Tag Archives: Arlene Bennett

Arlene Bennett: The Fall of Singapore and the Fate of the Last 65 Australian Nurses in 1942

The 8th Division Australian Army nurses of the 2/10 AGH, 2/13 AGH and 2/4th Casualty Clearing Station were stationed in Malaya. As the Japanese proceeded with great speed down the Malayan Peninsula the nurses were ordered to transfer to Singapore. They were working at St Patrick’s School and the ACS Oldham Hall School until they were to be evacuated.

On the 10th of February 6 members of the AANS were sent on the WAH SUI with wounded soldiers bound for Australia. It was decided that all the nurses should be evacuated from Singapore because of what had happened in Hong Kong. The nurses were asked for volunteers to leave on the first ship available. No one volunteered to leave so Matron Paschke and Matron Drummond decided who would leave Singapore first. Fifty-nine nurses were selected to leave first on the EMPIRE STAR and later on the 12th of February the SS VYNER BROOKE would be one of the last ships to leave Singapore. Those on the Empire Star were bombed but they made it back to Australia even though fourteen people on the ship were killed. The nurses flung themselves over the passengers to shield them from the bombing. The nurses received the George Cross for their bravery. The SS VYNER BROOKE had a very different story filled with tragedy.

For the 65 nurses on SS VYNER BROOKE there was still much work to be done on the way home. They helped with the food that was on board as most people didn’t think to carry food with them.

SS Vyner Brooke

 Sister Clarice Halligan had written home to her sister in Melbourne, “Thank you very much for the parcel. I was glad to get it. We are carefully packing all tinned foods in the bottom of our kit bags in case we are in for a siege which is quite likely, however we are ready what may come, we can make it and a bit more, as long as we keep the Japs out of Australia anything that may happenhere is worthwhile.” Clarice would be one of twenty-one nurses massacred on Banka Island.

The ship travelled during the night and kept close to the shoreline hoping not to be detected. This worked for a while but on the 14th of May their luck would run out. The ship was bombed and machine guns strafed those who were in the water or in lifeboats. The nurses assisted the passengers to abandon the ship prior to leaving the ship themselves with some emergency supplies of medicines and bandages in their pockets. Twelve nurses were lost either at the time of the bombing, in the water or floating off and away from land.

Up to 100 boats were lost in the bombing of the ships in the Banka Strait and up to 5000 people were lost.

A group of 22 Australian Nurses washed up on Radji Beach near Muntok in Indonesia. Matron Drummond suggested that a bonfire should be lit to act as a beacon for those who were still at sea. About 60 men also washed up on the beach. The nurses cared for those who were injured with what little they had. Eventually it was decided that a party of men should walk into the town and alert the Japanese that the women and injured had remained on the beach. Matron Drummond also suggested that the civilian women and children should begin the long walk into town. This single act saved so many lives. The women and children passed the Japanese who would ultimately go to Radji Beach.

When the Japanese soldiers arrived at Radji Beach they ordered the men around the bluff in two groups where they were shot and bayonetted to death. Once they had finished dealing with the men they returned to the women wiping their bloodied bayonets. What happened next was shocking. The nurses were allegedly raped and then they were lined up and urged to walk into the sea. A machine gun began to fire upon them. Matron Drummond said to her nurses, ‘Chin up girls….. I am proud of you….I love you all.” She was brutally shot as were all of the nurses. All but one of the nurses died. Vivian Bullwinkel who was taller than average was shot just above the hip but no vital organs were hit. She feigned death in the water and was gradually washed back to the shore. She could no see sign of life in any of the nurses who were washed up on the beach. The Japanese had left the beach. Vivian crept into the jungle behind the beach and hid. She slept for about 24 hours. A voice from within the jungle called to her. It was Private Kinsley, a British soldier who had been badly injured. Vivian, who had been shot, managed to look after him. She walked to a nearby village to ask for assistance but the men of the village offered none because they we afraid of reprisals from the Japanese. As she began to return to the jungle, the women called to her and they left her some food. She and Private Kinsley lived in the jungle for 12 days. Vivian decided that they should give themselves up. Private Kinsley begged for one day more of freedom. When asked why he told Vivian that it was his birthday and that he wanted to be free one last time. They waited.

