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Carroll Calkins Grinnell, Sr.

Carroll Calkins Grinnell, Sr.

männlich 1898 - 1945  (46 Jahre)

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  • Name Carroll Calkins Grinnell 
    Suffix Sr. 
    Geburt 13 Jun 1898  Troy, Bradford County, Pennsylvania, USA Suche alle Personen mit Ereignissen an diesem Ort 
    Geschlecht männlich 
    Datensatzidentnummer MH:I185050 
    _UID 61f2526d78c491eca96b309c23d6b1d3 
    _UPD 27 JAN 2022 09:20:34 GMT+1 
    Tod 15 Jan 1945  Manila, Capital District, National Capital Region, Philippines Suche alle Personen mit Ereignissen an diesem Ort 
    Personen-Kennung I185050  Fritztree
    Zuletzt bearbeitet am 22 Mai 2025 

    Vater Stowell E. Grinnell,   geb. 1867, Bradford County, Pennsylvania, USA Suche alle Personen mit Ereignissen an diesem Ortgest. 25 Jul 1957, Elmira, Chemung County, New York, USA Suche alle Personen mit Ereignissen an diesem Ort (Alter 90 Jahre) 
    Mutter Nellie J. Calkins,   geb. 1867, Bradford County, Pennsylvania, USA Suche alle Personen mit Ereignissen an diesem Ortgest. 15 Feb 1955, Elmira, Chemung County, New York, USA Suche alle Personen mit Ereignissen an diesem Ort (Alter 88 Jahre) 
    Eheschließung 17 Jun 1891  Bradford County, Pennsylvania, USA Suche alle Personen mit Ereignissen an diesem Ort 
    Datensatzidentnummer MH:F65934 
    _UID 61f2524d78c491eca96b309c23d6b1d3 
    Familien-Kennung F65934  Familienblatt  |  Familientafel

    Familie Ruth Hutchings Belding,   geb. 13 Dez 1898   gest. 19 Feb 1990, Rensselaer County, New York, USA Suche alle Personen mit Ereignissen an diesem Ort (Alter 91 Jahre) 
    Eheschließung 9 Okt 1920  Schenectady, Schenectady County, New York, USA Suche alle Personen mit Ereignissen an diesem Ort 
    Datensatzidentnummer MH:F65936 
    _UID 61f2551478c491eca96b309c23d6b1d3 
    Kinder 
     1. Carroll Calkins Grinnell, Jr.,   geb. 21 Jul 1921, Schenectady, Schenectady County, New York, USA Suche alle Personen mit Ereignissen an diesem Ortgest. 8 Jan 2008, Atlanta, Fulton County, Georgia, USA Suche alle Personen mit Ereignissen an diesem Ort (Alter 86 Jahre)
    Familien-Kennung F65936  Familienblatt  |  Familientafel
    Zuletzt bearbeitet am 22 Mai 2025 

  • Ereignis-Karte
    Link zu Google MapsEheschließung - 9 Okt 1920 - Schenectady, Schenectady County, New York, USA Link zu Google Earth
    Link zu Google MapsTod - 15 Jan 1945 - Manila, Capital District, National Capital Region, Philippines Link zu Google Earth
     = Link zu Google Earth 

  • Fotos
    Carroll Calkins Grinnell Sr
    Carroll Calkins Grinnell Sr

  • Notizen 
    • Carroll was an exceptionally bright and hard-working young man and graduated from high school when he was 13 years of age. His parents felt he was too young to go to college at that time so he got a job. At the age of 15 Carroll began attending Union College, Schenectady, New York. He graduated at the age of 19. Carroll C. Grinnell married Ruth Hutchins Belding on 09 October 1920 in Schenectady, New York. Their first son, Carroll Calkins Grinnell, Jr. was born in Schenectady County, New York.

      He was employed by General Electric in June, 1919 and was sent to Japan in 1923 as an Electrical Engineer. The couple's second son, David Bayldon Grinnell, was born while they were residing in Kobe, Japan. They were there for ten years.

      In 1933 he was transferred to Manila, Philippines. In 1940, son, David, was ready to enter 8th grade, so the family returned to the States to enroll him in preparatory school. The State Department would not allow Mrs. Ruth Grinnell to return to Manila with her husband because they felt it was too dangerous as the Japanese Navy was holding maneuvers in the Sea of Japan.
      Source: https://cnac.org/emilscott/santotomas01.htm

      By the time WWII came to the Philippine shores (08 December 1941), Grinnell was president of General Electric (PI) Inc. and the commercial manager for the Far East. He was scheduled to leave and go back to the United States on the next Pan American Clipper, but it was machine gunned and sunk by the Japanese in the Hong Kong harbor.

      On 02 January 1942, Japanese forces entered and occupied Manila and on 07 January 1942, he was detained by Japanese soldiers and sent to the University of Santo Tomas Internment Camp. Carroll became the civilian commandant of the camp which housed more than 3,500 internees at a time from January 1942 until February 1945. A total of about 7,000 people were residents in Santo Tomas at one time or another - 2,000 of which were transferred to the Los Baños internment camp. On 27 July 1942 he was elected to the Executive Committee and the Japanese Commandant (Mr. R. Tsurumi) then appointed Carroll as Chairman of that Committee. "For the past twenty years he had done business in and out of Japan, and his knowledge of things Japanese, including an acquaintance with the language, was of great service to him in his new position." Carroll and the seven-member Executive Committee reported to the Japanese commandant of the camp. He would be the leader of the internees for basically the duration of the war.

