Skip to content

About George C. Brundrett

About the author: George C. Brundrett (June 25, 1911 — July 4, 1945). Captain, US Army. Born in Texas. Graduate of Texas A&M ’33. Find A Grave contains the following information:

Capt. George Brundrett was held as a POW in the Philippine Islands. In December 1944, he was boarded onto the Oryoku Maru for transport to Japan. The ship was sunk by American planes at Subic Bay, Philippine Islands, on December 15, 1944. The surviving POWs were boarded onto the Enoura Maru which reached Takao, Formosa. While docked it was bombed by American planes on January 9, 1945, killing many of the POWs. The surviving POWs were boarded onto the Brazil Maru and reached Japan on January 29, 1945. Brundrett was taken to Fukuoka #1 where he died.

About the diary: The diary covers incarceration as a P.O.W. including time at DAPECOL (Davao Penal Colony) to transfer to Cabanatuan. Included in the Philippine Diary Project through the kind assistance of Robert Hudson who originally posted a portion of the diary in his BataanSon PhotoBucket account composed of twelve pages, typed, with the first entry is dated October 4, 1943, and the last entry is dated October 8, 1944. However, the cover of the file itself states the diary covers the period “Aug. 1942 — Oct. 1943,” with the source being “Cabanatuan Prisoner of War Camp.” This is in fact preserved in two items in the National Archives, Record Group 407 (Records of the Adjutant General’s Office, 1905 – 1981), Series: Diaries and Historical Narratives, 1940 – 1945. Folder 2 and Folder 3. The entries have been transcribed as typed, with only occasional edits in [italicized underlined text between brackets] to suggest possible meanings.