Book cover for Remembering.....Horowhenua and the Second World War by Linda Fletcher.
Stories from the Horowhenua Chronicle archives feature in a new book to be launched by Adopt an Anzac on VJ Day.
Interviews with servicemen who came home after World War II, originally published in the paper, have enhanced the content of the book, which follows the format of research group's
first book, Horowhenua and the Great War, 1914-1918 with photos and pen portraits of the men who died.
Remembering…Horowhenua and the Second World War also features stories from soldiers, sailors, airmen, nurses, prisoners of war, a war widow, a war orphan, WAACs, a Normandy veteran and home guards as well as the people who stayed behind and took care of things on the home front.
Among them is a POW, who was in hospital when Italy capitulated, who went to work with the partisans and spent the next two years blowing up bridges and even robbing a bank; a rear gunner on an RAF Wellington bomber who became a prisoner of war and made a model of a clipper ship, now displayed in the Levin RSA, which was smuggled out of the camp in the empty trouser leg of an amputee being repatriated; another POW survived the sinking of a ship transporting prisoners from North African battles to camps in Italy; a soldier who returned to Crete after the war as part of a body retrieval party; and a Post and Telegraph radio operator, a Coastwatcher in the islands, who was executed by the Japanese and whose work wasn't recognised until 72 years later.
Two of the people featured in the book, Nell Dowling and Tony Jones Snr will be at the launch.