      23 December 1944 - Santo Tomas Internment Camp
      23 December "started ominously for the Camp, when the Commandants staff and guards made a surprise search of Shanty Area B at roll call time...Mr. E. E. Johnson was arrested about 3 p.m. and presumably taken out of Camp for investigation; Mr. C.C. Grinnell, A.F. Duggleby and Clifford I. Larsen were arrested later and held in the Commandant's office until after 7 p.m. when they were lodged in the Camp jail. The shanties of these four internees were thoroughly searched by the military police and soldiers and also Mr. Duggleby's sleeping quarters in the Finance and Supply office. No indication was given as to the reason for their arrests."

      "This afternoon about 15 Jap M.P.'s came into camp & tore the place apart – Grinnell, the head of the camp and Duggleleby, one of the camp's leaders were thrown into jail – No one knows why – But I have my suspicions & they center around getting news outside as to the terrible conditions which prevail here – And they are terrible –" Source: Diary of Albert E. Holland, internee

      On the night of 23 December, Carroll C. Grinnell, Chairman of the Internees Committee and Alfred F. Duggleby, head of the Family Aid Committee, together with Ernest E. Johnson who works in Grenell's office and a man by the name of Clifford L. Larsen, were imprisoned in the camp jail by the Japanese Kempeitai (Japanese Military Police) for *reasons which were never made clear even to the local Japanese staff. Grenell's office and shanty were sealed. A number of papers were taken from Duggelby's office. Source: Diary of Raymond Leyerly, former chief of police of Manila and internee at Santo Tomas.

      "Strange, as they were very close to the Japanese. They were the trustees." said internee Neville Stopford.

      *They were arrested on suspicion of aiding the underground resistance forces.

      23 December 1944
      Ernest E. Johnson was taken from the camp to an unknown destination.

      31 December 1944
      Ernest E. Johnson was seen at the Japanese Military Police Headquarters in the former home of Dr. Paldomero Roxas by Dr. Antonio Sison, also a prisoner.

      05 January 1945
      In the afternoon of 05 January, Carroll, Duggleby and Larsen were removed from the camp to an unknown destination.

      14 January 1945
      The minutes of the Internee Committee have the following statement under date of Jan 14, 1945: "In response to inquiries made by the Committee, the Commandant's office advised that they had no information as to the whereabouts of the three internees removed from camp by the military police on Jan. 5th...." No information was ever given to the Camp authorities with respect to the charges for which these men were imprisoned.

      On or about 15 January 1945
      The four men were executed by the Japanese Kempeitai (just weeks before the camp was liberated).

      Carroll Calkins Grinnell – General Electric
      Alfred Francis Duggleby – Benguet Consolidated Mining Company
      Ernest Emil Johnson – United States Maritime Commission
      Clifford Lawrence Larsen – Atlantic Gulf and Pacific Company

      03 February 1945
      Santo Tomas Prison internees were freed by the U.S. Army.

      After their release Tom Poole and Charles Schelke (both with G.E., Schelke was general manager at G.E.) and Lt. E. Thor Johnson, U.S.N. (son of Ernest E. Johnson), stationed in Manila, began searching to find out what had happened to the four men.

      After a number of dead ends, the breakthrough came after meeting with Dr. Antonio Sison who informed them that he had been imprisoned with Ernest E. Johnson at the Japanese Military Police Headquarters in the former home of Dr. Paldomero Roxas, on the corner of Calle Cortabitarte and A. Mabini in Malate. Dr. Antonio Sison was released on 02 January 1945 and said that he learned after his release that the others had been executed.

      19 February 1945
      The men went to the Headquarters of the Japanese Military Police building and searched room by room but found no evidence of any of the four men having been there. A Filipino who had been imprisoned there told them that many of the executions had been conducted in the nearby field across Cortabitarte Street. They briefly searched the area but found nothing.

      20 February 1945
      They returned to the site and began a careful search of the nearby field (near Harrison Park) and that is where Tom Poole found Carroll's body, from which he removed a shoe and sock. "He, Miss Davis (Carroll's secretary), the camp shoe repairman, and I (Charles Schelke) identified these articles as Carroll's."

      21 February 1945
      Tom Poole and Charles Schelke returned to the spot and found fourteen bodies wired together in groups of a few each. They removed the bodies of Grinnell, Duggleby, Johnson and Larson from the pit in which they had been buried after their execution (they had been beheaded and showed signs of having been tortured) and brought them to Santo Tomas. At Santo Tomas the bodies were positively identified by individuals familiar with them.

      22 February 1945
      A medical examination of the four bodies was made by Dr. T. O. Stevenson on 22 February 1945. The condition of the bodies indicated that death had occurred on our about 15 January 1945. They had been dead about one month and would have been executed just two weeks before Santo Tomas was liberated.

      After the medical examination was completed, they were placed in separate wooden boxes and buried at the east corner of the Seminary Building, University of Santo Tomas, at 4:00 p.m., 22 February 1945. Markers, bearing the name of each individual , were put in place.


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