The Story Of Francis J. Morrissey: Pilot School, The 450th Bombardment Group, Flying The B-24 Liberator And Prisoner Of War At Dulag Luft, Stalag Luft III Sagan, Stalag XIII-D Nurnberg And Stalag VII-A Moosburg
The Story Of Francis J. Morrissey: Pilot School, The 450th Bombardment Group, Flying The B-24 Liberator And Prisoner Of War At Dulag Luft, Stalag Luft III Sagan, Stalag XIII-D Nurnberg And Stalag VII-A Moosburg
The Story Of Francis J. Morrissey: Pilot School, The 450th Bombardment Group, Flying The B-24 Liberator And Prisoner Of War At Dulag Luft, Stalag Luft III Sagan, Stalag XIII-D Nurnberg And Stalag VII-A Moosburg
Morrissey:
Pilot School, The 450th Bombardment Group, Flying The
B-24 Liberator And Prisoner Of War At Dulag Luft, Stalag Luft III
Sagan, Stalag XIII-D Nurnberg And Stalag VII-A Moosburg
Parr Morrissey
Rzatkowski
ii
fl
fi
CHAPTER 1
Francis Joseph Morrissey - Birth Through
Post-WWII Military Service
3
Francis (Frank) Joseph Morrissey was
born on 25 October 1922, in Coldwater,
Ohio to James Stephen Morrissey
(1879-1952) of Fowler, Benton County,
Indiana and Mary Eva Morrissey
(1879-1958) of Butler Township, Mercer
County, Ohio. Frank was one of two sib-
lings; his sister Mary Jane was born three
years earlier.
50 at refrigerator pioneer Frigidaire
His mother
Corporation, a General Motors
Mary was a
subsidiary. Frigidaire had their Division
homemaker.
Plant No. 1 located at 300 Taylor Street
His father
near downtown Dayton. Frank’s father
James was a
was one of 12,000 workers at the time in
steam-fitter
the company’s Dayton-area factories
that worked
During World War II Frigidaire
the night shift
division’s two plants (Kettering
in Department
4
Boulevard being the other) produced Frank attended grade school in Dayton
propellers and aircraft machine guns for at Holy Angels from 1928 to 1934 and
the war effort. Our Lady of the Rosary from 1934 to
The Morrissey family lived in three 1936
different homes on the east side of In 1940 he graduated
Dayton from Frank’s early years through from Fairmont High
his wartime service: first 250 Medford School on Far Hills
Street, then 332 Elverne Avenue and Avenue (State Route
finally 231 Troy Street in Dayton. 48) in Kettering, Ohio.
Frank did well in both
academics and sports.
He played varsity
football - right guard
for the Fairmont
Dragons - receiving a
letter for both the 1938
Frank’s parents in June 194 and 1939 seasons.
5
.
Left
A classified ad from
The Dayton Herald,
Monday, 23 March
1942, page 1
Source:
https://www.newspa-
pers.com/image/412219745
7
:
After graduating high school Frank was by pilots, navigators, and bombardiers.
employed at Hobart Manufacturing as The first six weeks was a compressed
an automatic screw machine operator, "boot camp" that concentrated on
and prior to enlisting the International athletics and military training. This was
Tool Company at 434 E. First Street in followed by four weeks of academics.
Dayton as an apprentice tool maker Students were taught the mechanics and
On 18 July 1942, Frank enlisted as a physics of flight. Then they were taught
Private in the U.S. Army Air Corps at to apply their knowledge practically by
Patterson Field’s 3rd Station Air Depot, teaching them aeronautics, deflection
Fairfield (Fairborn), Ohio. He was shooting, and thinking in three
assigned Army Serial No. 15318562 dimensions. Cadets were also evaluated
for 10 hours in a crude flight simulator
He arrived at San Antonio Aviation
called a "blue box", then performed a
Cadet Center at Randolph Field in San
harrowing "ride-along" with a
Antonio, Texas by 26 December 1942, to
pilot-instructor for an hour. Those that
begin Pre-Flight School, and finished by
passed were then permitted to attend the
17 February 1943. This phase was
first phase of Pilot School - Primary
divided into two parts and was attended
Flight Training
8
.
Above: Frank at
332 Elverne
Avenue,
probably after
graduation from Primary Flight Training
Right: 1943 Pilot School photographs
Next Page: Frank’s Elementary Pilot
Training And Ground School diploma
issued by Brayton Flying Servic
10
e
11
Typically, students were classified as an This system was later changed so that all
Aviation Cadet (AV/C) when they had pilots were commissioned.
two year or more years of college, or The pilot of an aircraft was in command
scored high on the Aviation Cadet test. even if the co-pilot outranked him. If a
In contrast, an Aviation Student (AV/S) Flight Officer was the pilot, the co-pilot,
usually had less than two years of navigator and bombardier would be
college or scored less than excellent on under his command, even if they were
the Aviation Cadet test commissioned officers.
Both the AV/C and the AV/S received It was common for a B-17 or B-24
the same training and had the same bomber crew to have many different
responsibilities, but once the AV/C combinations of Flight Officers, Second
completed flight training he was Lieutenants, First Lieutenants and
commissioned as a Second Lieutenant, occasionally Captains and Majors.
while the AV/S was appointed as a
At Primary school, Morrissey spent a
Flight Officer. A Flight Officer was
total of 61 hours and 55 minutes flying in
equivalent in pay grade to a Warrant
the Fairchild PT-19A Cornell trainer - a
Officer Junior Grade (W.O.J.G.).
two-seat open cockpit aircraft powered
12
.
Primary. About 100 miles in length each, instruments or by aerial navigation, fly
these flights were pre-determined round at night and fly for long distances. Frank
trip routes that were drawn on a map flew 71 hours and 45 minutes in the
strapped to the student’s knee. BT-13B Valiant - a 4,227 lb. 450 hp
All of those in this class that completed enclosed trainer with room for the
Primary training in Cuero were next sent instructor and two students. With a top
to Basic Flight Training in Waco, Texas. speed of 155 mph produced by the sole
Pratt and Whitney engine, the BT-13B
Although scheduled to leave Cuero on
also included operable landing flaps, a
Thursday, 22 April, Frank and his class
two-position variable pitch propeller
didn’t leave until Friday at 1:00 p.m.
and a two-way radio.
They arrive at Waco Army Air Field to
begin training as Class 43-H at 6:00 p.m. Instructors rated Frank’s character and
on Saturday, 24 April 1943. The class efficiency as “Excellent” during this
finished this phase of training on training.
26 June. The “Ground School” portion of Basic
This phase of Pilot School taught was challenging. If grades fell below
students to fly in formation, fly by 75% in any subject, students didn’t get to
14
go to town and had to attend night Morrissey started the final flight training
classes. Some students never made it to required to earn a Pilot rating -
town Advanced Flight Training - at Lubbock
Beginning on Wednesday the 26th of Army Air Field in Lubbock, Texas, with
May, students were flying cross-country Class 43-H on 28 June 1943. There he
to both Jacksonville and Palestine, Texas. was assigned to the 495th Squadron
Night flying also begun the same day.
Night training was completed for all
students by Thursday, 17 June.
On Monday, 21 June 1943, the students
learned they were going to Lubbock,
Texas for their next and final phase of
flight training. Wednesday of this week
was the last scheduled day of flying for
Basic. They also received their Basic Above: A group of aviation cadets
Flight Training Class 43-H “yearbooks” heading toward their assigned BT-13s.
on this day.
15
.
16
3
Advanced school before graduating and had retractable landing gears and
getting his pilot's wings. electrically operated flaps. Twin engine
Instructors rated Frank’s character and planes require the additional skill of
efficiency as “Excellent” during this synchronizing the speed of the two
training engines
Advanced school was a more complex Students started in the slower 5,700 lb.
continuation of the same training Cessna AT-17 “Bobcat” trainer. It was
experienced at Basic Flight Training. As made of wood and tubular steel with a
with the previous phases of training, it fabric covering. This construction gave it
consisted of ground school, physical the nickname of “Bamboo Bomber” with
training, inspections, etc. Flying became a second name of “Double Breasted
more difficult with detailed navigation Cub.” The landing speeds were relative-
for long distances, additional instrument ly slow, similar to the planes in the Pri-
flying, radio procedures with landing mary and Basic schools. The AT-17 land-
fields, and intensive night flying. The ed and stalled a lot slower than the
major difference in training was the BT-13B
transition to a twin engine airplane that
17
.
The next plane the cadets trained in was The class started flying cross-country on
the 6,062 lb. Curtiss AT-9 “Fledging” Tuesday, 20 July. On Saturday the 24th
nicknamed “Jeep”, with all metal they flew cross-country at low altitudes
construction. The AT-9 was a faster and to both Portales and Canyon, New
more difficult twin engine trainer than Mexico, then back to Lubbock.
the AT-17. The handling of this plane Night flying comprised 20 hours of the
made it ideal training for pilots who 70 hours required in Advanced school.
would go on to fly high performance
In early August students transitioned to
aircraft
AT-9s.
The main daily schedule was flying from
On Saturday, the 7th of August the class
7:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m., three hours of
conducted night flying to Albuquerque,
ground school in the afternoon, one hour
New Mexico and El Paso, Texas. Then
of physical training and finally link
they traveled across the river and
training at night. Alternating each day,
border into Juarez, Mexico and back
they flew in the evening one day and
across the border to Lubbock the same
morning the next
night.
18
20
.
Frank is standing in the rear row near the middle window with Class 43-H
on graduation day, 30 August 194
21
3
22
n
23
25
2
As previously stated, a Flight Officer Officer drew at least $255 and often more
(F/O) was a rank equivalent to a junior because of his added time in service
grade warrant officer and was reserved Like many Flight Officers sent to a
mainly for those pilots under 21 years of theater of operations during World War
age with only a high school diploma. II, Frank eventually received a direct
Financially, Flight Officers were actually commission as a second lieutenant, with
a little better off than their a date of rank of 9 April 1944
commissioned counterparts. Their $150 The class received their Pilot Badge from
per month in basic pay was the same as Major Alvin L. Smith, commander of the
that of junior grade warrant officers and 495th Two-Engine Flying Training
second lieutenants and, like other Squadron, and Captain Thomas O.
officers, they received another $75 (50% Marshall, commander of the 72nd
of basic pay) as flight pay. But where the Two-Engine Flying Training Group.
overseas cost-of-living allowance for
An Advanced Flight Training class photo
commissioned officers was 10% of their
in an earlier part this chapter shows
basic pay, it was 20% for warrant
cadets Clyde Odis Primrose and Francis
officers. Thus, a second lieutenant
J. Morrissey training together.
collected $240 in combat, while a Flight
26
.
Laundry service was bad in Clovis. It Special Orders No. 258 dated 15
took 10 days to get washed laundry back September 1943, relieved Frank from the
and a week to get dry cleaning back. 302nd and assigned him as a Co-Pilot
Most officers had only three or four suits (CP) to Crew No. 302-9-59 (one of 23
of kakis, and thus, it was challenging to crews transferred from Clovis to
keep clothes clean. In addition, they had Alamogordo) with the 450th, with a
to pay $34.50 in advance for one month report date not later than 2400 hours
of officer's mess tickets for food and it (midnight) on 27 September. By this
was reported that the food wasn’t as time the pilots new they would be flying
good as they had at Lubbock the four-engine B-24 Liberator. Once in
Alamogordo crews would begin training
28
.
as a combat group prior to being frames covered with tar paper. The
assigned to overseas duty. desert heat and the lack of cooling
By 20 September, the 450th had 24 facilities made life unpleasant until cool
complete crews at Alamogordo Army weather arrived
Air Field. Although the 450th officially Accelerated crew training in
moved to the Field in July of 1943, it Alamogordo was divided into four
wasn’t until late September that crews phases, with flying and ground school
began their combat group training mixed in each phase. The first phase was
required prior to being assigned to designed to increase individual job
overseas duty. proficiency, develop team work and to
Two squadrons were originally planned become familiar with equipment. Pilots
for Alamogordo. Thus, it had insufficient were getting their first experience with
room or runways for four squadrons. In the B-24. Only the essential crew flew,
addition, at first, some crews were while the remainder attended schools in
housed in tents. A rapid building their specialty to hone skills
program was started to build additional
buildings, most of which were wooden
29
30
31
In the second phase the complete crew Squadron (H). This group of squadrons -
practiced bombing, extensive air to the 720th, 721st, 722nd and 723rd -
ground gunnery and air to air gunnery would eventually contain approximately
on towed targets. Some simulated bomb 70 complete crews.
runs covered long distances at altitudes On 19 November 1943, Special Orders
as high as 20,000 feet, while on oxygen. No. 309 were issued to move the 450th to
The third phase consisted of Herington Army Airfield, a Kansas-
navigational skills at all altitudes, over based staging area used for overseas
long distances. The final phase was movement. The move would be in
mainly close formation flying combined phases - 10 crews per day for six days -
with navigation, simulated bomb runs, starting on 20 November, by aircraft
and flying at different altitudes, with with only personal luggage
phases two through four being The orders stated that Morrissey’s crew
conducted both day and night was assigned to depart for Herington on
Special Orders No. 58 dated 21 Sep- B-24H Serial No. 41-28603, the
tember 1943, assigned Frank and his “Chiquita Mia”, the morning of 23
crew to the 722nd Bombardment November. The destination of Herington
32
33
34
35
36
Previous Page: The “603” crew from After modification, the new B-24H’s
Rzatkowski’s copy of this photo dated arrived at Alamogordo in early
10 November 1943 November 1943. On 22 November, the
Top Row Left To Right: remaining ground echelon was issued
orders to prepare for movement by train
2LT Harry E. Parr, Navigator
on 26 November, for Camp Patrick Hen-
F/O Francis S. Rzatkowski, Pilot
ry, Virginia. Each unit was to bring all
F/O Francis J. Morrissey, Co-Pilo organizational equipment with them
SGT Raymond W. Flora, Radi (tents, mess equipment, office
equipment, maintenance equipment,
toilet paper, etc.) Upon arrival in
Bottom Row Left To Right:
Virginia, the party would embark on the
SGT George G. Grad, Gunne
ships S.S. Bret Harte, U.S.S. Henry
SGT Benedict L. Klinshaw, Gunne Baldwin, and the Benjamin S. Milam,
SGT William J. Booth, Gunne which would take them to the combat
SGT Herbert N. Wilch, Gunne zone
SGT Dee R. Jones, Enginee After Morrissey and his crew arrived in
Herington, the first order of the day was
37
.
to settle in and prepare paperwork for Crew No. 302-9-59 then spent as much
allotments sent home, war bonds, wills, time as possible outfitting their Liberator
and power of attorney. for overseas duty. The plane was
checked and double checked for possible
problems. Some of the overseas legs
such as crossing the Atlantic were very
long and everything had to work perfect
prior to leaving
Issuing flight clothing and equipment
was part of the next phase of processing
for movement. The crews were issued a
Above: Navigator “Handsome” Harry sheepskin coat and leg zippered pants,
E. Parr (standing closest to the Shillings fur lined helmet, steel helmet, boots, and
Store building wall) with Co-Pilot Frank goggles. A .45 Caliber pistol with
Morrissey, at the northwest corner of shoulder holster was issued for personal
Walnut and Broadway Streets in protection. Electrically heated under
downtown Herington, Kansas, late suits were issued with gloves and felt
November 194 shoes to wear inside of fur lined boots.
38
3
Other miscellaneous gear was issued, ATC operated bases along the route to
such as oxygen masks, vests, and life the war zone to transport men and
vests. New parachutes were issued as supplies, and to assist bomber crews.
two types - chest and seat. Most pilots The Caribbean wing operated bases on
were issued “seat packs” that were worn the southern route down the Caribbean
all of the time. The remaining crew wore coast.
the “chest packs,” which were only used The processing of planes and personnel
during emergency. A specially designed through Morrison Field usually took one
harness was worn which allowed the to two days. During this time crews were
chute to be snapped on with two many times restricted to base in an
buckles. This system permitted freedom attempt to limit sensitive information -
of movement during flight such as how many planes and men were
Frank and his crew left Herington being processed. Mechanics used this
around 6 December 1943, for Morrison time to inspect the aircraft for any need-
Field at West Palm Beach, Florida - their ed repairs and supplies.
port of embarkation. Crews were now
assigned to the Caribbean wing of the
Air Transport Command (ATC). The
39
For most crews, Morrison Field was the passed the orders to plot a course to each
last place they would stand on United airfield.
States soil until they returned at the end
of the war.
From October 1943 to May 1944 the field
processed 6,216 planes and 45,344 flying
personnel despite the base’s reduction in
personnel
At this point, the air crews had no
knowledge of where they were going
and were only given a heading. The
sealed orders were given to the crews
just before take off for each leg of the Above: B-24 Liberators at Morrison Field
journey. The orders were marked waiting for processing before going
“Secret” and could not be opened until overseas. Photo courtesy of the U.S. Air
they had been in the air for two hours, Force Historical Research Agency
at which time the navigator would be
40
Above: Borenquen Field, Puerto Rico sometime between 1943 and 194
41
5
Crew No. 302-9-59 left on the first leg of for the next leg of the flight. The average
their long journey to the combat zone stay at Borenquen Field for each ship
around 7 December 1943, flying to was one to two days
Borenquen Field, Puerto Rico. Here, The next flight was approximately 1,700
ground crews were alert and the planes miles to Waller Field on Trinidad.
were serviced before the arrivals Trinidad is a small island in the West
boarded the trucks that would transport Indies, just off the coast of Venezuela.
them to the registering office. Two crew This leg took ten and one-half hours.
members from each Liberator were Then, came an additional 1,200 miles to
usually left behind for guard duty. Belem Airfield in Brazil. This flight took
Minor repairs were made when seven and one half hours.
necessary. Restriction was enforced as
Instructions were to keep in contact with
far as the transit crews were concerned.
Waller Field for the first half the trip,
Besides, fatigue weighed down any
then keep in contact with Belem for the
desire of any one man to go visiting in
last half. Two alternate fields - Adjacento
the nearby town. Special briefings were
Field (at Fortaleza, Brazil) and São Luís
held for pilots, navigators and radio
Airport were to be used in case of
operators the evening before departing
42
.
emergency. Facilities at Belem Airfield Natal was one of two jumping off places
were very crude and primitive for the long over-water flight to Africa.
The journey to Belem took them over All equipment had to be in perfect
jungle and across the mouth of the working order. Crews were involved in
Amazon River. Several B-24s went down special meetings for pilots, navigators,
in the Amazon jungle due to bad weath- and radio operators. All fuel tanks were
er or mistakes in navigation. As late as topped off to the maximum capacity
1995, a Liberator was found in the while on the runway. Natal was a better
Brazilian jungle and the remains base than others, with adequate facilities
recovered. and food.
The next station - Parnamirim Field at The final leg from South America was
Natal, Brazil - was over 1,000 miles approximately 2,200 miles, all over
away. This took approximately six hours water. It took over eleven and one-half
and was also over the jungle, where hours to arrive at Mallard Field, Dakar,
there was no place to land if trouble Senegal, Africa.
developed If there were problems with the planes
on this leg, the crew would have to ditch
43
their plane in the Atlantic Ocean, with Dakar, being the western most point of
little hope of survival. The B-24 was Africa and just north of the equator, was
known to break in half upon ditching very hot and humid. The sleeping
and would sink within seconds. Crew quarters and mess facilities were all in
members could be severely injured or tents. Men had to sleep under mosquito
trapped in the tangle of the wreckage. nets for peace from the insects. The local
The bomber was equipped with survival natives were notorious for stealing, and
gear such as life rafts, first-aid kits, everything had to be guarded, including
flares, emergency rations, life preservers, the plane
etc Here crews were shown the importance
The navigator did the initial navigation, of malaria prevention. Before they were
with the radio operator locating a radio allowed off the ships, the planes were
beam to follow approximately 200 miles sprayed with insecticide internally. Crew
from Dakar. Most crews landed with less members had to stay on their Liberator
than a half hour of fuel remaining, for at least an extra ten minutes.
leaving a very little margin of safety. Frank Rzatkowski shared an amusing
Some planes ran out of fuel on the story about this incident. This pilot was
runway just as they touched down
44
.
not generally a drinker of alcohol. not fly over 12,000 feet without oxygen,
However, as a celebration for surviving which was not supplied for the flight
the harrowing journey to Dakar, the overseas. The only way through the
leader of the “Chiquita Mia” broke open mountains was a narrow pass at 8,000
a case of whiskey he had stored on the feet. A sigh of relief would have been
ship for such a special occasion. As the heaved by all when this was successfully
crew were all sharing a glass, military passed, because Marrakech was just
personnel came on board and started beyond.
spraying them with insecticide mid- During this period, several planes
drink, without any thought of their crashed into the mountains. Fortunately,
current consumption. only one plane from the 450th was lost in
The next journey, across the Sahara the mountains. Like all other stations be-
Desert was a seven hour flight of fore, the pilots, navigators and radio op-
approximately 1,400 miles to Menara erators were briefed on that particular
Airport at Marrakech, French Morocco. leg. This leg was comparable to the trip
This flight required a difficult crossing of over the ocean due to the endless sea of
the Atlas Mountains. The mountains sand.
were 14,000 feet high and the crew could
45
46
a
Nothing could be seen for miles and Airfield, located about 10 miles south of
miles around. Tunis, Tunisia, was approximately 1,000
Before their off-duty visit to town, miles and six hours flying time. Tunis
Rzatkowski gave his crew a stern was littered with burned out and shot-
warning: Marrakech was dangerous; he up trucks, aircraft and all other types of
told them not to stare at or touch the military equipment, which was
women, and not to smoke anything primarily German. The final battle in
offered, especially out of a pipe. His Africa that led to the defeat of Field
concern was reinforced by a recent story Marshall Rommel was located in the
of another AAF pilot accepting a shoe area around Tunis. The airfield was
shine from a local, followed by having a covered with bomb craters; and most of
hand grenade shoved up the officer’s the hangars no longer had roofs.
pant leg, killing him instantly. The flight from Tunis to Manduria, Italy
The briefing for the final leg informed was 500 miles and approximately four
them that the actual destination for the hours flying time over the colorful
unit would be Italy, not England. The Mediterranean Sea. Their home was an
journey from Marrakech to Oudna old Italian fighter base with a 7,000 foot
dirt strip constructed in an olive grove.
47
The field initially had one runway made those following had to pitch tents in the
of oiled clay and dirt with revetments on mud
the sides for parking aircraft. Some areas The first plane of the 450th touched
had perforated steel planking (PSP), down at the Manduria Airfield in the
which is an ingenuous set of light weight rain on 20 December 1943; Frank’s crew
interlocking panels that were put arrived on 3 January 1944. The ground
together on the ground, providing a crew, equipment and supplies came by
hard surface for air strips or parking. ship, arriving the first part of January
During the rainy season there were very 1944. The first ship arrived at the Port of
few high areas free from mud. The only Bari on New Years Eve. Another ship
living quarters available were old Italian arrived at Naples and the final ship
barracks with no beds or cots. The crews docked in Sicily on 15 January
only had what personal gear they
The 450th came together as a fighting
brought in their duffle bags. The dirty
unit on 8 January, when they made their
barracks leaked when it rained, and had
first bomb run on the airdrome in
no heat or lights. Those who came in
Mostar, Yugoslavia. This was considered
first found space in the barracks, and
to be an easy “milk run” with little
48
.
49
.
50
On 6 March, between the 450th’s 32nd one of twelve Flight Leaders for the
and 33rd mission, Morrissey traveled to 450th.
Bari to visit Leo Elwood Phillips for Thirty-seven B-24s took off at 0630 hours
three hours. Phillips was the brother of to bomb the south half of the main
Esther P. Lewis and Morrissey’s future marshaling yard. Two ships returned
brother-in-law. Also assigned to the 15th early. Thirty-five dropped 104.75 tons of
AAF, Phillips was trained to generate 500 lb. bombs target at 1133 hours from
oxygen for use by bomber and fighter 20,000 - 22,000 feet. One ship jettisoned
crews. Morrissey visited Leo once more three tons of bombs near the target after
on the 27th, between the 450th’s 38th engine failure reduced speed and one
and 39th missions, spending over five jettisoned bombs in Adriatic after they
hours together. They had ample time for hung when bombs were released over
discussion and an evening meal. target.
