Patrick Stanley Vaughan Heenan
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Patrick Vaughan Stanley Heenan (29 July 1910 – 13 February 1942) was a captain in the British Indian Army who was supposedly convicted of treason, after spying for Japan during the Battle of Malaya of World War II.Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp Heenan was executed by his wardens while in custody during the Battle of Singapore. With the defeat of the British imminent, Heenan had mocked the guards, saying he would soon be free, while they would be the prisoners. In response, British military police shot him and dumped his body into the harbour.Template:Sfnp
According to Heenan's biographer, Peter Elphick, these events were suppressed by British Commonwealth military censors.Template:Sfnp
Early life
Heenan's mother, Annie Stanley (born 1882), was not married at the time of her son's birth at Reefton, New Zealand. His birth certificate recorded her maiden name as his surname, and did not include any information about his father.Template:Sfnp A year later, both mother and son moved to Burma with a mining engineer named George Charles Heenan (1855–1912). The older Heenan is described by some sources as an Irish republican,Template:Sfnp although he seems to have had a long association with New Zealand, including selection for regional representative cricket teams in the 1880s and 1890s.[1] There is no conclusive evidence that George Heenan was Patrick's father, or that George and Anne ever married. However, Patrick was baptised in Burma as a Roman Catholic, with the surname Heenan.Template:Sfnp George Heenan died at Pauk, Burma, in 1912. Patrick's mother then worked as a governess for a family named Carroll.Template:Sfnp
In 1922, the Carrolls moved to England, and Anne Stanley went with them. Mrs Carroll died a few years later, and Bernard Carroll, who was an accountant, married Anne.Template:Sfnp From 1923 to 1926, Patrick was a boarder at Sevenoaks School in Kent, and in 1927 proceeded to Cheltenham College, as a day boy, in a stream of students preparing for military careers.Template:Sfnp Although he was then 16 years old, at Cheltenham he was put in classes with pupils as young as 13.
Accounts of his time at Sevenoaks and Cheltenham show Heenan to have been a poor student and – in the words of the Dictionary of National Biography — a "gloomy, resentful misfit disliked by other pupils".Template:Sfnp He nevertheless excelled at sports, especially boxing, due largely to his impressive physique.Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp According to Elphick, Heenan was unpopular with other students at Cheltenham and was often in trouble with school authorities. Although he joined the Junior Division, Officers Training Corps (OTC) at Cheltenham, Heenan did not gain any formal qualifications;Template:Sfnp because of this, he was not able to be admitted to British Army officer training, when he left school at the age of 19. Heenan instead joined Steel Brothers, a trading company with interests in Asia.
Military career
In the early 1930s, Heenan applied for the Army Supplementary Reserve, the only way he could become an officer without formal qualifications. According to Elphick, had Heenan's illegitimacy been known, it would have prevented him becoming an officer. He was able to join the reserve by presenting his baptism certificate, along with a certificate signed by his school headmaster, stating that Heenan was capable of performing the duties of an officer. This was endorsed by the commander of Cheltenham College's OTC.
In 1933, he was commissioned into the Supplementary Reserve.[2] In 1935, Heenan was transferred to the British Indian Army,[3] with the service number 547/AI.[4] His parents' address at this time was recorded as Cheam, Surrey, England. He was put on the Indian Army's Unattached List, and was sent to India. After six months' training with a British regiment, Heenan was not accepted by any Indian Army regiments. He had to do an additional six months with another British regiment before being accepted by the 16th Punjab Regiment. He reportedly performed well in a skirmish on the North-West Frontier, but was later transferred to the Indian Army Service Corps. According to Elphick, this was a device commonly used to get unsatisfactory officers away from prestigious frontline regiments.Template:Sfnp However, Heenan later returned to the 16th Punjabs, but to a different battalion.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
In 1938–39, Heenan took a six-month "long leave" (an Indian Army tradition) in Japan.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
During 1941, as fears of a Japanese invasion of Southeast Asia grew, Heenan's unit was sent to Malaya. He was transferred to an Indian Army Air Liaison Unit and was sent to Singapore for training. Following the completion of air liaison training, Heenan was stationed at Alor Setar, in Kedah, northern Malaya, in June 1941.Template:Sfnp It was in this area that most of the British Royal Air Force, Royal Australian Air Force and Royal New Zealand Air Force squadrons in Malaya were based.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
Japanese forces invaded Thailand and Malaya on 8 December. Sydney Tavender, chairman of the Cotswold branch of the Far East Prisoners of War, and who served in the AIL unit with Heenan, said the Japanese aircraft always seemed to know the correct recognition codes, despite the fact that they were changed every 24 hours. By 10 December, the Japanese had destroyed most of the Allied aircraft in northern Malaya.
