1818271 Gunner William CARTER, 9 Coast Regiment, Royal Artillery: 12/09/1944

Discussion in 'Royal Artillery' started by La-de-da-Gunner Graham, Sep 12, 2012.

  1. La-de-da-Gunner Graham

    La-de-da-Gunner Graham Senior Member

    Remembering today:

    Casualty Details | CWGC
    GUNNER WILLIAM CARTER
    Service Number: 1818271
    Regiment & Unit/Ship
    Royal Artillery, 9 Coast Regt.
    Date of Death: Died 12 September 1944
    Age 34 years old
    Buried or commemorated at SINGAPORE MEMORIAL
    Memorial Reference: Column 15.
    Location: Singapore
    Son of John and Martha Carter; husband of Edith Carter, of Warstock, Birmingham.

    :poppy: Remembered with honour.
     
  2. Buteman

    Buteman 336/102 LAA Regiment (7 Lincolns), RA

    :poppy: R.I.P. - William Carter, Royal Artillery :poppy:

    Died on the Rakuyo Maro.

    RAKUYO MARU and KACHIDOKI MARU (September 12\13, 1944)
    On September 4th, 2,218 Australian and British prisoners of war, who had survived the building of the Death Railway, were marched the three miles from the Valley Road camp in Singapore to the docks to board the two twenty-three year old passenger/cargo ships Rakuyo Maru (9,500 tons) and the Kachidoki Maru (10,500 tons). The Kachidoki Maru was the ex US ship President Harrison which had ran aground at Sha Wai Shan in China and was captured and salvaged by the Japanese. Both vessels were bound for Formosa. In the South China Sea, the twelve ship convoy, including three transports, two tankers and four escorting destroyers, was attacked by three American submarines, the Growler, Sealion and the Pampanito. The Rakuyo and Kachidoki were both sunk by torpedoes 300 miles west of Cape Bojeador, Luzon. A total of 1,144 British and Australian POW's lost their lives. Among those lost were thirty-three men from HMAS Perth. All told there were 1,074 survivors, 141 were picked up by the three submarines. The USS Queenfish and USS Barb arrived later and in heavy seas rescued another thirty-two before heading for Saipan. The Japanese destroyers rescued 520 British prisoners from the Kachidoki (488 POW's and crew had died) and 277 British and Australians from the Rakuyo, to again become Prisoners of War.
     
  3. La-de-da-Gunner Graham

    La-de-da-Gunner Graham Senior Member

    Many thanks for that info.

    Keith
     

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