Betty Jeffrey and Vivian Bullwinkel

The next day they set off into Muntok and were met by a passing car of a Japanese officer. They were treated kindly and were taken into camp.

Meanwhile 31 more of the Australian Nurses had come ashore all along Banka Island. They were initially held in the Customs House and moved a few doors up to the picture theatre. After a few days they were moved to the Coolie Lines and the men went to the Muntok Gaol next door. Betty Jeffrey and Iole Harper would take three days to reach land having swum into the mangrove swamps. Eventually all the nurses would be together. Thirty-two of the sixty-five had survived. Vivian retold her story but the nurses agreed to never speak of it again until they were at home. Private Kinsley died a few days after he was imprisoned.

Most of the nurses had discarded their shoes as they left the ship so they bound the feet in rags or found shoes and used them and some made trompers- wooden scuffs.

The nurses would soon be moved to Palembang in Sumatra. They would be taken in a dirty coal carrying ship out to sea and then up the Musi River to Palembang. The nurses would briefly be settled into a camp at Bukit Besar which was inhabited by various soldiers as well as civilian men and women.

The nurses were then sent to a camp which was referred to as Irenelaan. The men’s camp was the Palembang Gaol. Behind the women’s camp the men were building a new camp in which to be housed. The women’s houses were hopelessly cramped with little space within for the women housed there. The women had few items and two of the nurses had found a used toothbrush which they shared throughout the war. There was little firewood to burn to do the cooking. There were no medications to use as the women became ill. A used tin would become a valuable item for the women. Life was monotonous for them but they soon developed ways of improving their lot. Margaret Dryburgh , a missionary from England and Norah Chambers would start the vocal orchestra.There were lectures given to the women on a variety of subjects. The food was cooked by groups of women. The amount of food was limited. The rice was dirty, the vegetables were left by the Japanese in the sun to rot and there were small amounts of meat left for the women. The women had to clean the latrines with coconut shells or similar. During the rainy season this task was made even worse.

As Christmas Eve 1942 approached the women saw the men passing by to go to work. The woman began to sing Silent Night and Oh Come All Ye Faithful to them as they passed by. The following day the men would return this favour. It was the closest that they would get to be with each other.

The women lost condition as each day passed. During their time in Palembang they could go to the Charitas Hospital for some extra treatment. During these visits to the hospital some of the women could meet with the men from the men’s camp to discover how the men were doing. Sr Mavis Hannah was caught by the Japanese with messages in a sanitary pad to be relayed to wives in the women’s camp. She was left to stand in the sun for hours as punishment. The nuns from Charitas were also imprisoned by the Japanese becauses they appeared to be on the side of the prisoners. They hid medicines in their robes which would give some hope to those who were ill. They too joined the camp.

The women moved once again, this time to the men’s camp Palembang. The men had left the camp but before they left they had trashed much of the camp. They didn’t know that the women would be taken there. Some of the women would die in Palembang

Eventually the women’s camp was moved back to Muntok. They were taken by boat. The camp was very primitive. The women were deteriorating and so many died. Disease was rampant in Muntok. There was malaria, Dengue fever, Banka  Fever alongside malnutrition, beri-beri and dysentery. The nurses took care of the sick as well as doing their other tasks but gradually they were becoming sick too. Four nurses would die in the camp in Muntok during 1945. This was terrible for the nurses to endure but they needed to carry on as best they could. They had very little access to medication. The amounts that were left would have almost been useless.

By April 1945 the internees were to be moved again. This time they were taken in two groups back to Sumatra. Women were dying and so many did not make it to their final destination. They were taken on a ship to Palmembang. Conditions were appalling. They arrived late at night and were loaded into the   cattle carriages of a train. These airless carriages were cramped and the women spent the night in them. The following day the travelled the many hours to Loebok Lingau. So many people did not live to reach their destination.

Sr Betty Jeffrey described their journey as dreadful. Everyone was weakened.

The camp was in an abandoned rubber plantation. High on a hill. There was a creek running through the two halves of the women’s camp. The accommodation was in a dirty rat-infested state. The creek soon became contaminated. The health of the inhabitants deteriorated significantly due to the small amount of food and illness leading to high death rates.