Heenan was caught during an air raid. "When we discovered he wasn't in the slit trenches with us we became suspicious," Tavender reported. "We went to his quarters and discovered a radio, which was still warm. That was the last we saw of him. He was arrested."[5] The Japanese air raids were assisted by radio transmissions made by Heenan.Template:Sfnp Among other espionage equipment, he reportedly had a morse code transmitter operated by an alphanumeric keyboard — similar to a Traeger Transceiver — which was disguised as a typewriter.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". Heenan was sent to Singapore, and was reportedly court-martialled in January 1942.Template:Sfnp He does not seem to have been formally sentenced, but the normal sentence for treason by British officers was death.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
Heenan remained in custody at Singapore for several weeks. The Japanese gradually drove the Allies out of Malaya, and on 8 February they attacked Singapore Island. Within days, it became clear that the battle was being won by the Japanese. In the words of journalist and author Lynette Silver (whose main source is Elphick):
- By 13 February[,] Heenan had become very cocky, taunting his guards ... that he would soon be free and they would be prisoners. It appears that ... British military police took matters into their own hands. After cards were cut to decide who would ... [kill] Heenan, it is alleged he was taken to the dockside, where a sergeant executed him with a single pistol shot to the back of the head. The body was then dumped in the harbour.Template:Sfnp
Elphick also says that Heenan was shot at Keppel Harbour.Template:Sfnp
Effects and aftermath
Military historian Brian P. Farrell believes that Heenan could not have done decisive damage to the Allies but probably cost No. 62 Squadron some personnel and aircraft.Template:Sfnp Elphick suggests that the British Commonwealth air forces would have been defeated without Heenan's help; their aircraft in Malaya were inadequate compared to the Japanese and airfields in northern Malaya had been located in positions that were for all intents and purposes not capable of being defended. Elphick added that Heenan "must have passed on much helpful information pre-war and he pushed the rate of aircraft destruction along a bit after the war began".Template:Sfnp Elphick also says that word of Heenan's actions spread quickly among British Commonwealth officers, which had a significant effect on morale.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
By 1998, the families of other personnel listed on the Commonwealth War Graves Commission World War II memorial at Kranji War Cemetery in Singapore were requesting the removal of Heenan's name.[6] His date of death on the memorial, 15 February 1942,[4] was reportedly a standard date assigned to all Commonwealth personnel officially listed as missing during the Battle of Singapore.[6]
See also
- Velvalee Dickinson (American spy for Japan during World War II)
- John Semer Farnsworth (American spy for Japan in the 1930s)
- Harry Thompson (spy) (American spy for Japan in the 1930s)
- Norman Baillie-Stewart (British spy for Germany during World War II)
- Arthur Owens (suspected British spy for Germany during World War II)
- Eddie Chapman (British double agent during World War II)
- William Colepaugh (American spy for Germany during World War II)
- Tyler Kent (American spy for Germany in the early 1940s)
References
- Notes
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- ↑ The Courier-Mail, Brisbane, 6 May 1992
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- Bibliography
- Script error: No such module "citation/CS1". Published online by Four Corners, Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 2002.
- Script error: No such module "citation/CS1". Published online by Four Corners, Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 2002.
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External links
- Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1". An article about the Traeger Transceiver, with pictures.
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Template:Authority control Registration Number 1910/4742 Family Name Given Name(s) Stanley Patrick Vaughan Mother's Given Name(s) Annie Father's name NR New Zealand Births, Deaths, Marriages
- Pages with script errors
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- 1910 births
- 1942 deaths
- British Indian Army officers
- British Indian Army personnel who were court-martialed
- Extrajudicial killings in World War II
- Executed British collaborators with Imperial Japan
- Executed spies
- Military of Singapore under British rule
- Military history of Malaya during World War II
- Indian Army personnel killed in World War II
- People educated at Cheltenham College
- People educated at Sevenoaks School
- People executed by the British military by firearm
- People from Reefton
- People convicted of spying for Imperial Japan