From: Jonathan Henshaw
Sent: Thursday, September 30, 2010 4:49 PM
Subject: WB Prentice
Thank you both to Mr Bridge
and Ms Foster...it sounds quite possible that these are one and the same
individual. Prentice's partner could well have been Dutch Indonesian, but I
don't yet have information on that (still looking, though!).
Ms Foster, could you be any more specific about what he had a bad reputation
for or how the staff at the Girls' School reacted? I would like to be a bit
more certain it is the same individual before posting what I have found here on Topica. My email is
jonathan.mylastname@ualberta.ca --I have written it that way to avoid
spam.
Jonathan Henshaw
From: Kathleen Foster
Sent: Thursday, September 30, 2010 10:02 AM
Subject: RE: WB Prentice
Hello Jonathan,
Was there only one
dentist? I certainly remember a dentist who had a surgery in part of the
hospital. He took out one of my teeth and gave me some brandy when I
fainted at the door. Not having asked permission, I arrived back at the
girl’s school smelling of brandy and minus a tooth. I was in
trouble, since he and his partner (Dutch?) had a bad reputation. I
thought they were from Indonesia.
Kathleen Foster (Strange)
From: Ron Bridge
Sent: Thursday, September 30, 2010 12:26 PM
Subject: RE: WB Prentice
Wentworth Baldwin PRENTICE
b 1894 was in Weihsien Block 23 Room 10 his no was RK Prentice 69 Mills St Morristown NJ USA.
Quote Prior to internment
in mid March 1943 he had practised in Peking ( Beijing) and to quote Internationall Red Cross Report.
All dental equipment is the
personal property of WB Prentice and was brought by him from Peking Sufficient
equipment was available for fillings and extractions but equipmnet for Crown, Bridge and prosthetic work are lacking.
Unquote.
from this I would suspect
that he had been in priavte practice in Peking.
Rgds
Ron
From: Jonathan Henshaw
Sent: Thursday, September 30, 2010 4:49 PM
Subject: WB Prentice
Thank you both to Mr Bridge
and Ms Foster...it sounds quite possible that these are one and the same
individual. Prentice's partner could well have been Dutch Indonesian, but I
don't yet have information on that (still looking, though!).
Ms Foster, could you be any more specific about what he had a bad reputation
for or how the staff at the Girls' School reacted? I would like to be a bit
more certain it is the same individual before posting what I have found here on
Topica. My email is jonathan.mylastname@ualberta.ca
--I have written it that way to avoid spam.
Jonathan Henshaw
From: Ron Bridge
Sent: Friday, October 01, 2010 10:56 AM
Subject: RE: WB Prentice
I would say that it is
certainly the same person dentists at that time in North China were
about as plentiful as Hen's teeth. Also as the reprot says it his his own kit suggests that
he was in private practice and not at one of the big medical centres.
Rgds
Ron Bridge
From: Jonathan Henshaw
Sent: Friday, October 01, 2010 7:39 PM
Subject: Re: WB Prentice
Hello Weihsieners,
I happened onto this issue with Dr Prentice while reading the memoirs
of ETC Werner. There was very little, only a few sentences, that
described Weihsien, but a very large report on his investigations about the
murder of his daughter, Pamela Werner. After googling, I found the information
below:
From vagabond to journalist:
Edgar Snow in Asia, 1928-1941
During
the months that Snow was writing Red Star over China he not only had to wrestle
with a rush of significant historical events in China and in Europe, but also
endured a host of personal distractions. Perhaps the most bizarre was a macabre
murder that took place too close to the Snows' home for comfort. On January 8
the mutilated body of nineteen-year-old Pamela Werner was found in a deep ditch
along the road that ran by the ancient Tartar City Wall. Foster Snow frequently
road her bicycle along this road on her way home at night.
Pamela was the daughter of the deceased wife of E.T.C. Werner,
seventy-two-year-old former member of the British Consular Service and now
reclusive writer, and another man. Pamela's heart and lungs had been removed
through a surgically neat circle cut in her diaphragm. There was evidence of
recent sexual intercourse. She reportedly had an appointment with a dentist,
Dr. Prentice, was was rumoured to belong to a love cult, and whom the
elder Werner accused of the murder. Others suspected Werner himself. Still
others noted the body carried the hallmarks of a ritual Chinese murder. The
crime was never solved. It did, however, generate a potent mix of gossip and
speculation that made the Snows question their earlier decision to take
advantage of the were-fox legend in moving into their home on Kuei Chia Chang
and lose a little faith in the sense of secruity and privilege that
Westerners characteristically enjoyed living in Peking. --pg 275.
