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stamp, name

human history
  • Other Name

    Japanese name 'chop' in container, WW2 (descriptive name)

    Major E.C.S. (Colin) Little, Royal Indian Army Service Corps (RIASC) (associated name)

  • Description

    Japanese 'chop' (name seal or stamp) in container collected by Major E.C.S. (Colin) Little while serving with Royal Indian Army Service Corps (RIASC), in Burma, WW2

  • Place
  • Associated Place
  • Accession Number
    2015.20.25
  • Accession Date
    07 Apr 2015
  • Department
stamp, name 2015.20.25

Images and documents

Images

Artefact

  • Credit Line
    Collection of Auckland Museum Tamaki Paenga Hira, 2015.20.25
  • Primary Maker

     unknown (Maker)

  • Place
  • Date
    Unknown
  • Associated Notes

    Japanese 'chop' in container collected by Major E.C.S. (Colin) Little while serving with Royal Indian Army Service Corps (RIASC), in Burma, WW2

    Colin Little was on a trip to England when war was declared and he joined the Royal Army Service Corps as a 2nd Lieutenant. He served in France and was present at the evacuation of Dunkirk. In late 1940 he went as a volunteer to India and transferred to the India Branch Transport. Here he was Officer Commanding.47 General Purposes Transport Company, Royal Indian Army Service Corps, 14th Army. During the Japanese advance he worked on the Burma road coordinating supplies and the movement of refugees. He returned to Britain when the war ended in August 1945 and was subsequently repatriated to New Zealand.

    Dr Edward Colin Selby QSO MBE FNZIAS MSc DPhil.

    Born in China and educated in England Colin Little came to New Zealand circa 1934 to work for his grandfather Edward Selby Little, (who founded ICI in China and headed the Australian Trade Commission to China). Edward Selby Little had retired to Kerikeri where he had citrus orchards and became known as the "father of Kerikeri'. Colin, aged 21 when he came to New Zealand, had a degree in horticulture and for four years managed his grandfather's Kerikeri estate.

    Colin had returned to England on a trip and when war was declared joined up with the Royal Army Service Corps which, at the time, was the only unit accepting volunteer officer cadets (the only NZ force then in the UK was a machinegun battalion which had a full complement). He got a commission as 2nd Lieutenant and served in France, being present at the evacuation of Dunkirk, and subsequently went as a volunteer to India (late 1940). In India he gained the rank of Lt. Colonel and in 1941 transferred to the India Branch Transport and became OC 47 General Transport Company, Royal Indian Army Service Corps, 14th Army in Burma.

    During the Japanese advance he worked on the Burma road coordinating supplies and the movement of refugees, returning to England when the war ended in August 1945, and later coming back to New Zealand.

    Following his return to New Zealand Colin graduated in science from Auckland University; worked for eight years as a technical officer with Imperial Chemical Industries; graduated with a PhD from Oxford followed by three years working with the UN International Atomic Energy Agency creating laboratories in Burma and East Pakistan. Dr Little then worked for the British Government publicising UK research on aquatic weed control followed by a series of placements with the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation in various parts of the world, and a brief assignment for the World Bank on the utilisation of coconut timber in Indonesia. Dr Little retired back to New Zealand in the mid-1970s returning initially to the Bay of Islands where he established an environmental trust.

  • Associated Event
    WW2; 1939-1945
  • Associated Person
  • Associated Place
  • Period
  • Media
  • Measurement Reading

    60mm

    11mm

    8mm

    62mm

    18mm

    12mm

  • Classification
  • Last Update
    15 May 2023
The development of the Auckland War Memorial Museum online collection is an ongoing process; updates, new images and records are added weekly. In some cases, records have yet to be confirmed by Museum staff, and there could be mistakes or omissions in the information provided.

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