- Wilburn Snyder
Infobox Person
name = Wilburn L. Snyder
birth_date = birth date|1923|1|23|
birth_place = Plain Dealing,Bossier Parish ,Louisiana , USA
death_date=death date and age|2008|5|13|1923|1|23
death_place=Houston, Harris County,Texas
residence=Baytown (Harris and Chambers counties), Texas
occupation=Baptist clergy man
spouse=(1) Florence Snyder (deceased) (2) Lan'l Snyder
children=Kyle Snyder of Goliad David Smith of Crosby Gregg Smith of Baytown Theda Cuellar of Houston Renae Haskins of Pasadena
footnotes=(1) Having twice contractedmalaria during theinterment following theBataan Death March , Snyder survived with the help of an Army buddy who stolemedicine from theJapan ese captors.(2) Snyder, who was called to the
Baptist ministry well after his Bataan captivity, was later the Gulf Coastchaplain for theveterans group,American Ex-Prisoners of War .(3) Snyder's experiences are recalled by Donald Knox in the book "Death March: The Survivors of Bataan".
(4) Years after his oppression, Snyder went to
Japan on four missionary trips.Wilburn L. Snyder (
January 23 ,1923 –May 13 ,2008 ) was aBaptist pastor in Houston,Texas , and a survivor of theBataan Death March andinternment in thePhilippine Islands duringWorld War II .Snyder was born in Plain Dealing in
Bossier Parish in northwesternLouisiana to Mary and G.A. Hammer. He graduated in 1940 from Lee High School in Baytown, and attendedLee College , acommunity college in Baytown, and then theUniversity of Houston .http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/deaths/5784295.html]POW years
Snyder was so eager to join the
United States Army that he claimed to have been a year older than he was. In June 1940, he wanted to "get in on the ground floor” of a second world conflict which seemed imminent to many. "I was seventeen. I went by myself and enlisted," Snyder sad. His parents were reluctant to give their consent and regretted having done so when Snyder was declaredmissing in action at Bataan. [http://baytownsun.com/story.lasso?ewcd=e5d6249f2275ced2 The Baytown Sun ] ]After serving fifteen months at
Fort Crockett in Galveston, Snyder was deployed to the Philippines as a combatmedic in the 3rd Battalion of the 31st Infantry. From that outfit of twenty-nine men, he was one of five who returned to the United States.On Snyder’s death at the age of eighty-five, the "
Houston Chronicle " quoted his daughter, Theda Cuellar of Houston: “He had no hatred towards those people. As aChristian , he put away all that hatred, but he wanted people to know what they went through.” Cuellar said that her father suffered twice frommalaria during the internment and was left for dead, but aUnited States Army buddy stolemedicine from theJapan ese invaders and nursed Snyder to health.After American forces under
General Edward P. King, Jr., surrendered onApril 9 ,1942 , Snyder, along with some 12,000 American and 68,000 Filipino defenders of the Bataanpeninsula , was forced to march sixty-eight miles over fourteen days to the prison camp. On this journey, a large number of thesoldier s, denied food and water by the Japanese, perished.In surrendering, King disobeyed orders, but Snyder and other captives contended that the general had no alternative. Snyder said that the surrender was respected by the men who were afflicted from a lack of food,quinine , medicine, and ammunition.“I think it was one of the bravest things for him [General King] to do. He risked his whole military career when he did that because he did it against orders. He’s a tremendous man in my eyes. He saved about 12,000 Americans’ lives," said Snyder in a
Memorial Day 2007 interview with his hometown "Baytown Sun "newspaper .In his own words, Snyder recalled the Death March:
"Any troops who fell behind were executed. Japanese troops beat soldiers randomly, and denied the POWs food and water for many days. One of their tortures was known as the sun treatment. The Philippines in April is very hot. Therefore, the POWs were forced to sit in the sun without any shade,
helmet s, or water. Anyone who dared ask for water was executed. On the rare occasion they were given any food, it was only a handful of contaminatedrice . When the prisoners were allowed to sleep for a few hours at night, they were packed into enclosures so tight that they could barely move. Those who lived collapsed on the dead bodies of their comrades. For only a brief part of the march would POWs be packed intorailroad cars and allowed to ride. Those who did not die in the suffocating boxcars were forced to march about seven more miles until they reached their camp. It took the POWs over a week to reach their destination."Snyder said that the march could have been easily achieved had the men been in good physical condition and not denied sustenance. "It was the condition that we were in that made it . . . a death sentence." Snyder said that he and his comrades could barely walk a few steps without seeing another dead body. They saw so many of their friends die . . . I know this sounds hard to believe, but we actually got used to death," Snyder recalled.
Remembering Bataan
In the spring of 1982,
NBC aired a documentary, "Bataan: the Forgotten Hell", to observe the 40th anniversary of the march and recall the brutalities inflicted on the captives. Japan had refused to sign the 1929 Geneva Convention Relating to the Treatment of POWs. Nearly half of the men died ofdehydration andheat exhaustion . [ [http://ussslcca25.com/bataan.htm Migration of doom...Bataan Death March ] ]With the end of the war, Sndyer and 105 other prisoners were liberated on
August 15 ,1945 . Years after his captivity, Snyder attended a military reunion in the Philippines. Donald Knox, in the book "Death March: The Survivors of Bataan" (New York: Harcourt Brace Inc., 1981), recalls Snyder having asked his Filipino guide why a particular group of children was holding the “V” for victory sign to the visiting American veterans. “What do those little kids know about that sign?”, Snyder asked. The guide replied, “They may not know how to read and write, but they know about Bataan.” [Michael Botson of Houston, Wilburn Snyder guest book, Houston Chronicle.com]Snyder was
chaplain for the Gulf Coast chapter ofAmerican Ex-Prisoners of War , a veterans service organization founded inArlington, Texas , in the wake of Bataan. [ [http://www.axpow.org/ American Ex-Prisoners of War Organization ] ]Ministry
After the war, Snyder returned to the Houston area and worked as a
pipefitter forEthyl Corporation . A co-worker conducted aBible study group in which Snyder agreed to participate. He had not been a Christian during his military service. He had described his personal anger as essential to having overcome the odds against survival at Bataan. On being converted to Christianity and called to the ministry, Snyder said that he believed thatGod instilled anger in him to bring him through Bataan.Over the years, Snyder served as pastor of various Houston area Baptist churches, including Kashmere Garden, Northwood Manor, East Houston, and Candlestick.
First unable to forget the suffering that he endured as a prisoner, Snyder harbored a strong hatred for the men who showed no mercy to him and other captive Americans and Filipinos. "When I got back [to the United States] , if I had the power to push a button and sink every island in Japan, that’s what I would have done. But since the Lord’s been in my life, I’ve been back to Japan four times to preach to them. I love them."
Death
Snyder died in the Veterans Affairs Hospital in Houston. He was preceded in death by his first wife, Florence. In addition to daughter Theda Cuellar, survivors include his second wife, Lan’l Snyder of Baytown; sons, Kyle Snyder of Goliad, David Smith of Crosby, and Gregg Smith of Baytown; other daughter, Renae Haskins of Pasadena, Texas; three brothers, Alva John Hammer of Baytown and C.J. Snyder and Michael Snyder of Louisiana; and three sisters, Margaret S. Selzler of
Raeford, North Carolina , Judy Marie Snyder Knippers (born ca. 1950) and husband William C. “Buddy” Knippers of Dry Prong inGrant Parish , and Faye Harris of Louisiana.Services were held on May 15 at First Baptist Church in Galena Park. Interment was in San Jacinto Memorial Park Cemetery near Baytown.
References
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