One notable mission before the summer While still 34 minutes from the target
of 1944 was the Group’s 43rd - to the and in cruising formation a flight of
marshaling yard in Budapest, Hungary. between 15 to 20 ME-109s were seen
This third day of April found Bruner as from an altitude of 22,500 feet flying
51
almost 2000 feet higher and to the right. Attacks were made singly and in pairs -
Some were black and some were yellow one flight seemed coordinated as 11 to 12
but they did not come close enough for ME-109s and FW-190s joined at 3 and 9
distinctive markings to be seen. No o'clock diving underneath while 4
initial attacks were made. Trailing JU-88s stood to rear to close immediately
slightly were two Lufwaffe JU-88s at a after at 5 and 7 o'clock high firing
higher elevation who seemed to be rockets and breaking off at 100 yards on
directing the flight. either side. All attacks took place
Actual attacks were not started until between 20,000 - 21,000 feet. The great
until 1110 hours when five FW-190s majority of attacks were not pressed
approached from the rear, but stayed home with complete aggressiveness.
back and fired 20mm cannon without Flak over the target was intense and
closing. The attacks increased in accurate - putting holes in a number of
intensity up to the target where all the 450th’s Liberators. Luckily, no
action was broken off but rejoined as the damage was serious. The bursts over the
formation rallied target area were of the black and white
kind with black puffs predominating.
There were no flak signals for enemy
52
.
aircraft to break off encounters noted. crew members were seriously wounded
Enroute of Sarajevo, slight, good heavy and two were slightly wounded. No
flak was encountered while at Liberators were lost.
Szekesfehervar it was moderate, good, As the target was approached it was
heavy. At Dubrovnik the flak was slight, seen that smoke screens had been started
poor and heavy and that the target area was 6/10
Of the two B-24s that returned early on obscured. The Y at the northeast end of
this particular mission one jettisoned the marshaling yard was still visible and
three tons of bombs in the Adriatic and the bombardiers were able to use it for
one returned bombs to base. Thirty-four target identification purposes. Visual
ships returned to base at 1352 hours. assessment of damage was virtually
One returned to base at 1840 hours impossible as the smoke screen
having stopped at a friendly field to thickened but crew members were
refuel. almost unanimous in declaring the
In all, 16 aircraft received minor flak target well hit.
damage. One aircraft received minor Photo coverage showed 90 bursts in the
damage from the fighter attack. Two marshaling yard, with 10 of those on the
53
54
4
55
.
54
.
57
59
Previous Page and Above: Easter Sunday church services being conducted on
9 April 1944 for 15th AAF personnel near a runway on Manduria Airfield
60
Then on 30 May 1944, every crew’s worst According to the Missing Air Crew
nightmare occurred. Lieutenant Morris- Report (MACR) #5463 (see Chapter 5 for
sey’s B-24H Serial No. 42-94901 piloted the complete report), the crew inside the
by Tommy F. Bruner, was shot down “901” that day included
over Križevci, Yugoslavia. The Memor- 2LT Bruner, Tommy F. Pilo
ial Day Mission for the “901” crew - No.
2LT Morrissey, Francis J Co-Pilot
77 for the 450th and Frank’s 27th - was to
2LT Parr, Harry E. Jr. Navigato
bomb an aircraft parts factory in Ebre-
ichsdorf, Austria. 1LT Gross, Edwin Bombardie
S/SGT Cain, Richard J. Radi
S/SGT Engle, Charles D. Gunne
T/SSG Jones, Dee R. Jr. Enginee
SGT Josephson, Harland F. Gunne
SGT Mielke, Wallace J. Gunne
S/SGT Pine, Arthur W. Gunne
The“901” In Fligh
61
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t
The 450th Bombardment Group’s S-2 its electrical system from flak. Two
(Intelligence) Narrative Report for this aircraft were missing and one aircraft
mission stated that 38 B-24 type aircraft down at a friendly field
took off between 0630 and 0656 hours The formation was attacked by 15-20
(6:30 a.m. to 6:56 a.m.) to bomb the ME-109s, 1 JU-87 and 7-10 JU-88s at 1110
factory. Thirty (30) aircraft dropped 75 to 1137 hours (11:10 a.m. to 11:37 a.m.)
tons of 500 lb. G.P. bombs in the target from 13,000 - 18,000 feet after leaving the
area from 20,000 - 23,000 feet from 1030 target and after apparent withdrawal of
to 1038 hours (10:30 a.m. to 10:38 a.m.). escorts. 16 assaults were made, very
Three aircraft returned early. Two aggressively: from 6 o'clock level and
aircraft jettisoned five (5) tons: one high, from 3 and 4 o'clock low and some
jettisoning 2 ½ tons in an open field to coming in two abreast splitting high and
the right of the Initial Point (the last of a low and closing in to within 50 yards.
series of navigated waypoints before the Some ME-109s were silver and crosses
target) because of inability to stay with on fuselage, wings and tail; and some
formation with full bomb load and the were silver with white tails.
other jettisoning 2 ½ tons near Bad
Voslau Airdrome because of damage to
62
.
63
Near the Austrian border the “901” Parr reported that those Bf 109s were
developed engine supercharger trouble, followed about 200 yards behind by a
and began feathering one engine, which lone silver P-51 Mustang with red and
resulted in the Liberator to lose altitude white diagonal stripes on the rudder.
and speed The B-24 was hit from the rear by rounds
Lieutenant Gross reported that the ship fired from the P-51, according to Parr, as
overflew their target at Ebreichsdorf and well as rounds from the 20mm cannon
clover-leafed around heavily defended mounted on the Bf 109 that was in chase.
Vienna, Austria for a brief time before it Parr added that the shots from the P-51
was eventually hit by German FLAK at were the most destructive, tearing the
about 22,000 feet. The FLAK pierced the B-24‘s horizontal stabilizer to shreds and
belly of their airplane. The No. 3 and punching large holes in the ailerons.
No. 4 engines also took direct hits and The Messerschmitt’s rounds exploded in
smoked and sputtered before going the tail, cutting the control cables and
silent. The “901” was then attacked at disabling the Inter-phone crew
6 o’clock and /or 7 o’clock high from communications system, which meant
multiple German Messerschmitt Bf (Me) the pilots could no longer effectively fly
109 fighters.
64
.
the ship. Sometime after losing who looked down through the opening
communication with the rest of the crew below and froze. Gross then told him:
tail gunner Pine motioned that German “That’s where you bail out.” He gave
fighters were coming up close behind. him a push out the bottom of the ship
At an altitude of around 16,500 feet and before he could respond.
already after the “901” had started to After bailing out Gross made himself
lose altitude more rapidly, Gross, who comfortable in the harness. Shortly after
was on the flight deck, heard Morrissey his jump one of the attacking Bf 109s
shout: “Bail out! Bail out! flew within about 50 feet of his
The bombardier then put on his parachute. Ed could clearly see the
parachute and opened the bomb bay pilot’s black flight jacket, helmet and
doors. When he was about to jump he oxygen mask. However, instead of
noticed the top turret gunner stuck in his killing him, the pilot saluted and turned
seat webbing. Ed went back to help him, the plane back to join his unit
releasing his seat restraint and helping Gross landed safely just north of the
him slide down the fuselage. He then led Sava, a river and a tributary of the
the gunner to the bomb bay catwalk, Danube that flows through Croatia
65
”
A report from a nearby B-24 crew stated German records credit Luftwaffe pilot
that within two minutes nine parachutes Unteroffizier (Sergeant) Josef Kaiser of
left the airplane - first a group of three 9/JG-27 with shooting down the “901.”
chutes, then a group of four chutes and Jagdeschwader 27 (JG 27) was a fighter
finally two more. Parr, Gross and Jones wing of the Luftwaffe, serving in
were the first three to bail out; followed Germany, France, Austria, North Africa
by Cain, Engle, Mielke, and Bruner; and as well as the Mediterranean theater
finally, Josephson and Morrissey
This was Kaiser’s fifth and last air
The ship then turned over, went into a victory. He was killed in action on
steep dive and exploded upon hitting 12 June 1944, flying Bf 109 G-6/U4 -
the ground. The time of impact was 1113 Werk #440305 in aerial combat in the
hours (11:13 a.m.) at coordinates Caen/Bayeux area of France during the
46°00’N - 16°30‘E - near Križevci - Battle of Normandy.
located about 60 kilometers northeast of
Included in the MACR is the English
Zagreb, Yugoslavia (now Croatia).
translation of a German Downed Allied
Aircraft Report - Kampfflugzeug Unterla-
gen - KU-1301 dated 1 June 1944.
66
This report was completed at 1050 hours hangars with paved aprons (three large
that day by Air Base Command A(o) double-bay, three large and two small)
111/XVIII, Agram-Stadt (Zagreb - on the east and west sides of the airfield,
Borongaj), a joint Croatian Air Force/ a ladder-type servicing hardstand at the
German Luftwaffe airfield located about northeast corner, five workshops, motor
five kilometers east of Zagreb. pool and garages, administration
The airfield at Zagreb -Borongaj was buildings and barracks. A main railway
built between 1925 and 1926 as a joint line was located near the northern
military-civil airfield. It became a joint boundary. The air base’s dimensions
Croatian Air Force – Luftwaffe base were approximately 1005 x 640 meters
following the German occupation in with a take-off/landing run of 1,005
April 1941 with both countries using it meters
mainly for training. It was extended and It is interesting that on 30 May 1944, a
considerably improved by the Germans satellite of Borongaj connected by
in 1942 taxiway - Vukomerec - was bombed by
The field at Borongaj contained 55 USAAF B-17 Flying Fortresses, which
extensive facilities including eight resulted in three Croatian aircraft
destroyed and one German and six
67
.
Croatian aircraft damaged. The hangars, shrapnel and passed out momentarily
administration buildings, repair shops, before bailing out. Upon capture,
stores buildings were also damaged per Josephson was sent to “Army Hospital
a German report 1/637” before transport to Dulag Luft. A
The 1 June 1944, Luftwaffe report from 450th BG report within the MACR states
Zagreb - Borongaj airfield stated that that Bruner was captured as well; the
Morrissey, radioman Cain and nose Germans later reported sending him to
gunner Mielke were captured on 30 May Dulag Luft with an injured ankle.
in the vicinity of Križevci, and Cain, Engle, Josephson and Mielke
transferred to Dulag Luft Oberursel on would be transferred to Stalag Luft IV in
1 June for Prisoner of War (PW) Gross Tychow, Pomerania (now Ty-
collection and interrogation. chowo, Poland). Opened to American
A report dated 4 June 1944, states that PWs on 12 May 1944, the camp held
Engle was also captured. A second Allied aircrew who were
report dated 4 June states that Josephson non-commissioned officers. Sometime
suffered the same fate; in addition, he before the end of hostilities the camp
was wounded with 20mm round expanded capacity to 6,400 airmen.
68
.
Above: A 1930s photo of the west side Above: A 1930s photo taken at a footpath
of Zagreb - Borongaj airfield. The Sava on the west side of the airfield. Buildings
river can be seen in the distance. The visible in the photo include the
Sava flows through current day administrative building and the western
Slovenia, Croatia, along the northern and northern hangars, still standing and
border of Bosnia and Herzegovina, and protected today by the Republic of
through Serbia, discharging into the Croatia
Danube in Belgrade
69
.
70
I
71
)
Parr, Gross and Jones managed to avoid Yugoslavian soldiers, as well as civilians
capture with help of Yugoslavian who spoke English confirmed Pine’s fate
partisans they found soon after landing. upon finding him surrounded by
Jones had broken a few ribs as a result of shattered plexiglass and hanging out of
bailing out. All three made it back to the tail turret in the crashed B-24H; he
Italy and returned to duty by 13 June. had taken rounds to the chest and head
Unfortunately, Pine did not survive. in-flight, which certainly instantly killed
Around 30 May 1944, it was reported to him. According to a questionnaire
Luftflotte (Air Fleet/Airfield Area) included in the MACR, he was killed by
6/XVII Agram through the German 20mm rounds fired from Kaiser’s Bf 109
Commanding General in Croatia that a that was chasing the Liberator from
German lieutenant named Fruehwirth of behind. This was his first mission, as the
A.P.O. 56 963 came to post headquarters assigned tail gunner had grounded
with one of Pine’s identification tags himself.
found near the crashed Liberator. It was Arthur W. Pine was later buried in Plot A
wrongly presumed that the tag belonged Row 11 Grave 35 in the Sicily-Rome
to one of the 901’s pilots. American Cemetery at Nettuno, Italy
72
73
74
l
75
d
76
At the time Frank’s last ship was shot large L-shaped structure, housed the
down, Dulag Luft was actually interrogating offices, files and records.
composed of three installations: the Senior officers lived on the post; junior
interrogation center at Oberursel; the officers outside in a hotel. The comman-
hospital at Hohemark; and Wetzlar, the dant lived on a nearby farm. The entire
transit camp where prisoners ultimately camp was surrounded by a barbed-wire
ended up before shipment to a fence, but was equipped with neither
permanent prisoner of war camp perimeter floodlights nor watchtowers.
Oberursel consisted of four large The camp was built on level ground.
wooden barracks, two of which were There were large white rocks that
connected by a passage and known to covered the length of the front lawn
PWs as the “cooler." These contained forming the words "Prisoner of War
some 200 cells. These cells, 8’ high, 5’ Camp.” In fact, "Prisoner of War Camp"
feet wide and 12’ feet long, held a cot, a was painted in white letters across the
table, a chair and an electric bell for PWs roof of nearly every building. Dulag Luft
to call the guard. The third barrack was of great importance to the Germans
contained the administrative and they knew the Allies would never
headquarters. The fourth building, a bomb it as long as it could be identified
77
.
from the air. The camp was estimated to There is record that one officer, a
cover about 500 acres. The boundaries of Captain William N. Schwartz, was
the camp were formed by two parallel imprisoned 45 days
fences ten feet apart and they stood 12 All crew in solitary confinement cell
feet tall, with trenches and barbed wire were denied cigarettes, toilet articles and
entangled between them. Watch towers Red Cross food. Since prisoners were
were spaced around the camp at one held in solitary confinement for limited
hundred yard intervals. Trained dogs periods of time, no system of prisoner
prowled the outer boundaries and representation by senior Allied officers
heavily armed pill boxes were scattered existed at Oberursel.
beyond the barbed wire.
German personnel, all Luftwaffe, were
At Oberursel prisoners were kept in divided into two main branches:
solitary confinement. The average stay in Administrative and Intelligence. Under
solitary was four or five days, and Intelligence came officers and interpreter
legally no longer than 28 days - the noncommissioned officers (NCOs)
maximum number of days of solitary actually taking part in the interrogations
permitted by the Geneva Convention. and other intelligence work of the unit.
78
.
The total strength of this branch was 50 who in turn would detail the most suit-
officers and 100 enlisted men. able member of his staff top conduct the
Administrative personnel consisted of questioning. These interrogations were
one guard company and one Luftwaffe sometimes held in the cells, but more
construction company, each consisting of often in the rooms of the interrogator.
120 men. Occasionally members of the Usually such interrogations were quite
Gestapo at Frankfurt were permitted to short, as, for instance in the case of an air
interrogate prisoners gunner, who would have little
Prisoners were first visited by a information; but sometimes in the case
reception officer, and sometimes also by of a pilot or prisoners who were
an interpreter, depending on the particularly security minded, the
language spoken by the PW. The interrogations might continue for three
reception officer would endeavor to or four days, often twice per day.
persuade the prisoner to answer all the The interrogation of Allied prisoners at
questions. He would then transmit this the hands of German military personnel
on a form together with his assessment was usually nonviolent. An occasional
of the character of the prisoner to a interrogator, exasperated by polite
senior officer, usually the rank of Major, refusals to give more than name, rank,
79
.
and serial number - or, more occasional- "murderers of children" and threatening
ly, perhaps by an exceptionally "fresh" them with indefinitely prolonged
PW, may have lost his temper and struck solitary confinement or starvation
a PW. It is not believed that this ever rations - unless they would talk.
went beyond a slap on the face, dealt in Prisoners were threatened with death as
the heat of anger - certainly physical spies unless they identified themselves
violence was not employed as a policy as airmen, by revealing technical
On the other hand, no amount of information on some such subject as
calculated mental depression, privation radar or air combat tactics. Confinement
and psychological blackmail was in an unbearably overheated cell and
considered excessive. Upon arrival, PWs pretended shootings of "buddies" was
were stripped, searched and sometimes resorted to in the early days.
issued German coveralls. At other times, Intimidation yielded inferior results and
they retained the clothing in which they the "friendly approach" was considered
were shot down. best by the Germans
Interrogators often used threats and Rations at Dulag Luft were typically two
violent language, calling prisoners slices of black bread and jam, with ersatz
coffee in the morning, watery soup at
80
midday, and two slices of bread at night. received a Red Cross box of clothes and
No Red Cross parcels were issued at toilet articles. There was also a system of
Dulag Luft prisoner representation by senior Allied
As a rule, men seriously needing serious officers at Wetzlar, generally resulting in
medical treatment were sent to better treatment of incoming PWs. This
Hohemark hospital. Those suffering camp served as a resting place for
from the shock of being shot down and prisoners, recuperating from capture and
captured, received no medical attention. the relatively harsher treatment at
Some PWs arrived at permanent camps Oberursel. Usually only after a few days
still wearing dirty bandages which had at Wetzlar, prisoners were put on a rail
not been changed at Oberursel. car that took them to their permanent
prisoner of war camp.
After completion of interrogation at
Oberursel, prisoners were next Next Page: Frank’s postcards showing
transferred the 60 kilometers by train to the AAF-sanctioned rest camp at Santa
the transit camp in Wetzlar, located Cesarea Terme in Italy, where he rested
north of Frankfurt. In contrast to on leave less than a week before being
Oberursel, prisoners at Wetzlar typically shot down over Croati
81
.
82
These photographs of the town of Santa
Cesarea Terme, Lecce, Apulia, Italy, were
taken in 1944 or 1945 by Corporal
Donald Krasno, a Photo Laboratory
Technician with the 5th Photo Group
Reconnaissance, 4th Photo Technical
Squadron of the 15th AA
83
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West Compound Assigned Crew Arriving At Stalag Luft III On 10 June 1944
Last Name First Name Initial Rank ASN PW No. Block - Roo
ADAMS RUSSELL J. JR. 1L O-67881 566 162-1
ANDERSON CHARLE F 1L O-75525 566 171-1
AVERY HAROLD B 2L O-68752 566 171-
BASSET EAR F 1L O-68380 566 158-1
BLOCK JAMES H SG 3750757 578 173-
BOYL GEORG F 2L O-81677 567 160-1
BRENIS JOHN E. F/ T-206 567 171-1
BUKER HAROLD 2L O-81858 567 170-1
BURROUGH JAC 2L O-69935 567 172-1
BYRN JOHN J 2L O-69236 567 160-1
CHAPLIN DONAL F 2L O-75648 567 166-
CLARK EDWI T 2L O-69384 567 170-1
CODDIN ARTHU M 1L O-80377 567 171-
CORLE HENR L 2L O-75478 568 157-1
CONKLI CYRI D 2L O-81275 567 172-
CROS ELVIN W 2L O-69364 568 170-1
CULKIN ALBERT G. SG 3277122 578 172-
CZEMERD JOHN J. 1L O-728768 588 160-1
DICKSO DONAL W. JR 2L O-81033 568 162-1
DOHERT JOHN H 2L O-75686 568 172-1
DRESSE WILBU S 2L O-69887 577 157-12
87
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West Compound Assigned Crew Arriving At Stalag Luft III On 10 June 1944
Last Name First Name Initial Rank ASN PW No. Block - Roo
DUNHAM WILLIAM F. 2L O-70396 568 172-1
ELDE JAMES M. 2L O-76099 568 170-1
FERGU GEORG T. JR 2L O-74968 565 159-1
FOSTE RALP R 2L O-69883 569 157-1
FOSTE WILLIAM T.J 2L O-75717 569 170-1
GARSO RALP 2L O-70362 569 172-1
GAUDAE GEORG W 2L O-75777 569 172-1
GEORG WALDEMA C 2L O-69188 569 169-1
GOODSO ROBER G. 2L O-54279 569 160-1
GRAY STANLE V. 2L O-68607 569 173-
HAH CHARLE I 2L O-75274 569 172-1
HANSO WAR M 2L O-75388 570 160-1
HARDIN ROBERT W SG 3755223 578 173-
HARVE HARR 1L O-73151 570 170-1
HAVERKO ROBER E. 1L O-73272 570 163-1
HERRICK JULIUS F 2L O-75366 570 172-1
HODGE FRANCIS G. JR. CP O-66036 570 161-1
HUART RAYMON E. 2L O-75212 570 172-1
IV EDWIN R. 2L O-67606 570 170-1
JARE ROBERT C 2L O-80745 570 163-11
JAY DONAL S 2L O-76143 570 172-13
88
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West Compound Assigned Crew Arriving At Stalag Luft III On 10 June 1944
Last Name First Name Initial Rank ASN PW No. Block - Roo
JONE JOHN H 1L O-66503 571 163-1
KEIT 2L O-81016 571 171-
KEIT WALTER B. JR. 1L O-80241 571 160-1
KELLE CURTI C 2L O-75221 571 171-1
KOC STEPHE 2L O-69491 571 160-1
KOEHLE MARTIN G 2L O-74689 571 162-1
LANDIS JOSEPH P. CP O-72888 571 170-1
LOCHNE DENNIS J. 2L O-70206 572 170-1
LEDBETTE HOWAR E. 2L O-80856 571 173-1
LEONAR PAU T 2L O-81450 577 173-1
LOWEL FREDERIC H F/ T-12402 572 172-1
LUKASHEVIC JOSEPH J. 2L O-70063 572 172-1
McCLELLA EUGEN L 2L O-70694 572 170-1
McELMURR RE H 2LT O-68748 572 172-1
MATTHIA ADOLP J. JR. 1L O-74903 572 160-1
MITCHEL ROBER W 2L O-80776 572 172-1
MITCHENE HARD A 2L O-81177 572 170-
MORAN ANDREW J. 2L O-69821 572 157-1
MORRI JOSEP 1L O-67479 573 171-1
MORRISSEY FRANCIS J. 2L O-170313 573 164-1
NAA VERNON N 2L O-75754 573 160-1
89
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West Compound Assigned Crew Arriving At Stalag Luft III On 10 June 1944
Last Name First Name Initial Rank ASN PW No. Block - Roo
NUTTER LLOY A 1L O-75250 573 172-1
OBRIE MAHLO F 2L O-75749 573 166-
PHILLIP THOMA D 2L O-68775 573 172-1
PICKET SEAR G. 2L O-74905 573 171-
PRIC AUSBUR B 2L O-80139 573 163-1
REI LORE F. 2L O-69347 574 161-1
ROSSMA RAYMON E. 2L O-74433 574 165-1
SAMBER HAROL E. 2L O-69974 574 163-1
SAUMSIEGL ROBERT W 2L O-71032 574 172-1
SCHMID ROBER A 2L O-69072 574 160-1
SEVERSO ELME D 2L O-75774 574 170-1
SHAUGHNESS W J 2L O-69389 574 171-1
SHOFNE JAMES F CP O-66268 574 160-1
SIMAR MELVI E. 2L O-69026 574 170-
SIVA STEPHEN J 1L O-66913 574 160-
SKOPI PETE 2L O-70132 575 170-1
SMIT JAMES W 2L O-69182 575 166-1
SORKIN JAC 2L O-70381 575 171-
STAPLETO EDWAR F 2L O-81458 575 171-
TAUGHNE ROBER T 2L O-68240 575 170-1
TAYLO WILLIAM E. 2L O-70409 575 172-1
90
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West Compound Assigned Crew Arriving At Stalag Luft III On 10 June 1944
Last Name First Name Initial Rank ASN PW No. Block - Roo
TOLLESO JULIU Q F/ T-12207 575 170-1
VAN WEELDE D C 2L O-80989 575 172-1
VOUGH HARR L F/ T-12335 575 170-1
WATSO HARR J. JR. 2L O-75825 575 172-1
WEIGL WALTE P 2L O-80990 576 170-1
WEIS EDWAR E. 2L O-69343 576 170-1
WILSO BUC 2L O-69259 576 170-1
WILSO CARLETO L 1L O-80332 576 171-1
WINAND FRANK P. II 2L O-68253 576 160-1
WITTGREV JOHN W 2L O-75814 576 166-
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Previous Pages: This two-sided letter dated 7 June 1944, written by Frank at Dulag
Luft to his mother Mrs. James S. Morrissey via Kriegsgefangenenpost (Prisoner of
War Mail), states that he is a Prisoner Of War (PW)
Above: B-24H Serial No. 41-28603, the “Chiquita Mia” with part of a new crew,
sometime after January of 1944, but before being shot down on 12 April 194
92
.
