Historians of The Sandakan Death March

One of the most acclaimed authorities on the Sandakan Death March route is Dr Kevin Smith. Kevin is the Author of Borneo- Australia’s Proud but Tragic Heritage and Escapes and Incursions and Stories From Sandakan: 2/18th Battalion.

See Kevin Smith's letter to Sandakan Spirit MD Wayne Wetherall here. You'll get a feel for his knowledge of the subject.

The other authority on the Sandakan Death March and Sandakan POW camp is WW2 Veteran and POW Don Wall.

Don wrote his first book Kill the Prisoners way back in 1988 and his revised fourth edition in 1995. Don had the full co-operation during his research of Sandakan Death March survivors Keith Botterill, Owen Campbell and Nelson Short.

These in-depth discussions covered all aspects of the events of prisoner of war life in Sandakan.

Don also had full access and permission to use the private records of Lt. Col. H.W.S Jackson, MBE (Ret.) in particular records of the recovery of remains, his first hand knowledge of the people of Borneo, those that witnessed the prisoners on the marches and those who saved the lives of the six survivors.

Dear Wayne

You might find the following comments useful.

It is pleasing to see Wayne Wetherall's trek route taking in the very toughest section of the track that was walked by prisoners of war all those years ago between Sandakan and Ranau.

That is the section that travelled north of the Tovio River near Taviu to Mankadai through the Maitland Ranges and then onto Miru. From Miru the track climbed precipitously to the very high razor-backed ridge of the Maitland Range, and on through Maringan before it descended to Lolosing and onto Tampias.
Prewar, of course, the route from Ranau to Sandakan came down to Tampias as a pony trail, from where the travel was down the Liwagu River by boat into Labuk Bay and around to Sandakan or by boat to Beluran where a foot trail to Sandakan was picked up.

On that Taviu to Tampias section alone, approximately fifty of our Australian prisoners of war perished, their names documented in an Appendix to Lynette Silver's own book.

Most of those fifty were on the first march to Ranau, and died in February 1945.

Most of those who perished on the second march to Ranau are shown in that Appendix as having met their fates on the ECR - the East Coast Residency, which takes in the whole area covered by the march from Sandakan to Ranau. On the Taviu to Tampias section these soldiers died in June 1945. There were British deaths as well on both marches.

Your clients who walk that authentic Miruru (Milulu and Miru also used)-Menkadait, Lolosing track must be proudly yet sadly conscious that they walk in the faltering steps of heroes, men already tragically weakened by their ordeals.. A Japanese officer described the ordeals of that track to Miru: " . . . before Milulu we met a heavy rain and the path along the cliff was washed away everywhere. We fell down and crawled up the cliffs several times."

Nelson Short, one of the four survivors from Ranau, described in interview his own experience of the steep valley sides that they had to traverse. “I went over the top of a cliff. I fell and rolled down and down. I thought I was never going to stop. I had a - - was carrying a little mat with me and I come to rest on this rock and it saved my life. I crawled back up again and got back onto the march with them, but there were some terrible - - the precipices you know, little paths you had to go around, and everything were shocking - - shocking country through there."

Just a day or so later, climbing up the mountain beyond Miru called for unbelievable reserves of strength. In my book I have described that climb in the following terms:

“Clinging to the stems of shrubby bushes and liana vines, getting a good foot grip before hauling themselves up one more step, avoiding the spiny rattans and the evil barbs of one or two other bushes, resting whenever they could against the uphill side of an occasional huge tree trunk, panting and gulping for air, each man fought his own way slowly upwards to the top of the razor-back ridge."

Be proud of your venture, Wayne. In enabling young Australians and others to experience that track you greatly honour the memory of all who passed that way in 1945.

My kind regards to you.

Kevin Smith – Sandakan Death March Author 
Borneo- Australia’s Proud but Tragic Heritage 
Escapes and Incursions 
Stories From Sandakan: 2/18th Battalion 

Note from Wayne Wetherall

Please note the actual Villages of Mankadai, Milulu and Miruru are actual post war Villagers and were not on the actual track or route during the March. The Sandakan Death March Track avoided Villages. The names of the Villages are mentioned to show and describe the general area that the track passed through.)

Sandakan and the Sandakan Death Marches is one of the most tragic Australian stories of World War Two.

The Sandakan Death March is also one of our most heroic.

The POW’s at Sandakan and along the Sandakan Death Marches under the Japanese experienced continual privation, hard labour, brutality, appalling living conditions and death.

POW’s were bashed by the guards, suffered from starvation and resultant killer diseases and sometimes murder.

