Thanks Kenneth, I really enjoyed this, it's a fascinating story. I wonder if you know whether your grandfather was working in business full-time in Kunming or if he was also still doing some engineering/logistics work for the government?
Hi, I don't know much about what the family did while they were in Kunming. My grandfather wrote that he did not do much during the war years, but somehow made enough from “various deals on commissions” to live comfortably. While my grandmother recorded that "in Kunming the family "lived on the Second (上二) street. We had a jewelry store."
February 3, 2023 at 9:50 PM
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Our Family's Journey
[Image]
Strategic Hui Tong Suspension Bridge 惠通橋 over the Salween River -- US Army 2-½ ton
CCKW "Jimmy" cargo truck
towing a Howitzer -- (US National Archives)
The Backdoor to China
Between 1937 and 1938, China built the Yunnan-Burma Road as a backdoor supply
route during Second Sino-Japanese War. The Chinese government depended on this
road to transport materiel through Britain's colonial possessions in Burma and
India to Chungking in Central China. Supplies were transferred from ships
docked at Burma's capital, Rangoon, to rail cars bound for Lashio. From the
Lashio railhead, trucks transported the materiel over the Burma Road to
Kunming in China's Southwestern Yunnan Province. The road became one of
China's main lifelines after China lost sea-access along its Eastern and
Southern coasts.
When full scale war broke out between China and Japan, my grandfather
HONG Hock How
was a professor of electrical engineering at National Sun Yat Sen University
in Canton, and Japan was swiftly occupying much of coastal China. In
June 1938, Hock How moved his wife, Tui Goon, and their children, Larry, Jack,
Paul, and Lily, to Hong Kong, while his
parents
stayed behind in their family village.
Hock How went ahead to Rangoon, Burma, where he lead the Works Department of
the Rangoon Truck Assembly Plant for the Chinese government, and was charged
with assembling 2,000 Dodge trucks then 500 Ford trucks. Tui Goon and the
children eventually rejoined Hock How in Rangoon. Over 16 months, Hock How's
team built the trucks from complete knocked-down condition. After the truck
chassis and wooden bodies were assembled, they were loaded with war materials
and driven to Chungking, China along the Burma Road.
The 717 mile Burma Road was built by 200,000 Burmese, Chinese, and local
minorities. Hock How described the route in his autobiography:
"The road distance from the Burma border to Kunming is only about 600 miles
but a portion of the road is narrow, dangerous, and goes over the [Hui Tong
惠通] Mountains, 12,000 feet
above sea level. It usually takes six days for the journey over this
distance."
The road connected existing trails and was upgraded "stone by stone" to handle
heavy truck traffic through both the wet and dry seasons. Laborers often
pulled large stone rollers by hand to level and pack the road surface. Once
completed the road had to be continuously upgraded and maintained. The Hui
Tong and Gongguo 功果 suspension
bridges were also improved to support fully loaded vehicle traffic across
the Salween and Mekong rivers (known in Chinese as the Nu
怒江 and Lancang
瀾滄江 rivers, respectively).
[Image]
Map of Yunnan Supply Routes, 1938-1945 (Routes and
Japanese Area of Control are approximations. Any errors are
mine.)
Fall of Rangoon
The Japanese invaded Burma in December 1941 in order to cutoff this critical
supply line and to secure Burma's petroleum, mining, and agricultural
resources. As Hong Kong and Singapore fell and Burma was threatened, HONG Hock
How decided to evacuate his family to Kunming. At the end of February
1942, Hock How drove an “Austin 12” (12 HP passenger car), with a hired
driver following in a truck loaded with company goods. A week later, on March
7, the British Burma Army evacuated the Burmese capital and it fell to the
Japanese.
[Image]
Austin Heavy 12 coupe (c1928 model) in Sepia - Manchester, England
1976
(CC BY 2.5)
[Image]
Convoy with Chinese Troops in Salween Gorge, 30 Jan. 1945 (US National Archives)
Hock How and his family arrived safely in Kunming in late-March 1942.
Remembering their narrow escape over the mountains Hock How later wrote, "Some
people, who were slow and were unlucky, and did not get over the [Hui Tong]
suspension bridge soon enough, were caught by the Japanese either as prisoners
or had to run away and walk over the [Hui Tong] mountains.” In her memoir
written in 1980, Tui Goon had a similar recollection of the family's flight
through the mountains:
"We traveled in an Austin car and a 3-ton truck load with steel bars for
Chiang Kai Shek. The invading Japanese army were close behind us, but we
were lucky and arrived in [Kunming] safely, although the trip took over a
month on the Burma Road."
[Image]
Japanese Conquest of Burma April-May 1942 (Public Domain
work of the US Federal Government)
Following the fall of Rangoon, the Japanese forces pressed the Burma Army
north and to the west toward British India and Chinese Armies toward the east
along the Burma Road. The Japanese advance was eventually halted at the
Chindwin River near the Indian border and Salween River in China. As Hock
How's account alludes, the Hui Tong bridge was a critical choke point on the
Salween River with only one lane of traffic that could support one fully
loaded truck at a time. On May 5, 1942, Japanese forces reached the bridge but
the Chinese blew it up before the Japanese could capture the bridge and cross
to the other side. The western bank of Salween River would marked Japan's
deepest advance of the war into western Yunnan.
