By Kansas Historical Society
A temporary exhibit at the Kansas Museum of History.
Portrait of James C. Hughes (1918/1920) by UnknownKansas Historical Society
James Clark Hughes led an extraordinary life. As a Kansan, Hughes is among a select number of soldiers who served in a major military expedition and two world wars. Through photographs, diaries, and personal effects, Hughes captured his service in great detail.
He took more than 600 images of his time at the Mexican border (1916) and in Europe (1919). As a Japanese prisoner of war during World War II he kept a daily diary and, upon liberation, brought home items from his imprisonment.
Later in his life Hughes and his family donated these items to the Kansas Museum of History. Now, through the record he left, his story can be told.
Like father, like son
Much of Hughes' life was patterned after his father and namesake Colonel James W.F. Hughes. The elder Hughes served as an adjutant general of the Kansas National Guard in the 1890s. He was also the mayor of Topeka and a community leader.
Like his father, Hughes wanted a military career. He joined the Kansas National Guard in 1905 as soon as he was old enough. By 1906 he was a sergeant and a trumpeter. Take a look at his bugle.
James C. Hughes' bugle (1905) by Kansas National GuardKansas Historical Society
Bugle used by Hughes as a trumpeter in the Kansas National Guard.
A decade after joining the Kansas National Guard, Hughes saw his first conflict in 1916 as a member of Field Artillery Battery A of the Kansas National Guard.
Postcard of Mexican Punitive Expedition soldiers (1916) by UnknownKansas Historical Society
The unit was dispatched to the Mexican Punitive Expedition, an effort to capture Mexican revolutionary Francisco “Pancho” Villa. Here soldiers are marching near San Antonio, Texas, 1916.
Autographic Camera (1914) by KodakKansas Historical Society
At this time cameras were popular but not abundant. The Kodak Autographic Camera was unique in that allowed a photographer to write on one side of the negative without exposing the image. Hughes used a stylus to label and date his pictures.
Villa was never captured but a war between Mexico and the United States was averted. Around this time Hughes began to develop his interest in photography. He used his new camera to photograph Kansas National Guard Officers at Eagle Pass.
World War I
On April 6, 1917, President Wilson asked Congress for a declaration of war against Germany. In Topeka, like cities across the country, patriotic parades were used for military recruitment. This picture captured Hughes in a parade riding his horse down Kansas Avenue.
130th Field Artilery Flag (1914/1918) by United States MilitaryKansas Historical Society
Captain Hughes was assigned to the newly formed U.S. Army 35th Division made up of 23,000 soldiers from Kansas and Missouri. He was one of 3 million soldiers to join the war effort. He took his camera with him.
Saturday Morning Inspection of Company C (1917-10-20) by James C. HughesKansas Historical Society
Arriving in August 1917, Hughes spent 10 months training at Camp Doniphan and Fort Sill, Oklahoma. Captain Hughes commanded the field artillery battery standing for inspection at Fort Sill, Oklahoma, October 20, 1917.
Fort Sill School of Fire (1918-03-07) by James C. HughesKansas Historical Society
In preparation for trench fighting in Europe soldiers experienced live artillery training in trenches at Fort Sill, Oklahoma, March 7, 1918.
On June 1,1918, Captain Hughes arrived in Liverpool, England. Nine days later the troops were marching across France.
Members of the U.S. occupation force pose in front shells (1919-02-20) by James C. HughesKansas Historical Society
Hughes’ battalion was constantly on the move, stopping in a different town almost daily before engaging in the Battle of Meuse-Argonne on September 26, 1918. This would be the final major Allied offensive in the war. The battle line stretched across the entire Western Front and lasted until the Armistice on November 11, 1918. It was the largest and deadliest battle in United States military history.
Captain Hughes spent seven months in Europe after the war as part of the army of occupation. Most of the photographs he took in Europe are from this time between November 1918 and June 1919. He recorded the devastation at Boureilles, France, January 31, 1919. Since Hughes was not an official army photographer he did not take pictures of fighting.
German officer’s helmet (1914/1918) by Deutsches HeerKansas Historical Society
Captain Hughes, like many other soldiers, documented his time in World War I with more than just photographs. He also collected “souvenirs.” This German officer’s helmet was discovered by Hughes on the battle front of the 35th Division near Les Eparges, France.
July 1919 Captain Hughes and fellow soldiers left Brest Harbor, France, aboard the U.S.S. Zeelandia on their way home.
At home
Hughes returned to Topeka and to his wife, Mabel, and four children. He decided to remain in the military, moving his family frequently during the next 20 years due to military down sizing. They lived everywhere from Maryland to Hawaii.
National Balloon Race (1924) by James C. HughesKansas Historical Society
Hughes continued to take photographs. On April 23, 1924, he captured the U.S. army balloon at the National Balloon Race in San Antonio, Texas. An estimated people 100,000 attended the event.
The military tradition in the Hughes family, dating back to the U.S. Civil War, continued with Hughes' children. Both sons attend West Point; both daughters married graduates of the U.S. Naval Academy. Here Hughes poses with his son James Renwick during the summer of 1934. All four sons and sons-in-law would join James C. Hughes in the next world war.