The nurses were weakened due to lack of food and the constant threat of disease. Despite this they managed to offer some succour to those in the camp. They could bathe the patients and give them a drink or perhaps assist them to eat a small amount of rice. They had nothing but care and compassion to offer  and some words of encouragement.

It is thought that approximately 89 women died in the camp at Belalau. Another four nurses would die at this camp. One died after the war had finished.

The end of the war came but the nurses did not know that it had ended. They wouldn’t know until Captain Seki Kazuo addressed the women. On the 24th of August he climbed onto a table and announced that the war was over and that we could now be friends. He never said who the victors of the war were.

The Japanese would throw open the doors of the store room which held Red Cross packages with food and medicine in them. The nurses had suffered the deprivation of these items as had everyone in the camp. Undoubtedly the death rate could have been less significant.

Because the camp was well hidden amongst the trees in a place where the allies hadn’t been able to find the nurses. Finally, Gideon Jacob had flown over the camp and saw fabric moving amongst the trees. Major Tebbutt who had been on the SS VYNER BROOKE with the nurses had insisted that they must be somewhere in Sumatra. Indeed they were.

Food was parachuted into the camps. The nurses enjoyed Vegemite on bread!

Liberation on 16th September 1945
Still wearing their uniforms.

On the 24th of September Matron Annie Sage and Sister Floyd , one of the nurses who had belonged to the 2/10th and was evacuated on the EMPIRE STAR, and Sister Chandler arrived by plane to collect the nurses. Matron Sage had taken sixty-five lipsticks for the nurses. When she arrived she saw the small number of nurses and she asked of the nurses, “where are you all?” She realised that this was all that was left of the 65 nurses. She declared that she was the mother of them all. A profound moment. Only 24 nurses had survived the war.

They left for Singapore by plane with Sister Chandler. The nurses arrived and were taken to St Patricks Hospital – the place where so many of them had been before they left Singapore. They gradually gained weight but the soft beds were too much for some of them who slept on the hard floor. They were befriended by Lady Edwina Mountbatten who had a keen interest in their story and wellbeing. She would visit the Nurses Memorial Centre in Melbourne when she visited the nurses in Australia.

The nurses travelled home on the AHS Manunda and arrived in Freemantle, Western Australia on the 23rd of October. The nurses would finally be home on Australian soil.

The nurses had a special bond. They would talk to each other often and would meet up often. They would speak of what had happened to them and how they had survived to each other but they didn’t talk of their ordeal to others. Many returned to nursing and others married. Others were never well enough to go back to nursing. Vivian Bullwinkel went to the War Crimes Tribunal in Tokyo.

She was a notable nurse who returned home. She had a full career. She worked at the Repatriation Hospital in Melbourne and she resigned her post as Lieutenant in 1947 and later became the Matron of Fairfield Infectious Diseases Hospital. She was the president of the Victorian College of Nursing (precursor of the Australian College of Nursing).

She was a decorated nurse who was awarded the Royal Red Cross Medal 2nd class, the Florence Nightingale Medal, an MBE and an AO.

She contacted and kept in touch with all of the families of the nurses who were massacred on Banka Island writing to them all at Christmas and special occasions when she knew that it would have been tough for them.

She was a most revered nurse who will this year have a statue unveiled at the Australian War Memorial in not only her honour but for all the nurses who were lost on Banka Island.

This is an Australian story, a story of women, a story of war, and it is a story that we must never forget.