Search for Alternative Supply Routes
Despite the stalemate along the Salween River, Japan had temporarily achieved
its goal of closing China's backdoor. With the Burma Road cutoff, the allies
were forced to airlift supplies over The Hump from airfields in Assam, British
India, which was in northeastern India and connected by rail to Calcutta.
On December 1, 1942, British and American commanders agreed to establish a
land route from India to Kunming starting from the town of Ledo. The Ledo Road
would snake down into Burma reaching the towns of Shingbwiyang, Myitkyina, and
Bhamo before meeting the Burma Road at the Mong-Yu junction between Lashio and
Wanting.
During this time, Hock How continued to work on commission after arriving in
Kunming, and he and his family lived comfortably. Larry, Jack, and Paul
attended school and learned the Yunnan dialect. In July 1943, Tui Goon and
Hock How's fifth child, Mary, was born. Tui Goon recalled that "we lived on
the Second (上二) Street. Hock How
had a jewelry store. Larry went to Wu Wha Middle School. Jack, Paul, and Lily
attended grade school."
In a conversation in September 2009, Jack recalled:
"We knew that the war was going on because the Japanese airplanes would fly
in and were being shot down by the Flying Tigers*. So, we knew that there
was an alarm that we could read from the lantern on the police station in
the middle of the street. Green was clear, yellow was caution, red means
that they are coming. So we had to find a place to hide."
The new Ledo Road eventually stretched 465 miles from Ledo to the Mong-Yu
junction, spanned 10 major rivers and 155 secondary streams (averaging more
than one bridge every 3 miles). The road was build by 15,000 American soldiers
and 35,000 local workers using modern gas powered equipment. It cost 1,100
American and many more local lives, and US$150 million. The road took two
years to complete with the first convoy of 113 vehicles arriving in Kunming on
February 4, 1945. By the wars end, an estimated 147,000 tons of supplies had
been delivered over the road.
[Image]
Crowds in Kunming Cheer the Arrival of First Convey, February 1945 (US
National Archives)
The combined Ledo-Burma Road, which now stretched 1,072 miles, was named the
Stilwell Road by Chinese leader Chiang-Kai Shek after American General Joseph
W. Stilwell. At the outset of World War II, Stilwell, who had been a military
attache in China, became Chiang-Kai Shek's chief-of-staff and commanded the
Chinese Fifth and Sixth armies in Burma. Stilwell also served as the
commanding general of all US troops in the China-Burma-India theater
Despite the Ledo Road's successful completion, it was not without controversy.
According to the creator of the website cbi-theater.com, Carl W. Weidenburner:
"The usefulness of the Ledo Road was debated both before its construction
and after its completion... As it neared completion and until well after the
war ended, many pointed out that it never lived-up to the original estimates
of capacity as a supply line."
Although the Ledo Road supplied far less tonnage than The Hump, the effort had
other benefits. As road construction wound its way into Burma, it became
easier to supply the troops in Burma who were pressuring the Japanese Army
from the north. Then with the capture of the airfield at Myitkyina, flights
over the Hump were able "to fly a more southerly route without fear of
Japanese fighters, thus shortening and flattening the Hump trip with
astonishing results." At that point, air deliveries more than doubled between
June and November 1944 from 18,000 to 39,000 tons.
Weidenburner concludes:
"As the road was built it served as a combat highway enabling the reconquest
of Burma, serviced a pipeline that paralleled it to carry fuel all the way
to China, and allowed safer more southerly routes for airlift flights to
China. The accomplishment of building the Ledo Road stands as a testament to
the men responsible and the American spirit that made it possible."
Over the Hump and Back Down the Road
In July 1945 with the end of the war in sight, Hock How decided to take Larry
to the New York to attend school. They first flew over the Hump to Calcutta,
then spent four months arranging for passage on a freighter going to Port
Angels, Maine. In December 1945, they finally arrived in New York.
A year and a half later, Hock How returned to Rangoon by way of San Francisco
and Shanghai. With contracts in hand with International Harvester, Packard
Motors, British Motors, and Cummins Diesel Engines, Hock How opened an office
and showroom for Jing Hong Trading Corporation. In 1947, Tui Goon hired a
truck for their belongings and returned to Rangoon with the rest of their
children via the Burma Road.
* Footnote: The Flying Tigers - American Heroes of the CBI Theatre
The First American Volunteer Group (AVG) of the Republic of China Air
Force was formed as a mercenary group to help oppose the Japanese
invasion of China. Operating in the China Burma India Theatre from
1941–1942, the AVG was nicknamed the Flying Tigers and commanded by
Claire Lee Chennault. Of the original group of 99 pilots and 200
ground crew, nine to twelve were Chinese Americans. The group became
famous for its ability to inflict outsize damage on Japan's
better-equipped and larger aircraft fleet.