Frank completed the next rail trip, from officers began arriving from other camps
Dulag Luft to Stalag Luft III - a distance around the same time. The Center
of nearly 600 kilometers and usually compound was opened on 11 April 1942,
three days travel time - by 10 June 1944. originally for British sergeants, but by
Stalag Luft III (Stammlager, itself short the end of 1942 replaced by Americans.
for Kriegsgefangenen-Mannschafts-Stamm- The North Compound for British
lager, or main camp for aircrew) was a airmen, where the Great Escape
Luftwaffe-run prisoner of war camp occurred, opened on 29 March 1943. A
built in located about 90 miles southeast South Compound for Americans was
of Berlin in the German province of opened in September of 1943 and US-
Lower Silesia, near the town of Sagan, AAF prisoners began arriving at the
which is now Żagań, Poland. camp in significant numbers the
following month.
The East Compound of the camp was
completed and opened on 21 March Frank was assigned Prisoner Of War
1942. The first prisoners, housed at (PW) Number 5731 and barracks within
Stalag Luft III were British RAF officers, Block 164 (commonly written as 64),
arriving in April of 1942. American AAF Room 14 of West Compound, which
93
94
95
Stalag VIII-C was built in September to Sagan. Most railcars used for
1939 to house several thousand Polish transporting PWs to Stalag Luft III
prisoners from the German September lacked windows in the section utilized
1939 offensive. Later in the war French, by the prisoners, but there was one
Belgian, British, Canadian, Greek, Yu- small, iron-barred opening for
goslav and Soviet prisoners were in- ventilation on the outside wall.
terned. Two-man wooden, high-back bench
Shown with the vicinity map is part of seats, facing forward, were separated by
an Allied aerial photograph taken on a middle aisle. At the rear entrance was a
17 September 1944, which shows Block small compartment that was utilized by
164, Morrissey’s barracks in relation to the German guards. That compartment
the rest of the West Compound. had a glass front view that permitted the
guards to monitor prisoner activities.
Crew members traveling from Dulag
Across the aisle opposite the guard
Luft Wetzlar to Stalag Luft III first had to
compartment was a small toilet-room.
travel to Frankfurt-am-main, and from
There was seating space for about forty
there usually took small third class
prisoners. PWs had to give up their belts
railroad cars for the one to three day trip
and shoes for the trip.
96
From Sagan the PWs marched a short complete the processing until all of the
walking distance to the prison camp. information requested was supplied
Prisoners first entered an area called the New prisoners were then taken to the
“Outer Lager” for processing. Each South Compound entrance gate and met
prisoner was photographed and then by prisoner who were appointed to
handed a form to complete. The form assist in finding food and a bed.
had a Red Cross heading and according Processing and assignment to more
to the Germans was required to be filled permanent quarters would be made the
out in order for the Red Cross to verify following day after first “Appel” or roll-
status. Just as with the form used in call
Dulag Luft, many of the questions were
New arrivals were in many instances
seeking information exceeding the
were assigned to a room occupied by a
“name, rank and serial number”
small number of prisoners.
response that had been crew members’
Conversations upon first arrival were
briefed guideline. Forms were often
guarded since occupants had to ensure
returned with the warning that a
that that new PWs were not spies. Each
prisoner would not be permitted to
new prisoner had to be interrogated and
97
.
“cleared” by designated members of the the news was from the “BBC” in
prisoner staff before sensitive England, any discussion of how or
information could be discussed. The where the information was received was
process included the prisoners be forbidden
personally vouched for by two existing Each block had an assigned senior
PWs who knew the prisoner by sight. officer, generally the rank of major or
Anyone who failed this requirement was lieutenant colonel. The compound
severely interrogated and assigned a commander was a colonel.
group of PWs who had to escort him at
Albert P. Clark, Jr., captured on 26 July
all times until he was deemed to be
1942, became the first Senior American
genuine. Several infiltrators were
Officer (SAO), a position he held until
discovered by this method.
the arrival of Colonel Charles G.
Cleared prisoners were allowed to listen Goodrich some two months later. The
to the daily news that was transported physical segregation of compounds by
by special messenger to the barracks. guard towers, barbed wire and locked
Only those cleared by the chief of the gates required the organization of each
certain activity were to relay this as an independent camp. At the time of
information, and although the source of
98
.
the evacuation of Stalag Luft III the in Block 164, just down the hall from
camp leaders were Lieutenant Morrissey’s room
Senior Allied Officer - The SAO appointed committee officers
Brigadier General Arthur W. Vanama to head certain activities. Committees
SAO South Compound - managed activities devoted to obtaining
Col. Charles G. Goodric information, planning escape activities
and hiding surveillance equipment.
SAO Center Compound -
Col. Delmar T. Spive Although each room also had a senior
officer in charge, sometimes a lieutenant,
SAO West Compound -
there was very little reference to grade or
Col. Darr H. Alkir
rank in assigned rooms.
SAO North Compound -
There was, however, a certain courtesy
Lt. Col. Edwin A. Blan
provided to those prisoners who had
In March of 1944 Colonel Alkire arrived
been imprisoned for a year or more.
to North Compound from Dulag Luft,
They were generally housed in the single
where he had served as the SAO. The
or double rooms in the blocks
colonel then transferred to West on 27
April, where he was assigned to Room 9
99
e
100
.
Above: A typical barrack stove which Above: The Germans provided each
burned low quality compressed coal room with a large jug and bowl; each
provided by the Germans (USAFA, SMS POW was given a spoon, fork, cup, mess
329) tin and small bowl (USAFA, SMS 329)
101
Right: Each barrack hut had two toilets,
that served anywhere from 150 to 200
men. They were only used at night, when
each compound’s communal latrines
were not accessible due to curfew.
(USAFA, SMS 329
102
)
The Occupants Of Block 164, Room 14, West Compound Of Stalag Luft III
Last Name First Name Rank Rating Arrival (1944) ASN PW No.
AUBI ALBERT E. 1LT NAVIGATO 14 MAY O-79872 458
COULSO JOHN I. 2LT NAVIGATOR 14 MAY O-69866 458
DANIELS DUANE W. 2L PILO 14 MAY O-75919 459
DILLE RALPH O F/ BOMBARDIE 7 JUNE T-146 553
FLEITZER MARK H. 2LT PILOT 31 OCTOBE O-82513 848
FOG ALBERT R. 2LT PILOT 14 MAY O-75448 459
GEORG ERNEST W. 1LT PILOT 14 MAY O-74016 459
METCALF JOHN B. 1L BOMBARDIE 30 AUGUST O-67147 788
MORRISSEY FRANCIS J. 2L CO-PILO 10 JUNE O-170313 573
PHILLIPS HAROLD C. 2L CO-PILOT 14 MAY O-69097 463
SWINEHART* CHARLES M 1LT PILO 30 AUGUST O-68650 788
* 722nd Squadron of the 450th BG; B-24H Serial No. 41-29376 “Guardian Angel”
** 720th Squadron of the 450th BG
103
G
*
Y
E
N
*
.
.
T
T
T
T
O
T
T
T
R
R
R
R
3
6
0
6
6
7
2
3
9
3
0
104
)
105
.
frequently checked by the guards as they landed safely and was captured in the
recognized that they could be used to vicinity of Nienburg around 1250 hours
shore-up escape tunnels
The West Compound sketches shown on
the following pages were drawn by
Hardy A. Mitchener, who was a
Navigator with the 509th Squadron of
the 351st Bombardment Group, 8th Air
Force, stationed in Polebrook, England.
Mitchener’s B-17 Flying Fortress was
shot down at around 1130 hours - less
than 30 minutes after Morrissey’s B-24
by police, then turned over to the local
Liberator was shot down - on 30 May
military command before being sent to
1944, within five kilometers of
Dulag Luft Oberursel on 1 June 1944
Nienburg, after completing a successful
bombing mission of an aircraft factory at Above: Mitchener’s German-issued
Oschersleben, Germany. He parachuted, Prisoner Of War identification card
106
.
107
.
108
109
110
The area was covered with trees, so the
men were responsible for clearing trees
and stumps in order to establish more
functional land
Right: Theater groups were very popular
at all of the Luft camps. Materials were
supplied by the YMCA, so PWs were
able to make costumes and stage
scenery.
They made theater seats from Red Cross
food crates. Tin cans could be used to
make chandeliers.
The men formed musical groups (using
YMCA instruments) such as the "Sagan
Serenaders." The YMCA also provided
playbooks, but prisoners also wrote and
produced their own plays.
111
112
113
Right: Each compound at Stalag Luft III
contained around a dozen barracks
called blocks, a cookhouse, a shower
building, a laundry, a theater and a
chapel building.
A barracks building housed about 150
men. There were about twelve to fifteen
sleeping rooms in each barrack, which
were furnished with benches, lockers, a
table, and double or triple bunk beds.
Lighting was poor.
114
115
116
In one corner of a typical room was a Between the two parallel fences lie
wood or charcoal burning stove. Simple barbed wire entanglements accumulated
wooden tables, benches and stools were to a depth of about two to four feet.
provided for prisoners. In each block Inside the camp and approximately 30
there was a room, equipped with a feet from the perimeter fence a warning
cooking range, that served as a kitchen. wire or wooden rail some two feet off
Another room, with porcelain basins, the ground marked the inside boundary
was the washroom. A third room, with of a "no-man's land." Anyone stepping
one urinal & two commodes, was the over the warning rail in the direction of
latrine the perimeter fence would be shot with-
The perimeter fence consisted of two out warning
separate and parallel barriers spaced
about seven feet apart, each about nine
feet high with an overhang at the top
pointing inward and consisting of
barbed-wire strands placed approxi-
mately six inches apart horizontally and
two feet apart vertically.
117
.
118
p
119
•
•
•
•
equally. The camp also had an official for communal purchases. As British
internal bartering system called a government policy was to deduct camp
Foodacco — PWs marketed surplus pay from the prisoners' military pay, the
goods for "points" that could be "spent" communal pool avoided the practice in
on other items. The Germans paid other camps whereby American officers
captured officers the equivalent of their contributed to British canteen purchases.
pay in internal camp currency
(lagergeld), which was used to buy what
goods were made available by the
German administration.
In October of 1944, it was announced
that PW pay, which up to that time had
been in lagergeld would henceforth be in
Reichsmarks. As non-commissioned
officers did not receive any "pay" it was
the usual practice in camps for the A soup vat at Stalag Luft III
officers to provide one-third for their use
but at Luft III all lagergeld was pooled
120
As of 5 August 1944, the weekly issue of Every three months a weak beer was
Red Cross food packages was reduced made available in the canteen for sale.
by 50%. This was due to an influx of new Prisoners received letters from home, but
prisoners in the summer of 1944. Instead they were usually written two to three
of a parcel per man each week, the issue months earlier
would be one parcel for two men each Luft III had the best organized
week. It wouldn’t be long before the recreational program of any prisoner
effects of the food reduction would be- camp in Germany. Each compound had
come very apparent. Although Germans athletic fields and volleyball courts.
provided bread and some vegetables to
The prisoners participated in basketball,
prepare a soup in the communal kitchen,
softball, boxing, touch football,
food from the Red Cross parcels was the
volleyball, table tennis and fencing, with
main means of sustenance. While the
leagues organized for most. A pool,
Germans provided bread and some
20’ x 22’ x 5’ deep, used to store water
vegetables to prepare a soup in the
for firefighting, was occasionally
communal kitchen, food from the Red
available for swimming
Cross parcels was the main means of
sustenance.
121
The German guards were referred to as The camp's 800 Luftwaffe guards were
"Goons" and, unaware of the western primarily either too old for combat duty
connotation, willingly accepted the or young men convalescing after long
nickname after being told it stood for tours of duty or from wounds.
"German Officer Or Non-Com.” German Because the guards were Luftwaffe
guards were followed everywhere they personnel, the prisoners were accorded
went by prisoners, who used an far better treatment than that granted to
elaborate system of signals to warn other PWs in Germany.
others of their location. The guards'
Oberst (Colonel) Franz Braune was
movements were then carefully recorded
installed as the Stalag Luft III
in a logbook. Unable to effectively stop
Commandant a few months before Frank
what the prisoners called the "Duty
had arrived, having replaced Friedrich
Pilot" system the Germans allowed it to
Wilhelm von Lindeiner-Wildau, who
continue and on one occasion the book
was relieved of command as a result of
was used by the camp commandant to
the “Great Escape” of 77 non-American
bring charges against two guards who
PWs on 24 and 25 March 1944. It was
had slunk away from duty several hours
Oberst Braune that on 6 April, had to
early
122
.
inform the Senior British Officer Group everywhere and Stalag Luft III prisoners
Captain Herbert Martin Massey that 41 and guards alike were very edgy. Pieber
(eventually updated to 50) escaping even told the prisoners to "be very
officers had been "shot whilst trying to careful, you are in great danger; no more
escape. tricks.
Prisoners and Luftwaffe alike were In the summer of 1944 Commandant
horrified by the German reaction - Braune quietly allowed the prisoners to
ordered by Hitler - to the Great Escape. build a memorial at the local cemetery.
Hauptmann Pieber, Braune’s adjutant,
afterwards said to Martin’s interpreter,
"You must not think the Luftwaffe had
anything to do with this ... we do not
wish to be associated ... it is terrible."
Later the list of names was posted and
contained 47 names; an update a few
days later added three more.
The memorial as it looks today
The aftermath was a grim time with the
Gestapo investigators poking their noses
123
"
"
124
e
Urns containing ashes of the 50 escapees funerals, including one for a Jewish
shot by the Gestapo were originally airman.
buried there, but after the war were tak- Late in November of 1944, a major
en to the Old Garrison Cemetery at Poz- change in compound security took place.
nan. The remaining men who had been All of the guards had been removed
captured were sent to several different from the guard towers located between
camps in Germany, and most remained the new West compound and the South
imprisoned until the end of the war and North compounds. The corridor
Deputy Commandant Major Gustav road between prison compounds was
Simoleit, a professor of history, German off limits to PWs. The north end
geography and ethnology before the of the road terminated in the German
war, spoke several languages, including “Lager” and living quarters. The south
English, Russian, Polish, and Czech. end terminated at a gate between two
Transferred to Sagan in early 1943, he guard towers. This gate was unmanned
proved sympathetic to allied airmen. and was used as access for delivery of
Ignoring the ban against extending certain utility items. The waste disposal
military courtesies to PWs, he provided wagon (honey-wagon) used this gate for
full military honors for Luft III prisoner access to the corridor road before
125
entering the gate at the entrance to the library for works of fiction and
South Compound nonfiction. The libraries were a
During the second and third weeks of necessary component of the education
November, full scale winter had reached program, but their overall importance
Sagan, and packed the snow a foot and a was even greater. The library was a clean
half deep. As a result, prisoners were place capable of seating about 80 men.
confined more and more to the barracks, A standard library procedure for
and daytime winter activities continued shelving, lending, and cataloging the
to grow. Many spent their time reading. books was established. The entire library
There were some who would read a new system at Stalag Luft III was run by
book every day. The following observa- about two dozen volunteers.
tions best summarize the importance of The reading was done on homemade
libraries, books, and reading to prisoners tables illuminated by two 60-watt bulbs
of war in Stalag Luft III. where there should have been a dozen.
Each compound had at least two The fiction library eventually contained
libraries, one for reference material and about 2,000 books. These circulated
one that served as a general lending completely every ten days. The most
highly demanded books by order of
126
.
A prisoner in Stalag Luft III wrote in his heavily read being books on Math,
diary Business, History, in that order
1 August 1944. No, the trick is to keep At the conclusion of the war, the U.S.
yourself busy. Keep doing anything to War Department’s Military Intelligence
have an object to be accomplished, even Service reported that reading was the
if that object is only the construction of a greatest activity of prisoners of war. The
tin plate. There are other things too, this report stated: “Of all the recreations,
is the first chance many of us have had reading seemed to take the first place.
in years (me included) to do any serious Many officers availed themselves of
reading, catch up on ourselves mentally. numerous text books to improve their
And, thanks to the Red Cross and the knowledge on various subjects.” Arthur
YMCA, we have a pretty fair library A. Durand, in his secret history of Stalag
here, containing some 2,000 volumes of Luft III, wrote: “The effect of serious
all kinds reading that well-selected camp libraries
11 September 1944. Our reference library made possible, though neither obvious
contains some 1,200 volumes. Most nor measurable, cannot otherwise than
ultimately be of great benefit to many
individual ex-prisoners, and indirectly to
128
:
the communities in which they live.” being halved less than 10 weeks before
And Major General Delmar T. Spivey, Christmas 1944, the Red Cross was still
who was a prisoner in Stalag Luft III, providing a steady supply of clothing
wrote similarly and food to make up for German
Many people do not read much, but if deficiencies as late as December.
they were deprived of all reading The Red Cross also provided a complete
material they would suffer greatly. I am Christmas day dinner. The American
sure that thousands of books in our Red Cross packed and shipped 75,000
library were responsible for providing Christmas parcels in the summer of 1944,
constructive, mind-saving diversion leaving time for a Christmas arrival
from the mental fortunes of prisoner life to all the camps. The packages contained
As of December in 1944 Stalag Luft III mixtures of food (including canned tur-
prisoners were still allowed to write key and fruit cake), tobacco, games, and
three (3) letters and four (4) cards a Christmas decorations.
month to back home. And despite the The following 1944 holiday writings and
influx of American prisoner which drawings are from the Wartime Log of
resulted in living space and rations Chester “Chet” Strunk, Stalag Luft III
129
:
130
131
132
It was clear by the end of December that of the Soviet's presence became increas-
the Soviets were soon likely to overrun ingly evident with the sound of artillery,
Stalag Luft III. The question was, what heard louder each day at roll call. As
would the Germans do about it? This appel was dismissed, individuals would
concern occupied prisoner discussion shout, "Come on Uncle Joe!
more than food. None of the options Around this time the Germans handed
were attractive. Even being liberated by out the pamphlet shown on the
the Soviets was scary -- what to expect? following page, which offered American
The possibility of mass execution by the and British prisoners a chance to join
guards was an alternative taken with the Germans in fighting the
seriously by the average prisoner, most "Bolshevik, Barbaric Asiatic East." There
of whom had some plan in mind for how were no takers.
he would respond to such a challenge
Each prisoner had his own plan. Some
The most likely possibility was that joined into groups to build sleds to carry
prisoners would be evacuated to the food, clothing, or other things deemed
west before they could be liberated. And, valuable but most men tried to figure
plans for that possibility concerned PWs how they could carry these things on
more and more as the physical evidence
133
"
their person
American strength at this time was 6,844
- the largest American officers' camp in
Germany. Many men anticipated relying
on the pockets of their clothing, rather
than creating something else to carry. For
example, slit a head-hole through their
blanket to wear it as an outermost gar-
ment rather than carrying it.
On the morning of 27 January 1945, there
was an air of restrained excitement
among the well over 10,000 Allied
occupants of Stalag Luft III. In spite of
the biting cold and the steady fall of
snow in large flakes, prisoners huddled
outside their barracks discussing the
latest report: The Russians were less than
134
.
135
An Allied aerial reconnaissance photo of Stalag Luft III taken 17 September 1944
136
137
Above are sketches of the West Compound at Stalag Luft III. Lieutenant Frank
Morrissey was interned in this part of the camp from June 1944 to 27 January 1945.
(Courtesy of the Bob Neary Estate
138
)
A photo that Frank’s parents mailed to him while at Stalag Luft III. Notice the camp
German censor stamp on the back - GEPRUFT 49.
139
This photo was taken looking across the southwest corner of the North Compound
into the West Compound, as viewed from the South Compound (USAFA, SMS 329)
140
This photo was taken at the western border of the South Compound, looking into the
southeast corner of the West Compound of Stalag Luft III. The prisoners walked the
perimeter, getting in shape for “what ever is coming.” The Russian advance caused
Hitler to order the camp’s evacuation on 27 January 1945
141
.
Nothing could match the impact of the Ivan Konev's Southern Army had
short speech delivered in the middle of already pierced to within 20 kilometers
the second act of "You Can't Take It With of the camp
You" presentation at the South In the barracks following Colonel
Compound Theater on that night of 27 Goodrich's dramatic announcement,
January. Making an unscripted entrance, there was a frenzy of preparation - of
Colonel Charles G. Goodrich, the senior improvised packsacks being loaded with
American officer, strode center stage and essentials, distribution of stashed food,
announced, "The Goons have just given and of putting on layers of clothing
us 30 minutes to be at the front gate! Get against the Silesian winter
your stuff together and line up!
With a temperature of 10 degrees
At his 4:30 staff meeting in Berlin that Fahrenheit and six inches of snow on the
very afternoon, Adolf Hitler had issued ground, 2,000 of the prisoners South
the order to evacuate Stalag Luft III. He Compound were assigned to clear the
was fearful that the Allied airmen in the road ahead of the main group
camp would be liberated by the
Russians. Hitler wanted to keep them as
hostages. A spearhead of Soviet Marshal
142
.
"
143
144
"
146
147
148
149
150
Lieutenant Dick Kenney, far right, rests with his bunkmate during the long, forced
march by the Germans (USAFA, SMS 329)
151
152
Upon reaching the main gate before The compounds were left in a state of
leaving the camp each man was offered chaos. At least 23,000 Red Cross food
an unopened Red Cross parcel to take parcels were left behind intact. Prisoners'
along. An extra 11-pound box to carry? belongings worth an estimated $500,000
Most declined. Those with sleds did load were abandoned, as well as more than
up. Hunger, however, was not to be the 100,000 books. At least 2 million
defining stress of this event cigarettes were left in the North and East
The compounds were ready to march as Compounds alone
instructed but since there was a several Outside the wire, prisoners waited and
hour delay prisoners were able to repack were counted, and waited again for two
and some had time for a good meal. hours as the icy winds penetrated their
Barley oatmeal and some meat was multilayered clothes and froze stiff the
issued from the kitchens. Some was shoes on their feet. Finally, the South
eaten and some packed. One Camp moved out about midnight
enterprising party carried a leg of veal At first, groups were walking in dense
for the first two days before they columns, which hour by hour stretched
managed to have it cooked. for huge distance. At the beginning, the
153
.
columns were 200 meters in length but it former helping to pull the sleds on
changed into a two kilometers spread which their equipment was communally
In the back of prisoner columns were packed, others bartering for sleds them-
tractors with trailers and horse carts, selves. The frequent presence of refugees
which were carrying exhausted people on the road and the knowledge that the
march of British prisoners was part of a
The guards, mainly elderly men, were
gigantic retreat of armies and peoples
not only insufficient to prevent
westward gave color to a comparison
individual prisoners from escaping but
with Napoleon's retreat from Moscow
found conditions so severe that it was all
about which so many had read while in
they could do to look after themselves.
captivity. Almost incessantly, far away to
In several instances prisoners helped
the north was the sound of firing,
them by putting their packs into sleds
presumed to be the battle around Frank-
and hauling them along with their own.
furt-on-Oder and encouraging the hope
By the second day many guards were
that the Russians might yet come to the
unfit for duty
rescue.
