Monday, August 19, 2013

A jungle dirt track saved 400 soldiers from certain death.

Unless you lived in the remote Choa Chu Kang area in the past, or unless you know your local geography or history really well, you probably would not have heard of Jalan Perang.

Before the 1970s, Jalan Perang was really a non-descript jungle track leading to places where people would not normally venture.
It ran along the western Bukit Gombak slope, running south from Choa Chu Kang Road all the way to Jurong Road.

Click on sketch to enlarge to full size.

This small dirt track was mainly used by kampong villagers to their smallholdings within the Choa Chu Kang/Jurong farmland as well as by trucks carrying granite from the 4 major quarries on Gombak Hill.  It looked exactly like the picture below, except I remembered it was much narrower.

One of the last few country dirt tracks left in Singapore now.
(Bahtera track at Sarimbun)
The track was called Jalan Perang in English, but rightly it should be in the Malay pronunciation of Pērang, meaning 'dirt track'. However over  the years, it became anglicised and pronounced as Perang (per-rung), which in Malay means war!
This brings me to the story which I will now tell you of how this dirt track became the salvation for 420 soldiers during the Japanese invasion of 1942.
On 8th Feb 1942, the Japanese Army crossed Johore Straits and invaded Singapore through Choa Chu Kang. The defending force there was the 22nd Australian Brigade led by Brigadier Taylor. 
However, the Australians were pushed back by the Japanese from Choa Chu Kang Sarimbun Beach all the way to the south of Tengah Airfield. There they set up a defensive blockade along Choa Chu Kang Road.  (See map below to have a clearer idea)
A reserve unit, called the Special Reserve Battalion comprising over 400 soldiers, was quickly despatched to Choa Chu Kang and given to Brigadier Taylor for assistance. They were ordered to defend the hills south of Choa Chu Kang Road near Bulim and were duly positioned there.
By the afternoon of 9th Feb, Brigadier Taylor withdrew his forces away from the battlefront to Ulu Pandan. In his haste to escape from the advancing Japanese, he forgot to inform the newly arrived Special Reserve Battalion about the withdrawal! 

Click on the map for a detailed view.

By the time the commander of the S.R. Battalion realised he had been abandoned by the 22nd Brigade, the Japanese forces had already bypassed his position in the north and south. Gallantly, the commander, Major Bert Saggers, led his men through the only way out, heading due East in growing darkness, all the time avoiding any contact with the enemy.
Fortuitously, he hit upon the dirt track and from then could make a speedy retreat towards friendly lines at Bukit Batok Hill. Thus, having saved his battalion of 420 soldiers from being annihilated by the surrounding Japanese forces. They then took up defensive position at a small hill at Bukit Batok facing the oncoming Japanese army along Jurong Road. Today, on the hill where they camped that night in 1942, stands the Church of St Mary of the Angels Bukit Batok.
Major Bert Saggers, was captured at the surrender of the British capitulation and was sent to the Thai-Burma Railway as a prisoner of war.  He survived and returned to Australia after the war.
Major Bert Saggers
Commanding Officer
Special Reserve Battalion, Feb 1942.


Today Bukit Batok West Ave 5 and Bukit Batok East Ave 5 follows the identical route that used to be Jalan Perang, all the way from Choa Chu Kang Road to Hillview Avenue.



Related links:
Tragedy at Sleepy Valley
Hillview Ave to Jurong Road

WW2 relic at Hillview Avenue

9 comments:

  1. Thanks for the captivating account. And the hard work to produce the maps. You shd be a history teacher.

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  2. This is fascinating! I love learning about Singapore's history.

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  3. Thanks for the well-researched and interesting account. Looking at the old map, from my fading memory, I think I remember where Jalan Perang was in the old days in the 60s and 70s. Vaguely remember wandering into that 'deserted road" with thick forests on both sides. I did not venture far though. I do remember there was a rumour going around at one time that a young mother took her life and her baby's by jumping into the well. Later, people found two monkeys weepng in the area nearby, a mother and a baby monkey. Kids like me at that time debated on whether to venture there to see.

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  4. Born in the 1980s, I never knew about this particular battle incident during the WW2 even though the two world wars covered a large part of my secondary school history curriculum. Thanks for the enthralling account. Knowing history, a road will never be just a road that takes me to places anymore. I can almost imagine the action that took place.

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  5. James, thank you again for this piece of history. I drive along this road every day. Now I know something of its history. Yum

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  6. Hi James, I remembered my husband, then bf used to drive me into these tracks in Choa Chu Kang and I am always amazed how he could remember the tracks when there are no road names.
    As mentioned in my earlier post, my in-laws have been staying in this area for few generations.
    I have been staying here around CCK for 30 years.
    I thank you for all the research and I really enjoy reading your write ups. Please continue with the good work.

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  7. I have not heard of Sleepy Village and now that I do, I can't hold my excitement as that is the place where I travel often as my brother stays just next to it, BB St 25.

    All the furious fightings and killings barely 70yrs ago on this ground are unimaginable.

    It will not be the same for me, passing by the forgotten Sleepy Village anymore.

    Thank you James, for this valuable piece of history which I will share to all I know.

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  8. Thank you sir for the amazing hustory info..

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  9. Amazing History info..a great research James Tan.A vital information about Sleepy valley n LamSan.

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