The AVG were equipped with Curtis P-40B Warhawk aircraft which where
characterized by good pilot armor, self-sealing fuel tanks, sturdy
construction, heavy armament, and a higher diving speed than most
Japanese aircraft. The fighters were marked with Chinese colors and
painted with a large, distinctive shark face on the front of the
aircraft.
[Image]
Hell's Angels, the 3rd Squadron of the 1st American Volunteer
Group "Flying Tigers," 1942
(R. T. Smith, copy at SDASM Archives, Public domain, via
Wikimedia Commons)
Chennault developed a "dive-and-zoom" combat doctrine to exploit the
unique qualities of the P-40's and the fact that they were not as
maneuverable or as numerous as the Japanese fighters. Chennault
instructed his pilots to take on enemy aircraft in teams from an
altitude advantage. They avoided entering into turning dogfights with
the nimble Japanese fighters, and instead executed diving or slashing
attacks then dove away to set up additional attacks.
To gain full advantage of these tactics, Chennault created an early
warning network of spotters in hundreds of small villages, in isolated
outposts, in hills and caves, stretching from near Canton through all
Free China to the northwest. These stations were equipped with radios
and telephones to warn of approaching Japanese planes and allow the
fighters time to take off and climb to a superior altitude before
engaging the Japanese.
In November 1941, the AVG were assigned to opposite ends of the Burma
Road to protect this vital lifeline. They engaged in one of the first
successful actions against the Japanese after Pearl Harbor, and
participated in the defense of Rangoon.
On March 23, 1942, around the same time the Hong family was fleeing
along the Burma Road, the AVG retreated to China crossing the Hui Tong
suspension bridge--later returning to destroy it. Over four days in
early May, the group flew continuous bombing and strafing missions
into the the mile-deep Salween River Gorge to neutralize Japanese
efforts to build a pontoon bridge over the river. With the Burma
campaign effectively over, Chennault redeployed his squadrons to
provide for the air defense of China.
[Image]
"Blood chit" issued to the AVG Flying Tigers. The Chinese reads:
"This foreign person has come to China to help in the
war effort. Soldiers and civilians should rescue,
protect, and provide medical care. (Uploaded by
Cubdriver at English Wikipedia. CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons)
According to NPR's James Doubek:
"Flying Tigers historians are quick to point out how essential
ordinary Chinese people were to the mission. Those who paved runways
did so as volunteers, [Macalester College professor of Chinese and
Japanese History Yue-him] Tam says, 'to help the American fighters
because they were fighting for China, fighting for freedom.'
"Chinese villagers also suffered immensely to help when pilots were
shot down. 'The Japanese would go into these villages and they would
torture and mutilate and kill the villagers in an attempt to find
out where the Flying Tigers were. And in most instances, the
villagers would not tell them,' [Flying Tiger Historical
Organization President Larry] Jobe says. 'They would suffer the
consequences.'"
By July 1942, the AVG was incorporated into the United States Army Air
Forces' 23rd Fighter Group, which went on to achieve similar combat
success, while retaining the shark nose art on the remaining P-40s.
The Flying Tigers were officially credited with 297 enemy aircraft
destroyed, a similar number of unconfirmed, and only 14 AVG pilots
killed in action, captured, or missing in combat. Their record is
unmatched to this day.
Sources:
“Burma Road.” Wikipedia, Wikimedia Foundation, 18 May 2021,
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burma_Road. Accessed 09 June 2021.
Doubek, James. “The Flying Tigers: How a Group of Americans Ended up Fighting
for China in WW II.” NPR, 19 Dec. 2021,
www.npr.org/2021/12/19/1062091832/flying-tigers-americans-china-world-war-ii...
Accessed 20 May 2023.
“Flying Tigers.” Wikipedia, Wikimedia Foundation, 20 May 2023,
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flying_Tigers. Accessed 20 May 2023.
HONG, Hock How. Autobiography, 7 February 1979.
HONG, Tui Goon. Autobiography recorded by Larry Hong, August 1980.
“Introduction to the Old Burma Road.” Burma Road, 29 Dec. 2018,
burma-road.com/introduction.html. Accessed 09 June 2021.
Tuchman, Barbara W. (1971).
Stilwell and the American Experience in China, 1911-45. Macmillan. p. 484
Weidenburner , Carl W. “The Ledo Road CHINA-BURMA-INDIA.” The Ledo Road,
www.cbi-theater.com/ledoroad/Ledo_Page_One.html.
2 Comments
Close this window Jump to comment formThanks Kenneth, I really enjoyed this, it's a fascinating story. I wonder if you know whether your grandfather was working in business full-time in Kunming or if he was also still doing some engineering/logistics work for the government?
January 7, 2022 at 9:21 AM
Hi, I don't know much about what the family did while they were in Kunming. My grandfather wrote that he did not do much during the war years, but somehow made enough from “various deals on commissions” to live comfortably. While my grandmother recorded that "in Kunming the family "lived on the Second (上二) street. We had a jewelry store."
February 3, 2023 at 9:50 PM