Tuesday 30 July 2013

The Battle for Normandy and the Battle for Hong Kong

In the summer of 2012 my son and I went over to France to visit the landing beaches and battlefields of Normandy.  It was an incredible experience to see the invasion beaches and the ruins of war scattered over that historic countryside. One of my friends in Hong Kong, Martin Dewick, had come across a book about a tank commander in Normandy by the name of Lt Stuart Hills which had a surprising Hong Kong connection. Stuart Hills had been born in Hong Kong in 1924 and likewise his elder sister Helen in 1922, and his younger brother Peter in 1926. His parents Herbert Stuart Hills and Edith Attwater Hills were in Hong Kong when the war began in December 1941. Their home was destroyed by shelling and they were incarcerated in Stanley Internment Camp until liberation in August/September 1945.
   The book is titled By Tank into Normandy and is the gripping account of Lt Hills experiences landing on the invasion beaches on D-Day and the chase across France to Germany.


Lt Hills served with the Nottinghamshire Sherwood Rangers Yeomanry. He was an officer in charge of a troop of three Sherman Mark IV DD (Duplex Drive) or swimming tanks. His unit was assigned to Gold Beach on the western end of the British sector.  As the Landing Craft approached the beach whilst under both shell and machine-gun fire,  he recalls.
I gave the order, 'Go, Go,  Go'  and we lumbered slowly down the ramp and flopped into the sea.
He was standing on the back of the tank, in order to be able to see over the flotation screen. After fifty to seventy-five metres the tank started taking in water and finally sank no doubt due to shrapnel damage to the soft underside of the tank.
   The crew abandoned the tank some five-hundred metres offshore and got into their small rubber dinghy without a paddle or any means of propulsion other than their bare hands. For much of the day they drifted offshore, with shells and gunfire all around them, and they were lucky not to be mown down by approaching landing craft and other vessels heading for the invasion beach. 

Sherman Tank with flotation screen lowered (Wikipedia)

Sherman Tank still with flotation screen lowered just after landing
 (Source: Wikipedia)

Lt Hills and his crew were eventually picked up by an LCG (Landing Craft fitted with Guns) whose job was patrolling up and down the beach pounding German shore defences from different positions off Gold Beach.  When the LCG had to return to England they deposited Lt Hills and his crew back in a dinghy but this time with a paddle and they landed by dinghy, somewhat ignominiously, no doubt looking wet and wretched on Gold Beach on D+1. They rejoined their regiment and were allocated another Sherman tank and Lt Hills went on to win the Military Cross.
   But now let's go back to that Hong Kong connection. Lt Stuart Hills' father Herbert had come to Hong Kong in 1910 and was employed by Jardine Matheson. When the First World War started in 1914 he joined the Hong Kong Volunteer Defence Corp (HKVDC) and later transferred to the imperial cavalry where he saw service at Salonika and elsewhere in the Middle East. Stuart Hills takes up the story:
My father had met my mother Edith in the Middle East, where she had served as a nurse at Gallipoli and in Egypt. They duly married in Hong Kong in 1919, after my father had returned to the colony to rejoin Jardine Matheson. Their house was 29 The Peak, where I was born in 1924. 
In 1941 when the war began, Edith a volunteer military nurse took up her duties initially at Bowen Road Military Hospital and then at the relief military hospital established at St Albert's, Rosary Hill. This had been a former monastery. During the initial period of Japanese occupation she was moved to St Teresa's Hospital near the POW camp in Argyle Street. 

Herbert Stuart Hills was a fifty-six-year-old Exchange Broker. His house on Lugard Road was heavily shelled during the eighteen days of fighting following the Japanese invasion of the Crown Colony on 8 December 1941. Herbert Hills wrote to the three children from Stanley Camp following liberation. In the letter dated 24 August 1945 Herbert writes:
I took my post as District Warden, Air Raid Precautions (ARP) at Stanley. My office and quarters being in a flat on the ground floor belonging to one of the European Wardens of the prison. [European Married Quarters] 
By 24 December, Stanley was surrounded and during the morning Herbert's ARP office was hit by a Japanese shell. He had a lucky escape as he had left the office minutes before the shell made a direct hit  - wrecking everything. He described Christmas Eve as being a 'nightmare' as the battle raged around Stanley. At around 9 a.m. he managed to get into the the prison and occupied a cell until 24 January when he and the prison wardens were moved to Stanley Internment Camp. 
  

Edith & Herbert Hills (Courtesy: Mandy Parkes)