Guards eventually became indistin-
The exodus was harrowing to PWs of all
guishable from prisoners, some of the
compounds, especially to those of the
154
South Compound who made the first Compound were a cinema, a riding
part of The March - 34-miles (55 km) school, an animal stable, a laundry, and a
from Sagan to Muskau in 27 hours with French PW Camp. Except for the riding
only 4 hours sleep. school where there were no sanitary
Hour after hour, they plodded through arrangements or facilities and the
the blackness of night, a blizzard majority caught a mild form of
swirling around them, winds driving dysentery, all billets were crowded but
near-zero temperatures conditions were tolerable and the
civilians in charge did all in their power
At 2:00 a.m. on 29 January, the men of
to make people comfortable.
South Compound stumbled into Muskau
and found shelter on the floor of a All Compounds had at least a day of rest
pottery factory. It was dusty but warm and food in Muskau. By this time they
had marched up to 36 hours, many with
They stayed there for 30 hours before
only a few hours sleep. This is where
completing the remainder of The March -
Colonel Goodrich passed the word au-
the nearly 16 miles to Spremberg.
thorizing escape attempts. In all, some 32
Additional billets used in Muskau by
men felt in good enough condition to
prisoners other than those in South
make the try. In 36 hours, however, all
155
had been recaptured. Those prisoners group formed ranks with the North
then rejoined with their respective Camp column
groups The following day after some food
On Thursday, 1 February, 57 North provided by the Germans they marched
Compound prisoners remained in into the city of Graustein. Here the
Muskau for medical attention where the civilians and the Kriegies were trading
French medical officer exhausted a large cigarettes, chocolates and coffee for
portion of his supplies for the prisoners' bread, apples, potatoes, beer an wine
benefit. Meanwhile, about 1,500 Red The march from Graustein to Spremberg
Cross food parcels sent from Sagan were was an easy march as the snow had
partially issued. About one-third of a melted and the weather was somewhat
loaf of bread per man was issued but warmer. In Spremberg, they were
again not everyone received it. quartered in a large gymnasium which
A day earlier, 523 American PWs left the was part of a German garrison and given
North Camp body to join fellow some soup along with the ever present
prisoners in other columns of the march. black bread. They were allowed to spend
At the same time 566 of the East Camp the night and slept on their blankets on
156
.
the floor. Some PWs were put in empty ate some barley soup at a Wehrmacht
garages, stores and in military barracks. training garage and were then marched
Those sheltered in barracks got warm through the town to the railroad station.
soup and bread They were then herded into French
Somewhere along the line the men of "forty-and eight" boxcars, putting 50
East Compound had passed through prisoners into one boxcar with two
Spremberg. South, West and North guards
compounds had already arrived to the
city, but were headed south on the rails.
The North Compound eventually fell in
with the West Compound at Spremberg
and on 2 February, entrained for Stalag
XIII-D at Nurnberg, which they reached
after a two day trip.
On Sunday, 4 February, prisoners from
the Center Compound marched the Next Page: The March route from Stalag
almost 4.5 miles (7 km) into Spremberg, Luft III to Spremberg, Germany
157
.
158
In all, the movement from Sagan to they thought was their final destination -
Spremberg took six days and covered 62 Stalag XIII-D Nurnberg (Nuremberg -
miles; it snowed four of those days. Langwasser).
Other cities traveled through included They traveled by rail in "forty-and eight"
Ilowa (Halbau), Borowe (Burau), boxcars. These boxcars packed 50 to 60
Gozdnica (Freiwaldau), Przewóz men in a car designed to hold 40, and
(Priebus), Potok (Pattog), Leknica one guard in each boxcar. The only way
(Lugknitz), Bad Muskau, Kromlau, one could sit was in a line with others,
Graustein and finally to Spremberg, toboggan-fashion, or else half stood
Germany. while the other half sat.
During next days, prisoners were It was a three day ordeal, locked in a
divided according to the compounds moving cell with the stench of vomit and
they occupied at Stalag Luft III to excrement. The only ventilation in the
prepare for movement by rail cars came from two small windows near
On 31 January, the South Compound the ceiling on opposite ends of the cars.
men plus 200 men from the West The train lumbered through a frozen
Compound started their journey to what countryside and bombed-out cities
159
160
rotated standing and sitting every-so-of- nein nein! Streng verboten!" (No, no no!
ten so that we wouldn’t cramp up too Strictly forbidden!
much One of the prisoners who spoke good
It was reported in one of the boxcars that German responded, “You’re going to
guards had two apple boxes to sit on. open the doors, and you’re going to
Prisoners had a filthy floor. It rained for throw those damn (apple) boxes out.
two of the three days - the boxcar roof You’re going to put those damn guns
leaked -- most were sick with dysentery, down, and you’re going to have the
chilblaines, or bad colds. same amount of space as we do, which is
In another boxcar during the first night not much. Or, you’re going to shoot us.
and following day guys were vomiting Now, you have bolt action rifles, and
and had diarrhea, and there wasn’t one we’ll let each of you get off two shots.
bucket to be had. Men told the guards to That’s a total of four shots. We’ll even let
open the doors, to let some fresh air in you, with those four shots -- we’ll let you
and to at least let the sick guys get sick kill two. Four times two is eight, so at
hanging outside. They took their rifles the most you’re going to be able to kill
and swung them. Their response “Nein, eight people. Then we’re going to take
you apart ear by ear, joint by joint,
162
.
eyeball by eyeball. And you’ve got one their rifles down, and we got along just
minute to decide what to do. fine
The two guards, upper middle-aged old- During the three day (4 to 7 February)
er men, were pretty shook up with the rail trip the Center Compound group
force of words that came their way. They received only 7/10th of a loaf of bread
put their heads together and spoke per man, and water was officially passed
quickly to each other. Then they pleaded out only twice. At each stop prisoners
with us and they started crying traded cigarettes and soap for bread and
"Please don’t hurt us, we’re just water. No one slept, except for those
following orders. who passed out from sheer exhaustion
because there wasn’t room for more than
"We won’t hurt you, just open the damn
half at a time to lie down. They have lost
door!
all semblance to civilized beings. They
With that, the two soldiers quickly
were filthy dirty, unshaved, and many
unlatched the door and pushed it all the
had picked up lice and fleas. All the
way open, and we threw their apple
clean clothes were now filthy dirty
boxes out. They were then told to put
163
.
"
"
"
Above: A fire at the marshaling yards Above: A wash house at Stalag XIII-D
near Stalag XIII-D torn apart for the lumber needed to
(USAFA, SMS 329) heat barrack
(USAFA, SMS 329
164
s
At some point men from the Center rested for a couple hours. Rousted up
Compound had intersected at another again they were formed up into a long
train station with men of the South and column once more and marched back
West Compounds. The 2,000 PWs of down to the train station where a line of
Center Compound had now been box cars was waiting. Crammed inside
marched and transported by rail a total they endured four more days of misery.
of nine days. Not stopping at the train They traveled southwest, eventually
station, the long column of men of reached the city of Munich, and then the
Center Compound was turned train came back north before arriving at
northward and taken, as previously Stalag XIII-D Nurnberg (Nuremberg -
mentioned, to a German Wehrmacht Langwasser).
Panzer maintenance and training facility In summary, this destination by rail for
and fed some soup. All the tanks were all prisoners originating from Stalag Luft
gone - probably fighting the Russians on III was as follows
the eastern front - but there was a small
1. Around 2,000 men from South
contingent of German soldiers left to
Compound and 200 men from West
control the facility. The PWs were then
Compound, arriving at either Stalag
herded into the tank storage barns and
165
166
Cross parcels arrived from Dulag Luft. Nuremberg at this time was being
Shortly thereafter, the Swiss made bombed during the night by the British
arrangements for sending parcels in an and during the day by the Americans.
American convoy. Soon Red Cross B-24s and B-17s bombers, supported by
parcels began to arrive in GI trucks the P-38, P-47 and P-51 fighters over the
On 28 February 1945, Colonel Alkire skies of Germany were uncontested. The
drafted a detailed letter to the the Stalag only exception was the German artillery.
XIII-D Kommandant outlining In early March the men were informed
numerous violations of the International that they were going to have the luxury
Convention relating to the treatment of of one hot shower. They were advised
Prisons of War (POW). The violations that the hot water would be on for no
outlined by Alkire included the more than three minutes.
proximity of the camp to hostile fire and The Germans command informed the
aerial bombing; inadequate food; a lack camp in early April to get ready to
replacement clothing; dirty and infested march out of the camp as General
sleeping areas; and a lack of cleaning Patton was driving close to Nuremberg.
materials and personal hygiene supplies This march would be unlike the
167
movement out of Stalag Luft III as it was The men left camp just before 0900
warmer; the sun was shining and most hours, marching almost thirteen miles to
had the expectation they would soon be the town of Neumarkt before halting
freed. There was little to pack, just their After resting for several hours, they were
blankets and what towels they had. marched at night to limited the danger
There were no extra clothes to put on of being bombed or strafed.
and very little food to divide.
From Neumarkt they marched through a
On 4 April 1945, the prisoners at number of towns such as Berching,
Nuremberg received official word they Beilngries, Pfeffenhausen and
would evacuate the camp - their second Gammelsdorf. On April 10th the German
evacuation by foot in less than three tried to force the PWs across the Danube
months. This destination would be River at night. The senior officer protest
Stalag VII-A Moosburg, another prison this order and refused. The men could
camp located 160 kilometers (100 miles) hear the sounds of their own artillery
from Nuremberg and nearly 30 miles firing and crossing the river could
north of Munich - the same distance hinder their chances of being liberated
from the ill-famed Dachau concentration by the U.S. Army. The following day
camp.
168
they were marched across the river. As so men from the Center Compound also
they crossed, they noticed the bridge reached the camp
was prepared for demolition with stacks Unlike Stalag Luft III, which was a camp
of dynamite and several bombs hooked run by the Luftwaffe (Air Force), VII-A
up to electrical wires. Some of these was under the control of the German
bombs were American 1,000 pounders Heer (Army).
After a 91 mile march which included Stalag VII-A was located in Bavaria, 22
avoiding allied bombers and fighters miles northeast of Munich and a half-
and the retreating German army, Frank mile north of Moosburg, Germany. In a
Morrissey arrived at Stalag VII-A sprawling set of tightly spaced rows of
(officially Stammlager VII-A) around 19 drab, rundown, one-story military
April 1945. With him were 2,000 or so barracks built to accommodate 10,000 to
men from Stalag Luft III’s South and 14,000 prisoners, the Germans had now
West Compounds. Led by Colonel crowded together 110,000 prisoners of
Walter E. "Pop" Arnold, the prisoners war. In addition to Americans, it
marched through the city of Moosburg included military personnel of every
up to the gates of the enormous prison Allied European nationality, including
camp. Some days after another 2,000 or
169
(40,000) Russians, Indians, Australians, comrades. Once in the main camps the
South Africans, Asians and South Germans kept the PWs in their dirty,
Americans damp, dark, unheated, overcrowded
The South and West Compound barracks. Wooden bunks were joined
prisoners were placed in Stalag VII-A’s together into blocks of 12, a method of
Nordlager Compound upon arrival, and cramming well over 400 men into a
then eventually moved to the main building originally intended for 180.
camps. While in the Nordlager Outside the buildings large tents had
Compound no facilities were provided been erected wherever there was enough
for washing, sanitation or cooking; and space to set them up.
only straw spread over the barrack floors All buildings were hopelessly infested
served as bedding. In the main camp, with vermin. As spring came to Bavaria,
over 300 men were housed in barracks some of the more enterprising men
normally holding fewer than 200. moved out of the barracks into tents that
All the men from the Center Compound had been erected to accommodate the
were quartered in two separate set of stream of newcomers still coming in
barracks next to their South Compound from other evacuated Stalags. Some men
chose to sleep on the ground, setting up
170
.
quarters in air raid slit trenches. The bedbugs - the unlucky ones slept on
camp resembled a giant hobo village. floors, tables, or outside on the ground
Barbed wire encircled a world inside crowded tents
comprised exclusively of austere, There were no sanitary facilities inside
dilapidated buildings, grungy tents, the barracks. One latrine served over
mud, and clusters of gaunt, emaciated 4,000 men. Latrines were unheated,
men in shoddy, worn out clothing unlit, unspeakably foul-smelling
occupying every inch of unused space separate structures that were nothing
they could find more than large outhouses with a
The main camps had one cold-water narrow passageway and a long row of
spigot in each of the five (5) barracks for bench seating against a back wall.
800 men to use; they were the only The bench seating contained a series of
source of water for every purpose. about twenty holes, spaced about
The fortunate ones among us slept on eighteen inches apart. Beneath the
triple-deck wooden bunks on gunnysack seating was a sickening, stinking, open
mattresses filled with excelsior and slit trench. Misery, diarrhea and
infested with fleas, lice, and dysentery were rampant.
171
.
There was nothing to read and no room green-death, at midday; and one or two
to walk. Prisoners could only sit and more slices of black bread in the
wait for the war to end evening
Parcels were very scarce and for the Other prisoners reported that a few
most part prisoners lived on German boiled potatoes were distributed every
rations for the next three months. other day. As an extra on Sundays, men
The the coming of spring men were received two ounces of raw sausage.
covered with insect bites and always They managed to heat several cups of
hungry - there was never enough food. black, unsweetened tea every day. Frank
described a common soup made of a
The daily food ration consisted of two or
combination of saw dust and pig en-
three slices of heavy German black
trails. In March, the Germans provided
bread, which we believed was made
boilers and enough fuel to allow each
from a combination of flour and saw-
man to draw a pint of hot water daily.
dust, each morning, plain boiled
potatoes or turnips, and a bowl of a vile,
ill-tasting, watery soup made from
dehydrated vegetables, which we called
172
.
173
.
174
A
175
A plan was executed which allowed men men sleeping with blankets in open
to work in the German kitchen for food foxholes.
preparation. Afterwards the quality of By 15 April, the daily bowl of soup had a
the rations improved significantly. The few more potatoes, and the swill the
German administration also consented Germans referred to as coffee was served
to a group of 50 prisoners under guard daily. Around this time Red Cross food
to gather small amounts of firewood in also increased - from half to full parcels
an area outside but proximate to the
The most retched of the emaciated and
camp.
diseased prisoners were now getting
Men of the South Compound were medical attention. They finally had soap,
eventually moved to the enclosure and were allowed to shower and shave.
occupied by the Center Compound. Some of the prisoners were getting
Thus, 4,000 PWs now lived in an area year-old letters from home. Blankets,
which had been unable to properly toiletries and clothing mysteriously
support 2,000 men. Larger tents were appeared. Prisoners cheered more often
erected in whatever space was available. when seeing Allied reconnaissance
Straw was provided as bedding. In squadrons fly over. They often took an
addition, it was not uncommon to see
176
extra pass over the camp to the sound of hostages in the surrender negotiations. A
loud cheers newly captured American major told
Colonel Paul R. Goode became the those in the camp that arrangements
Senior American Officer (SAO) in mid- were being made to take us home within
April, upon the arrival of prisoners from the week. Those that had been prisoners
OFLAG 64 (A German Army Prisoner Of for two, three or more years were crazy
War camp for Allied officers). In with hysteria. What if the major was
addition, Allied officers from merely an English speaking German
Nurnberg arrived to Moosburg on ordered to mess with our minds. It had
19 April. happened before. Then the Germans
would organize the march south. Many
When the news arrived, it was worth the
of the men were frenzied and near
wait. General George S. Patton's Third
hysterics at the possibility that Patton's
Army Division was taking every
Third Army would not get here in time
German village or German unit in its
path with little resistance. Another During the last 10 days in April it was
rumor flew through the camp that the though that all Allied prisoners would
Americans were to be marched south as be left in camps, per an agreement
between the German Government and
177
the Allies, and preparations were made chose to live in tents while others slept
accordingly. However, as the Allies were in air raid slit trenches
making ground advances towards the On 27 April, two Swiss representatives
camp fear that the Germans would move of the Protecting Power arrived at
PWs to a fort in Salzburg and hold them Moosburg, to attend and facilitate the
there as hostages were never absent from transfer of the camp from German to
the prisoners’ minds. American Authority
With the approach of U.S. forces on 13 It appeared that the unexpectedly rapid
April 1945, the American prisoners at advance of the American forces in the
XIII-D were marched to Stalag VII-A. region necessitated an immediate
While the majority reached VII-A on 20 conference between the camp authorities
April, many had dropped out on the - represented by Oberst Braune - and the
way with the German guards making no local German Army Corps commandant,
attempt to stop them. Built to hold in order to propose the exclusion of
14,000 PWs, Stalag VII-A now held fighting from the Moosburg region
130,000 from evacuated stalags with 500
living in barracks built for 200. Some
178
.
179
g
The proposal, made by Braune and the the Swiss Red Cross, a major in the
Swiss representatives, was accepted in German SS, and the senior American and
view of Article 7 of the Geneva British officers from Stalag VII-A Colonel
Convention. Appropriate instructions Paul S. Goode (U.S. Army), and Group
were given to the commander of the Captain Willets (Royal Air Force)
division in the sector in question, and Colonel Goode asked to speak with a
the proposal was formulated for senior Allied officer. They were prompt-
presentation to the advancing ly escorted to Lieutenant Colonel James
Americans. According to this proposal, W. Lann, the commanding officer of the
an area of a few kilometers around U.S. Army’s 47th Tank Battalion
Moosburg would have to be declared a
The SS major carried a written proposal
neutral zone
from the area commander, which he was
At dawn on 29 April, a car approached a to present to the commanding officer of
U.S. Army roadblock on the southeast the American force.
side of Mauren from the direction of
After a brief discussion, Colonel Lann
Moosburg. The car was not fired on as it
escorted the group to Puttenhausen to
was seen to be flying a white flag. In the
meet with General Karlstad.
car were four men - a representative of
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.
After the introductions, the Red Cross After a long discussion with the German
representative and the SS major dis- spokesman, General Karlstad declared
cussed the German proposal with the proposal unfavorable and
General Karlstad. Colonel Goode and unacceptable. The German returned to
Group Captain Willets did not take part his divisional headquarters and the
in the discussion, and for the most part, Swiss then drove to camp with Goode
spent their time talking with various and Willets.
officers in the command post. At some Colonel Goode and Group Captain
point during the discussions, Colonel Willets had arrived back at the camp
Goode left the room to get something to shortly before the initial Allied
eat. Since it was actively engaged in movement to liberate Stalag VII-A. They
combat operations, and far ahead of told their fellow prisoners that an
Division Trains, the combat command armored unit was coming to free them,
was on C-Rations. Learning that Colonel and while the German resistance was
Goode was a prisoner of war, some the expected to be light, they should keep
men, who had acquired a few fresh eggs their heads down. The prisoners and
for their personal use, cooked him a guards watched as the SS took up
breakfast of fried eggs, bacon, and toast defensive positions in the area. It was
181
not long before the sounds of battle came While the effort to capture the bridge
from the distance. The fight for Moos- was underway, General Karlstad went
burg was underway. into Moosburg with the main body of his
Fire from the American tanks and force. Meanwhile, large numbers of
infantry, aimed at the SS who were firing German prisoners were being rounded
from behind the railroad embankment, up by Colonel Lann's tank and infantry
came into the camp. Prisoners and platoons, including one large group that
guards alike hurriedly sought cover in stated it was the guard of the prison
ditches, under buildings, and behind camp. General Karlstad and his staff
brick walls. Adding to the commotion questioned some of the German officers
was the sound of the demolition charges regarding the prison camp and selected a
exploding as the Germans destroyed the German captain to act as his guide for
bridge across the Isar. As soon as it had Stalag VII-A
started, it was over. The firing ceased First Lieutenant Joseph P. Luby of the
except for the occasional sounds of small 68th Armored Infantry Battalion, Second
arms and machine gun fire from the Lieutenant William J. Hodges, and three
direction of the bridge Jeeps were guided by the German cap-
tain towards the camp. As this little
182
.
convoy, carrying one mounted .30 and making a quick search of arms in the
caliber machine-gun, approached the pockets of the guards
camp gate, the alarming sight of a large Moments later, a battle-scarred medium
number of armed Germans in the outer tank joined them at the main gate. Still
yard of the great camp was noted, but others, carrying infantrymen on their
Lieutenant Luby took exactly the right backs, took up positions outside the
action. Without slackening his speed but camp
with both hands on the business end of
General Karlstad received an
his machine-gun he rolled into the
unconditional surrender of the German
middle of the German formation,
garrison and the camp. The first allied
brought his peep to a sudden halt and
prisoners to present themselves were
called "Achtung." The German guard of
Group Captain Willets and Colonel
240 men was ordered to line up and to
Goode. In a few moments an
drop their weapons in front of them. The
enterprising American produced a
two young officers and three Jeep
United States Flag – from where,
drivers went rapidly down the line
perhaps only he knew – and amid
receiving the pistol belts from officers
thunderous cheers from the prisoners,
183
.
184
185
Prisoners as they lived just before and shortly after liberation
186
187
188
A
Shown on one of the Sherman tanks which liberated Stalag VII-A is Lt. Col. A.P.
Clark on the left side of the gun, and Lt. Col. Robert R. “Moose” Stillman on the
other side of the gun. POW Dick Schrupp is the other soldier next to Stillman.
(USAFA, SMS 329
189
)
190
Freedom at last for Stalag VII-A Moosburg POWs (USAFA, SMS 329)
191
192
The Allied Command At Liberatio
193
n
194
)
195
.
196
197
198
Previous Pages and Above: Additional POW and liberation related photographs
from the estate of Francis J. Morrissey
199
Before V-E Day, the Allies interpreted a proper evacuation, furthermore because
‘Standfast’ Agreement with the German of the Soviet advance from the east,
military authorities to mean that overrunning many of the camps, it
Recovered Allied Military Personnel became more and more difficult to
(RAMPs) recovered in camps overrun retrieve and access the American
were to remain in place under the Prisoners of War, causing additional
command of their already appointed hardships on the prisoners.
leaders. The reason for this policy was to After V-E Day, the ‘Standfast’ Agreement
allow the Western Allies enough time to was understood to mean evacuation
prepare for an orderly evacuation. from the forward area as soon as
However, after Allied Forces entered possible, designated to be arranged by
German territory, it became known that air, via a program known as “CATOR”
as the enemy retreated they took their (Combined Air Transport Operations
PWs with them, such as with Stalag Luft Room). The primary Staging Area for
III, moving the camps and/or the recovered and repatriated American
inmates to areas between the Allies Prisoners of War was RAMP Camp 1,
advancing from both east and west. located at Camp Lucky Strike, one of the
Hence, there was no time to wait for a many recognized Cigarette Camps. This
200
particular camp was near the On 7 May 1945, the commander of the
Embarkation Port of Le Havre, France Supreme Headquarters Allied
Camp Lucky Strike was selected as the Expeditionary Force (SHAEF) decided
installation that would have the greatest that all American and British
part of the work involved in the ex-Prisoners of War should be evacuated
processing and evacuation of RAMPs in the shortest possible time, regardless
because of its proximity to the port of Le of any limiting circumstances. This
Havre and because it had a capacity change in policy greatly accelerated
expandable to 70,000 evacuation of liberated Prisoners
through administrative channels, and
During March of 1945, large numbers of
from a daily rate of approximately 1,500
Americans RAMPs liberated by Soviet
the number jumped to 30,000 by 9 May
Forces and evacuated through Odessa,
1945
were shipped from Europe to the Zone
of Interior, requiring opening of Camp By around 8 May 1945, former prisoners
Wings, another Cigarette Camp, and a were being moved from Stalag VII-A and
nearby airstrip in the vicinity of Le flown to Rheims, France, and from there
Havre on 7 April 1945. to Camp Lucky Strike
201
.
202
in a short time, was made an indepen- designated area with a capacity of about
dent command. Block C was set up for 2,000 beds. The men were kept here for
the 306th General Hospital facility to about one (1) day after which they were
take care of convalescent RAMPs. The transferred to the processing areas for a
former PWs were flown in from the for- minimum of from 1½ to two (2) days.
ward areas to the airport at Le Havre, The capacity of the latter was 4,000 beds.
where a 2,000-bed tent setup was made After processing, they proceeded to the
available. All RAMPs were screened "pending shipment" area for a minimum
medically at the airport by Physicians of of one (1) day - in actual experience from
the 98th Medical Battalion and by the 3½ to 10 days. Each of these designated
Dispensary Officers from Le Havre units. areas had a different mess. The special
Those few who arrived by rail transport bland ration was used by all three except
were sorted several hours out of Le that mess no. 1, in the reception area,
Havre, and complete triage was effected eliminated dried fruits. In addition, there
before the train arrived at the station was a supplementary issue of one multi-
By 10 May 1945, Camp Lucky Strike had vitamin capsule for each man at each
become very well organized. Reception meal. Between meals, a nutritional bar
into the RAMP Camp was in a was available for all personnel. On 7
203
.
