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Henry Solomon White Papers, 1861/1865

0.1 Linear Feet Summary: 1 in. (1 folder)
Abstract Or Scope
The manuscript diary of Henry Solomon White, a Corporal and Orderly Sergeant in Company N, Sixth Regiment, [West] Virginia Volunteer Infantry, covering the period of 24 September 1861 to 26 September 1864. Company N was organized at Camp White, in 1861 for a three-year tour of duty guarding the B.&O. and North Western railroads. The company was stationed at various times at Burton, Littleton, Barrackville, Fairmont, Clarksburg, Bridgeport, Grafton, and Webster. Squads of this company were detailed for special duty and scouting detail in Cornwallis, Ritchie County; Camp Burne; Camp Wilkinson; and in Monongalia, Marion, and Roane counties; and Fayette and Greene counties, Pennsylvania. Company N was on duty in Fairmont during the Jones Raid in 1863.
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Henry Solomon White Papers, 1861/1865 0.1 Linear Feet Summary: 1 in. (1 folder)

Robert Paul Evans, WWII Soldier, Typescript Regarding Experiences in a Japanese Prison Camp, 1945

0.01 Linear Feet Summary: 1/4 in. (1 folder)
Abstract Or Scope
Typescript regarding the experiences of Robert Paul Evans of Littleton, West Virginia while he was held prisoner by the Japanese. The typescript was written by Evans's aunt and based on Evans's description of his experiences and his testimony to the War Department. Evans held the rank of Technical Sergeant and served as a B-29 Radar Observer with the 500th Bomb Group, U.S. Army. He was forced to parachute from his plane during a bombing raid over Tokyo and was captured and taken to Kempei Tai prison run by the Japanese military police. ("Kenpeitai" was the name of the Japanese military police, but the typescript uses "Kempei Tai" as the name of the prison.) Evans was later moved to Camp Owari. The typescript describes Evans's capture, his experiences in the camps, the release of prisoners at the end of the war, and Evans's return home. The account of Evans's experiences in the camps describes the lack of medical care; frequent beatings; his relationship with a Japanese Christian minister who was also a prisoner; the behavior of guards; especially poor treatment of prisoners who had been involved in bombing raids; and how prisoners and civilians would sneak food to Evans and other prisoners.
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Robert Paul Evans, WWII Soldier, Typescript Regarding Experiences in a Japanese Prison Camp, 1945 0.01 Linear Feet Summary: 1/4 in. (1 folder)

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