14

Prisoner of war
14 October 1942
Transcona, Manitoba, Canada
TEXT ATTACHMENT


15

For those who survived and returned, many never spoke of their experiences.

16

Map showing Prisoner of War Camps in the Far East
January 1945
141 Regent Avenue West, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
TEXT ATTACHMENT


17

Lance Sergeant James M. "Jim" Thom was taken as a Prisoner of War (POW) on Christmas Day 1941. He was in the same camp as Bob Nixon and these two men maintained a strong bond and friendship. As a POW, Jim Thom was forced to labour in a mine.

18

An example of an envelope used by Jim Thom to write to his father
3 December 1943
Transcona, Manitoba, Canada
TEXT ATTACHMENT


19

Back at home in Transcona, Jim's sister Ina kept a scrapbook of telegrams, newspaper clippings as well as the correspondence of the Thom family that included censored letters written between P.O.W. Jim Thom and his father, Transcona Police Chief Alex Thom, and sisters Ina and Olive from 1942 to 1945.

20

A card from the Maxwell family
1941
Transcona, Manitoba, Canada
TEXT ATTACHMENT


21

Lance Sergeant James M. "Jim" Thom, who was interned 4 ½ years by the Japanese as a Prisoner of War, was liberated on September 16, 1945. Jim Thom returned to his hometown of Transcona, Manitoba.

22

Certificate of gratitude from King George, as awarded to Jim Thom
1945
Transcona, Manitoba, Canada


23

Jim Thom's National Registration Certificate
17 January 1946
Transcona, Manitoba, Canada


24

After having endured years of hardship including sickness, starvation, and torture, the Hong Kong P.O.W.s were welcomed home by King and Country.

25

Pte. R.J. Nixon was taken as a prisoner of war in Hong Kong
1941
Jamaica
TEXT ATTACHMENT


26

Jim Thom's sacrifices as a POW are being recognized because of the generous contribution by his family of his letters and life story. The scrapbooks they kept during the war years tell a gripping story of the lives of Transcona men and the impact their captivity had on the families at home.