
6141961
Private
Ernest John Denyer
Also known as Jack

1920/05/09 - Born South Stoke, Sussex
Son of Daniel and Winifred Kate (nee Hitchman) Denyer
Twin brother to Leonard and step brother to Hilda Hitchman
Next of Kin Mother, Winifred Denyer, Blue Doors, Southstoke, Sussex
East Surrey Regiment
2nd Battalion
Service
When war broke out in 1939, the East Surrey Regiment were transported to Shanghai for defence duties.
In August 1940 the 2nd East Surrey Regiment were then transported to Singapore for training in jungle warfare as Japan were becoming a threat. After six months of training the 2nd battalion was moved to Sunei Patini, Malay.
When Japan entered the war attacking Malaya, the 2nd Battalion was position at Jitra, Malaya.
By the 11th of December the battalion was confronted by the Japanese commanded by Saeki who decided to attack the troops at Jitra during the night of the 11th and in doing so suffered heavy losses by the allied positioning of their machine guns. Saeki then decided to throw everything he had at the centre of the British defences and succeeded in driving a deep wedge into their positions before he came up against the Leicesters and the 2/2nd Gurkhas who stopped the Japanese attack, the 2nd East Surreys then counterattacked to help the Leicesters. By the 12th December Major-general Kawamura commanding the 9th Infantry arrived at Jitra and sent his 41st Regiment down the eastern side of the main road and the 40th Regiment down the western side to assist Saeki who was still being held by the Leicesters. Murray-Lyons ordered the Leicesters to withdraw behind a stream called the Sungei Jitra, the Leicesters had fought bravely and their good positions were argued but they had to obey the order.
At a meeting just south of Gurun on the 14th December, Murray-Lyon told General Heath that his troops were not in condition to withstand another retreat but if they had to a strong defensive position should be chosen and a concentrated defines should be planned, with transportation for his troops. General Heath agreed that the 11th Division should hold Gurun and the 12th Brigade would hold the Japanese to the east at Kroh and Grik. After a conversation on the phone that night with Percival, Heath got his way and it was agreed that the 11th would retreat a further sixty mile to a defensive position beyond the Perak River delaying the Japanese as long as possible so Penang could be evacuated.
That night the Japanese attacked in numbers and drove a gap in the Punjabi defences and reached the 2nd East Surrey headquarters and then the 6th Brigade headquarters, killing everyone there, when Murray-Lyon saw the damage he immediately ordered a seven mile withdrawal, but finding the numbers of troops left, sent more orders to withdraw behind the Muda River. The remaining troops had some luck as the Japanese had been hit hard as well and they did not follow up on the action giving the remains of the 11th Division time to fall back, giving the British time to evacuate Penang.
The British started evacuating on the 13th but the orders included only British born personnel and civilians, this caused a feeling of despair among the Asiatic population, and anger towards the British for leaving them to fend for themselves at a time when they wanted leadership.
On the 17th December the Kobayashi Battalion of the Japanese 5th Division landed on Penang from small boats and the island was theirs.
Fearing his troops would be cut off by the Japanese troops from Kroh, Percival tried to use the natural obstacle of the Perak River as a defines against the Japanese tanks.
The 2nd Battalion, East Surrey Regiment and 1st Battalion, Leicestershire Regiment were amalgamated to form the ‘British Battalion’ . The two battalions suffered had heavy losses and were amalgamated on 20th December 1941 as the ‘British Battalion’ under the command of Lieut. Col. C.E. Morrison, D.S.O., M.C., of The Royal Leicestershire Regiment.
Yamashita read the situation well and on the 26th December the 4th Guards Regiment crossed the Perak River to the north of Kuala Kangsar through thick jungle and then headed south for Ipoh, trying to outflank the British, they would then proceed to Kuala Lumpur. The British front had now been joined by the 12th Indian Brigade and the badly cut up 6th Brigade had merged into the 15th Brigade, they had now retreated by the 31st December to a strong defensible sight at Kampar where the artillery for once had a clear sighting of the ground between them and the advancing Japanese.
On the 2nd January the Japanese Guards Division tried landing troops at Kuala Selengor and Port Swettenham but were held off till the 4th when they achieved a landing just north of Kuala Selengor and moved inland at Battalion strength. Percival asked the Perak Flotilla to stop any more landings but it had been bombed continuously and was down to only two motor launches. While the landings were taking place 11th Division had retreated to the Slim River with very thick jungle on either side it was thought the Japanese could not outflank the defenders and the road defences would stop the tanks.
The long retreat down Malaya was now on, pursued and outflanked by the Japanese who were more suitably equipped and prepared for jungle warfare.
The ‘British Battalion’ fought as one till Malaya and Singapore fell to the Japanese on the 15th February 1942.
1942/03/17 - WO 417/40, Casualty List No. 773. Reported ‘Missing’.
1943/08/10 - WO 417/64, Casualty List No. 1208. Previously shown on Casualty List No. 773 as Missing. Now reported a ‘Prisoner of War’.
Friday July 14th 1944
Little Hampton
Gazette

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Japanese PoW
1942/02/15 - Captured Singapore
Changi Camp
PoW No. 19341
Japanese Index Card - Side One

Japanese Index Card - Side Two

1943/03/23 - Transported overland to Thailand with ‘D’ Force, train 9
Work Group 1
Worked Tracklaying at Kannyu, Kinsaiyok, Prang Kasi and Tha Mayo
1943/10/25 - Rail tracks from Thailand and Burma joined near Konkoita, Thailand
1944/07/30 - Ernest was sent back to River Valley.
Hospitalised at Changi Hospital.
194509/05 - On Changi Roll
1945/11/02 - Liberated
General Seishiro Itagaki, Japanese Commander of Singapore, would not accept the surrender. Plus it gave him time to cover up all Japanese Atrocities in Singapore. The allied naval landing force 'Operation Tiderace' were delayed as it was still understood the Japanese would dispose of all the PoWs in Singapore if they landed. Mountbatten ordered British paratroopers into Singapore to protect the camps. To many of the PoWs in Singapore, those red berets of the paratroopers were the first signs that the war had ended. All this delayed organising the PoWs. It wasn't till the 12th September that Lord Mountbatten accepted the Japanese surrender at the Municipal Building. Hospital cases were the first to leave Singapore 1945/09/10 on the HMHS Koroa. They were soon followed by Repatriation ships which started reaching the UK about the 15th of October 1945. Why many of the liberated PoWs on these ships had November on their Japanese Index cards, I don't know as in other areas of the Far East, PoWs were marked as Liberated at their PoW camps with the correct date. Unless General Seishiro Itagaki did not make the cards available when the camps were liberated.
Liberation Questionnaire was filled out by Ernest after being liberated


Repatriation
Flown from Bangkok to Rangoon to be shipped home after convalescing
1945/10/26 - WO417/98, Casualty List No. 1894. Previously reported on Casualty List No. 1208 as Prisoner of War now Not Prisoner of War. Previous Theatre of War, Malaya.
Pacific Star
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War Medal
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1939-1945 Star
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Far East Medals
Post War
Ernest married Dorothy M. Laker in 1952.
They lived their whole lives in Arundel, West Sussex.
Ernest passed away 2001, in Sussex
Information
Barry Denyer - Nephew
Andrew Snow - Thailand Burma Railway Centre
Fall of Malaya and Singapore
Thailand Burma Railway
British Battalion
KEW Files:- WO 361/2070, WO 361/2166, WO 361/2005, WO 345/14, WO 392/23, WO 361/2229, WO b367/2, WO 2170,
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