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Battle Banner – Santa Fe New Mexican

Battle Banner – Santa Fe New Mexican

“The only time my father would ever talk to me or someone else other than his [Army] friends for his experiences [in the Philippines and Japan]”, Says Bill Cox,” it was when I heard him say something to one of my drinking friends, and after he expedited, I asked my father about it. “

The 77 -year -old Cox is the son of the late CPL. Oscar Avery Cox, which serves in battery F from the 200th Coast Artillery of the National Guard of New Mexico. The Elder Cox Was Born in 1922 in Corona, Lincoln County, Grew Up in Artesia, and Joined the National Guard at Age 19. He Was Deployed, Along With More Than Gieri The summer of 1941 of these troops, 829 died, and 987 survived after the test that awaited them in Asia.

In the Philippines, CPL. Cox survived the battle of Bataan, March of the death of Bataan and his internment in various Pow camps. He passed the trip on a hell of a ship to the Japanese archipelago. It was closed at the largest POW camp in Japan, Fukuoka Pop Camp #17, by Mitsui Miike Mine Mine, also the biggest in Japan, where CPL. Cox and other allied prisoners and Chinese prisoners worked and many died. He encountered hunger, illness, beatings, despair and the death of hundreds of young men like him.







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Veteran, former PoS and author Ralph Rodriguez (1917-2018) from New Mexico is one of the subjects in Hampton Sides’ book Ghostly soldiersS










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