Despite appalling conditions at Sandakan and along the Sandakan Death March route, the prisoners never gave up. Their heroism, their determination and their indomitable spirit are testimony to the strength of the human spirit and an inspiration to all.

Of the 2434 prisoners incarcerated at Sandakan, 1787 were Australian. The remaining 641 were British. The six Australians who escaped from the Sandakan Death March were the sole survivors.

The story of the Sandakan Death Marches and the Sandakan POW camp is a tragedy of massive proportions.

This is not a pleasant story, but a story of unwavering Australian Spirit and stoic courage and mateship beyond all conceivable human limits.

During this time the family and friends of these incarcerated men waited three and a half long years to find out some news about their loved ones taken prisoner by the Japanese.

In 1945 the Australian Army restricted information about the suffering and atrocious conditions of these POWs to protect the feelings of the next-of-kin. For over 30 years this information was suppressed and still 66 years on the information regarding this tragedy was vague or little understood.

What is also not so well known that while there were only six survivors of the three Sandakan Death Marches the inconvenient facts are that of the 2,030 Australian Prisoners sent to Borneo, 218 survived to go home after the war and here was around 90 escapes or attempted escapes from Borneo of which 21 survived to go home.

Over the past two journeys Wayne and Jerome and his team of local Dusun’s, who are direct descendents of the carriers and villagers along the track have meticulously, using the latest in GPS mapping technology and old fashion hard work we were able to faithfully piece together as close as what they believe to be the original route.

Trekking the Sandakan Death March route with us is an experience not just a holiday. We see things as an explorer, historian and adventurer.
When you trek the Sandakan Death March with Sandakan Spirit, you're participating in a personal discovery experience; you are truly living and participating in an historic and monumental Borneo adventure.

After sixty six years, you too can now walk the Sandakan Death March track in the footsteps of the Sandakan Death March heroes.

Breaking News

Sandakan Spirit owner and adventurer Wayne Wetherall and his Borneo Partner Jerome Robles on the 13th August 2011 have uncovered more sections of the lost and forgotten tracks of the Sandakan Death March at Lolosing.

The section of track from Lolosing –Monkilau and onto Tampias has remained hidden, its secret location only known to one or two local men who were carriers for the Japanese on this soul destroying section of the Death March route.

This remarkable discovery has resulted in years of research and hard slog through the Borneo Jungle. Wetherall commented; “it was like entering a lost world, the jungle was thick, dark, steamy and brooding. The track was steep, slippery, brutal and unforgiving, it was difficult staying upright. No white man had trekked this toughest section of the track since the POW’s marched it 66 years ago.

READ a full story on this here or listen to the radio interview here.

Learn about the sandakan history. Click here!

Special Announcement

Join us for our history making treks.

In March, May, July and August 2012 our Sandakan Spirit groups will walk in the footsteps of heroes along the Sandakan Death March Route.

These treks will see members of the Defence Forces, Sporting Groups, Corporate and individuals come together in this unique and momentous event.
Contact us now to find out how you can come part of this history making treks!

Borneo track claim

Sunday Herald Sun (Melbourne) Sunday 21/08/2011BRIGID O'CONNELL

AN Australian trekker says he has uncovered two new sections of the infamous Sandakan Death March track in Borneo which would help with the preservation of one of the country's most tragic and heroic wartime histories.

More than 2400 Australian and British prisoners of war died on the mountainous track during World War II, where they were sent to build an airstrip for the Japanese and were beaten, tortured and executed. 

Only six Australians escaped and survived.

The route was lost for 60 years but opened to the public in 2006.

But trekker Wayne Wetherall, whose company Kokoda Spirit trains Victorian hikers, says he has discovered two new sections of the route after intensive research and interviews with those who witnessed the attacks on Australian soldiers.

"The real answers for us have been actually walking through the jungle and talking to the local people aged in their 90s now who were the carriers," he said.

His research also included piecing together information from the Australian Office of War Graves recovery maps, Japanese death certificates and the Australian War Memorial archives.

The new sections they have uncovered include a seven-hour trek across the Maitland Ranges between the relocated villages of Mangkadai and Milulu and a
stretch of jungle near a former Japanese logistics camp.

Mr Wetherall explored this new section with a team of Melbourne hikers last weekend.

"We were the first people to actually go into this section of the forest called Lolosing and it was primary Borneo jungle deep, dark, with vines coming down everywhere," he said. "We had with us an 80-year-old who was a carrier for the Japanese, and he was showing us where the commander's building used to be and where he saw an Australian soldier killed.

"It was chilling stuff to be there with him. It's going to be an ongoing project because there is still much more left to discover."

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