Lost Battalion (Pacific, World War II)

Texas Historical Marker for the Lost Battalion (Jacksboro, Texas)

The Lost Battalion was the 2nd Battalion, 131st Field Artillery, 36th Infantry Division (Texas National Guard) of the U.S. Army. The men of the battalion, plus the survivors of the sunken cruiser USS Houston, were captured by the Japanese on the island of Java in the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia) in March 1942. It is called the lost battalion because the fate of the men was unknown to the United States until September 1944. They were prisoners of war for 42 months until the end of World War II. 534 soldiers from the battalion and 368 survivors of Houston were taken prisoner. Most of the men were sent to Thailand to work on the Burma Railway, the building of which is portrayed in the film The Bridge on the River Kwai. Of the 902 soldiers and sailors taken captive, 163 died in captivity.[1] Most of the prisoners of war were from western Texas.[2]

Sergeant Frank Fujita was a notable survivor who was a POW for three and a half years. He went on to write the memoir Foo: A Japanese-American Prisoner of the Rising Sun.

  1. ^ "History of the Lost Battalion", Lost Battalion Association, http://texasmilitaryforcesmuseum.org/lostbattalion/history.htm, accessed 29 Dec 2014
  2. ^ Marcello, Ronald E. "Lone Star POWs: Texas National Guardsmen and the Building of the Burma-Thailand Railroad, 1942-1944" The Southwestern Historical Quarterly, Vol. 95, No 3 (Jan 1992), p. 293. Downloaded from JSTOR.

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