[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 166 (Monday, October 16, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6396-S6397]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REMEMBERING LIEUTENANT THOMAS F. BURKHART AND VETERANS OF THE WAR IN
THE PACIFIC
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. Mr. President, this week my constituent Caroline
Burkhart of Baltimore, MD, is on a historic trip to Japan of
remembrance and reconciliation. A guest of the Japanese Government, she
will follow the journey of her father, Thomas F. Burkhart, who was a
prisoner of war of imperial Japan 75 years ago. Her trip will include a
visit to the site of the camp in which her father was held as a POW.
At the start of WWII, Lieutenant Burkhart served in the Philippines
with the Headquarters Company of the 45th Infantry, Philippine Scouts,
an elite U.S. Army unit composed of American officers and Filipino
enlisted men. After Japan's December 8, 1941, invasion of the
Philippines, his battalion helped defend the withdrawal of American
forces on Luzon to the Bataan Peninsula. Barely a month after being
promoted to first lieutenant, on January 24, 1942, Lieutenant Burkhart
earned a Silver Star for ``Gallantry in Action'' at the Battle of
Abucay Hacienda, January 15 to 25, 1942, which maintained the first
battle position on Bataan.
Sick with malaria, Lieutenant Burkhart was in the open-air general
hospital No. 1 near the tip of Bataan when Major General Edward King
surrendered the peninsula to Japanese forces on April 9, 1942. Soon
thereafter, the patients were taken by truck, boxcar, and foot up to
Camp O'Donnell, an overcrowded, makeshift POW camp. In early June, the
Japanese, fearing the deaths of the prisoners from the horrific
conditions in the camp, began to release their Filipino POWs and
transfer the others to a new facility at Cabanatuan. It is estimated
that 1,550 Americans and 22,000 Filipinos died at Camp O'Donnell, the
overwhelming majority within the first 8 weeks.
[[Page S6397]]
On November 6, 1942, Lieutenant Burkhart was among 1,500 prisoners
packed into the coal bunker of the unmarked ``hell ship'' Nagato Maru
to Japan. It took three torturous weeks for the ship to make its way
from the tropics to the cold of Northeast Asia. Lieutenant Burkhart,
nearly blind from malnutrition, was used as a slave laborer for the
construction company Toshima Group--today's Tobishima Corporation. He
was soon moved to the Hiroshima No. 1-B Zentsuji POW Camp on the island
of Shikoku. The enlisted men at Zentsuji were slave stevedores for
Nippon Express Co.--Nippon Tsuun--at Sakaide Rail Yards and the Port of
Takamatsu. As an officer, Lieutenant Burkhart worked in the camp
garden. On June 23, 1945, he and 334 officers were transferred to POW
Camp 11-B Rokuroshi, deep in the Japanese Alps. Food was scarce,
conditions were overcrowded, and winter clothes were unavailable,
leading many to fear that they would not survive the harsh winter.
Lieutenant Burkhart was liberated from this camp in early September.
Lieutenant Burkhart remained in the Army and had a distinguished
career with the quartermaster corps, retiring in 1957 as a lieutenant
colonel in the U.S. Army Reserve. Throughout his life, he was plagued
by health problems most likely caused by the illnesses and hardships of
being a POW. In 1972, at age 57, he passed away and was buried in
Arlington National Cemetery.
Thomas Burkhart's daughter Caroline has honored his memory by working
tirelessly to preserve the history of the POW experience and to teach
its lessons of American perseverance and grit. Ms. Burkhart is an
active member of the American Defenders of Bataan and Corregidor
Memorial Society. In this year, the 75th anniversary of the fall of the
Philippines, we appreciate the effort by Japan to reach out to Ms.
Burkhart and the American POWs in the spirit of reconciliation and
healing.
I ask my colleagues to join me in wishing Caroline Burkhart a safe
and meaningful journey and in expressing our gratitude and appreciation
to Thomas F. Burkhart and all veterans of the war in the Pacific for
their heroic service and sacrifice.
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