WWII 80: Prisoners of War | September 4, 2025

WWII 80: Highlights from the Truman Library
Prisoners of War
September 4, 1945
To Private Luther D. Bass and the hundreds of other Allied survivors of Tokyo POW Camp #8B, time must have seemed like it slowed to a crawl in early September 1945. Bass and many of his fellow prisoners of war had been captives of the Japanese for over three years, suffering hunger and forced labor. Now the war was over and they had been evacuated to the town of Onahoma to await liberation. Yet it would take several days for American forces to reach Onahoma. How had Bass survived his captivity, and how would he and his fellow POWs endure their anxious wait for liberation?
For the millions of occupied peoples and thousands of Allied soldiers captured by the Japanese during the war, conditions were often horrific.
While no nation, Allied or Axis, ended the war with a spotless record, Japanese troops gained notoriety for their cruelty toward prisoners. Early in the war, Japan had pledged to follow the protocols of the 1929 Geneva Convention—which forbade mistreatment of POWs—but Japanese leaders violated this agreement, encouraging their soldiers to brutalize enemy captives.
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Japanese troops used some POWs for bayonet practice, tortured and starved others, and forced many to perform hard labor. Nearly one third of American POWs held by the Japanese died in captivity.
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Private Luther D. Bass, a native of Georgia, was captured with thousands of other Americans when the Philippines fell to the Japanese in the spring of 1942. Unlike many of his fellow POWs, Bass survived two years of imprisonment in the Philippines. In March 1944, the Japanese loaded him and about 300 other men aboard a ship bound for Japan. Japanese POW transport vessels were called “hell ships” for their terrible conditions, and were frequently attacked by Allied ships and aircraft. After the 300 prisoners landed safely in Osaka, Bass and his fellow POWs were sent to a mining camp called Hitachi or Tokyo #8B. The following month, the ship they had traveled on was sunk by an American submarine.
The new inmates of Tokyo #8B became slave laborers in copper mines along with captive Koreans.
Conditions were certainly poor, but they could have been worse. “I remember no incidents of brutality,” American POW Martin S. Christie later wrote. “Occasionally someone got slapped around but nothing of a serious nature. The Japanese Camp Commander was a graduate of Northeastern University and the interpreter was a mixture of Japanese-Caucasian ancestry. Working conditions in the mines were rough, but the [Japanese] civilian workers were in the most part kind to us.” Bass, Christie, and their fellow prisoners lived and worked in the camp for the next 16 months.
Relief for Allied prisoners of Japan finally appeared on the horizon in August 1945 when Emperor Hirohito agreed to surrender. Recent days had been tense—especially since some Japanese officials apparently argued for the execution of all prisoners should the Allies invade. Fortunately, Japan’s surrender saved the country from invasion and possibly many prisoners’ lives.
On August 26, Luther Bass and the inmates of Tokyo #8B received a welcome present from a U. S. Army B-29 bomber: an airdrop of badly needed food and clothing. Bass — whose American pride had survived more than three years of captivity — cut and sewed parachutes from the supply drop into an American flag.
With their guards gone, the former POWs left for Onahoma on September 2 to await rescue by a U. S. Navy ship.
However, in what must have been a maddening delay, a failure in communication kept the POWs in Onahoma for another week. Fortunately, relations with the Japanese residents of the town were friendly. The former POWs finally received new instructions from the high command directing them to Tokyo.
While his homeward odyssey took several more weeks, Luther Bass eventually returned to Georgia. The flag that he had stitched together out of parachutes and patriotism also survived, and in 1973 fellow Tokyo #8B prisoner Earl R. Short donated it to the Harry S. Truman Library and Museum.

More to Explore
- Relive history in The White House Decision Center. Step back to 1945 and into the roles of President Truman, J. Robert Oppenheimer and other West Wing advisors. How will WWII end? You decide.
“WWII 80” SERIES
Eighty years ago, World War II ended under President Truman’s decisive leadership. “WWII 80” uses historic artifacts, eyewitness accounts, and consequential documents from the vaults of the Truman Library and National Archives to highlight key moments in the war’s final months–from the Battle of the Bulge and liberation of Dachau to the unconditional surrender of Japan.
To view previous posts, visit this link.
PHOTOS
Top: United States prisoners of the Tokyo Prisoner of War Camp Number 8, posing with an American flag handmade by Luther Bass from parachutes that dropped food and clothes to the men, August 26, 1945.
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