May 1945, this bar served 460 gallons of mess. It was estimated that the average
eggnog, 320 gallons of cocoa, 452 gal- consumption was well over 5,000
lons of malted milk, and 128 gallons of calories per man/per day
tomato juice. The average serving was After the RAMPs went through the first
approximately 12 ounces. In addition, two areas, they were sent, as stated
the RAMPs reaching the camp after the previously, to the holding or "pending
evening meal were served 160 gallons of shipment" area. Here, the modified type
dehydrated pea soup and 1,400 cheese A-ration was served. This holding area
sandwiches made with white bread. was no longer under the control of the
Although no control was maintained at RAMP Camp, having been returned to
the nutrition bar for second helpings, the the control of the Lucky Strike Post
length of the line was a deterring factor.
By the middle of May the general health
In the mess, effective control was exer-
of the RAMPs had much improved. The
cised by characteristically colored and
sick call rate had dropped to an average
marked cards issued by the tent
of 60 to 75 patients per day in an area
commander to the men in formation
whose population varied from 1,500 to
before each meal and surrendered as
2,800 men, as contrasted with the earlier
they passed through the gate to the
204
.
rate of 200 for a population of 2,000. The On 19 May 1945, Movement Orders were
chief complaints at this time were boils, generated from Headquarters,
skin infections, cellulitis, and diarrhea; Normandy Base Section, Communica-
gastrointestinal symptoms now tion Zone, European Theater of
accounted for only 1.8% of the total. Operations, for Frank to recuperate at
On 13 May 1945, Frank sent a telegram his parent’s home at 231 Troy Street in
to his parents via Western Union Sans Dayton.
Origine (71-137-31) stating, “All Well On the 23rd of May Frank left Le Havre,
And Safe. Hope To See You Soon. All France for home with a pay advance of
My Love= Francis J. Morrissey. 4,000 French Francs, or $80.70. He
On the 23rd of May the Department Of traveled across the Atlantic Ocean on the
War sent a telegram via Western Union troopship Monticello as part of a convoy
to the Morrissey family stating, “The of over 90 troopships and Liberty Ships.
Secretary Of War Desires To Express His The Monticello’s official troop capacity
Pleasure That Your Son 2/LT Morrissey was 556 officers and 6,334 enlisted
Francis J. Returned To Military Control= passengers. On this voyage it carried
J A Ulio The Adjutant General.” 3,339 liberated prisoners, 409 wounded
205
and 1,453 First Army soldiers. It also had that many liberated prisoners enjoyed
a crew of around 700 ice cream in a year or more.
The enlisted men were crammed into After a port of call in Southampton,
canvas bunks, four to a tier, in every Hampshire, United Kingdom, the
available space from “A” deck to the Monticello next arrived to fog and rain
bottom of the ship. With more than at Pier 16, Stapleton, Staten Island, New
1,500 officers on this trip, most captains York City at around 2:00 p.m. on Sunday,
and lieutenants slept in the same bunks 3 June 1945.
as the enlisted. Even colonels were in Two other troopships that arrived that
cramped quarters - four shared a cabin. day were the LeJeune, carrying 2,424
On this voyage the ship could only liberated Americans, 377 rotational
provide two of three meals - breakfast troops and 701 wounded, and the Santa
and dinner - that it typically served on Margarita, docking at Pier 15 with 199
any given day. However, what it lost in liberated prisoners.
number it made up in quantity and The John B. Hood, one of the Liberty
quality at each meal. It was the first time Ships built by the United States
Government during the War, brought
206
207
208
209
home some 350 Americans that day. The
Hood displayed a gaping 10-foot hole in
its bow, the result of a collision involving
14 ships off Grand Banks, Newfound-
land in Canada the Sunday before. The
collision started when two vessels in the
convoy, all traveling in dense fog, struck
icebergs.
The Monticello was a confiscated Italian
built ship the United States purchased
from Brazil on 16 April 1942; one of the
The Monticello was returned to the
2,711 ships used by the U.S. Government
Italian government in June 1947, and
that had been built or acquired during
renamed “Conte Grande”, and after
World War Two. The ship decommis-
being inactive for two years, resumed
sioned in Norfolk, Virginia on 22 March
service as a passenger vessel in South
1946, and returned to the War Shipping
America. She was scrapped in 1961
Administration for disposal on 27 May.
210
A Woman’s Army Corp band on a Within two weeks of his arrival home
welcoming boat met the 9,000 or so Frank married Esther Pearl Phillips.
veterans that arrived in New York on a Frank met Esther by way of her older
those three troopships, and around 1,000 sister Mary Ellen Phillips. Mary Ellen
more that arrived on the four Liberty had been friends with Frank’s sister
ships that day Mary Jane Morrissey since their late
All the liberated prisoners were then teens. Frank and Esther had met and
taken from Staten Island to Camp became acquainted during the few
Kilmer, New Jersey, the largest months prior to his November 1942
processing center for troops returning reporting to Randolph Field in San
from Europe. Like one other Army Air Antonio to begin Pre-Flight School. They
Forces officer on the Monticello that wrote each other continually - from the
confirmed upon arrival he had parents beginning of Pre-Flight School until his
to soon visit in the Dayton area, Frank August 1943 graduation from Advanced
more than likely was released from Flight Training at Lubbock Army Air
Camp Atterbury, located about four Field.
miles from Edinburgh, Indiana
211
Frank and Esther in front of his parents’ home at 332 Elverne Avenu
213 e
Their wedding was held on 16 June 1945, Immediately following the ceremony an
at Sacred Heart Church in downtown informal reception and wedding break-
Dayton, Ohio. William Mote served as fast was held at the Wishing Well Inn on
best man; Frank’s sister Mary Jane West Franklin Street in Centerville, Ohio.
served as Esther’s only attendant. Later in the day they left for a short trip
to Chicago; Frank and Esther delayed
their honeymoon for two months.
214
215
e
216
217
218
Above: Esther with her mother Bessie Phillips, and Frank with his mother Mary Eva
and father James Stephen Morrisse
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Above: Frank and Esther, with Mary Jane Morrissey and William Mote standing
outside the Wishing Well Inn, West Franklin Street in Centerville, Ohio on
16 June 1945
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After the end of the war Frank was Consolidated B-24 Liberator; Beechcraft
assigned to the Engineering Division of C-45 and C-45F Expeditor; Douglas
the Air Technical Service Command C-47B Skytrain; Douglas C-54 and C-54B
(ATSC) and Accelerated Service Test Skymaster; and Fairchild C-82 and
Section, Flight Test Division at Wright C-82A Packet.
Field, Ohio. In the latter assignment he
served as a Functional Test Pilot until 12
July 1946
As of 29 September 1945, Frank had
accumulated 216 hours and 20 minutes
(216:20) as a Co-pilot and 22:40 as a First
Pilot.
From October 1945 through June 1946,
Morrissey flew a variety of Army Air
Forces aircraft: The North American
AT-6, AT-6D and AT-6F Texan; Boeing Above: Building 8, which housed the
B-17 and B-17G Flying Fortress; Operations and the Flight Test Division
after its construction in 1943
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The end of the war in September 1945 abstracted, indexed, and organized
brought demobilization and a return to 55,000 captured German documents
pre-war operations. Procurement moved representing Germany’s best
to the back seat and Wright Field’s aeronautical research and development.
operations returned to research and German aircraft and engines were
development, with the work focus shift- shipped to Wright Field for analysis.
ed from propeller-driven aircraft to jet Projects OVERCAST and PAPERCLIP
propulsion. also brought prominent German
Wright Field also moved away from scientists to the field where they
developing, modifying and improving contributed their knowledge to
individual items in favor of a American aeronautical engineering
coordinated approach that emphasized
new systems and models. Next Pages:
In late 1945 the Air Documents Research Morrissey’s Air Medal and accompany-
Center moved to Wright Field from ing ribbons as they look in 202
London. Working under T-2 Intelligence,
An aerial view of Wright Field in 194
a 500-member team catalogued,
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227
Above: Frank with Esther’s sisters Mabel
and Ruthmae, and Carl at a
Phillips‘ family gathering on 28 June
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8
Above: The Morrissey’s near their home at 526 Wiltshire Boulevard in Kettering,
with their first-born, Merrill (the author’s mother
230
After release from active duty Frank Frank served in a number of Reserve
transferred to the Air Force Reserve. units until the end of 1966 - the 355th
From 16 October 1946, to 4 November and 356th Troop Carrier Squadrons of
1952, Frank remained in the inactive the 302d, as well as the 2252d Air
Reserve, assigned to the First Air Force Reserve Flying Center - all located at
at Mitchel Air Force Base, located near Clinton County Air Force Base.
Long Island, New York.
In November of 1952 he joined an Air
Force Reserve unit - the 356th Troop
Carrier Squadron of the 302d Troop
Carrier Group, or Wing (M). The 302d,
also known as “The Buckeye Wing”, was
activated at Clinton County Air Force
Base (CCAFB) near Wilmington, Ohio on
14 June 1952, as part of the First Air
Force. Frank was granted “Flying Sta-
tus” once again on 5 December of the
same year.
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chlorinated lime for sanitation from In 1958 it became the first Air Force
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, to Bradley Reserve Troop Carrier Wing to fly a
Field, Connecticut, aboard C–46 aircraft mission in the Arctic.
between 21 and 23 August. By 2 Sep- Just in the short period between 1 July
tember floodwaters had receded and Air 1965 and 31 March 1966, the Wing
Force emergency missions ended. completed 5,742 flying hours while
Hurricane Diane left 250 people dead accomplishing 953 missions.
and caused $150 million in damage
In 1956 the 302d distinguished itself by
winning top honors in the first
Continental Air Command (CONAC)
Computed Air Release Point - "CARP" -
Rodeo, in competition with other airlift
wings.
The 302d transitioned from the C-46
“Commando” into the C-119 "Flying
Boxcar" aircraft in early 1957.
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The following story was is from the men to the target from their Fort Campbell,
Hamilton (Ohio) Daily Journal on Ky. Station
Monday, 18 August 1958. Photos specific The assault was watched by 5,000 spectators
to the story follow – mostly members or families of members of
Airborne Units in Mock Attac the 101st Airborne Division Association,
Wilmington, Ohio (AP) – The “Screaming which had its annual convention in
Eagles” landed with little difficulty Sunday Cincinnati over the weekend.
and quickly mastered their problem The division commander, Maj. Gen. W.C.
This was a mock paratroop attack staged by a Westmoreland said the paratroopers “did a
highly trained company of the Eagles – bang up job on a difficult drop mission.
members of the 101st Airborne Division – at Twelve planes took part in the operation,
Clinton County Air Force Base making two passes over the target to drop
After the drop, they moved into attack posi- 125 men and their equipment each time.
tions and secured the base radio shack – the Only two men suffered injuries – neither
object of their problem seriously.
This was also a mission of the 302d Troop
Carrier Wing, a reserve unit which flew the
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Previous Pages: Captain Morrissey
briefing officers of the 302d Troop
Carrier Wing and the 101st Airborne
Division’s 1st Airborne Battle Group,
501st Infantry, on their 17 August 1958,
mission. Notice the cigarette smoke in
the last photo.
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A C-119C “Flying Boxcar” flying from A C-119C “Flying Boxcar” dropping
Fort Campbell, Kentucky to Clinton troops while flying from Fort Campbell,
County Air Force Base, Ohi Kentucky to Clinton County Air Force
Base, Ohi
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An undated photo including Frank and other Air Force Reserve and civilian
members of the 302d Troop Carrier Wing, Clinton County Air Force Bas
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249
regularly supported Air Force Reserve responsible for the 302d, during normal
troop carrier joint operations training. operations and smaller exercises such as
By the 7th of November almost 5,000 “Pine Cone,” Hayride” and “16 Tons.”
101st Airborne Division troops had On 24 December 1958, Frank was rated
jumped and more tonnage of equipment as a Senior Pilot; and then a Command
dropped than any other time since the Pilot on 22 April 1963
end of WWII - with the exception of the Frank became an Air Force Reserve
Berlin Airlift. Technician (ART) with the unit in
302d Troop Carrier Wing Commander September 1957 and on 3 February 1959,
Colonel Donald J. Campbell was the Air designated the civilian position of
Division provisional commander for the Instructor Pilot.
operation - in charge of all participating Air Force Reserve Technicians were
Reservists. The provisional Air Division Department of Defense civilians that
was set up to take care of command were responsible for the day to day
issues under Tactical Air Command’s operation of Reserve units. These
839th Division. This was Campbell’s first positions required satisfactory
command of this size, previously only participation as a Reservist.
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252
It is interesting that Frank was permitted
to wear his Air Force uniform while
carrying out civilian duties. In many
other instances both Air Force and Army
Reserve Technicians are required to wear
civilian clothing.
From early January to 10 March 1961 he
attended the 10 week Instrument Pilot
Instructor School Course (No. 1-104500F)
at Connally Air Force Base, Texas. This
qualified Frank as the civilian supervisor
of the instrument training program of
the 302d Troop Carrier Wing. Captain
Morrissey was awarded the Air Force
Specialty “I” - Instructor on 10 March
In April of 1961, Colonel Campbell
awarded Frank with Continental Air
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254
being assigned to the Air Reserve versions were built, 811 of those being
Personnel Center in Denver, Colorado. KC-97 tankers
On 24 February 1967, he transferred to Morrissey completed Phase I Co-Pilot
the 145th Air Refueling Squadron of the Training on the KC-97L on 30 September
160th Air Refueling Group in the Ohio 1967, and then Phase II by 21 January
Air National Guard. Also located at 1968; the latter certified him as Combat
Clinton County Air Force Base and later Ready on this particular aircraft. He then
Lockbourne, AFB in Columbus, Ohio, completed the same phases for KC-97L
the 145th flew large, four-engined KC-97 Pilot Training on 31 August and
Stratotankers. 7 December 1968, respectively.
The KC-97 Stratofreighter was an aerial In May of 1967, the 145th began
refueling tanker variant of the C-97 involvement in Operation Creek Party.
Stratofreighter (which was itself based This was a continuous rotational mission
on the Boeing B-29 Superfortress), great- flying from Rhein Main Air Base, West
ly modified with all the necessary tanks, Germany, providing air refueling to
plumbing, and "flying boom.” Between United States Air Forces in Europe
1947 and 1958, 888 C-97s in several (USAFE) tactical aircraft.
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257
Frank transferred to the Retired Reserve in May of 1972, and started to receive
retirement pay and full military benefits at age 60 on 25 October 1982. As of this time
Frank had accumulated almost 26 years for Reserve retirement purposes and over 40
years of Service for Basic Pay.
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259
ORIGINAL WAR AND POST-WAR MILITARY RECORD
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WORLD WAR II BATTLE
Naples - Foggi
Romeo - Arno
Air Offensive Europ
Air Combat Balkan
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18 July 1942: Enlists as a Private in the U.S. Army Air Corps at Patterson
Field’s 3rd Station Air Depot, Fairfield (Fairborn), Ohio. He was
assigned Army Serial No. 15318562
12 November 1942: Arrives at San Antonio Aviation Cadet Center at Randolph Field
in San Antonio, Texas begin Pre-Flight Schoo
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24 April 1943 Arrives at Waco Army Air Field, Texas, to begin Basic
Flight Training with Class 43-
27 June 1943 Arrives at Lubbock Army Air Field in Lubbock, Texas, to begin
Advanced Flight Training with Class 43-
September 1943: Assigned to the 302nd Bombardment Group (H) AAB, Clovis,
New Mexico
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15 September 1943: Special Orders No. 258 relieves him from the 302nd
Bombardment Group and assigned as a Co-Pilot (CP) to Crew
No. 302-9-59 of the 450th Bombardment Group (H), Alamogordo,
New Mexico, with a report date not later than 2400 hours on
27 September
21 September 1943: Special Orders No. 58 assigns him and his crew to the 722nd
Bombardment Squadron (H) within the 450th Bombardment
Group (H
10 November 1943: By this date Crew No. 302-9-59 had been assigned B-24H
Liberator Serial No. 41-28603; the “603” was named the
“Chiquita Mia” around this date as wel
283
)
19 November 1943: Special Orders No. 309 were issued to move the 450th to
Herington Army Airfield, a Kansas-based staging area used for
overseas movement
6 December 1943: By this date Crew No. 302-9-59 had flown to Morrison Field at
West Palm Beach, Florida - their port of embarkatio
7 December 1943 Crew No. 302-9-59 left on the first leg of their long journey to the
combat zone, flying first to Borenquin Field, Puerto Rico
3 January 1944: By this date Crew No. 302-9-59 had arrived to their duty station
in Manduria, Ital
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8 January 1944 The 450th Bombardment Group (H) begins their combat
missions from Manduria, bombing the Airdrome in Mostar,
Yugoslavi
4 May 1944 Frank’s new B-24J Liberator, the “Dauntless Duchess”, Serial No.
42-99760 piloted by Tommy F. Bruner, crashes on Manduria
Airfield shortly after an unsuccessful take of
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a
30 May 1944 Frank’s third Liberator, a B-24H with Serial No. 42-94901 piloted
by Tommy F. Bruner, is shot down over Krizevci, Yugoslavia. The
Memorial Day Mission - No. 77 for the 450th and Frank’s 27th -
was to Ebreichsdorf, Austria to destroy an aircraft component
factory
1 June 1944 By this date Lieutenant Morrissey, and Sergeants Cain and
Mielke had been captured by the Germans and sent to Dulag
Luft Oberurse
7 June 1944 From Dulag Luft Wetzlar Frank writes a letter his mother Mrs.
James S. Morrissey via Kriegsgefangenenpost, stating that he is a
Prisoner Of Wa
10 June 1944 Frank completes the rail trip from Dulag Luft Wetzlar to
Stalag Luft III - a distance of nearly 600 kilometers
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June 1944 Shortly after being given Prisoner Of War (PW) Number 5731,
Frank is assigned to live in Block 64, Room 14
27 January 1945 The March from Stalag Luft III with the destination of
Spremberg, Germany began when American PWs leave the
South Compound at 11:20 p.m. and Frank with the West
Compound at 11:30 p.m.
31 January 1945 The South Compound and 200 men from West Compound,
left Spremberg for Stalag XIII-D Nurnberg (Nuremberg -
Langwasser)
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2 February 1945 The South Compound and 200 men from West Compound,
arrived at Stalag XIII-D Nurnberg (Nuremberg - Langwasser)
29 April 1945 Stalag VII-A is liberated by Patton's Third United States Arm
13 May 1945 Frank has reached Le Havre, France by this date; he sends a
telegram to his parents via Western Union Sans Origine (71-137-
31) stating, “All Well And Safe. Hope To See You Soon. All My
Love= Francis J. Morrissey.
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23 May 1945 The Department Of War sends a telegram via Western Union to
the Morrissey family stating, “The Secretary Of War Desires To
Express His Pleasure That Your Son 2/LT Morrissey Francis J.
Returned To Military Control= J A Ulio The Adjutant General.”
23 May 1945 Frank leaves Le Havre for home with a pay advance of 4,000 French
Francs, or $80.70. He traveled across the Atlantic Ocean on Liberty
Ship USS Monticello as part of a military convoy
3 June 1945 Arrives at Staten Island, New York, New York on the USS
Monticello
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Additional Sources used for this publication
290
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291
292
.
“Moosburg Online.” Accessed 26 April 2014. Murray, Debi. “The Air Transport
Command’s Morrison Field, West Palm Beach, Florida.” Accessed 20 December
2018. http://www.pbchistoryonline.org/uploads/file/Morrison%20Field.pdf
“Official Home of The 450th BG Association and The 450th Bomb Group Memorial
Association (B.R.A.T.S.).” Accessed 22 April 2014. http://www.450thbg.com
293
.
Shavit, David. "The Greatest Morale Factor Next to the Red Army." Books and Li-
braries in American and British Prisoners of War Camps in Germany during World
War II.” Libraries & Culture Vol. 34, No. 2 (Spring, 1999), pp. 113-134. Published by:
University of Texas Press. Accessed 29 July 2014. Article Stable URL: http://www.js-
tor.org/stable/25548713
“Stalag Luft III — A World War II POW Account.” Accessed 9 December 2017
http://www.observernews.net/2014/07/24/stalag-luft-iii-a-world-war-ii-pow-ac-
count/
“The Cigarette Camps - The U.S. Army Camps In The Le Havre Area.” Accessed 5
May 2014. http://www.skylighters.org/special/cigcamps/cmplstrk.html
294
.
“The National WWII Museum New Orleans.” Accessed 23 April 2014. http://www.-
nationalww2museum.org/visit/plan-a-visit-adwords.html?gclid=CjwKEAjwxtKe-
BRDMzoeQmYn5uHcSJACGCF3DItEIFgP5vJvPxCieJN3oiBICp3HQSh2VeE_sE-Eda-
BoCYiLw_wcB
“The Wartime Memories Project - STALAG LUFT 3 POW Camp.” Accessed 22 April
2014. http://www.wartimememories.co.uk/pow/stalagluft3.html
295
.