Lest we forget.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

WHITE COOLIES by Betty Jeffrey

J.P.L Kickhefer – Illustrations from White Coolies

The Muntok Peace Museum- muntokpeacemuseum.org

Australian War Museum – www.awm.gov.au

National Archives of Australia – www.naa.gov.au

The Australian Nurses Memorial Centre, Melbourne – admin@nmc.org.au


Appendix 1

AUSTRALIAN NURSES KILLED AT THE TIME OF BOMBING OF SS VYNER BROOKE OR SHORTLY AFTER:

Matron Olive Paschke – Victoria, aged 37

Kathleen Kinsella – Victoria, aged 37

Louvima Bates – Western Australia, aged 32

Ellenour Calnan – Queensland, aged 29

Mary Clarke -NSW, aged 30

Millicent Dorsch -South Australia, aged 29

Caroline Ennis –Victoria, aged 28

Gladys McDonald – Queensland, aged 32

Lavinia Russell – NSW, aged 32

Marjory Schuman – NSW, aged 31

Merle Trennery -South Australia, aged 32

Mona Wilton – Victoria, aged 28

AUSTRALIAN NURSES MASSACRED ON RADJI BEACH, BANKA ISLAND

Matron Irene Drummond – South Australia, 36

Alma Beard – Western Australia, aged 29

Elaine Balfour-Ogilvy – South Australia, aged 30

Joyce Bridge – NSW, aged 34

Florence Casson – South Australia, aged 38

Mary (Beth) Cuthbertson – Victoria, aged 31

Dorothy (Bud) Elmes – NSW, aged 28

Lorna Fairweather – South Australia, aged 29

Peggy Farmaner – Western Australia, aged 28

Clarice Halligan – Victoria, aged 37

Nancy Harris – NSW, aged 31

Minnie Hodgson- Western Australia, aged 33

Ellen (Nell) Keats – South Australia, aged 26

Janet Kerr – NSW – aged 31

Eleanor McGlade – NSW, aged 38

Kathleen Neuss – NSW, aged 30

Florence Salmon – NSW, aged 26

Esther Jean Stewart – NSW, aged 37

Mona Tait – NSW, aged 27

Rosetta Wight – Victoria, aged 33

Bessie Wilmott – Western Australia, aged 28

AUSTRALIAN NURSES WHO DIED IN MUNTOK, BANKA ISLAND

Wilhelmina Raymont – Tasmania, aged 33

Irene ‘Rene’ Singleton – Victoria, aged 36

Pauline Blanche Hempstead – Queensland, aged 36

Dora Shirley Gardam – Tasmania, aged 34

AUSTRALIAN NURSES WHO DIED IN BELALAU, SUMATRA

Gladys Hughes – Victoria, aged 36

Winnie May Davis – NSW, aged 30

Pearl Mittleheuser – Queensland, aged 41 (died 18/08/1945)

NURSES WHO RETURNED HOME TO AUSTRALIA

Vivian Bullwinkel

Betty Jeffrey

Nesta James

Carrie (Jean) Ashton

Kathleen (Pat) Blake

Jessie Blanch

Veronica Clancy

Cecilia Delforce

Jess Doyle

Jean (Jenny) Greer

Janet (Pat) Gunther

Ellen (Mavis) Hannah

Iole Harper

Violet McElna

Sylvia Muir

Wilma Young

Christian Oxley

Eileen Short

Jessie Simon

Valerie Smith

Ada Syer

Florence Trotter

Joyce Tweddell

Beryl Woodbridge


Appendix 2

NURSING AND MEDICAL STAFF IN SUMATRAN PRISON CAMPS, NOT INCLUDING AUSTRALIAN ARMY NURSES 

Edith Florence Bedell, Nurse *

Frank Bell, Nursing orderly (Padang Men’s Camp)

Catherine Boudville, Singapore General Hospital (Padang Camp)

Phyllis Briggs, Nurse *

Rachel Brooks, Nurse

Edith Castle, Colonial Nursing Sister *

Mary Charman, QA Nursing Sister  (Padang and Bankinang Camps )

Harley Clark, Dentist (Men’s Camp)

Marjorie Hindaugh Cocke, St John’s Ambulance Volunteer *

Marjorie Cooke, Nurse *

Mary Cooper, QA Nursing Sister*

Jessie Coupland, Nurse, Malayan Nursing Service *

Elsie Crowe, Gynaecologist  (Padang internee)

Naomi Davies, QA Nursing Sister, (Padang Camp)

Joy Dexter, Health visitor, Women and Children’s clinic *

Ruth Dickson, QA Nursing Sister *

M. Dlish, Nurse *

Ethel Eveling, 12th Indian General Hospital, (Padang and Bankinang Camps)

