To honour those who served their country

“In this their finest hour”

Royal Army Service Corps

T/222085

Lance Corporal

Robert James Hatcher

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1908/12/20 - Born Ascot, Berkshire

Son of Arthur Robert and Emily Hatcher

Royal Army Service Corps

Att:- Royal Army Medical Corps, 196 Field Ambulance

 

Service

The role of the Field Ambulance was to treat and evacuate the wounded from the front line to a Casualty Clearing Station where more advanced medical care could be given. This was done through a series of Dressing stations. Each unit had a Regimental Aid Post (RAP) as close to the front line as possible. This was usually the first stop for all casualties. Most casualties were brought to the RAP by Regimental Stretcher Bearers. Basic treatment and assessments were carried out by an RAMC doctor attached to the unit, before more serious casualties were evacuated to an Advanced Dressing Station (ADS) by Field Ambulance stretcher bearers. From here the casualty was again treated or assessed before being taken to a Main Dressing Station (MDS) before finally being evacuated to the Casualty Clearing Station (CCS) or hospital. The Field Ambulance was responsible for everything coming from the RAP and going to the CCS. Ambulances were driven by members of the RASC attached to the unit, who were also armed for the protection of the RAMC. The RAMC men did not carry or have access to any weapons and relied solely on the soldiers around them for protection.

196 Field Ambulance

Click on photo to enlarge

The 196 Field Ambulance travelled on the SS ANDES and the SS ORANSAY leaving Great Britain on the 30th October 1941 with Convoy CT.5. The unit comprised 253 men, 54 RASC and 199 RAMC.

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On arriving at Nova Scotia in Canada the unit travelled on the USS Joseph T Dickman leaving Halifax with Convoy William Sail 12X

1941/11/08 - At Halifax transferred to American liners

1941/11/10 - Left Halifax with Convoy William Sail 12X, destination unknown, believed to be Middle East.

Convoy William Sail 12x

 

Above Photo of Convoy William Sail 12X supplied by the late Maurice Rooney

Vought SB 2U Vindicator Scout Bomber - USS Ranger which was flying an Anti Submarine patrol over the convoy.

Front Line Top to Bottom:-

USS West Point - USS Mount Vernon - USS Wakefield - USS Quincy (Heavy Cruiser)

Back Row Top To Bottom:-

USAT Leonard Wood - USS Vincennes (Heavy Cruiser) - USS Joseph T Dickman

(USS Orizaba Ap-24 also sailed with Convoy though not pictured in photo)

 

1941/12/08 - Japan entered war by bombing Pearl Harbour and invading Malaya

18th Division diverted from Middle East and sent to Singapore

1941/12/25 - The men spent Christmas Day on board and the meal was a typical Christmas, roast turkey, gravy, pickles and sage dressing.

1941/12/27 - Arrived Bombay, disembarked and arrived by train at Ahmednager, where they trained for two weeks when they were trained back to Bombay. They boarded the West Point and Wakefield in Task Force 14.2 to sail for Singapore.

Eventually disembarked in Singapore on 29th January 1942.

During the fighting in Singapore the 196 Field Ambulance was based behind the 4th and 5th Suffolks and the 5th Beds and Herts from the 55th Brigade. Some men were attached to other units such as the Royal Artillery and 1st Cambridgeshires and they soon began to take casualties themselves. 

As the situation grew more and more desperate 30 RASC men were taken from the unit to act as riflemen, along with RASC men from other units. The allied forces were slowly withdrawing closer to Singapore City and the 196 was based to the East of the Mac Ritchie reservoir near to the centre of the island. Men of the 196th were in support of one of the final British attacks of the campaign when Tomforce went into action. As the assault petered out the 196 unit found itself surrounded and had to evacuate the wounded protected by Tomforce. 

The 196th finally withdrew to two Main Dressing Stations.  One was based at the City High School next to Government House and behind the Cathy Building, and the other at Goodwood Park hotel, later to be occupied by Japanese officers. This is were they remained until the surrender.

