Difference between revisions of "Morgan, Sally Bateman 1998-06-26"

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Right here will be a general overview of the oral history interview. It will be roughly 3-5 sentences for new interviews, shorter for older interviews.  
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Sally B. Morgan, a resident of Arlington, Texas, discusses her experiences in a Prisoner of War Civilian Camp during World War II.
  
 
==General Interview Information==
 
==General Interview Information==
  
'''Interviewee Name:'''
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'''Interviewee Name:''' Sally Bateman Morgan
  
'''Additional Parties Recorded:'''
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'''Additional Parties Recorded:''' None
  
'''Date:'''  
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'''Date:''' June 26, 1998
  
'''Location:'''
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'''Location:''' Arlington, Texas
  
'''Interviewer:'''
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'''Interviewer:''' David Marshall
  
'''Length:'''
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'''Length:''' 1 hour
  
  
 
==Abstract==
 
==Abstract==
  
'''Tape 1, Side 1:'''
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'''Tape 1:''' Morgan, Sally Bateman,
 
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b. September, 1930,
<br>
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Parents,
 
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Father – John W. Bateman,
'''Tape 1, Side 2:'''
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b. Eden, North Carolina,
 
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15th Infantry,
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Stationed in China,
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d. January, 1931,
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Mother – (_?_) Bateman,
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Chinese,
 +
Childhood,
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Received help from the American Legion,
 +
Two older brothers,
 +
Education,
 +
Tin Zen – American School in China,
 +
World War II – Americans evacuated,
 +
Sally stayed behind,
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Methodist Missionary Boarding School,
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Baptist Missionary,
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John Blaylock,
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Caretaker for Sally and her brothers,
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1941- He was no longer able to exchange American money,
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He decided to take the children to America,
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The only ship was to the Philippines,  
 +
November 2, 1941 – they landed in the Philippines,
 +
Apartment in Manila,
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Prisoner of War Civilian Camps,
 +
January 5, 1942 – Japanese interrogation,
 +
John Blaylock continued missionary work at the camp,
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University of Santo Thomas,
 +
Lack of food,
 +
Black outs,
 +
Air raids,
 +
Education,
 +
Manila,
 +
World War II,
 +
Barbed wire around towns in China,
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Fearful – people in China had grown accustomed to it since it began in 1937,
 +
Black rob iron – "Mepa" slivers of bamboo,
 +
University of Santo Thomas,
 +
Civilian Camp consisted of businessmen,
 +
Men and women’s bedrooms were separated,
 +
How the camp was guarded,
 +
Los Banos,
 +
They were later transferred to another Civilian Camp,
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Classrooms were bedrooms,
 +
Close to 7,000 prisoners,
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Most deaths were due to malnutrition,
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Prisoner of War Camps (continued),
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Confinement,
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Medical Organizations developed by prisoners,
 +
Entertainment,
 +
Different ethnic groups – different languages,
 +
Food provided by Japanese,
 +
Rice,
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Wheat,
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Grains,
 +
Papaya,
 +
Mango,
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Prisoner of War Camps (1944 – 1945),
 +
Civilian prisoner labor,
 +
Men, women, and children,
 +
Building barracks,
 +
Bamboo (conditions deteriorated),
 +
Witnessing torture towards prisoners,
 +
Food became scarce,
 +
Chewing on sugar cane,
 +
11th Airborne Liberation – February 23, 1945,
 +
Morning roll call,
 +
Rumors that the Japanese were going to execute all the prisoners,
 +
11th Airborne,
 +
Military were to free 2100 prisoners,
 +
Liberated by paratroopers,
 +
Planes flying over the camp,
 +
Shooting,
 +
The Japanese were unprepared,
 +
Amphibian tractors – rescued prisoners,
 +
"The Angels",
 +
Remembrances,
 +
California – 1945,
 +
John Blaylock provided housing for her and her brothers.
 
<br>
 
<br>
  
'''Range Dates:'''
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'''Range Dates:''' 1930-1998
  
'''Bulk Dates:'''
+
'''Bulk Dates:''' 1930-1944
  
  

Revision as of 21:35, 23 June 2015

Sally B. Morgan, a resident of Arlington, Texas, discusses her experiences in a Prisoner of War Civilian Camp during World War II.

General Interview Information

Interviewee Name: Sally Bateman Morgan

Additional Parties Recorded: None

Date: June 26, 1998

Location: Arlington, Texas

Interviewer: David Marshall

Length: 1 hour


Abstract

Tape 1: Morgan, Sally Bateman, b. September, 1930, Parents, Father – John W. Bateman, b. Eden, North Carolina, 15th Infantry, Stationed in China, d. January, 1931, Mother – (_?_) Bateman, Chinese, Childhood, Received help from the American Legion, Two older brothers, Education, Tin Zen – American School in China, World War II – Americans evacuated, Sally stayed behind, Methodist Missionary Boarding School, Baptist Missionary, John Blaylock, Caretaker for Sally and her brothers, 1941- He was no longer able to exchange American money, He decided to take the children to America, The only ship was to the Philippines, November 2, 1941 – they landed in the Philippines, Apartment in Manila, Prisoner of War Civilian Camps, January 5, 1942 – Japanese interrogation, John Blaylock continued missionary work at the camp, University of Santo Thomas, Lack of food, Black outs, Air raids, Education, Manila, World War II, Barbed wire around towns in China, Fearful – people in China had grown accustomed to it since it began in 1937, Black rob iron – "Mepa" slivers of bamboo, University of Santo Thomas, Civilian Camp consisted of businessmen, Men and women’s bedrooms were separated, How the camp was guarded, Los Banos, They were later transferred to another Civilian Camp, Classrooms were bedrooms, Close to 7,000 prisoners, Most deaths were due to malnutrition, Prisoner of War Camps (continued), Confinement, Medical Organizations developed by prisoners, Entertainment, Different ethnic groups – different languages, Food provided by Japanese, Rice, Wheat, Grains, Papaya, Mango, Prisoner of War Camps (1944 – 1945), Civilian prisoner labor, Men, women, and children, Building barracks, Bamboo (conditions deteriorated), Witnessing torture towards prisoners, Food became scarce, Chewing on sugar cane, 11th Airborne Liberation – February 23, 1945, Morning roll call, Rumors that the Japanese were going to execute all the prisoners, 11th Airborne, Military were to free 2100 prisoners, Liberated by paratroopers, Planes flying over the camp, Shooting, The Japanese were unprepared, Amphibian tractors – rescued prisoners, "The Angels", Remembrances, California – 1945, John Blaylock provided housing for her and her brothers.

Range Dates: 1930-1998

Bulk Dates: 1930-1944


Access Information

Original Recording Format:

Recording Format Notes:

Transcript:



Thank you for your interest in this oral history interview. Our oral history collection is available to patrons in the Southwest Collection's Reading Room, located on the campus of Texas Tech University. For reading room hours, visit our website. Please contact Reference Staff at least one week prior to your visit to ensure the oral history you are interested in will be available. Due to copyright issues, duplications of our oral histories can only be made for family members. If an oral history transcript has been made available online, the link will be provided on this page. More information on accessing our oral histories is located here. Preferred citation style can be found here.