Heather Fisher, Australian Nurse, Malayan Nursing Service, (Padang Camp)

Phyllis Fonseca, Combined Singapore General Hospital (Padang and Bankinang Camps)

Dr Annamaria Goldberg-Curth ?neurologist *

Louisa Harley, QA Nursing Sister  (Padang Camp)

Hilda Hobbs, Nurse  (Padang Camp)

Kathleen Homer, Nurse *

Mary Jenkin, Medical Auxiliary Service *

Kathleen Jenkins, QA Nursing Sister  (Padang Camp)

Marjorie Jennings, Nurse *

K.E. Kong, Nurse *

Beatrice Lazar, Indian General Hospital, Singapore, (Padang and Bankinang Camps )

Dr Lentze (former director Pangkalpinang Hospital) (Men’s Camp)

Doreen Lewis, Indian General Hospital, Singapore, (Padang and Bankinang Camps

Marjorie Lyon, Doctor (Padang Camp)

Janet Macalister, Nurse *

Brenda Macduff, Nurse (Padang Camp)

Helen Mackenzie, Nurse *

Freda Mackinnon, Assistant Matron, Penang General Hospital

Lydia Maclean, QA Nursing Service (Padang Camp)

Marjory Malmanche, Nurse (Padang Camp)

Mary McCallum, Nurse *

Jean McDowell, Doctor *

Rennie McFie, Nurse *

Albert McKern Doctor (Men’s Camp )

Nell McMillan, Nurse (Padang and Bankinang Camps)

Laura Mepham, Nurse  (Padang Camp)

Olga Neubronner, Colonial Service Nursing Sister, St John’s Ambulance, Singapore *

Sally Oldham, Nurse *

Joan Powell, Nurse*

Violet Pulford, Nurse *

Alice Rossie, Nurse *

Ruth Russell Roberts, MAS Ambulance driver *

Hyda Scott-Eames, MAS Nurse *

Agnes Service, Nurse  (Padang Camp)

Constance Smith, Doctor, Women and Children’s welfare officer *

Jean Smith, Nurse (Padang Camp)

Netta Smith, Nurse *

Violet Spedding, QA Matron (Padang and Bankinang Camps )

Hugh Stubbs, Doctor  (Men’s Camp )

Dr Tay (Men’s Camp)

C.P. (Phyllis) Thane, VAD Nurse *

Margaret Thompson, Doctor *

Margot Turner, QA Nursing Sister *

Mabel Waugh, Matron, Kuala Lipis, (Padang Camp)

George West, Doctor (Men’s Camp )

Kathleen Woodman, QA Nursing Sister  (Padang and Bankinang Camps )

Also 40 Catholic Nuns and a large number of Catholic brothers who cared for dysentery patients in the Men’s camp (11 brothers died doing this work)

* Denotes those British medical /nursing personnel who were in camp with the Australian Nurses 1942-1945

Even More Speakers Confirmed!

We can excitingly now announce the next six speakers for our June conference! Remember, to be the first to hear this news, make sure you are signed up for our newsletter. There are extremely limited spaces for the conference still available, so register now to avoid disappointment. Missed out on our other announcements? Click here to see all the latest conference news.


Sears Eldredge

M.F.A., Ph.D., Professor Emeritus, Theater and Dance Department, Macalester College, St. Paul, MN

Besides Macalester College Eldredge has taught and directed theatre in colleges and professional schools including Justin Morrill College (the Experimental Liberal Arts College at Michigan State University); Earlham College; The Drama Studio, London and Berkeley, CA. He is the author of two books, Mask Improvisation for Acting Training and Performance (Northwestern Univ. Press, 1996), and the multi-media, Captive Audiences/Captive Performers: Music and Theatre as Strategies for Survival on the Thailand-Burma Railway 1942-1945 (Digital Commons, Macalester College, 2014).

With his presentation, Eldredge will complete the “Changi by the sea: Rice and Shine” blog he has been writing for the RFHG website. It will detail the final year and a half the FEPOWs spent in Changi Gaol, and the extraordinary music and theatre they produced for the incarcerated POWs when the need was most great.