Return to war
On December 7, 1941, the Empire of Japan carried out a surprise attack on the naval base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. This flag flew on the USS Ralph Talbot, a destroyer anchored at Pearl Harbor. While the ship was sailing to safety Colonel Hughes was across the dateline where Japanese planes were bombing air fields in the Philippines. Congress declared war.
James C. Hughes' POW identification badge 56 (1942/1943) by UnknownKansas Historical Society
Hughes was part of the 10,000 U.S. troops sent to the Philippines a few months prior to the bombing of Pearl Harbor to prevent a possible Japanese invasion. As commander of a field artillery battalion, he first engaged the Japanese at lIngayen Bay. Five months later, on April 9, 1942, Hughes and 75,000 U.S. and Filipino troops fatefully surrendered at Bataan.
Every POW received an identification badge to help guards keep track of them. Hughes' POW badge #56 was issued at Camp Karenko, Formosa (Taiwan).
A remarkable record: 1,202 days as a Japanese POW
Colonel Hughes, 54 at the time of his capture, would live in six POW camps before the war ended. He left a detailed record of his experiences in five notebooks. The daily record started one year to the day of his capture: "Its high time I started a diary. … It becomes a sort of continuous letter to the family—just in case something happens to me and I don’t get back—it serves as an historical record of uneventful events—and it helps very materially to pass the time away. I hadn’t started one previously, mostly because I didn’t think I would be able to ever get it home—but its certainly worth a try…."
James C. Hughes' POW cup (1942) by UnknownKansas Historical Society
All soldiers captured at Bataan went to Camp O’Donnell, the first and worst POW camp that Colonel Hughes had to endure. Soldiers arrived at camp with nothing but the clothes on their back. Before they could eat at Camp O’Donnell soldiers had to scrounge for things as basic as a bowl and a cup. Colonel Hughes left a grim record of how he acquired some of his utensils: "the canteen I took from under the stiff outstretched hand of a thin [American] soldier who had died during the night half under the porch of the ODonnell hospital. …The cup belonged to Col Berry CAC who died at Tarlac. So my cup and my canteen both came from dead men."
James C. Hughes' POW bowl (1942) by UnknownKansas Historical Society
All POWs lost weight due to the starvation diets. Colonel Hughes weighed 177 pounds before the war. At his lowest he weighed only 125 pounds. On August 15, 1943, he wrote: "How many people in the states could realize that for over a thousand consecutive meals I've had nothing but rice and soup." Hughes ate from this bowl for three years. It is inscribed with his initials, his status as a prisoner of war, and the name of his camp. “JHC PW TARLAC”
Senior officers (colonels and generals) were treated better than enlisted men and lower ranking officers due to the 1929 Geneva Convention. Although better, still a POW they were hungry, confined, poorly housed, forced to do manual labor, and humiliated. Clothing was hard to come by. Colonel Hughes was issued these blue pants at his second camp, Tarlac, in 1943 and wore them through the end of the war. His journal entry from November 26, 1943, reads, "my blue trousers that I have to wear for warmth-cause considerable camp comment. I can count 10 burlap patches. And 26 other cloth patches-mostly from an old blue coat I found in the trash pile when I left Karenko."
It was so cold in the camp in Manchuria that Hughes crafted new and warmer head gear. April 17, 1945, his diary reads: "Finished a fancy British air corps type of overseas cap. Its a brilliant blue - made from the flannel lining of Frissels 'storage bag.' Pattern from a Br. E.M. gray cap. A snappy number."
Fortier drawing of POW beards (1942-07-27) by Malcolm FortierKansas Historical Society
Like Hughes, who kept a diary, other officers found ways to record their time. Colonel Malcolm Fortier was captured at Bataan along with Colonel Hughes. He drew caricatures that upon his release were turned into the self-published book The Life of a POW Under the Japanese In Caricature. This drawing shows the types of beards worn in camp. Hughes is fourth from left.
POW Red Cross Box (1943-12-24) by American Red CrossKansas Historical Society
Delivery of letters and Red Cross boxes were always met with great delight. It was a very special day when Hughes received his first personal Red Cross box and news from home. December 24, 1943: "Just think-a box-the first word in over two years-and it arrives the day before Christmas!!! It couldn’t possibly have selected a more appropriate date for itself."
Free at last
By spring 1945 Hughes made almost daily entries about impending release. Years of suffering finally came to an end. American parachute troops brought the word of Japanese surrender. Russian soldiers arrived two days later to liberate the camp.
Hughes POW reunion (1945) by UnknownKansas Historical Society
Although free, it would take Hughes three months to reach the United States. During this time he learned of his father’s death and the safe release of his son (James Renwick) from a German POW camp.
The final entry
Hughes' last diary entry, made on October 19, 1945, recorded going to the hospital in Van Nuys, California, for a physical and 10 days leave. And there it ended. Colonel Hughes retired in 1948. He died February 26, 1964, and is buried with Mabel at Arlington Cemetery in Washington, D.C. The last photo is Colonel Hughes relaxing in his California home around 1960; his father still a presence in his life.