JEATH Museum
>More background info
>What there is to see
>Location
>Access and costs
>Time required
>Combinations with other dark destinations
>Combinations with non-dark destinations
>Photos
More background info: for history and background info in general see the separate entry for the
Death Railway.
This is the original JEATH museum – to be distinguished from the
Kanchanaburi World War II Museum closer to the
Bridge over the River Kwai, which also sometimes uses the legend JEATH, but was established much later and is a jumbled mess (though entertaining for it). The original JEATH museum was founded in 1977 by the abbot of the Wat Chaichumpon temple complex.
For many years it was the only place here in which the plight of the POWs working on the
Death Railway was commemorated. And for that it deserves credit, even if by now it has been surpassed in quality and state-of-the-art-ness by the newer
Thailand-Burma Railway Centre near
Kanchanaburi War Cemetery and the
Hellfire Pass Museum further north along the old railway line. The JEATH Museum may be a bit faded but is still worth a visit.
What there is to see: the museum consists mainly of two long bamboo huts, similar to those that the
POWs forced to work on the
Death Railway would have been housed in. Exhibits inside are mostly blow-ups of old photos, paintings and newspaper clippings (mostly English and also a few in Dutch), augmented by a few artefacts – including a big shell of a bomb, allegedly of the type used by the US in the air raids on the
Bridge over the River Kwai. Some of the paintings in particular are quite gruesome, esp. the detailed images of tropical ulcers and maggot infested sleeping quarters.
Labels and short textual explanations accompanying various exhibits are in Thai and English (sometimes rather dodgy, esp. the spelling) and occasionally Japanese lines have been added too.
Sadly, some of the photos, but also a few text clippings, are so faded and/or stained that it's difficult to make out what's on them or read it all. In a way that adds a certain decrepit charm to the place, though. You just hope that they'll get enough funds to preserve some of the exhibits before they become completely useless.
The most interesting bits, I found, were the more recent newspaper clippings, some of which are about ex-POWs who've come back to the Bridge and the museum – and apparently not all of them appreciate the tourism hype that has grown around the Bridge and the Railway in particular.
Outside the museum is a rather interesting book stall selling a range of information materials (with some overlap with the shop at the
Thailand-Burma Railway Centre).
Access and costs: easy and cheap.
Details: the JEATH Museum is close to the centre of
Kanchanaburi, within walking distance from the bus station. From the
Bridge over the River Kwai it's about 3 miles (4.5 km) to the south-east, so when starting from there (e.g. if you've come on the
Death Railway itself), then you may need a taxi or cyclo. Don't get fooled and be directed to the
Kanchanaburi World War II Museum (which also sometimes uses the designation JEATH) which is much closer to the Bridge. That may be worth a look too in its own right (but more for its weirdness) but it is certainly not the original JEATH Museum. This, i.e. the real thing, is part of the Wat Chaichumpon temple complex further south.
Admission: 30 Baht.
Opening times: daily from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Time required: roughly 45 minutes. More if you want read every single text on display in full detail.
Combinations with other dark destinations: see
Kanchanaburi.
JEATH museum 1
JEATH museum 2
JEATH museum 3
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JEATH museum