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Ben
Steele: From Bataan to Hiroshima
Reprinted with permission from ArtMontana.com
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Ben Steele was one of the American soldiers captured
in the Philippines at the beginning of World War II. His
three and one half years as a prisoner began with what
is known as the "Bataan Death March" and he
was later interned in several labor camps. His captivity
ended after working in a Japanese coal mine less than
80 miles from ground zero of the atomic bomb that was
dropped on Hiroshima.
Benjamin Charles Steele was born in Roundup, Montana,
in 1917, the son of ranchers. Life on the ranch was difficult
but there were good times, too. Ben enjoyed hunting and
fishing with his father, but didn't like going to school
very much. He would rather be riding his horse. Often,
he would raise his hand for permission to go to the bathroom
(an outhouse). Once he was outside, he would saddle up
his horse and head home. This wasn't very popular with
either his mom or the teacher.
The stock market crash in 1929 coupled with a severe drought
in the early 30's meant financial hardships for the Steele
family. Unable to make enough money on the ranch or to
find another job, Ben's father set up a still in the mountains
and began to bootleg whiskey. The money from that operation
kept the family going for about three years. After his
father was arrested for bootlegging and was sent to jail,
Ben and his mother kept the operation going from their
house.
Ben graduated from high school in 1939 and in 1940 joined
the Army Air Corps. He enjoyed his training as a recruit.
Compared to the life on the ranch, it wasn't much of a
challenge. He got to sleep in past 4:30 a.m., didn't have
to work so hard, and the food was good. That was soon
to change.
In late 1941, the 19th Bomb Group, to which Ben was assigned,
was stationed at Clark Field in the Philippines. At their
Thanksgiving dinner that year, their Commanding Officer,
Major Davis, told them to enjoy their dinner, since it
might be a long time before they had another one like
it. It turned out that he was right. On December 8, those
stationed at Clark Field received the news that Pearl
Harbor had been attacked by the Japanese. Later that night,
Clark Field was bombed.
On Christmas Day, the soldiers at Clark Field were given
the order to move to Bataan. There, they were on the front
lines of the battle against the Japanese. Food rations
were cut in half, and medicine was scarce. The soldiers
killed and ate all of the domestic animals they could
find, and stripped the fruit trees. They were constantly
hungry. By April 9, when Bataan was surrendered to the
Japanese, the soldiers were in poor shape physically and
were disillusioned because of the lack of support from
the U.S. government.
The Bataan Death March
Ben Steele was one of 8,000 American and 40,000 Filipino
prisoners to make the long march off the Bataan Peninsula.
The group at Clark Field joined POW's coming from farther
south. They were told that trucks were waiting up the
road to transport them, but they didn't believe it. It
did turn out that there were trucks along the way, but
none of them were used to carry prisoners.
It might not have been too hard for healthy men to make
that trek, but most of the POW's were weak from exhaustion
and lack of food. For the six days that Ben was on the
march, the prisoners were only fed two cups of rice. The
Japanese soldiers seemed to enjoy tormenting them, and
they were not shown any mercy. They were forced to walk
close together, and if they stumbled or fell they would
be bayoneted or shot. At the beginning of the march, they
walked all one day, all night, and all the next day without
food or water or rest. On the third day they were fed
a scanty cup of rice. They were not given water, and many
men drank from polluted pools of water on the side of
the road. Even if they were successful in getting a drink
without being caught by the guards, they still might die
from drinking the stagnant water.
Ben lost track of time on the march, and didn't know for
years how long it really was. He did know that many prisoners
died from starvation, disease, heat, and brutality. They
lived with the constant fear that they might be killed,
as many were. Some of the prisoners began to believe that
the dead were the lucky ones.
Camp O'Donnell and the Tayabas Road Detail
They finally reached the town of San Fernando, where they
were loaded into boxcars and taken to Camp O'Donnell,
where more than 2,000 American soldiers died within the
first six weeks of imprisonment. On the first of June,
the Japanese told the American officers in charge at the
camp that 325 men were needed for a work detail away from
camp. Ben was one of the soldiers selected to go. The
Tayabas Road detail was even more difficult than the March,
especially since none of the soldiers knew when it would
be over. For most, it would end in death. Out of the original
325 soldiers, Ben was one of only 50 who survived the
work camp.
After working on the Tayabas Road Detail, Ben became so
ill from beriberi, dysentery, pneumonia, blood poisoning,
and malaria that he could no longer work. He was interned
at Bilibid Prison for eighteen months. During that time
he began to record with his drawings the extent of human
degradation and cruelty prisoners were subjected to. He
did so at great risk. The consequences of being caught
making these drawings could have resulted in severe punishment
or death. He provides this record as a tribute to those
who did not survive and as an expression of what he experienced.
The drawings were done before Steele had any formal art
training. He did many drawings on whatever scraps of paper
he could find and with whatever he could use to make a
mark. The drawings were hidden and kept, but did not survive
the sinking of a transport boat that was taking the prisoners
to the Japanese Mainland. Steele later produced these
drawings from memory. Two drawings that he did while he
worked in a coal mine on the Japanese mainland did survive.
Most of the drawings and 3 paintings are now in the collection
of Montana State University -- Billings Foundation.
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