Records indicate that the 196th had treated 426 men and of those, 11 men had died. These figures come from the War Diary of the unit that ends on 15th February 1942.

The 196th had suffered 6 casualties, but no fatalities, although Lt Cuthbert did not recover from his wounds for some months.

 

1942/04/01 - WO 417/41, Casualty List No. 786. Missing

1943/06/03 - WO 417/62, Casualty List No. 1151. Previously posted Missing, 15/02/1942. Casualty List No. 786. Now a Prisoner of War.

 

Japanese PoW

1942/02/15 - Captured Singapore

PoW No. M-617

Japanese Index Card - Side One

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Japanese Index Card - Side Two

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1942/10/28 - Transported overland to Thailand

New PoW No. I 22058

Group I were the first work group to start work on the actual line from the Thailand end.

New PoW No. I 8227

Robert died from Diphtheria and Beri-beri at Aerodrome Camp Hospital Kanchanaburi

 

Died

Age 34

1943/03/12

 

1945/11/26 - WO417/99, Casualty List No. 1920. Previously reported on Casualty List No. 1151 as Prisoner of War. Previous Theatre of War, Malaya. Died

 

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1939-1945 Star-tn

Pacific Star

War Medal

1939-1945 Star

 

Loved Ones

Son of Arthur Robert and Emily Teresa Hatcher, of College Town, Berkshire

 

Memorial

KANCHANABURI War CEMETERY

2. F. 40.

Hatcher-Robert-James-Kanchanaburi War Cemetery Site Plan

Kanchanaburi War Cemetery

 

“GONE” WE SHALL MEET AGAIN, DARLING

 

Summary

of

196 Field Ambulance In Captivity

In captivity 46 men of the 196th Field Ambulance died. The first to die was Private Ungless, of a perforated appendix, 18th June 1942, in Roberts Barracks, Changi. The last was Driver Bowden of the RASC, who died 12th October 1945 in Rangoon hospital, nearly two months after liberation.

Most of the men who died did so in the worst period of the captivity between the months of May and December 1943. During this time 30 men died.

Of the 144 British Other Ranks on ‘F’ Force medical personnel the 196 provided at least 66 men and around a further 30 on the ‘H’ force. These two groups widely recognised as the harshest on all of the terrible railway project. L/Col Huston OC 196 Field Ambulance was the medical officer in command of ‘F’ Force.

Around 77 men of the 196th went on the June mainland parties as the medical team.

18 men were sent to Japan.  Driver Carter was on the Rakuyo Maru when it was sunk by the US Navy.  He was rescued after 5 days at sea by the USS Queenfish. Driver Waghorn was on the Kachidoki Maru when it was also sunk in the same action.  Sadly he was lost at sea.

7 men went on the Wales Maru on 15th May 1943 and were based at or around Hakodate camps in Japan.

9 were on the Hioki Maru in June the following year and were mostly based at the Fukuoka camps. Two men, Lance Corporal Ball and Driver Minns died in Japan and are buried at Yokohama Cemetery.

Of the whole unit 18 men only remained at the Singapore camps following the death of Private Ungless. They suffered one death, Private G A Lewis, who died in January 1943.

Driver Merricks escaped captivity with some others from different units but was recaptured after being discovered by locals in Thailand who reported their presence.  He died in November 1943.

7 of the 25 private ranked RAMC soldiers mentioned in despatches were from the 196th Field Ambulance.  In total 12 members of the unit received the award.

The achievements of all of the medical soldiers during this awful period as prisoners of war is frequently expressed in books and accounts written and told by Far East Prisoners Of War.

 

Information

Helen Seaman

Andrew Snow - Thailand Burma Railway Centre

Commonwealth War Graves Commission

Japanese Transports

196 Field Ambulance - Roll of Honour

The Men of the 196 Field Ambulance by Clayton Ford

Thailand-Burma Railway by Ron Taylor

KEW Files:- WO 361/2172, WO 345/24, WO 361/2170, WO 392/24, WO 361/2166, WO 361/2166, WO 361/1753, WO 361/1623,

*

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