Turner Publishing. “450th Bomb Group (H).” Accessed 22 December 2014. https://
itun.es/us/1DQTE.l
“Stalag Luft III Collections at the Air Force Academy.”Accessed 23 April 2014
https://afac.ent.sirsi.net/client/en_US/default/?
rm=STALAG+LUFT+III0%7C%7C%7C1%7C%7C%7C0%7C%7C%7Ctrue
“We Wanted Wings: A History Of The Aviation Cadet Program.” Accessed 23 April
2014. http://www.aetc.af.mil/shared/media/document/AFD-061109-026.pdf
296
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Frank in 198
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9
298
8
299
The commissioning of Jeffrey Frank Jones, with his grandfather, Francis J. Morrissey
and father, Frank Roy Jones, at Wright State University on 26 September 1986
300
CHAPTER 3
The 450th Bombardment Group
"
World War I
The 450th Bombardment Group (Heavy) was constituted on 6 April 1943, and activat-
ed on 1 May 1943, at Gowen Field, Idaho. The new group was moved without person-
nel or equipment to a temporary station at Clovis Army Air Field, New Mexico on 21
May 1943, where the command and headquarters of the group was assembled. On 5
July 1943, the group was reassigned to Alamogordo Army Air eld, which was to
house the Group for all phases of training with their Consolidated B-24 Liberator
bombers
When the group was nally assembled for the rst time at Alamogordo, many of the
key positions in both the group and squadrons had been lled. Both of cers and men
arrived daily and little by little all sections were built up to full strength. Crews were
allotted in groups of eight, twelve and forty-six bringing the strength nally on 24 Au-
gust 1943, to seventy or full strength
After training was completed, the 450th was reassigned to the Mediterranean Theater
of Operations (MTO) in Southern Italy, arriving arriving in December of 1943. It began
operations with Fifteenth Air Force in January of 1944 and engaged chie y in missions
against strategic targets in Italy, France, Germany, Austria, Czechoslovakia, Hungary,
307
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and the Balkans until April 1945. The group bombed aircraft factories, assembly plants,
oil re neries, storage areas, marshaling yards, air elds, and other objectives
The 450th contributed to the intensive Allied campaign against the enemy aircraft
industry during Big Week (20–25 February 1944) by attacking factories at Steyr and
Regensburg, being awarded a Distinguished Unit Citation (DUC) for braving the
hazards of bad weather, enemy ghters, and ak to bombard a Messerschmitt aircraft
manufacturing factory at Regensburg on 25 February
The group received a second DUC for a mission on 5 April 1944, when the it fought its
way through relentless attacks by enemy aircraft to bomb railroad marshaling yards at
Ploesti, Romania. The group also struck such objectives as enemy defenses, troop
concentrations, bridges, and marshaling yards in support of the Invasion of southern
France.[1] It operated from Poltava Airbase, near Kiev in the Soviet Union, to support
the advance of Russian troops in the Balkans as part of Operation Frantic, and
supporting the United States Fifth Army in the Allied effort in Italy
The group redeployed to the United States during May. Many personnel were
demobilized upon arrival at the port of debarkation; a small cadre of key personnel
was formed and the group was then established at Harvard Army Air Field, Nebraska
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in July[citation needed] and the unit was redesignated the 450th Bombardment Group,
Very Heavy in July and was equipped with Boeing B-29 Super Fortresses and
programmed for deployment to the Paci c Theater
The Japanese Capitulation in August made the group redundant to Air Force require-
ments and the unit was demobilized, and the unit was inactivated on 15 October 1945
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Lineag
Constituted as 450th Bombardment Group (Heavy) on 6 April 194
Activated on 1 May 194
Re-designated 450th Bombardment Group, Very Heavy on 26 July 194
Inactivated on 15 October 194
Re-designated 450th Fighter-Bomber Group on 23 March 195
Activated on 1 July 195
Re-designated 450th Fighter-Day Group on 8 March 195
Inactivated on 11 December 195
Re-designated 450th Bombardment Group, Heavy on 31 July 1985 (remained inactive
Assignment
II Bomber Command, 1 May 194
47th Bombardment Wing, 20 December 1943 – 12 May 194
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Source
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/450th_Bombardment_Group
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IN HONOR OF THOSE WHO SERVED WITH TH
450th BOMBARDMENT GROUP (H
ITALY 1943 - 45 WORLD WAR I
SQUADRON
720th 721st 722nd 723r
“THE COTTONTAILS
DISTINGUISHED UNIT CITATION
REGENSBURG FEB 25th 194
PLOESTI APR 5th 194
1505 MEN OF THE 450th GROUP WER
KILLED OR MISSING IN ACTIO
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FROM THIS AIR BASE AT MANDURIA, ITALY
MEMBERS OF THE UNITED STATES ARMY AI
FORCE 450th BOMB GROUP (HEAVY) FLYIN
B24 LIBERATOR BOMBERS FLEW 265 BOMBIN
MISSIONS AGAINST THE AXIS, BETWEE
JANUARY 8, 1944 AND APRIL 26, 1945. MA
OUR COMRADES WHO MADE THE SUPREM
SACRIFICE REST IN ETERNAL PEACE
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DA QUESTO AEROPORTO DI MANDURIA, NE
PERIODO TRA L’8 GENNARIO 1944 ED IL 2
APRILE 1945 EQUIPAGGI DEL 450th GRUPPO D
BOMBARDAMENTO PESANTE DELLA “ARMY AI
FORCE” DEGLI STATI UNITI D’AMERICA
EFFETTUARONO, CON I BOMBARDIERI B2
LIBERATOR, 265 MISSIONI DI GUERRA CONTR
LE FORZE DELL’ASSE. POSSANO I NOSTR
COLLEGHI CHE FECERO IL SUPREM
SACRIFICIO RIPOSARE NELLA PACE ETERNA
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EDITORIAL STAFF
Capt. A. L. Camp
(Historical Of cer
1st Lt. Robert Maure
(Artist
T/Sgt. Chester Mice
Sgt. Mortimer Metchi
Sgt. Harris Hillendah
Sgt. Abraham Mint
S/Sgt Albert Cinkowsk
(photographer
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Historical Resume
Activation
General Order No. 68, 22 April 1943, Hq 2nd AF, Ft. George Wright, Washington,
of cially activated a new group to be known as the 450th Bombardment Group (H) on
1 May 1943, at AAB, Gowan Field, Boise Idaho. Twenty-one days later a paper
transaction transferred the 450th to the AAB in Clovis, New Mexico. The key
personnel was assigned on this base, and Captain William G. Snaith issued Order No.
1 assuming command until 12 June when Colonel John Stuart Mills arrived to take
formal command of the group
School of Applied Tactics
On 16 June 1943, the key personnel, together with four model crews, were sent to the
School of Applied Tactics in Orlando, Florida where they spent a month learning some
of the more practical aspects of heavy bombardment. At the conclusion of their
schooling, they returned to the AAB in Alamogordo, New Mexico, where other
members of the 450th complement has already begun to arrive from all parts of the
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United States. Another sister group, the 449th, was to train on the same eld, and they
too had arrived simultaneously
Setting up Camp
The rst thing done upon arrival was to set up camp for the four squadrons, known as
the 720th, 721st, 722nd, and 723rd respectively. Banging hammers and rasping saws
gave every indication that the young group would become one of the most building
minded out- ts in the Army Air Forces. In record time they had school rooms, brie ng
rooms, orderly rooms, of ces, shops set up to begin their ground training. Maps were
put up, benches were made, and all sorts of visual aides and training devices were in-
vented by the ingenious department members. By the rst of August they were ready
to start their ground training
Ground School and Flying
The Schools Of cers prepared a complete schedule for all three phases of ground
school, ranging from Intelligence to Armament. All effort and time was devoted to
training for overseas duty with the result that by the middle of September, 24 crews
were well on their way to third phase. On that date, the B-24 Mobile unit of the TTC
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arrived to prepare the combat and ground crews in their respective line of work. A
continuous schedule running from 0700 and through 1800 was put into effect with a
telescoped program that put the personnel through third phase as well by the end of
October. Leaves and furloughs were given to all in anticipation of an overseas
movement, and physical tness was brought up to 100%.
Despite the stepped up program, most everyone found time to run to El Paso for a bit
of diversion during which they managed to cross the Mexican border into Juarez for a
few bottles of "Carta Blanca" and a steak dinner. Anything else outside of this purely
exaggeration
Preparation for Overseas Movement
The moth of October saw the end of Ground Training Program and by November the
rst practice formation ights were own to the nearby cities in western Texas and Ok-
lahoma. On 10 November 1943, the POM arrived in Alamagordo and gave the word
that sent the 450th air echelon on its way to the staging area in Herington, Kansas on
the 20th of November.
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The processing in Herington took around ten days, at the conclusion of which the ech-
elon ew to West Palm Beach, the last stop in continental United States. There were
poker games, dice and mixed drinks in addition to a bit of sight seeing all along the
way, but the crews were eager to keep moving in anticipation of their new assignment
On to Brazil
From Florida, the Liberators fanned out over the Lesser Antiles, some going directly to
Atkinson Field in British Guiana, others to Trinidad's Waller Field, but the majority
stopped at Borinqnan Field in Puerto Rico. The latter was the highlight of the trip
insofar as accommodations and beauty was concerned. The South American coast was
next with its teeming jungle and the wide Amazon. Belem and Fartaleza were the next
stops followed by Natal on the Brazilian littoral. The smell of strong coffee, toasted
Brazil nuts, and fresh pineapple were in abundance as well as Swiss watches and the
now famous Brazilian leather boot
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Lt. Wagner was a very surprised pilot when a Frenchmen landed his plane on top of
his Liberator. No one was hurt, but later in the day an Arab darted across the path of
Lt. King's plane as it taxied out and a prop sent him to Allah. In due time, beginning
with the 20th of December, the 61 planes and 70 crews arrived in Manduria with the
exception of Lt. Cordage and his crew who failed to make up the mountain pass and
are now buried in Constantine
"Sunny Italy
Down in the heel, both literally and guratively, of Italy where Hannibal once watered
his elephants, stands the ancient city of Manduria. Ten kilometers to the north on a sol-
id rock promontory, the city of Oria with its high-walled castle of Roman days over-
looks the countryside were the 450th was to spend a year and a half.
Six inches of mud for a runway, a few dilapidated, vermin-infested barracks of the
defunct Italian Air Force and a two century old olive grove was the airport from which
the 450th would soon begin operations. The rst plane landed on December 20th in a
heavy drizzle, and the rain continued almost daily for several months
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an attempt to cross it. High ground for pup tents was at a premium, but the ingenious
soldiers lost no time in discovering the building virtues of Italian tu rock blocke
Vini, Bambiui and Fichi
Signs in the nearby villages announced the one unlimited commodity: vino, dark red
wine of dubious vintage. Ragged urchins crowded around the Americans with the
characteristic greeting of: "Allo, Joe, sigaretta?" Figs or chi were also in season, but the
dried fruits name soon developed into a less edible but more marketable product.
Building Room
The four squadrons assigned to their respective areas proceeded to put up their
installations and private quarters. Lumber, nails, and roo ng were the most dif cult
items to procure in southern Italy. The German Luftwaffe had sunk 18 supply ships to
Bari Harbor, destroying most of the supplies which would have been available to units
of the 15th Air Force
Early in January it was discovered that the Italian Admiral in Taranto was able to
release Italian stores to the American Army. Requisitions and chits were put through
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channels and in a week's time the building boom was on. Thousands of feet of lumber,
tin, nails, light bulbs, wire and seven Diesel generators were brought to camp. Other
supplies were acquired from English Army and Navy sources. By the end of the year,
several tons of materials, including cement, were safely stored in the 450th warehous-
es
The construction of of cers's clubs, day rooms, mess-halls and of ce buildings was
given priority, and before long the original quagmire referred to as "Lake Manduria"
had been transformed into an area which the I.G. declared to be a "model for the entire
Air Force.
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The furnishings secured from the Italian Air Force was a nucleus around which grew
the comfortable furnishings to be found later in the clubs or the 450th. Nothing was
spared by the Commanding Of cers that could improve the living conditions in the
otherwise dreary ats of southern Italy. Each club boasted a bar, railing and all, and
some of the areas went so far in their dressing up program that the First Combat
Camera Unit made several movies of them
When it came time to build a Base Aid Station, the speci cations were made to
conform to other buildings on the base. As a result, the station turned out to be a
two-wing hospital with wards, dispensaries, operating room, X-ray room , and private
of ces. Instead of a wood structure it was a neatly plastered, cement oored, tu
building with all modern plumbing facilities.
"Cottontails
Early in combat the 450th earned the name by which it became known in the Mediter-
ranean Theater and in the United States. The white rudders of the big tailed Liberators
were spotted by the German Luftwaffe when the 450th led the devastating attack
against the Prufening Aircraft Factory in Regensburg, Germany on 25 February 1944.
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Smarting under the blows of the 450th bombing, "Axis Sally," better known to the air-
men as the "Berlin Bitch," came on the air that night with a threat and a warning to
"The White-Tailed Liberators." On subsequent bombings over Germany, hundreds of
ME-109s and FW-190s ,supported rocket ring JU-88's, attacked aggressively,
knocking down several 450th bombers. From Berlin came the gloating voice of Sally:
"How did you like it, white-tailed Liberators?" From 'white-tails' the obvious nickname
of "Cottontails" developed in Disneyian fashion and under that battle name the 450th
helped to change the melli uous voice of Sally into a dying groan.
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Operation Digest
The 450th Bomb Group commenced combat operations on the 8th of January 1941,
dispatching 20 Liberators to attack the Mostar Airdrome in Yugoslavia. The rst really
successful mission , however, was own against Pisa on the 18th of January, and by the
following month the group was in the big leagues. During the next fteen months
until the nal operational effort on April 26, 1945, the group ew a total of 265
accredited missions against a variety of target throughout Nazi-occupied Europe.
From the little village of Manduria in the heel of Italy, 450th bombers fanned out over a
vast perimeter extending from Toulon, France to the Black Sea. Cottontail crews have
seen action in the skies above Northern Italy, Yugoslavia, Greece, Albania, Bulgaria,
Rumania, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, France, Austria and Germany. Both strategically
and tactically, the 450th played a forceful part in weakening the Nazi war effort,
striking effective, long range blows at enemy communications, industry and oil
resources, blasting gun positions, observation points, vehicles and troop concentra-
tions in direct support of Allied ground forces
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"The Battle of Ploesti
Early in April, rail hubs servicing the Germans in the east assumed top importance, as
the Soviet armies prepared to launch the drive that swept them through the Balkans.
On successive days, the 450th took part in assaults on the Budapest, Bucharest and
Ploesti Marshaling Yards, leading the entire 15th Air Force on the latter mission, which
was the opening round in the Battle of Ploesti.
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Many other important oil targets were attacked by the 450th, including the re neries at
Bratislava, Czechoslavakia; Vienna and Moosbierbaum, Austria and Blechhammer,
Germany.
In July, the group hammered the Manfred-Weiss Armament Works, the largest
industrial installation in Hungary.
Operation Uppercut
When the Southern France invitation was launched, the 450th assisted with very
effective pin-point bombing that knocked out gun installations along the shore, cut
supply lines. Earlier, the submarine pens at Toulon had been severely damaged and
harbor installations in Southern France successfully bombed
All-Out on Communication
In September, the grou pbegan in earnest its pounding of communications facilities,
the object of which was to cut off the German lines of retreat from Italy, Romania,
Hungary, and Yugoslavia.
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The "Brenner Blitz" reached a climax at Christmas time, with incessant blows leveled at
the Verona and Innsbruck terminases, and tactically important railroad bridges along
the Brenner Line
After a record year of operations, the 450th entered its second year in combat by
resuming all out attacks on the main Nazi communications system in southeastern Eu-
rope, an effort co-ordinated with the grand Soviet offensive through Hungary and
Austria. Such vital and highly defended targets as Linz, Graz, Munich and Vienna
were blasted by the 450th.
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Bomb Tonnag
The 450th has dropped nearly 15,000 tons of bombs on German-held targets since
January of 1944. Its highest montly total was 1415 tons, dropped in May of 1944. The
group's highest total tonnage for a single mission was on the 15th of April 1945, when
Cottontail Libs blasted gun emplacements and troop concentrations in the Bologna
area with 115 3/4 tons
Bombing Accurac
From the point of view of bombing accuracy, that is, percentage of bombs dropped on
or within 1000ft of the aiming point, the 450th has achieved an enviable record
For the past year of operations, the 450th was the outstanding group in the 15th Air
Force in bombing. Figures released by higher headquarters indicate that it has been
continually at or near the top since commencing combat service. The group performed
the number one job in the Air Force for the following months:
August 1944 - 59.5%
November 1944 - 47.0%
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December 1944 - 48.0%
February 1945 - 59.8%
Measured over six-month periods, the 450th achieved the following bombing accuracy
percentages:
As of - November 1944 - 47.0% - 3rd in the 15th Air Force
December 1944 - 48.0% - 1st in the 15th Air Force
February 1945 - 59.3% - 1st in the 15th Air Force
March 1945 - 56.0% - 2nd in the 15th Air Force
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Since October of 1944 the bombing accuracy record of the 450th for any one month has
been higher than the average of the 15th Air Forc
Maintenance
The 450th, in the eld of maintenance, has also ranked at the head of the Air Force. Its
cumulative average percentage of aircraft operational throughout the entire period of
combat is 81.8%, which is higher than the Air Force average at any time. The group's
highest monthly average was 90.9%
In the month of April 1945, 450th maintenance was exceptionally high caliber. On six
seperate missions, every aircraft assigned to the group was in commission. The group
was 100% operational for the mission of April 15, which called for maximum support
of the Allied ground forces in opening the nal offensive in Italy. This all out effort was
in large measure responsible for the special commendation of the Wing by Gernal
Spaatz, Commanding General of all Strategic Air Forces in Europe
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Victories
The skies over Ploesti, Steyr, Regensburg, Wiener Neustadt, and other high priority
targets will always be remembered by 450th air crews as the scenes of erce air battles
with Goering's once formidable Luftwaffe.
The of cally credited victory total of 450th gunners since the beginning of the group's
combat operations far outnumber losses directly attributable to enemy ghters. 194
Nazi aircraft were destroyed by the 450th; 38 probable and 27 damaged
Awards and Decorations
In addition to hundreds of decorations presented to 450th personnel, the group itself
has been awarded two Distinguished Unit Citations for outstanding performance of
duty in armed con ict with the enemy
The rst citation was granted in recognition of the group's heroic achievements in an
attack on the Regensburg Prufening Aircraft Factory, Germany, 25 April 1944.
For superior leadership of the entire 15th Air Force in striking the initial blow against
Ploesti, 5 April 1944, the "Cottontails" won a cluster to the D.U.C.
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The following awards have been made to individual members of the 450th since the
beginning of combat operations:
Distinguished Service Cross -1
Legion of Merit - 1
Silver Star - 65
Distinguished Flying Cross - 574
OLC to Distinguished Flying Cross - 28
Soldier's Medal - 18
Purple Hearts - 373
Bronze Star Medal - 50
Air Medal - 3023
Oak Leaf Clusters to Air Medal - 6469
Good Conduct Medal - 2417
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Accomplishments of the 450th
The history of the 450th in the Mediterranean Theater of Operations has been
punctuated by a series of accomplishments which have placed the "Cottontails" in a
unique position in the 15th Air Force.
In many elds of activity it has led the rest of the Air Force. It initiated many
innovations and improvements in housing and training; established records in
maintenance and bombing.
The 450th pioneered, and many of it's ingenious practices later became S.O.P. for the
Air Force.
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The Group holds many " rsts" in the Air Force. The 450th was
FIRST - To score 100% bombing accuracy; Brenner Pass, 27 December 1944
FIRST - In bombing accuracy in the 15th AAF for the months of November and
December 1944 and February 1945.
FIRST - In bombing accuracy in the 15th AAF for six-month periods as of December
1944 and February 1945.
FIRST - To make a high-level attack on the Ploesti, Rumania Oil Re neries.
FIRST - Among the groups in the 15th AAF to make a daylight attack on Budapest,
Hungary.
FIRST - To make full use of Italian rock "tu " in the housing program, wih the result
that great number of personnel were in permenant buildings
than that of any other group in the 15th AAF. The ne upkeep of these installations is
attested by the last two wing inspections.
FIRST - Group in the 15th Air Force to build completely equipped Base Aid Station.
FIRST - And only group in the 15th Air Force to build a radio transmitting station.
FIRST - Group in the 15th Air Force to install underground telephone and power lines
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FIRST - To devise a new supply for transmitting equipment SCR 274N when used as
ground installation for airdrome control purposes.
FIRST - To equip its ambulances with a two-way radio communication system with
planes.
FIRST - To introduce an elongated metal handle to facilitate the use and operation of
the engine control throttles in a B-24.
FIRST - Group in the 15th Air Force to take oblique photographs with a K-22 aerial
camera, of possible future targets.
FIRST - Group in the 15th Air Force to install a K-22 aerial camera in the bombsight
position of a B-24, which enabled photographers to take
front oblique photos of targets.
FIRST - To use balopticon projector in showing target photos, in co-ordination with
A-2A bomb trainers. Bombardiers made simulated runs on
actual target photos.
FIRST - Group in the 15th Air Force to give wing navigators pin points for checkpoints
by radar.
FIRST - To teach gunners position ring in Gunnery School.
FIRST - To set up mock turrets to train its gunners.
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FIRST - To build and install a skeet range.
FIRST - To use electrical solenoids on training machine guns.
FIRST - To employ "glide bombing" under actual combat conditions.
FIRST - To y last ship in the formation to train potential lead crews under actual
combat conditions.
FIRST - Place in the 1944 15th Air Force Basketball Championship
These outstanding accomplishments of the 450th were given of cial recognition in the
report of I.G. According to the report, "the overall operational techniques of this group
were, as such, being pursued in a highly effective manner... Training facilities show
evidence of much initiative and labor ... The 450th has the best equipped and the best
maintained bomb site shop in the 15th Air Force ... The 450th Group Headquarters is a
model for the 15th Air Force.
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a. The present designation of the unit is 722nd Bombardment Squadron
(H), 450th Bombardment Group (H), 47th Bombardment Wing (H), 15th Air Force,
United States Army
b. Changes in Organizatio
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tria; and one against the aircraft component factory in the same area. Two missions
against Port Installations at Porto San Stefano, Italy
(3) On 29 May 1944, an important mission was own, our
objective was to destroy the airdrome installations and aircraft assembly plant and also
to relieve the aerial pressure the Germans had against the Partisans, in Yugoslavia. The
target was the Wollensdorf Airdrome, near Wiener Neustadt, Austria. The target was
well hit and the pattern was good
On 30 May 1944, our formation was jumped by 15-20 Me 109's
when they returned on this date to the Wiener Neustadt area. The attacks were from 6
o'clock level and high. All the attacks were aggressive and most of them single and
closing into 50 yards. The target was well hit. Lt Bruner and crew went down to enemy
ghters on this mission. The P 51's put in a belated appearance and ended the battle in
short order.
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h. Losses in Actio
On 12 May 1944, on the raid against the harbor installations at San
Stefano, Install, Italy, the following men were missing in action. Lts Smith, Carl L;
Craven, Albert D; Cornelius, Willard M; Farrar, Edwin R.; S/Sgts Nally, John M,;
Payne, Langeton; Janzen Herbert; Sgts DeBlois, Joseph N; Courlay, Bernard W.; Wells
Jr. James E.; Lts Word, J.C.; Bertling, Norbert T; Garret, Edward F; Werner, John M; T/
Sgts Spector, Morris; Beightol, Harry M; S/Sgts Shirley, James G.; Whitley, Loyd: Boaz,
Paul D
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On 31 May 1944, on a mission to bomb the oil re neries at Ploesti,
Romania the following crews wer missing in action. Lts Schaeffer, Gerald L; Marker,
Herbert J; Friedber, Alan; F/O Looney, Temple O; S/Sgts Vasquez, Martin; Larson,
Orville H. Sgts LaCome, Alex F; Paul, Thomas F; Jarvis, Marvin W.; Werner, Norman
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C.; Lts Barrett, John F; Smith, Arthur L; Dunn, Jackson F; Scherer, John P.; S/Sgts
Pof nberger, Ralph L.; Hankins, Irwin M; Madera, Aurelio; Major, Robert R; Smith,
Clair C
2. Enclosed is the War Diary of this unit for the period 1 May 1944, to 1 June
1944
JULES J. L. HESSE
1st Lt., Air Corp
Squadron Historia
1 Incl. War Diary
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May
The weather was bright and cool but there was no mission today. There were two
practice missions own to acquaint the new crews with the tactics employed here and
to give them practice in formation ying. Today was "Defense Day" and all personnel
were walking around as if they just returned from the front and were ready to leave I
in a few hours. A target identi cation lecture was given by Lt. Chronister to the
bombardiers. The movies today were "Battle for Britain" and "Swing Out the Blues."
The Group celebrated its rst anniversary today
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May
There was no combat mission own today. The crews were briefed at 0700 for a
practice mission. There were six boxing bouts on in the evening at the 450th ring
May
Another practice mission was own today. Col. Mills emphasized the fact that
formation ying was of the utmost importance. There was a Group formation in front
of Group Headquarters. Col. Mills was awarded the Silver Star, Col. Gideon and Lt.
Courtwright were awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross and Captain McQueen was
awarded the Air Medal. Many of the crews received the Purple Heart award. The
theater in Oria featured "The Black Hills Express.
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May
The mission planned for today was that "Old Favorite" Ploesti, Romania but the mis-
sion was scrubbed shortly after takeoff and the planes returned to the base. The
weather in this area is beautiful today, a good many of the boys can be seen wearing
suntans already. In the afternoon all personnel exercised in a close order drill, What
Fun
May
Ten of our planes took off at 0800 to bomb the Oil Re nery at Ploesti, Romania. The
target was completely obscured by smoke making it dif cult for the bombardiers to
make their sightings. About thirty minutes past the target a huge smoke column rose
to 12,000 feet indicating that an oil storage tank was hit. The formation encountered
intense, accurate ak and also numerous ghters. There was a show in town "The
Falcon Meets Danger.” A few of the gunners completed 50 missions today and were
put on rotation, without a doubt the morale of the crews was bolstered by that
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May
The crews met for brie ng very early this morning and took off at 0800 to bomb the
marshaling yards at Brasov, Romania. The results were good and there was a large
concentration of bombs in the target area. The ak today was medium, inaccurate and
heavy and there were no encounters with enemy aircraft. All planes and crews
returned safely to base at 1700. Informal bell games are a daily occurrence now that the
weather is so be tting
May
A mission was planned today and the planes took off but returned early due to bad
weather. The Soldiers Medal was awarded to M/Sgt Merritt today for having saved a
burning aircraft on the line at the risk of his own life. There were Church Services held
this morning and the attendance was quite large. The boxing matches scheduled for
this evening were cancelled until tomorrow due to adverse weather
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May
There was no brie ng or mission today due to bad weather. Practice bombing and
gunnery missions were own by the new replacement crews. The Intelligence section
gave lectures today to the entire group on Russian Aircraft and their capabilities. A
lecture on Escape Proceedings was also given. The movie that was on today was
"Reveille with Beverly" and was very good
May
Brie ng was scheduled for 1100 for Wiener Neustadt today but was cancelled due to
weather. Beer was part of this weeks rations, one quart of Italian beer, even that taste
good. There was a U.S.O. Show presented at the theater in Oria. It was well attended
and found to be very good. Helen Young, formerly with Johnny Long's band stole the
show by far
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May 1
Eleven of our planes took off in what appeared like nice weather to bomb Wiener
Neustadt but turned back after several hours due to bad weather. All the bombs were
"fed to the sh.” There was no movie tonight due to the Italians having a esta in
Oria.
