Today is the seventieth anniversary of the end of World War II in the Pacific.
On this day in 1945 my father was on board the MV Duntroon, as head of a
 Prisoner  of War Relief Unit, together with a contingent of Australian 
General Hospital (Army) nurses. The vessel was bound for India, the 
mission of those on board being to aid the POWs being liberated from the
 Japanese in Burma.
When news of the Japanese surrender came through, the vessel was diverted to Singapore, arriving there
 on the day Lord Louis Mountbatten accepted the formal surrender from 
the Japanese commander. They set up headquarters in Changi Gaol, and 
began the dreadful business of assessing the physical and psychological 
state of the prisoners in Changi and those coming down from the 
Burma-Thailand Railway and the outlying camps.
The matron in charge of the AGH contingent was the remarkable Madge 
Brown, whom I got to know well in my school days as she took up a 
position straight after the war as administrator of student 
accommodation at the New England University College/University of New 
England, a position she still held when I left Armidale in 1966. Madge 
had an eventful war: among her other claims to fame was the fact that 
she had been in Tobruk during the siege. It was a privilege to have 
known her.
For more on Madge Brown, see  Ida Madge Brown (1904-2009).
 
 
1 comment:
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