. We had our picture in one of the local papers in Adelaide on arrrival.
I was then 9 years old and have little recollection of the voyage.

Unknown said...

My mother(Mary) Kirkham and I(8 years old) left Singapore on the WestPoint on the 30th January 1942.nk on Friday the 13th February
We left the ship and entered a camp in Colombo.

My father(John) Kirkham left Singapore I think on Friday the 13th February 1942 on a coal burning ship that went to Batavia. The ship then went to Colombo then onto Bombay then back to Colombo where the ship was scuttled. Does anyone know the name of the ship.

Regards

John Kirkham

Unknown said...

My father John Sr took RAF ground crew to Batavia.

Regards

John Kirkham

Unknown said...
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Unknown said...
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Unknown said...
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Unknown said...

Hi just trying to get detils of my mothers evacuation from Singapore in 1942
She was a British citizen - Daphne Anne PARK born 15.3.1925 and went toi Australia
from Singapore. Her father was serving with the British Army in Singapore when it fell. Many thanks

Rob Caulfeild-James said...

I would like to add the names of Mrs. Paul ( Nilda) Caulfeild-James, Kevin P. Caulfeild-James, Desmond Caulfeild-James and Patricia Caulfeild-James to the list of passengers on the Felix Roussel that left Singapore on 8th Feb. 1942.

Unknown said...

Does anyone have information about my grandfather's (Sgt George Lees) wife and children who were evacuated just before the Fall of Singapore. My grandmother was Helen Lees and her twins were about 4 years old and named James (Jim) and Sheila. The story is my grandmother was given a choice of two evacuation ships that were leaving, one to Australia and one to England. She chose the one to England, the one to Australia was bombed and sank.

My grandfather was taken prisoner immediately at the Fall and later beheaded, we are told, after an escape attempt. He was Mentioned in Dispatches although we cannot find out any information about that either. If you can provide any more information I would be very grateful. Please email to sue from England (all one word) at (g) mail. Thank you.

lynette said...

Prisoners of war who tried to escape and were either shot in the attempt or subsequently executed were awarded a posthumous Mention in Dispatches.

Unknown said...

I recently discovered a certificate for My grandfather William Joseph Hunt when he crossed the equator on the 29th January 1942 while aboard the USS West Point. Records show that the West Point docked in Singapore on the 29th to drop troupes, equipment and collect evacuees.

My grandfather was a civil servant with the Admiralty and I was sure that he was evacuated from Singapore but it seems as if he could have been on his way there instead. I know he mentioned being aboard HMS Prince of Wales I think he was evacuated on this ship so the discovery of this equator certificate is confusing.

I shall have to do more investigation.

Colin Viner.

Penny said...

My mother, 8 year old brother and I were evacuated on the Empress of Japan. On reaching Cape Town we were encouraged to disembark and stay in South Africa until the war was over. I understand we were told that we would not be welcome in UK as we would be a burden on a country that was already struggling to feed the population. My mother, however, was desperate to reach home and willing to brave the dangers of the Atlantic including German u boats and gunships. As our cabins were needed for some RN personnel in Capetown, who needed to get home quickly, a number of us were switched to a slower ship, the Letitia, which was to travel in convoy from Capetown to Glasgow. Although slower than the Empress, the Letitia was faster than the other ships in the convoy and at some point the captain got permission to break away from the convoy with its escort of gunships and go it alone. Fortunately for us, we made it!

Steve Hopper said...

My Father was, I believe, at that time, an driver in the RAF. He was, he claimed, on the last ship out of Singapore, Before he boarded he was told to return to the hospital and collect someone (not sure now if he said Male or Female). His instructions were that if the ship had left when he returned, he was to sail in the MTB parked astern of the ship. If the ship was still there, he was to set fire to the MTB and board the ship.
He did as instructed and on his return, the ship was still there so he and a couple of others from the ship, set fire to the MTB.
I believe it was a woman he collected from the hospital and he did say that his was the last ship out before the fall.
I would love to know who the person was that he collected from the Hospital and the name of the ship he sailed on.

Steve Hopper

Anonymous said...

I am looking for info on ENSA members evacuated from Singapore in 1942 !? If indeed they were? Particularly a British singer named Grace or Amy Mathews who had been working at Raffles & previously in South Africa. Does anyone have any info please?