May 1
There was no mission today. Maximum maintenance was ordered. Engineering was
told that every available plane would y tomorrow. Brie ng was held at an unusual
hour, 2000 for tomorrows mission. Wild speculations are going on throughout the
Squadron. The PX rations are improving, there was a ne array of candy and an
abundance of cigarettes for all
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May 1
The crews had their brie ng last night for the mission today. The target being the
harbor installations at San Stefano, Italy. The target was covered with an excellent
concentration. This morning the formation was routed to y up to and just behind the
front lines to help bolster the morale of the front line soldiers. Today was our rst
"Double Header"! At 1200 the crews were briefed and the planes took off at 1300 but
the mission was called off before the planes were entirely off the eld. The movie in
town today was "Beautiful but Broke.” On arrival back to the base all looked like they
took a our bath due to the abundance of dust
May 1
The "White Tails" were again airborne this morning to bomb the marshaling yards at
Piacenza, Italy. A good concentration of hits were scored in the target area with many
hits at the choke point and large res were started. The boys sure were happy when
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they landed and little wonder – no ak, no enemy ghters and a perfect bomb pattern
to go with it. The formations again ew over the front line to show the boys about
there that the Air Force is feeding the "Jerries" plenty
May 1
The target for today was the marshaling yards at Vicenza, Italy. The Mission wasn't too
successful. Navigation was poor the mission was poorly run and it is doubtful if any of
the bombs hit the target. There were church services held this morning and a large
crowd was present to observe Mother's Day. Colonel Mills addressed a formation of
the ground echelon and congratulated and thanked all for the excellent job they are
doing. He also read messages of commendations that the Group received. The 47th
Wing established a beach and the entire personnel are taking advantage of if and are
might pleased with it
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May 1
There was no mission today. Practice formations were own. The day was beautiful
and a good deal of the personnel took advantage of it by going down to the beach for a
swim. The movie today was "His Butlers Sister" starring Deanna Durbin. The men
seemed to like Deanna Durbin
May 1
No mission today. The weather was beautiful. The blue Italian skies sure provide an
excellent ceiling for bathing. Lectures on Escape Procedure were given to the combat
personnel by an Air Force Representative
May 1
The target for today was the harbor installations at port San Stefano. Colonel Mills led
a ne mission today. The pattern was good and the target was well hit. The ak was
not effective and a good many attribute it to the fact that Col Mills did a good job of
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evading it. Another excellent mission for the White Tails. The movie today was "Action
in the Arabia.” The usual large crowd was present but all are awaiting anxiously the
opening of he open air theater here on the base. A solution to eliminating the trip to
Oria and being covered with dust
May 1
The briefed target for today was the Oil Re neries at Ploesti, Romania. Very bad
weather was encountered about an hour before the target. During the afternoon most
of the men could be found down at the 47th Wings' private beach, swimming, playing
baseball or football or just taking things easy and getting a good suntan
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May 1
The weather today was not too ideal for ying but the group was ably led by Lt. Col.
Gideon. The target was Spezia in Northern Italy and brie ng was at 0430. It was
another red letter day for the 450th. The bombing results were excellent with a large
concentration on bombs on the marshaling yard and choke point with hits also on the
gas works, oil storage area and building adjacent to the marshaling yard. Many res
were observed as the planes left the target. "The Bridge of San Luis Rey" was shown at
the theater in Oria
May 2
Today was an off day all around. A stand down was scheduled and the weather was
anything but nice. Intermittent rain showers during the entire morning and afternoon.
Things ran along in the squadron in the same usual manner
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May 2
Another missionless day. Thee stand downs are permitting a good number of men to
catch up on their sack time. There were ve good bouts put on at the Manduria Arena
and at least a thousand people attended. The colored boys from the M.P. detachment
took an active part and each and every bout was a ne one
May 2
The mission for today was an important railroad bridge at Latisana, Italy. The target
was completely obscured by clouds and the planes circled the target may times hoping
to nd an opening but being unsuccessful they went on to bomb an alternate. All of
our ships returned safely to base. At last the outdoor theater was opened tonight.
There was a large crowd present but there was still plenty of room. The picture was
"Sweet Rosie O'Grady" starring Betty Grable. Special Services is to be commended on
doing such a ne job on the theater
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May 2
Our ships took off at 0730 to bomb troop concentrations in the Grattaferrara area. This
was in support of the Anzio Beachhead. Due to cloud coverage the extent of damage
could not be estimated. The "G.I. Movies" scheduled for tonight were called off due to
rain. Special Service was sorry that they did not have rain checks
May 2
The target for today was the Wollensdorf Airdrome at Wiener Neustadt, Austria. The
results were not too successful, they did not meet up with any escort and they were
jumped by enemy ghters before the target. The Group lost quite a few planes today.
In the evening a thriller was held at our theater entitled "The Uninvited." It was a
mystery show and proved to be very entertaining. The evening was cool and damp.
Everyone is in favor with the outdoor theater and the crowd attention is quite large
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May 2
Porto Marghera Oil Storage Installations in Northern Italy provided the target for
today. There were two aiming points today and both were well hit. The "Cotton Tails"
did it again. Everyone remarked that the barbecue was very well prepared. Take a bow
Dave Hettleman of the Red Cross
May 2
The crews were briefed this morning at 0400 and took off at 0630 to bomb the
marshaling yards at Nice, France. The target was very well hit with an excellent
pattern. Many of the boys went to the beach this afternoon. We wonder if the rumor
that many were caught with their pants down when some nurses came on the beach is
true. The movie tonight was "Mr Big". Due to the fact that the sound track wasn't very
good the picture wasn't enjoyed very much
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May 2
The mission for today was the marshaling yards at Marseille, France. The target was
obscured by smoke of other Groups bombs but we hit the aiming point anyway. Flak
was encountered from the I.P. to the target and many a ship was holed. When the fact
that there was going to be a stand down the following day was announced, it seemed
like a mild holiday spirit got into the blood of all
May 2
The program for today was maximum training and maintenance – no mission. It was a
beautiful day and church was well attended. The beach was well attended also during
the morning and afternoon as well as the evening
The usual Sunday evening boxing bouts were held and the card and many a good bout
on it. At 2300, the air raid siren sounded. Everyone immediately proceeded to their
shelters. Flashes could be seen in the distance. It was later con rmed that it was only
one German plane
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May 2
The ships took off at 0600 to bomb the Wollensdorf Airdrome at Wiener Neustadt,
Austria. Due to the bombing of other groups the aiming point was obscured by smoke.
The lead bombardier caught a glimpse of the hanger in the target area and as a result
the bombs were dropped in the target area causing considerable damage. In the
evening while the move going crowd was enjoying "Lost Angel" with Margaret
O'Brien, the "krauts" put in an appearance again. The jerry was very obliging and came
over during the change of reels. The audience sought shelter to sweat him out and af-
ter the all clear returned to the theater
May 3
The Memorial Day Mission was to Ebreichsdorf, Austria to destroy the aircraft
component factory. The formation was attacked by about 20 German ghters that were
scared away when the P-51's put in an appearance. The target was not hit and all
seemed a little disappointed. In the evening there were movie shorts shown that were
interrupted by an air raid alert
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May 3
There was an early brie ng this morning – 0430. The target was Ploesti, Romania. Lt.
Col. Gideon led the formation. The target was very effectively screened off by smoke,
but huge res were started and black smoke was observed making it evident that the
target was hit. Interception was attempted but all returned safely to base except Lt.
Schaeffer and Lt. Barrett’s crews. In the evening "Courageous Women" was shown. The
picture was a little too false to make it good, at least in the eyes of an overseas Group.
There were a lot of pretty women in it though so that helped to make up a bit for it
JULES J. L. HESSE
1st Lt., Air Corps
Squadron Historia
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HEADQUARTER
450TH BOMBARDMENT GROUP (H) AA
APO-52
US ARM
S-2 NARRATIVE REPOR
MISSION DATE: 30 MAY 194
MISSION NBR. 77
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I. CHRONOLOGY
Thirty-eight B-24 type aircraft took off at 0630-0656 to bomb the Ebreichsdorf Aircraft
Factory. Thirty aircraft dropped 75 tons of 500 lb G.P. bombs in the target area from
20,000 - 23,000 feet at 1030-1038 hours. Three aircraft returned early. Two aircraft
jettisoned 50 tons: one jettisoning 2 ½ tons inn open eld to the right of I.P. because of
inability to stay with formation with full bomb load and the other jettisoning 2 ½ tons
near Bad Voslau Airdrome because of damage to its electrical system from ak. Two
aircraft were missing and one aircraft down at a friendly eld.
376
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the I.P., swung into bomb run on axis of attack of 100 degrees. The second attack unit,
forced to deviate from its briefed run made a 180 degree turn and a run over the target
on an axis of 290 degrees. Hence, reforming, to Szombathely to Vrbeoveg to Drvenik to
base.
III. RESULTS
Photo coverage revealed no burst on aiming point. There were approximately 20
bursts on highway and small buildings; many bursts in the triangle formed by two
highways branching out and extending south. A concentration of bursts 1500 to 2000
feet southeast of target and ten bursts in the region of Bad Voslau.
377
low and closing in to within 50 yards. Some ME-109's were silver and crosses on
fuselage, wings and tail and some were silver with white tails.
B. Plane #304: One ME-109 attacked from 6 o'clock. Another 109 attacked a few
minutes later from 6 and 2 o'clock.
C. Plane #221: Two 109's made an individual attack each from rear, level.
378
:
D. Plane #984: ME-109 attacked from 5 to 7 o'clock, level. Later another attacked from
6 o'clock level.
E. Plane #156: ME-109 attacked starting from tail and broke toward nose.
G. Plane # 339: Several ME-109's attacked singly from 5 o'clock high from 10-12
minutes.
379
J. Plane #488: An ME-109 attacked from 4 to 6 o'clock high; broke away in Chandelle.
Was aggressive to 50 yards.
K. Plane #211: 2-5 ME-109's came in from 5 and 6 o'clock high dived through and un-
der formation. Also dived in from 5 o'clock high ring 20mm shells. This encounter
lasted from 15-20 minutes.
L. Plane #748: ME-109's came in at 6 o'clock and went away at and 2 o'clock and 3
o'clock. Steady attacks fro about 20 minutes.
M. Plane #154: 4 ME-109's made individual attacks; one from 6 o'clock high, one from
3 o'clock and 4 o'clock high, then broke under and down.
N. Plane # 234: Had three separate encounters with ME-109's which attacked from
rear.
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B. Flak: Flak from last turn before I.P. to the I.P. to the target and withdrawing from the
target was heavy, intense and excellent and was encountered at the following points:
Krasnja, Klagenfurt, St. Leonhard, St. Lorenzen, Sallo, Zelfweg, Krittle eld, St.
Micheal, Leoben, Bruck, Kapfenbarg, St. Marein, Guszrerk, Mariazell, Weiner
Neustadt, Veslau and Baden.
V. OBSERVATION
At 0940 hours from 20,000 feet, smoke from pots in town Celje; at 0947 hours from
20,5000 feet, smoke from posts over town of Maribor; at 0955 hours from 20,500 feet,
smoke from posts at town of Freiland; at 1040 from 22,000 feet, smoke from pots at
Vienna and Weiner Neaustadt.
At 0947 hours from 20,500 feet, barrage balloons were observed at Maribor at an
undetermined distance below. At 0901 hours from 15,000 feet at Zara Airdrome there
appeared to be 6-7 twin engine aircraft in revetments. At 1035 hours from 22,300 feet,
the Bad Voslau Airdrome appeared inactive with respect to aircraft
381
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At 0933 hours from 18,000 feet at Nova Mestro, 100-150 wagons in marshaling yard; at
1045 hours from 22,000 feet at Sopron, approximately 200 wagons in marshaling yard;
at 1054 hours from 17,500 feet at Szombathely, approximately 100 wagons in
marshaling yard.
VI. CASUALTIE
Waist Gunner in aircraft #205 (Snitehurst); Waist Gunner in aircraft #448 (Bodnarik)
and Tail Gunner in aircraft #448 seriously wounded by ak. Navigator in aircraft #282
(Peterson), Nose Gunner in aircraft #196 (Harper) and Ball Turret Gunner in aircraft
#104 (Penyak), slightly wounded from ak. Two bombers lost to ak. 21 bombers re-
ceived ak damage.
382
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VII. VICTORIE
Destroyed 7 ME-109'
Probable 1 ME-10
Damaged 2 ME-10
383
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385
:
COMBAT MISSIONS
The following is a list of combat missions own by all squadrons of the 450th Bom-
bardment Group during WWII:
386
a
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y
10. 01/19/1944 Airdrome, Perugia, Italy – Alternate – Airdrome, Iesi,
Ital
11. 01/20/1944 Airdrome, Guidonia, Ital
12. 01/21/1944 Marshaling Yards, Prato, Ital
13. 01/22/1944 Marshaling Yards, Arrezzo, Ital
14. 01/23/1944 Landing Ground, Launghezza, Rome, Italy – Air-
drome, Rieti, Ital
15. 01/24/1944 Marshaling Yards, Skoplje, Yugoslavi
16. 01/27/1944 Airdrome, Istres-Letube, Franc
17. 01/28/1944 Marshaling Yards, Ferrara, Ital
18. 01/29/1944 Marshaling Yards, Siena, Ital
19. 01/30/1944 Airdrome, Udine, Ital
20. 01/31/1944 Airdrome, Aviano, Ital
21. 02/03/1944 Marshaling Yards, Pontassieve & Stimigliano, Ital
387
y
388
)
389
)
fi
y
390
)
fi
y
391
fi
y
392
)
fi
fi
y
393
)
fi
fi
fi
y
fi
a
93. 06/30/1944 Airdrome, Zagreb, Yugoslavia – Bombs not droppe
94. 07/02/1944 Vesces Airdrome, Budapest, Hungary (2
95. 07/03/1944 Oil Storage Depot, Giurgiu, Rumania (2
96. 07/04/1944 Railroad Bridge, Pitesti, Rumania (2
97. 07/05/1944 Submarine Pens, Toulon, Franc
98. 07/06/1944 Railroad Bridge, Casarsa, Ital
99. 07/07/1944 Marshaling Yards, Zagreb, Yugoslavi
100 07/08/1944 Airdrome, Markersdorf, Germany – Alt - Town, Melk,
Germany (2
101. 07/09/1944 Concordia Vega Oil Re nery, Ploesti, Rumania (2
102. 07/12/1944 Theoule Sur Mer Railroad Viaduct, Toulon, Franc
103. 07/13/1944 East Marshaling Yards, Brescia, Ital
104. 07/14/1944 Ferencevaros Marshaling Yards, Budapest, Hungar
394
)
fi
y
105. 07/15/1944 Americano Romano Oil Re nery, Ploesti, Rumania
(2
106. 07/19/1944 Aircraft Components Factory, Neuaubing, Germany
(2
107. 07/20/1944 Lowenthal Airdrome, Freidrichshaven, Germany (2
108. 07/21/1944 Horsching Airdrome, Horsching, Austria - Target not
reache
109. 07/22/1944 Americano Romano Oil Re nery, Ploesti, Rumania
(2
110. 07/23/1944 Kucove Oil Re nery, Berat, Albani
111. 07/26/1944 Airdrome, Markersdorf, Germany (2
112. 07/27/1944 Manfred Weiss Armament Works, Budapest, Hun-
gary
113. 07/31/1944 Oil Storage, Targoviste, Rumani
114. 08/03/1944 Railroad Bridge, Ora, Ital
395
)
fi
y
fi
fi
a
396
)
fi
fi
fi
y
128. 08/26/1944 Giurgiu & Ruschuk Railroad Ferry Boat, Rumani
129. 08/27/1944 Railroad Bridge, Ferrara, Ital
130. 08/28/1944 Marshaling Yards, Miskole, Hungar
131. 08/29/1944 Railroad Bridge, Ferrara, Ital
132 09/01/1944 Railroad Bridge, Kraljevo, Yugoslavi
133. 09/02/1944 Marshaling Yards, Kraljevo, Yugoslavi
134. 09/04/1944 Marshaling Yards, Trento, Ital
135. 09/05/1944 Railroad Bridge Ferraro, Ital
136. 09/06/1944 Troop Concentrations, Leskovac, Yugoslavi
137. 09/08/1944 West Marshaling Yards, Nis, Yugoslavi
138. 09/10/1944 SE Industrial Center, Vienna, Austria (2
139. 09/12/1944 Allach R & W Engine Works, Munich, Germany (2
140. 09/13/1944 Railroad Bridge, Ora, Ital
397
y
141. 09/15/1944 Marshaling Yards, Lorissa, Greece – Bombs not re-
lease
142. 09/17/1944 Marshaling Yards, Budapest, Hungar
143. 09/18/1944 South Railroad Bridge, Budapest, Hungar
144. 09/19/1944 Railroad Bridge, Kraljevo, Yugoslavi
145. 09/20/1944 Airdrome, Malacky, Austria (2
146. 09/21/1944 Railroad Bridge, Novi Sad, Yugoslavi
147. 09/22/1944 West Marshaling Yards, Larissa, Greece – Bombs not
release
148. 09/23/1944 Railroad Bridge, Ora, Ital
149. 09/24/1944 Kalamaki Airdrome, Athens, Greec
150. 10/04/1944 Brenner Pass, Bolzano, Ital
151. 10/07/1944 Winter Hafen Oil Depot, Vienna, Austria (2
152. 10/10/1944 Marshaling Yards, Padua, Ital
398
d
153. 10/11/1944 Florisdorf & Kajren Oil Re neries, Vienna, Austria (2
154. 10/12/1944 Troop Barracks, Bologna, Ital
155. 10/13/1944 Marshaling yards, Banhide, Hungar
156. 10/14/1944 Railroad Bridge, Maribor, Yugoslavi
157. 10/16/1944 Tank Works, St. Valentine, Austria (2
158. 10/17/1944 Ordnance Works, Vienna, Austria (2
159. 10/23/1944 Railroad Line, Brenner Pass, Ital
160. 10/29/1944 West Marshaling Yards, Munich, Germany (2
161. 10/30/1944 Marshaling Yard, Klagenfurt, Austria – PFF Bombing
(2
162. 10/31/1944 Town Podgorica, Yugoslavia – Bombs not release
163. 11/01/1944 South Goods Siding, Vienna, Austria – Bombs not re-
lease
399
)
fi
y
164. 11/03/1944 Oil Re nery, Moosbierbaum, Vienna, Austria – PFF
Bombing (2
165. 11/04/1944 West Marshaling Yards, Munich, Germany (2
166 11/05/1944 Troop Concentrations, Podgorica, Yugoslavia – 6
Plane
167. 11/05/1944 Florisdorf Airdrome, Vienna, Austria – 28 Planes (2
168. 11/06/1944 Moosbierbaum Oil Re nery, Vienna, Austria – 28
Planes (2
169. 11/06/1944 Marshaling Yards, Sarajevo, Yugoslavia -12 Plane
170. 11/07/1944 Railroad, Brenner Pass, Ital
171. 11/08/1944 Troop Concentration, Mitrovica & Novi Pazar, Yu-
goslavi
172. 11/11/1944 Railroad Bridge, Ora, Italy – Mission called of
173. 11/12/1944 Railroad Bridge, Ora, Ital
400
s
fi
fi
y
401
s
fi
fi
y
184. 11/23/1944 Brod Sava, Yugoslavia – Alt - Railroad Bridge, Zenic,
Yugoslavi
185. 11/30/1944 West Marshaling Yards, Munich, Germany – 1 PFF
Plane (2
186. 12/02/1944 Marshaling Yards, Straszhof, Austria (2
187. 12/03/1944 Industrial Area, Linz, Austria – 3 PFF Planes (2
188. 12/06/1944 East Marshaling Yards, Sopron, Hungary (2
189. 12/07/1944 Main Marshaling Yards Innsbruck, Austria – 3 PFF
Plane
190. 12/08/1944 Moosbierbaum Oil Re nery, Vienna, Austria - 3 PFF
Plane
191. 12/11/1944 Moosbierbaum Oil Re nery, Vienna, Austria - PFF
Bombin
192. 12/12/1944 South Oil Re nery, Blechhammer, Germany – 6 PFF
Planes (2
402
s
fi
fi
fi
)
403
fi
y
206. 01/08/1945 North Main Marshaling Yards, Linz, Austria (2
207. 01/15/1945 Southeast Railroad Yards, Vienna, Austria (2
208. 01/19/1945 North Marshaling Yards, Brod, Yugoslavi
209. 01/20/1945 Verona/Parona, Italy – Railroad Bridg
210. 01/31/1945 Moosbierbaum Oil Re nery, Vienna, Austria (2
211. 02/02/1945 Moosbierbaum Oil Re nery, Vienna, Austria – Target
not reached
212. 02/05/1945 West Marshaling Yards, Salzburg, Austria (2
213. 02/07/1945 Moosbierbaum Oil Re nery, Vienna, Austria (2
214. 02/08/1945 Southeast Goods Depot, Vienna, Austria (2
215. 02/09/1945 Moosbierbaum Oil Re nery, Vienna, Austria – 2 PFF
Bombing (2
216. 02/13/1945 Southeast Goods Depot, Vienna, Austria - 18 planes
(2
404
)
fi
fi
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e
405
s
228. 02/24/1945 Porto Nuovo Main Station, Verona, Ital
229. 02/25/1945 North Main Marshaling Yards, Linz, Austria (2
230. 02/27/1945 Marshaling Yards, Salzburg, Austria (2
231. 02/28/1945 Railroad Bridge, Isarco Albes, Ital
232. 03/01/1945 Moosbierbaum Oil Re nery, Vienna, Austria (2
233. 03/02/1945 Marshaling Yards, Brescia, Italy – Alternate Targe
234. 03/04/1945 Marshaling Yards, Zagreg, Yugoslavi
235. 03/08/1945 Locomotive Depot, Maribor, Hungary – Secondary
Target (2
236. 03/09/1945 Marshaling Yards, Maribor, Hungar
237. 03/12/1945 Florisdorf Marshaling Yards, Vienna, Austria (2
238. 03/13/1945 Main Marshaling Yards, Regensburg, Germany (2
239. 03/14/1945 Railroad Bridge, Varazdin, Yugoslavi
240. 03/15/1945 Moosbierbaum Oil Re nery, Vienna, Austria (2
406
)
fi
fi
y
407
)
408
y
267. 04/18/1945 Tactical Defenses, 5th Army Support, Bologna, Ital
268. 04/19/1945 Railroad Viaduct, Avisio, Ital
269. 04/20/1945 Railroad Viaduct, Mairhof, Austria (2
270. 04/21/1945 Road Bridge, Legnago, Italy - Target not reache
271. 04/23/1945 Bridge, Legnato, Ital
272. 04/24/1945 San Ambrogio Marshallling Yards, Verona, Ital
273. 04/25/1945 North Main Marshaling Yards, Linz, Austria (2
274. 04/26/1945 Ammunitions Dump, Casarsa, Ital
409
y
Source
http://www.450thbg.com/real/html/missions.shtml
410
:
Majo
Huer, Herman J
0-22156
Majo
Oris, William L
0-309954
411
r
Captai
Erwer, Gordo
0-46882
Captai
Jonston, Robert B
0-90872
1st L
Auin, Albert E
0-79872
1st L
Cadwell, Clarence D
0-66347
412
t
1st L
Dakins, DeWitt C., Jr
0-803-8
1st L
Fory, Horace C
0-79566
1st L
Hat, Allen C
0-72827
1st L
Kig, William E., Jr
0-79755
413
t
1st L
Leman, Charles P
0-65956
1st L
Mcaughlin, Joh
0-66151
1st L
Note, William A
0-73563
1st L
O Kara, Mathew B
0-43438
414
t
1st L
Rig, William E
0-155172
1st L
Tat, Harold H
0-184525
1st L
Thomas, Clarence L
0-57944
2nd L
Arieson, Joseph D
0-688422
415
t
2nd L
Bruner, Tommy F
0-68426
2nd L
Brisek, Frank A
0-79205
2nd L
Burnham, Robert O
0-37707
2nd L
Coke, Harold L
0-68152
416
t
2nd L
Cox, Albert N
0-68382
2nd L
Daniels, Arnold L
0-86398
2nd L
Decker, George L
0-69038
2nd L
Doriak, John P
0-80955
417
t
2nd L
Garrett, Edwar
0-68960
2nd L
Gillespie, Bernard J
0-74922
2nd L
Glivin, William H
0-68202
2nd L
Gleason, James F., Jr
0-68896
418
t
2nd L
Gottfried, Henry A
0-66199
2nd L
Gross, Edwi
0-67638
2nd L
Gro k, Michae
0-75861
2nd L
Harrison, James D
0-67651
419
fi
t
2nd L
Hessen, Jules J. L
0-57790
2nd L
Hodge, Willoughby J
0-68751
2nd L
Howe, Ross E
0-83089
2nd L
Kahan, Alber
0-69010
420
t
2nd L
Kava, Richard F
0-69044
2nd L
Jennings, Raymond K
0-41221
2nd L
Laurini, Zane P
0-68961
2nd L
Leonhard, Albert T
0-86297
421
t
2nd L
McClure, J. C
0-74127
2nd L
Medley, Marion D
0-68145
2nd L
Meyers, Gerald L
0-69048
2nd L
Moberly, George A
0-86248
422
t
2nd L
Nisiobincki, Edward J
0-69070
2nd L
Parr, Harry E
0-69070
2nd L
Parrish, William A
0-69105
2nd L
Phillips, Harold C
0-69097
423
t
2nd L
Place, Harlan S
0-68964
2nd L
Poore, Robert W
0-69128
2nd L
Retzlaff, Wiollie R
0-74884
2nd L
Ryan, James M
0-68936
424
t
2nd L
Ryczek, John J
0-80973
2nd L
Schafranka, Robert V
0-67287
2nd L
Schieier, Edward W., Jr
0-69141
2nd L
Scharff, Walter J
0-52760
425
t
2nd L
Shain, Lehman E
0-73765
2nd L
Shanken, Courtney D
0-80973
2nd L
Shanken, Ear
0-80973
2nd L
Shane, Morri
0-85668
426
t
2nd L
Siegel, Loui
0-75278
2nd L
Simons, Neil E
0-74810
2nd L
Sisserson, William W., Jr
0-68478
2nd L
Stripp, James C
0-74955
427
t
2nd L
Strathie, Arthur R
0-74962
2nd L
Taylor, John W
0-74960
2nd L
Tipton, Vernon J
0-68861
2nd L
Walker, Carl G
0-74962
428
t
2nd L
Wheary, Frederick W
0-69052
2nd L
Wisbrod, Willia
0-69055
2nd L
Wright, William E., Jr
0-69102
2nd L
Zowader, Herma
0-86360
429
t
F/
Maddux, Hobert R
T-12192
F/
Morrissey, Francis J
T-12255
F/
Painter, Frank M., Jr
T-12255
F/
Primrose, Clyde O., Jr
T-12255
430
O
F/
Ryan, Frank M
T-12260
F/
Rzatkowski, Francis
T-36
F/
Weathermon, Gerald E
T-18750
F/
Word, J.C
T-18754
431
O
C. L. THOMAS
1st Lt., Air Corps
Adjutant
432
.