Gen-Ling Chang

Gen-Ling Chang is the former associate director of Toronto District School Board and currently the deputy executive director with ALPHA Education. As an active education leader and volunteer, she has an unwavering focus on equity and humanity issues and education. Making a difference for young people and their families who experience bias, discrimination, and stigmatization characterizes her years of service leadership in education and not-for-profit sectors.

Gen Ling’s service leadership then, and volunteer work now, are grounded in understanding education as an important institution of democracy, at the same time, its role in contributing to peace education. Working with ALPHA Education team, in building programs on critical understanding of WW2 in Asia, often overlooked in school curriculum, has further her work on youth engagement and leadership. ALPHA Education’s bold and necessary project to establish a peace museum dedicated to remembering, education, and world peace has been profoundly meaningful experiences for Gen Ling.


Arlene Bennett

In 1974 Arlene read Betty Jeffrey’s biography, White Coolies, the diary of her time as a prisoner of the Japanese during World War II in Indonesia. She was profoundly moved by the story of the Australian nurses.

She began her training at The Royal Melbourne Hospital in 1978. Following her training, she completed a Staff Year and then commenced a Coronary Care Course also at the RMH. She followed on and did her midwifery training at the Royal Women’s Hospital,
Melbourne. She returned to the Royal Melbourne Hospital, where she held the positions of Charge Nurse (Nurse Unit Manager) and Nurse Educator. She completed a Graduate Diploma in Adult Education at the University of Melbourne.

She is the Treasurer of the Lemnos – Gallipoli Commemorative Committee, which commemorates the Australian Nurses who served in Greece during World War I, a member of the Royal Melbourne Hospital’s Heritage Advisory Committee and is also an active member of Friends of Banka Island who assists the local community with aid as well as conducting the annual commemorative service for the nurses lost in the massacre on Banka Island. She was the immediate past president of the Australian Nurses Memorial Centre and remains on the History and Heritage Committee. She is an active participant in the commemoration of all nurses who have served from before Federation and, in particular, those nurses who lost their lives in Indonesia or were imprisoned during World War II and was recently interviewed by the Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federations ANMJ journal for their ANZAC Day remembrance of Vivian Bullwinkel. She has a close relationship with many of the families who had relatives in the camps or who had been massacred on Banka Island.

She has travelled to all of the sites in Indonesia where the camps were during World War II and has recently returned from Java, Banka Island and Sumatra.


Terry Smyth

Dr Terry Smyth was awarded a PhD in Sociology from the University of Essex in 2017; since then, he has been a Community Fellow in their Department of History (an honorary role). From his earliest days, he wondered how his own childhood had compared with those of other children of FEPOWs. After careers in the NHS and in further and higher education, this curiosity led to a PhD based on in-depth interviews. Terry has spoken about his research at conferences in the UK, Japan, and the Netherlands and has also written two chapters for edited volumes.

His single-authored book, ‘Captive Fathers, Captive Children: Legacies of the War in the Far East’, was published in November 2022 in hardback; the paperback edition is due in July 2023.


Terry’s father, Edwin, was captured in Java and then spent three years in Japan in Hiroshima 6B camp, slaving as a coal miner, where he felt the rumble of the first atomic bomb.


Jackie Sutherland

With a life-long interest in geography and environmental issues, Jackie Sutherland graduated with a degree from Aberdeen University. Her professional career has been varied. She has worked for a major conservation charity, lectured on environmental studies, and, most recently, was head of a large secondary school geography department.

She developed a broad interest in military history after she met her husband, a military historian and author. Together they have visited and studied several sites ranging from the Somme to Gallipoli and the Crimea, from Singapore to the Falkland Islands.


In Singapore, her increasing awareness of the broader historical context led her to see her late father’s POW diaries in a different light and to understand better the magnitude of her parents’ wartime experiences.


It was this new insight that led to the decision to publish


James Reynolds

James Reynolds is the grandson of the late Eric Cordingly, and the son of FEPOW speaker Louise Cordingly Reynolds. James has worked as a BBC journalist since 1997. He was posted as a foreign correspondent to Santiago de Chile, Jerusalem, Beijing, Washington, Istanbul, and Rome. He is now a presenter on the World Service.