*****
From the Wall Street Journal (plugging a book that will be published next
year):
On a freezing Beijing
morning in early January 1937, with the Japanese Imperial Army poised to invade
China, American journalist Helen Foster Snow stumbled across a horrible find
under the city's ancient walls—the murdered, eviscerated body of 16-year-old
English schoolgirl Pamela Werner. Down the street, Ms. Snow's husband, Edgar
Snow, was writing his classic book, "Red Star Over China," a
sympathetic account of Mao Zedong's guerilla army. Of similar height and build, Ms. Snow wondered: Had an
anti-Communist killer meant to strike her?
Scotland Yard's suspects
included an unknown psychopath; Ms. Werner's dentist, the American Dr.
Prentice, who ran a swingers' club (a "love cult" in 1930s parlance)
to which the schoolgirl belonged; and the victim's own father. The killer was never found.
*****
From the publisher's website:
British Embassy officials
were keen to pin the blame on the local Triad mafia. Edgar Snow, the American
writer with unique access to Mao's inner circle, believed anti-Communist
elements may have in fact mistaken Pamela for his wife, Helen, as the body was found
not far from his own courtyard house.
Joint investigations
between dogged Chinese and British detectives soon uncovered the shady secrets
of Peking's international society. By week, Pamela was a high school
border in nearby Tiantsin and player on the
hockey team; at weekends, however, she posed for glamour photographs and
frequented a swingers club of older men and young women, run by an American
dentist.
*****
Looking at the camp roster, I noticed that there was an American dentist by the
name of Prentice at Weihsien, and he was sent there from Peking. Werner
doesn't mention a specific name in his memoir, although he claims that the
identity of the killers was an open secret, but it is hard to imagine that both
he and the man he believed killed his daughter were in the camp without a
certain amount of tension being generated. Does anyone else recall anything
further on Prentice or his partner? or about Werner?
With thanks,
Jonathan
Yard's suspects included an unknown psychopath; Ms. Werner's dentist, the
American Dr. Prentice, who ran a swingers' club (a "love cult" in
1930s parlance) to which the schoolgirl belonged; and the victim's own
father. The killer was never found.
From: Pamela Masters
Sent: Monday, October 04, 2010 12:32 AM
Subject: Re: WB Prentice
This is in response to the several queries
about Dr. Prentice...
There is a very macabre story wrapped around
Dr. Prentice, but you have to remember I was possibly eight when I
heard it – all in bits and pieces. At that time, 1934-35, my sister Margo was
attending TGS and was an avid field hockey player. I recall being in
awe of her and her friends when they came to our house, all hot and musty after
a strenuous game. Among the girls was one I particularly liked because she was
named Pamela (my first name, but one which my family refused to call me by) and
if memory serves me right, she was a cute red-head with lots of freckles.
When the tragedy occurred, involving Prentice, I
believe Pamela Werner was living in Peking with her father, and
staying in Tientsin with friends while attending TGS. Dr Werner
was an anthropologist involved in the famous Peking-Man digs and was away from
home a lot of the time. Pamela’s mother, a beautiful Russian woman,
was brutally murdered several years earlier, and everyone was convinced that
her father had killed her in a jealous rage. He was much older that she was,
and every man who looked her way drove him into a fit of jealousy. The murder
was horribly brutal: she was stabbed umpteen times, and filthy names were cut
into her torso. That murder has never been solved.
Christmas 34-35, Pamela asked if she could stay
with us as she didn’t want to go home to Peking. Mother asked her why, and
Pamela said she was scared, but she didn’t elaborate. The decision was taken
out of Mother’s hands when Dr. Werner insisted Pamela go home, and reluctantly
Mother and Margo took her to the train station. That was the last time they saw
her alive.
It appears a day or so later, while she was
walking home with her Russian boyfriend from an ice-skating date, she stopped
to tie her shoe laces. She called to her friend to keep on going and that she’d
catch up. A minute or so passed and her friend turned to see where she was, but
she was nowhere to be seen. She had just vanished. He called and searched as
best he could, and then in a panic ran to the police station and reported what
had happened.
A massive manhunt ensued and ended with her body
being found atop one of the inner city walls, hacked to death, just as her
mother’s had been. Her boyfriend was never a suspect as he’d done everything he
could to help. But during the search, the chief of police had occasion to go up
to Dr. Prentice’s office (a tip-off, no doubt) and he found the place covered
in blood. It was everywhere. When Prentice was interrogated, he insisted he’d
worked on a Chinese laborer who needed an
extraction, and that the man had panicked in the middle of the procedure,
jumped up and ran, hemorrhaging all over the place
looking for a way to escape. The police chief insisted there was
much too much blood involved to have come from a tooth extraction, but they
were never able to pin anything on the dentist. Another brutal murder was left
unsolved…
Whatever his involvement, Prentice was one very
frightened man when he came to WeiHsien, and rumor has it that there was
at least one attempt on his life in the camp.
So there you have it, a real cold-case murder
mystery waiting to be solved…
Pamela Masters-Flynn
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