At Stanley Camp he was billeted in Block 13 Room 19. Edith was moved from Rosary Hill to St Teresa's Hospital in Kowloon and came into camp some six months later than Hebert, which explains why they had different billets. She was admitted to Stanley Camp on 17 June 1942 and was billeted in Block 13 Room 53. They were unable to get a shared billet until August 1945. Stuart recalls that 'when they were finally released (in 1945), my mother resembled a skeleton and my father was in an even more terrible condition, suffering from tuberculosis and beriberi among other things.  My father was put on a hospital ship to New Zealand and then in 1946 invalided back to Britain, where he died in 1947' aged sixty-two, no doubt as a result of the privations experienced in Stanley Camp.
My sister Helen and my mother had gone by ship to Australia in October 1941 to stay with an Aunt When my mother returned to Hong Kong in late November 1941 (weeks before war broke out), my sister stayed on in Sydney. She decided to risk returning to England and departed on the Blue Funnel line vessel SS Ulysses in 1942, but the ship was torpedoed off the coast of South Carolina. Helen and other survivors were picked up by a US destroyer.
Helen eventually reached England where she joined the WAAF (Women's Auxiliary Air Force).
My mother was, in fact, lucky to survive. During the fighting, she nursed a Japanese soldier, who died of his wounds, but she made sure he was properly buried, wrapped in the Japanese flag. When the Japanese took over the hospital at the end of the fighting, my mother, the doctor and ward sister might have been murdered. Machine guns were trained on them while the body was disinterred, and only when the Japanese saw the body wrapped in the flag did they accept what had really happened.
Edith was awarded the MiD (Mention in Dispatches) for her conduct and bravery as a wartime nursing sister who served in both world wars. Edith died in 1974 aged ninety-one.

Home on the Peak
The photographs below show the Hills family home at 29, The Peak in pre-war days. One notices the well-kept lawn, the stunning views across the harbour and the many windows.

29, The Peak (Lugard Road) in pre-war days (Courtesy: Mandy Parkes)

The photograph below was taken in 1954 and shows the house (on the left of the photo) still in war-time ruin. The house was demolished in 1955 and rebuilt.

(Photo courtesy of Peter Gesner Van der Voort as posted on www.gwulo.com)

The following photographs from Mandy Parkes (neé Hills) give us a fascinating glimpse of the inside of the house, a chance to see what a family home looked like in pre-war Hong Kong.

(Courtesy: Mandy Parkes)
One's attention is drawn to the old-fashioned radio set. In those pre-television days, the radio was a popular form of entertainment in the privacy of one's own home, although there was only one radio channel (ZBX) in Hong Kong. The radio programmes for the day were included in the daily newspapers.  The comfortable armchairs arranged around the hearth and the books on the coffee table all tell of a comfortable family home. Hong Kong winters could get quite cold especially on the Peak and the fireplace would have been well used.
(Courtesy: Mandy Parkes)
A cosy dining room one's attention is drawn to the fireplace and the mantlepiece with the mantle clock which had to be wound up by hand and the hydrangeas.
(Courtesy: Mandy Parkes)
A cosy alcove fitted with a couch and a desk for writing letters in the pre-digital world where the word email did not exist. Photographs of family on the desk and the painting of a boy in the alcove is Stuart .
(Courtesy: Mandy Parkes)
Sunlight shining through the windows, this was a bright and happy home with a spectacular view across the harbour. It was a house of many windows. When the war started the house built in 1922 with its memories of happier days was badly damaged by shelling from across the harbour and aerial bombing. It was left in ruins. The family sold it after the war and it was demolished in 1955 and a new house built on the plot.
   The letter below was written to the owner of 29, The Peak by Stuart Hills in 1984 hoping to see the house on a trip he was planning on making to Hong Kong in 1985 by then he was aged sixty and living in Tonbridge, Kent. Of course, at that time the original house had been demolished and rebuilt.




A glimpse of  pre-war Hong Kong from family albums

These following photographs are taken from the family album and show Hong Kong scenes before the war.


The peaceful village of Aberdeen with Brick Hill in the background (Courtesy: Mandy Parkes)

Dragon boat racing before the war (Courtesy: Mandy Parkes)

The HK Club Building, the Cenotaph and the statue of Queen Victoria in pre-war Hong Kong                                 (Courtesy: Mandy Parkes)

View across the  Harbour in pre-war Hong Kong (Courtesy: Mandy Parkes)
…………

Acknowledgements:

My thanks to Stuart Hills' daughter Mandy Parkes (neé Hills) for permission to use the family photographs and for providing me with other information relating to her family's history in Hong Kong.

My thanks to Peter Gesner Van der Voort for allowing me to re-produce the 1954 photo from his family collection which shows No. 29 The Peak still in ruins from its wartime damage.

My thanks to David Bellis, local historian in Hong Kong, who established the Hong Kong history web site Gwulo.com for allowing me access to photographs published on www.gwulo.com and other assistance so helpfully given.


4 comments:

  1. Just read James Holland's "Brother in Arms" where Stuart Hill's family is mentioned as being interned. Came across your posting and was glad to see they somehow survived interment.

    thanks to you and Mandy
    Dan

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  2. Thank you so much Philip for posting all this information on Edith Hills and her family. I am an Australian war nurse historian and I knew that Edith was in Stanley Internment camp but not those other details. Would appreciate more details about the MID if you have them - contactable via my website. kind regards Kirsty

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  3. Hi Kirsty: Thank you for your message. MiD's sometimes have citations but often do not. I am not aware - nor is family of there being any citation detailing the reason for the award. Suffice to say she acted very calm when a machine gun was trained on her. During the battle raging around the hospital she acted with gallantry and cool leadership. They had taken in a wounded Japanese officer who succumbed to his injuries - Edith and I think the Acting Matron (Mary Currie) treated the Japanese officer's body with respect wrapping a Japanese flag he carried round his body - when the Japanese discovered this it may have averted the brutality (rape and killing) that happened at other hospitals in HK.

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