John E. Love, Bataan Death March Survivor, Dies at 91

John E. Love, a Bataan Death March survivor who led a campaign to change the caption on a historic march photo from The Associated Press, has died. He was 91.
John E. Love, Bataan Death March Survivor, Dies at 91
In this Aug. 27, 2009 file photo, John E. Love, who is a Bataan Death March survivor, poses for a portrait in Albuquerque, N.M. An Albuquerque retirement home says Love, a Bataan Death March survivor who led a campaign to change the caption on a historic march photo from The Associated Press, has died. Gerry Lightwine, pastor at La Vida Llena, says Love died Monday, March 17, 2014 after a long battle with cancer. He was 91. Love was one of 75,000 Filipino and American soldiers who were taken captive by the Japanese in World War II when the U.S. forces surrendered in the province of Bataan and Corregidor Island in April 1942. Love later worked to change the caption on one of the most famous photos in AP's library about the march. The photo, thought to be of the Bataan Death March, actually was an Allied POW burial detail. The AP corrected the caption in 2010, 65 years after the image was first published. (AP Photo/The Albuquerque Journal, Pat Vasquez-Cunningham)
3/22/2014
Updated:
3/22/2014

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — John E. Love, a Bataan Death March survivor who led a campaign to change the caption on a historic march photo from The Associated Press, has died. He was 91.

Love died Monday after a long battle with cancer, said Gerry Lightwine, pastor at La Vida Llena, an Albuquerque retirement home where Love lived.

As a 19-year-old member of the New Mexico Guard, Love was one of 75,000 Filipino and American soldiers who were taken captive by the Japanese in World War II when the U.S. forces surrendered in the province of Bataan and Corregidor Island in April 1942.

In all, tens of thousands of troops were forced to march to Japanese prison camps in what became known as the Bataan Death March. Many were denied food, water and medical care, and those who collapsed during the scorching journey through Philippine jungles were shot or bayoneted.

“I was one of the first 300 or 400 off the march to enter Camp O'Donnell, and they (prisoners) began dying that same day,” Love told the Albuquerque Journal in a 2009 interview. He estimated he carried more than 1,000 bodies to the graveyard.

For the remainder of the war, Love was forced to work in a Japanese copper mine until being liberated in 1945.

After the war, he enrolled at the University of New Mexico and graduated in 1950. He worked at Conoco Inc. for 35 years and lived in El Paso, Fort Worth, Houston and Arlington, Texas, with his wife, Laura Bernice Ellis, who died in 2000.

In 2009, Love joined a campaign with other survivors of the Bataan Death March to change the caption on one of the most famous photos in AP’s library about the march. The photo, thought to be of the Bataan Death March, actually was an Allied POW burial detail.

Following a six-month investigation, the AP corrected the caption in 2010, 65 years after the image was first published. AP archivists confirmed Love’s account of the burial detail at a prisoner-of-war camp in the weeks that followed the Death March.

When Love learned of the caption revision in March 2010, he became emotional with a reporter.

“Son of a gun. Isn’t that great?” Love said. “It brings tears to my eyes. It really does.”

Larry Ong is a New York-based journalist with Epoch Times. He writes about China and Hong Kong. He is also a graduate of the National University of Singapore, where he read history.