Looking For Information on PFC
Andrew Galayda of Trenton, NJ,
Dear Sir,
My uncle, PFC Andrew Galayda of Trenton, NJ, was serving in the Coast
Artillery Corps at Corregidor, and likely served from time to time on Fort
Drum, when Corregidor fell on 7 May 1942. He was captured by the Japanese
forces. In June 1945, my father received word from the War Department that
the Japanese Government, in communications via the International Red
Cross, included my uncle's name on a list of POWs lost on 24 October 1944,
when the ship in which he was being transported with 1,775 other POWs, was
sunk by submarine action in the South China Sea, while the POWs were being
transported from the Philippine Islands to Japan.
My uncle was captured with the forces, military and
civilian, on Corregidor Island on 7 May 1942, held in POW Camp #1 in the
Philippines until 11 October 1944, when he was loaded onto the
civilian-controlled Japanese ship the Arisan Maru with nearly 1,800 other
POWs for transit to Japan. On 24 October, a little after 5 in the
afternoon, the Arisan Maru was sunk by an American submarine, either by
the U.S.S. Shark or U.S.S. Snook, the records are uncertain; the Shark was
sunk later during that patrol and the USN ended up giving credit for the
sinking of the Arisan Maru to the Snook, but again, records are uncertain.
From what I read, now available on the World Wide Web, the sinking of the
Arisan Maru resulted in the greatest number of American lives lost in a
single ship loss.
Does anyone have any information please on PFC Andrew Galayda?
Thank you.
Sincerely,
Thomas A. Galayda
Lt. Colonel, USAF (Ret)
Rome, New York
tgalayda@twcny.rr.com