General Information | ||
Rank: | First Name: | Second Name: |
---|---|---|
Private | John | |
From: | Enlistment Region: | Date of Birth (y-m-d): |
West Kildonan MB | Manitoba | 1913-01-01 |
Appointment: | Company: | Platoon: |
HQ Coy |
Members of 'C' Force from the East travelled across Canada by CNR troop train, picking up reinforcements enroute. Stops included Valcartier, Montreal, Ottawa, Armstrong ON, Capreol ON, Winnipeg, Melville SK, Saskatoon, Edmonton, Jasper, and Vancouver, arriving in Vancouver on Oct 27 at 0800 hrs.
The Winnipeg Grenadiers and the local soldiers that were with Brigade Headquarters from Winnipeg to BC travelled on a CPR train to Vancouver.
All members embarked from Vancouver on the ships AWATEA and PRINCE ROBERT. AWATEA was a New Zealand Liner and the PRINCE ROBERT was a converted cruiser. "C" Company of the Rifles was assigned to the PRINCE ROBERT, everyone else boarded the AWATEA. The ships sailed from Vancouver on Oct 27th and arrived in Hong Kong on November 16th, having made brief stops enroute at Honolulu and Manila.
Equipment earmarked for 'C' Force use was loaded on the ship DON JOSE, but would never reach Hong Kong as it was rerouted to Manila when hostilities commenced.
On arrival, all troops were quartered at Nanking Barracks, Sham Shui Po Camp, in Kowloon.
We do not have specific battle information for this soldier in our online database. For a detailed description of the battle from a Canadian perspective, visit Canadian Participation in the Defense of Hong Kong (published by the Historical Section, Canadian Military Headquarters).
Date Wounded | Wound Description | References |
---|---|---|
41/12/19 | N/A |
Camp ID | Camp Name | Location | Company | Type of Work | Arrival Date | Departure Date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
HK-NP-01 | North Point | North Point, Hong Kong Island | 41 Dec 20 | 41 Dec 22 | ||
HK-SA-01 | Shamshuipo | Kowloon, Hong Kong | Capture | 42 Jan 22 | ||
HK-NP-02 | North Point | North Point, Hong Kong Island | 42 Jan 22 | 42 Sep 26 | ||
HK-SA-02 | Shamshuipo | Kowloon, Hong Kong | 42 Sep 26 | 45 Sep 10 |
Transport Mode | Arrival Destination | Arrival Date | Comments |
---|---|---|---|
USS Gosper | Victoria | 1945-10-12 | Manila to Victoria, BC 1936 British and CDNS |
No other or additional related information found. Please submit documents to us using the contact link at the top of this page.
No other or additional related information found. Please submit documents to us using the contact link at the top of this page.
No other or additional related information found. Please submit documents to us using the contact link at the top of this page.
Date of Death (y-m-d) | Cause of Death | Death Class | |
---|---|---|---|
1968-07-07 | Drowning | Post War | |
Cemetery Location | Cemetery | Grave Number | Gravestone Marker |
Winnipeg Manitoba Canada |
No other or additional related information found. Please submit documents to us using the contact link at the top of this page.
John was born in Winnipeg, Manitoba, in January 1912, and was working as a cook for the Manitoba Department of Highways at the time of the outbreak of hostilities in September 1939. Enlisting in the Winnipeg Grenadiers, he served for 16 months in Jamaica and Bermuda before being embarked for Hong Kong in October 1941.
What followed in the desperate struge to defend the colony that December resulted in the decimation of the regimert’s ranks - one of its nurrilzer Company Sergeant-Major John Osborn, winning the Victoria Cross for his gallantry in the fighting on 19 December. For his own part, Hoosha was among those to be taken prisoner and, as verified by his War Crimes Office interview on being released in September 1945, he was witness to some of the more unpleasant aspects of Japanese hospitality - thus mention of him seeing Major Atkinson and Captain Norris being beaten and kicked, in addition to a Medical Orderly.
Awarded $81 CDN in repsect of loss of personal posssessions while a POW, including his gold signet ring and his wrist watc, Hoosha was discharged back in Winnipeg in April 1946.
There may be more information on this individual available elsewhere on our web sites - please use the search tool found in the upper right corner of this page to view sources.
John Hoosha had been a cook in the Winnipeg Grenadiers. He was a bit older than I was, and was then married. We became friends when we met in the hospital. I used to laugh at the way he approached every situation, and his brash and sometimes spicy way of expressing his opinion. I visited John one Sunday morning in 1963 at his home in West Kildonan when Edwina and the boys and I were passing through on our way to Dawson City. I was saddened to learn that his life ended tragically not many years after that. Taken from Memories Uninvited.
End of Report.
Report generated: 27 Apr 2025.
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