The text for this post is broken, please go to this link. http://annkitsuet-chinchan.blogspot.co.nz/2014/10/captain-roger-cheng.html Roger Kee Cheng My Grand dad's hero | |
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Born 16 May 1915 | |
Allegiance | Canada |
Service/branch | Royal Canadian Corps of Signals |
Rank | CaptainCaptain Fong is likely to be an alias of Roger Cheng. I am pleased that we could piece together Captain Fong, and validate Ah Kung's story. I am so excited that with our connection, we can dare say Captain Fong wasn't a figment of Ah Kung's imagination.Larry Wong, curator of Canadian Chinese Military Museum.This is the official documentationof Captain Roger Cheng.http://www.rcsigs.ca/index.php/Cheng,_Roger_K
Roger
Kee Cheng served as a member of the Royal Canadian Corps of Signals
during the Second World War. He saw service in Ottawa prior to
undertaking commando and guerrilla training for his subsequent service
in the Molucca Islands and Borneo.
Early Life
Roger
Cheng of Lillooet British Columbia was living in Vancouver before he
joined the military. He graduated from McGill University Engineering
School in 1938 with a degree in Electrical Engineering.
Military Service
After completing Signals training at A-7 Canadian Signal Training Centre Lieutenant Cheng was taken on strength of Canadian Signals Experimentation Establishment (CSEE) on 11 August 1942.
He
disembarked in Australia on 22 November 1944 where he served with
Services Reconnaissance Department (British Military Establishment No.
100) British Security Coordination until 31 October 1945. During this
time he was employed on special operational duties in the Molucca
Islands and Borneo from 13 July to 24 October 1945.
On
8 December 1945 Captain Cheng embarked at Brisbane Australia on board
SS "English Prince" for return to Canada (Unattached List, NDHQ)[1]
Notes
In
the portrait shown of Captain Cheng he is wearing parachute wings from
the 3rd Royal Australian Regiment. He presumably wore these in
preference to Canadian wings as he earned them, "having qualified by
completing sufficient descents to be deemed as operationally trained"[2] while serving in the South Pacific.
Blog Post[3]
Born
on 16 May 1915 Roger Kee Cheng went on to graduate as an electrical
engineer from McGill University in 1938, be commissioned as the first
Chinese-Canadian officer in the Royal Canadian Corps of Signals in 1941,
and serve in Borneo as a member of the Services Reconnaissance
Department (SRD) component of the Special Operations Executive (SOE) in
1945.
Second-Lieutenant
Cheng began his officer training on 3 October 1941, probably at the
Officer Training Centre in Brockville, Ontario. He was promoted
Lieutenant (Lt) on 23 May, 1942, and completed his officer training at
the Canadian Signal Training Centre in Kingston, Ontario, on 10 August,
1942.
Lt
Cheng was then posted to the Canadian Signals Experimental
Establishment (CSEE) in Ottawa, and promptly attached to the Royal
Canadian Ordnance Corps (RCOC), and seconded to the Master General of
Ordnance (MGO) Branch of the Director of Electrical and Communications
Design (DECD). On 1 October, 1943 he was made an Acting Captain. On 27
May 1944, he ceased his attachment and secondment, and was taken on
strength of No. 11 District Depot in British Columbia.
From
28 May until 26 August, 1944, at which time he started five days
embarkation leave, it is probable that Lt Cheng, was a member of an
original group of Chinese-Canadians who became known as the Kendall
Group, and underwent special training in British Columbia's Okanagan
Valley.
On
3 September, 1944, having finished his embarkation leave, Lt Cheng was
promoted Captain, and posted to the "Q List", signifying that he was now
officially on loan to the British forces. While details of his
activities between then and 6 August, 1945, are sketchy, indications are
that he, and five other Chinese-Canadians were landed, on that date, in
Sarawk, in northern Borneo, by Catalina Flying Boat Upon arrival, the
group joined a small British team which was gathering information on the
movements of the Japanese as well as about conditions in prison camps
in Kuching, the capital of Sarawak, where about 25,000 British prisoners
of war were being held. The day after the team landed, the Americans
dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima. Although Japan surrendered, many
isolated Japanese units refused to accept defeat and the war dragged on
for months. The team's major accomplishment was assisting in
transferring many emaciated prisoners to Australia before returning home
themselves.
On
31 October, 1945, Capt Cheng was attached for all purposes from the SRD
to. No 1 Canadian Special Wireless Group, a signals intelligence
organization that had arrived in McMillan's Road Camp, Darwin, Australia
on 18 April, 1945. He returned to Canada on 5 January, 1946, at which
time he was again taken on the strength of No. 11 Disrtict Depot. On 7
March, 1946, Roger Kee Cheng was discharged from the Canadian Army.
References
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Friday, November 7, 2014
Photohunt: A real hero Roger Cheng
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