Lost in Shangri-La: Escape from a Hidden World - A True Story. MItchell Zuckoff
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MITCHELL ZUCKOFF
Lost in Shangri-La
Escape from a Hidden World
A TRUE STORY
For Gerry
Contents
A Note to the Reader
A Note on the Text
List of Illustrations
Chapter 1 - Missing
Chapter 2 - Hollandia
Chapter 3 - The Hidden Valley of Shangri-La
Chapter 4 - Gremlin Special
Chapter 5 - Eureka!
Chapter 6 - Charms
Chapter 7 - Tarzan
Chapter 8 - Gentleman Explorer
Chapter 9 - Guilt and Gangrene
Chapter 10 - Earl Walter, Junior and Senior
Chapter 11 - Uwambo
Chapter 12 - ‘Chief Pete’
Chapter 13 - Come What May
Chapter 14 - Five-by-Five
Chapter 15 - No Supper Tonight
Chapter 16 - Rammy and Doc
Chapter 17 - Custer and Company
Chapter 18 - Bathtime for Yugwe
Chapter 19 - ‘Shoo, Shoo Baby’
Chapter 20 - Hold the Front Page!
Chapter 21 - Promised Land
Chapter 22 - Hollywood
Chapter 23 - Gliders?
Chapter 24 - Two Queens
Chapter 25 - Snatch
Epilogue After Shangri-La
Cast of Characters
The Filipino Regiments
Notes on Sources and Methods
Notes
Select Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgements
About the Author
Also by Mitchell Zuckoff
Copyright
A NOTE TO THE READER
NEAR THE END OF THE SECOND WORLD WAR, a us Army plane flying over the island of New Guinea crashed in an uncharted region inhabited by a prehistoric tribe.
In the weeks that followed, reporters raced to cover a tale of survival, loss, anthropology, discovery, heroism, friendship, and a near-impossible rescue mission. Their stories featured a beautiful, headstrong corporal and a strapping, hell-bent paratrooper, stranded amid tribesmen reputed to be headhunters and cannibals. They told of a brave lieutenant grieving the death of his twin brother; a wry sergeant with a terrible head wound; and a team of Filipino-American soldiers who volunteered to confront the natives despite knowing they would be outnumbered more than a thousand to one. Rounding out the true-life cast were a rogue filmmaker who had left Hollywood after being exposed as a jewel thief; a smart-aleck pilot who flew best when his plane had no engine; and a cowboy colonel whose rescue plan seemed designed to increase the death toll.
Front pages blazed with headlines about the crash and its aftermath. Radio shows breathlessly reported every development en route to an astonishing conclusion.
But the world was on the brink of the Atomic Age, and a story of life and death in the Stone Age was soon eclipsed. In time, it was forgotten.
I came across an article about the crash years ago while searching newspaper archives for something else entirely. I set it aside and found what I thought I was looking for. But the story stayed with me. I began doing what reporters call ‘collecting string’ – gathering pieces of information wherever possible to see if they might tie together.
News reports and official documents can talk about the past, but they cannot carry on a conversation. I dreamed of finding someone who had been there, someone who could describe the people, places and events firsthand. More than six decades after the crash, I located the sole surviving American participant, living quietly on the Oregon coast with vivid memories and an extraordinary story.
That discovery, and the interviews that followed, led to an explosion of string that wove itself into a tapestry. Among the most valuable items was a daily journal kept during the weeks between the crash and the rescue attempt. A lengthy diary surfaced, along with a trove of priceless photographs. Three private scrapbooks followed close behind, along with boxes of declassified Army documents, affidavits, maps, personnel records, military bulletins, letters, and ground-to-air radio transcripts. Relatives of more than a dozen other participants supplied more documents, photos, letters and details. Perhaps most remarkably, the trail led to several thousand metres of original film footage of the events as they unfolded.
Next came a trip to New Guinea, to learn what had become of the place and the natives; to find old men and women who had witnessed the crash as children; and to walk to the top of a mountain where pieces of the plane still rest, along with bones and belongings of some of those who died there.
As I write this, on my desk sits a melted piece of metal from the plane that resembles a gnarled human form. It’s a tangible reminder that, as incredible as this story seems, every word of it is true.
MITCHELL ZUCKOFF
A NOTE ON THE TEXT
THE EVENTS DESCRIBED IN THIS BOOK TOOK PLACE on the western half of the island of New Guinea in 1945. At that time, that portion of the island was known as Dutch New Guinea and its capital, on the northern coast, was called Hollandia. The area known at the time as Hidden Valley or Shangri-La is located approximately 240 kilometres southwest of Hollandia. Today, the former Dutch New Guinea is a province of Indonesia called Papua (not to be confused with Papua New Guinea, which is an independent country on the eastern portion of the island). Hollandia is now the city of Jayapura. Shangri-La or Hidden Valley is called the Baliem Valley.
Quoted material throughout the book has been left in its original form; in most cases, that means US spellings and units of distance and measure.
ILLUSTRATIONS
Corporal Margaret Hastings of the Women’s Army Corps photographed in 1945. (C. Earl Walter Jr photo)
Tents for members of the Women’s Army Corps in Hollandia. (US Army photo)
US military map of New Guinea during the Second World War. (US Army map)
Sergeant Laura Besley of the Women’s Army Corps. (Gerta Anderson photo)
Colonel Peter Prossen with his sons, David and Peter. (Peter J. Prossen Jr photo)
Colonel Ray Elsmore. (B.B. McCollom photos)
A native village photographed from the air by Colonel Ray Elsmore (C. Earl Walter Jr photo)
A C-47 in flight during the Second World War. (US Army photo)