;
CHAPTER 4
Photographs Of The 450th Bombardment
Group In Manduria, Italy
Lieutenant Francis J. Morrissey co-piloted the above B-24H, the “901”, Serial No.
42-94901, shot down over Krizevci, Yugoslavia, 30 May 1944, while on a mission to bomb
an aircraft plant in Ebreichsdorf, Austria.
433
Manduria on a September of 1943 map assessing the air eld for Allied use (AFHRC,
via Reid Waltman
434
)
fi
Manduria Air el
435
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436
)
437
438
n
439
440
r
441
l
442
a
443
m
444
"
445
m
446
s
447
s
448
e
449
fi
b
450
s
Group Hospita
451
l
Headquarter
452
s
453
"
454
d
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
Whiskey Lin
463
e
464
Cottontail Club – 1944. Of cer's Club 450th Bomb Grou
465
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p
466
fi
d
Of cers Quarter
467
fi
s
A ten year-old boy, Vincenzo Dimitri, teaches italian language to a B-24 crew
468
“Lake Manduria
469
”
470
471
The man on the left is Major General Nathan Twinning, the Commanding Of cer of
the 15th Air Force. The man on the right is most likely Col. Ellsworth Jacoby, Com-
manding Of cer of the 450th Bomb Group
472
fi
.
fi
A plane crash site
473
474
g
475
fl
.
476
s
477
e
Bari Cemetery, Italy - the nal resting place to the fallen soldiers of the 450th
Bombardment Grou
478
p
fi
CHAPTER 5
Missing Aircrew Report (MACR)
#5463 For B-24H Serial No. 42-94901
What's in these records
Typically a MACR gives some or all of the following kinds of information about each crew member
• Nam
• Ran
• Service numbe
• Crew positio
• name and address of next of ki
Some case les include the names of persons with some knowledge of the aircraft's last ight. In some cases these are rescued
or returned crew members. Most reports do not contain all of the above information, especially those prepared in 1943 and in
1947
479
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480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
CHAPTER 6
Dulag Luf
501
t
Introduction
Dulag Luft, through which practically all Air Force personnel captured in German oc-
cupied Europe passed, was composed of three installations: the interrogation center at
Oberursel; the hospital at Hohemark; and the transit camp in Wetzlar. Wetzlar sup-
planted the transit camp formerly situated in the Botanical Gardens of Frankfurt-on-
Main, but destroyed in Allied bombings between 22 & 29 March 1944. Wetzlar was a
former German ak troops camp. It is located three kilometers northwest of the City
of Wetzlar and 53 kilometers north of Frankfurt.
Oberursel, Auswertestelle West (Evaluation Center West) was situated 300 yards north
of the main Frankfurt-Homburg road and near the trolley stop of Kupforhammer - the
3rd stop after Oberursel (50°12'N. – 8°34"E). Oberursel is 13 kilometers northwest of
Frankfurt-on-Main.
502
:
fl
Strengt
The number of PW’s rose from 1,000 per month, in late 1943, to an average monthly in-
take of 2,000 in 1944. The peak month was July 1944, when over 3,000 Allied airmen
and paratroopers passed through Auswertestelle West. Since solitary con nement was
the rule, the capacity of the camp was supposedly limited to 200 men; although in rush
periods ve PWs were placed in one cell. Strength on any given day averaged 250
Descriptio
The main part of the camp consisted of four large wooden barracks, two of which were
connected by a passage and known to PWs as the “cooler." These contained some 200
cells. These cells, eight feet high, feet wide and twelve feet long, held a cot, a table, a
chair and an electric bell for PWs to call the guard. The third barrack contained admin-
istrative headquarters. The fourth building, a large L-shaped structure, housed the in-
terrogating of ces, les and records. Senior of cers lived on the post; junior of cers
outside in a hotel. The commandant lived on nearby farm. The entire camp was sur-
rounded by a barbed-wire fence, but was equipped with neither perimeter oodlights
nor watchtowers
503
h
fi
n
fi
.
fi
fi
fi
fl
fi
.
US Personne
Since PW were held in solitary con nement, and only for limited periods of time, no
US staff existed
German Personne
German personnel, all Luftwaffe, were divided into two main branches: Administra-
tive and Intelligence. Under Intelligence came of cers and interpreter NCOs actually
taking part in the interrogations and other intelligence work of the unit. The total
strength of this branch was 50 of cers and 100 enlisted men. Administrative personnel
consisted of: one guard company and one Luftwaffe construction company, each con-
sisting of 120 men. Some members of the staff were
Oberstleutnant Erich Killinger: Commandant
Major Junge Chief of Interrogation
Major Boehringer Political Interrogator
Captain Schneidewindt Record section Chief
Leutnant Boninghaus Political interrogato
504
l
fi
fi
r
fi
:
Later, there were attached to the staff, representatives of the General Luftzeugmeister's
department, the General der Kampf ieger's section, The Navy and the SS. Occasional-
ly members of the Gestapo at Frankfurt were permitted to interrogate PWs
Treatmen
The interrogation of Allied PWs at the hands of Auswertestelle West personnel was
"korrect" (as far as physical violence was concerned). An occasional interrogator, exas-
perated by polite refusals to give more than name, rank, and serial number- or, more
occasionally, perhaps by an exceptionally "fresh" PW, may have lost his temper and
struck a PW. It is not believed that this ever went beyond a slap on the face, dealt in
the heat of anger - certainly physical violence was not employed as a policy
On the other hand, no amount of calculated mental depression, privation and psycho-
logical blackmail was considered excessive. Upon arrival, PW were stripped, searched
and sometimes issued German coveralls. At other times, they retained the clothing in
which they were shot down. All were shut up in solitary con nement cells and denied
cigarettes, toilet articles and Red Cross food. Usually the period of con nement lasted
505
t
fl
fi
fi
.
four or ve days but, occasionally, a surly PW would be held in the "cooler" for the full
30 days permitted by the Geneva Convention, as a punitive measure. Captain William
N. Schwartz was imprisoned 45 days
Interrogators often used threats and violent language, calling PWs "murderers of chil-
dren" and threatening them with inde nitely prolonged solitary con nement or star-
vation rations- unless they would talk. PWs were threatened with death as spies unless
they identi ed themselves as airmen, by revealing technical information on some such
subject as radar or air combat tactics. Con nement in unbearably overheated cell and
pretended shootings of "buddies" was resorted to in the early days. Intimidation yield-
ed inferior results and the "friendly approach" was considered best by the Germans
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Rations were two slices of black bread and jam, with ersatz coffee in the morning, wa-
tery soup at midday, and two slices of bread at night. No Red Cross parcels were is-
sued. PWs could obtain drinking water from the guards
Healt
As a rule, men seriously needing medical treatment were sent to Hohemark hospital.
Those suffering from the shock of being shot down and captured, received no medical
attention; nor did the 50% suffering from minor wounds. Some PW arrived at perma-
nent camps still wearing dirty bandages which had not been changed at Oberursel,
even though their stay had been of two weeks duration
"SOURCE MATERIAL FOR THIS REPORT CONSISTED OF INTERROGATIONS OF
FORMER PRISONERS OF WAR MADE BY CPM BRANCH, MILITARY INTELLE-
GENCE SERVICE AND REPORTS OF THE PROTECTING POWER AND IN-
TERNATIONAL RED CROSS RECEIVED BY THE STATE DEPARTMENT (Special War
Problems Division).
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The Organizatio
At Obrerusal, near Frankfurt, was established in 1941, a central German Air Force In-
terrogation Centre, of cially termed "Auswertestelle West", meaning Evaluation centre
West which was the principle Air Force Intellegence center for the whole of the West-
ern Theater of Operations. Its chief function was to obtain information of an opera-
tional character relating to Allied Air Forces through the interrogati0on of captured
crews of Allied planes. Information thus acquired was of course supplemented by the
evaluation of documents sometimes recovered from crashed aircraft. The only infor-
mation, which a prisoner is required to give…, consists of his true names and rank or
regimental number. If he refuses such information he need not be accorded any privi-
leges. There is nothing in international law which… prohibits the interrogation of pris-
oners, provided no pressure of any sort is employed to extract (it).
It was the invariable practice that captured aircrew personnel passed rst through this
intelligence center for interrogation before being sent via a transit camp to an estab-
lished prisoner of war camp. It became generally known as Dulag Luft, and is so
termed throughout this trial
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Interrogation Procedur
Upon arrival at Dulag Luft, prisoners were undressed and their clothes searched. They
were then put into cells described in solitary con nement. They were there visited by a
reception of cer, such as the accused Eberhardt, and sometimes by an interpreter as
well if the reception of cer was not uent in the language of the prisoner. The recep-
tion of cer would endeavor to persuade the prisoner to answer all the questions on the
form…. And would transmit this form together with his assessment of the character of
the prisoner to Major Junge, the second accused who in turn would detail the most
suitable member of his staff top conduct the questioning. These interrogations were
sometimes held in the cells, but more often in the rooms of the of cer detailed. Usually
such interrogations were quite short, as, for instance in the case of an air gunner, who
would have little information; but sometimes in the case of a pilot or prisoners who
were particularly security minded, the interrogations might continue for three or four
days, often twice per day
The interrogation of cers would compile in the form of statements, the information
which they had gleaned as a result of their oral examination of the prisoners, and these
statements would then be forwarded to the German Air force Operations staff
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TREATMENT Because Dulag Luft is an interrogation center treatment varies with in-
terrogation of cers' analyses of their subjects. Sometimes it is deluxe, with wine,
women and song. More often it is exceedingly harsh, with solitary con nement, little
food and threats of physical violence
FOOD German ration is generally poor and Red Cross food parcels frequently are
with-held in an effort to force PWs to give Information
CLOTHING Red Cross Stocks are issued to offset frequent con scations of yers'
"pinks" and leather jackets as civilian garments
HEALTH Medical care and treatment were excellent but seem to be deteriorating, no-
tably in the case of AAF NCO's who arrive in Stalag 17B from Dulag Luft wearing
dirty bandages 2 & 3 weeks old. While Hohemark is a bona- de hospital it appears to
be primarily an adjunct of the interrogation center and wounded yers rarely remain
long. Those whose convalescence threatens to be protracted are interrogated and
shipped to other hospitals before being sent to permanent camps
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RELIGION No American chaplain is in this camp and PWs minister to their own
needs. Hauptman Offerman, commandant of Hohemark, requires PWs to attend his
nightly Bible readings
PERSONNEL American Senior Of cer: Col. Darr H. Alkire, former ASO, has been
transferred to Stalag Luft 3. 1st Lt. John H. Winant may be the new ASO
GERMAN COMMANDANT: Oberstleutnant Becker
INTERROGATION CHIEF: Major Kreuger
MAIL Only mail for permanent staff and patients in Hohemark is addressed to Dulag
Luft. Outgoing letters clear slowly through censorship Station in Stalag Luft 3, taking
three months by surface and six weeks by airmail. Members of permanent staff and
patients receive regular allotment of letter forms monthly. Occasionally, transients are
permitted to write home
RECREATION Lack of sports eld is not felt because most PWs are weak and tired or
wounded
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WORK None
PAY None
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STRENGT
The number of PW handled rose from 1000 a month in late 1943 to an average monthly
intake of 2000 in 1944. The peak month was July 1944 when over 3000 Allied airmen
and paratroopers passed through Auswertestelle West. Since solitary con nement was
the rule, the capacity of the camp was supposedly limited to 200 men, although in rush
periods as many as 5 PW were placed in one cell. Strength on any given day averaged
250
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DESCRIPTIO
The main part of the camp consisted of 4 large wooden barracks, two of which, con-
nected by a passage and known to PW as the "cooler", contained some 200 cells. These
cells, 8' high, 5' wide & 12' long held a cot, a table, a chair and an electric bell for PW to
call the guard. The 3rd barrack contained administrative headquarters. The 4th build-
ing, a large "L" shaped structure, housed the interrogating of ces, les & records. Se-
nior of cers lived on the post, junior of cers outside in a hotel. The commandant
lived on a nearby farm. The entire camp was surrounded by a barbed-wire fence but
was equipped with neither perimeter oodlights nor watchtowers
U.S. PERSONNE
Since PW were held in solitary con nement, and only for limited periods of time, no
U.S. staff existed
GERMAN PERSONNE
German personnel - all Luftwaffe - was divided into 2 main branches: Administrative
and Intelligence. Under Intelligence came of cers & interpreter NCOs actually taking
part in the interrogations and other intelligence work of the unit. The total strength of
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this branch was 50 of cers & 100 enlisted men. Administrative personnel consisted of
one guard company & one Luftwaffe construction company, each consisting of 120
men. Some members of the staff were
Later there were attached to the staff representatives of the General Luftzeugmeister's
department, the General der Kampf ieger's section, the Navy and the S.S. Occasional-
ly members of the Gestapo at Frankfurt were permitted to interrogate PW
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TREATMEN
The interrogation of Allied PW at the hands of Auswertestelle West personnel was "ko-
rrect" as far as physical violence was concerned. An occasional interrogator, exasper-
ated by polite refusals to give more than name, rank, serial number, or more occasion-
ally, perhaps by an exceptionally "fresh" PW, may have lost his temper and struck a
PW. It is not believed that this ever went beyond a slap on the face dealt in the heat of
anger - certainly physical violence was not employed as a policy. On the other hand,
no amount of calculated mental depression, privation and psychological blackmail
was considered excessive
Upon arrival, PW were stripped, searched, and sometimes issued German coveralls.
At other times they retained the clothing in which they were shot down. All were shut
up in solitary con nement cells and denied cigarettes, toilet articles and Red Cross
food
Usually the period of con nement lasted 4 to 5 days, but occasionally a surly PW
would be held in the "cooler" for the full 30 days permitted by the Geneva Convention
as a punitive measure, and Capt. William N. Schwartz was imprisoned 45 days. Inter-
rogators often used threats and violent language, calling PW “murders of children"
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and threatening them with inde nitely prolonged solitary con nement on starvation
rations unless they would talk. PW were threatened with death as spies unless they
identi ed themselves as airmen by revealing technical information on some such sub-
ject as radar or air combat tactics. Con nement in an unbearably overheated cell and
pretended shootings of "buddies" were resorted to in the early days. Intimidation
yielded inferior results and the friendly approach was considered best by the Ger-
mans
FOO
Rations were 2 slices of black bread and jam with ersatz coffee in the morning, watery
soup at midday, 2 slices of bread at night. No Red Cross parcels were issued. PW
could obtain drinking water from the guards
HEALT
As a rule, men seriously needing medical treatment were sent to Hohemark hospital.
Those suffering from the shock of being shot down and captured received no medical
attention, nor did the 50% suffering from minor wounds. Some PW arrived at perma-
nent camps still wearing dirty bandages which had not been changed at Oberursel
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even though their stay had been of 2 weeks' duration. Upon several occasions PW
were denied the ministration of either a doctor or medical orderly and there is at least
one instance where a yer with a broken leg was refused treatment of any sort until he
had answered some of the interrogator's questions 4 days after his arrival
CLOTHIN
PW received no Red Cross clothing. Instead they wore German fatigues or the uni-
forms in which they had been captured - minus leather jackets which were customarily
con scated
WORK NON
PAY NON
MAIL NON
MORAL
There is little doubt that the living conditions were expressly designed to lower morale
and to produce mental depression of the most acute kind. Still, due partially to brief-
ings which acquainted them with Oberursel and partially to their innate sense of loyal-
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ty, most PW successfully withstood the harsh treatment and yielded no important mili-
tary information other than name, rank and serial number.
WELFAR
Neither the Protecting Power, which was refused admission for a long time, nor the
Red Cross nor the YMCA could do anything to ameliorate the condition of PW in the
interrogation center
RELIGION NON
RECREATION NON
LIBERATIO
On 25 April 1945 American troops overran Oberursel. They found Auswertestelle
West no longer a going concern. Some 10 days earlier, its departments already widely
dispersed over what remained of Germany, the installation had ceased to exist even as
a headquarters of the German Air Interrogation service. Its records had been burnt or
evacuated and its leading personalities taking with them what remained of their orga-
nization had ed to a new site at Nürnberg-Buchenbuhl. The new Dulag headquarters
at Nürnberg did not survive the parent unit by many days. It was not long before
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LOCATIO
On 10 September 1943, the Dulag Luft transit camp, where PW who had been interro-
gated awaited shipment to permanent Stalags, was moved from Oberursel to Frank-
furt-on-Main. Here it was situated in the Palm Gardens only 1,635 yards northwest of
the main railroad station - a location which was a target area and therefore endangered
the lives of PW
On 15 November 1943 the Swiss stated, “This visit (to the camp) leaves a bad impres-
sion because of the new situation of the Dulag, so exposed to attacks from the air,
which is not in conformity with Article 9 of the (Geneva) Convention.
Thus the following Swiss announcement in the spring of 1944 came as no surprise:
“Dulag Luft, Wetzlar, is succeeding Dulag Luft, Frankfurt, which was destroyed in
course of one of the latest (24 March) air raids on Frankfurt. The camp is situated on a
slightly elevated position approximately 3 to 4 kilometers west north west from Wet-
zlar, a town some 50 kilometers north of Frankfurt-on-Main and is a former German
army camp (Flak troops).
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STRENGT
During the rst 9 months of 1943, 1,000 PW a month passed through the transit camp.
This increased to 1,500 a month, half British and half American, in the last 3 months of
the year. Statistics for Oct. 1944 follow
Incoming Personnel Total................196
Daily Average........................... 6
Total American..........................131
Of cers..........................15
NCOs..............................73
Total British............................65
Of cers..........................15
NCOs..............................49
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Camp strength uctuated from day to day. On the Swiss visit of 10 November 1944, it
was 311; on 13 March 1945 it was 825. Except for the permanent staff of 30, PW seldom
stayed more than 8 days
DESCRIPTIO
During May & June 1944, inmates lived in 18 tents pitched on the eastern side of the
camp area. On 13 July 1944, they moved to the newly-constructed buildings: ve bar-
racks and one large bungalow which held the messes and the store rooms. Capacity of
the camp was 784, with tents available in case of a sudden in ux. Two of the sleeping
barracks were reserved for of cers, two for NCO's, and the remaining one accommo-
dated the permanent camp staff, sick rooms and medical inspection room. The camp
staff, the of cers and the enlisted men ate separately
Each room in the barracks held six to eight triple-decker bunks - 18 to 24 men. Each
bed had a mattress lled with wood shavings and one pillow. All barracks had special
wash rooms with built-in basins and running cold water
Unoccupied space within the barbed wire was somewhat limited after the erection of
the last two barracks and the laying out of vegetable gardens cultivated for and by the
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PW. The area gave a neat appearance, however, with tidy paths and well-tended
lawns
U.S. PERSONNE
Senior Allied Of cer at Wetzlar was Colonel Charles W. Stark who enjoyed exception-
ally friendly terms with the Germans and drew many concessions from them. Mem-
bers of his staff were
1st Lt. Gerald G. Gille........Adjutant 2nd Lt. Arthur C. Jaros........Adjutan
2nd Lt. Herbert Schubert.......Mess Of ce
In addition, the staff comprised
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GERMAN PERSONNE
The housekeeping organization consisted of
Oberstleutnant Becker : Commandant Major Riess : Camp Of ce
Major Salzer : Camp Of cer Major Heydon : Camp Of ce
Dr. Thomai : Medical Of cer Dr. Wenger : Medical Of ce
Hauptmann Schmid Security Of ce
In November 1944 there was reported the existence at the camp of an interrogation
center. According to Col. Stark, treatment was good and correct in every way. Some
PW arriving from Oberursel were in solitary and asked purely “political” questions for
2 or 3 days. Then they were admitted to the transit camp. Chief of this interrogation
section was Major Ernst Dornseifer
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TREATMEN
Treatment was better here than at any other American PW camp in Germany. German
& American staffs seemed to cooperate with each other, resulting in favorable living
conditions to both parties. The Senior Allied Of cer operated Wetzlar as a rest camp
where PW suffering from the harsh treatment at Oberursel might regain their strength
and morale before traveling to permanent camps. As a result neither Germans nor
Americans provoked any untoward incidents
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No food shortage existed at Wetzlar, even though the Germans repeatedly cut their ra-
tion until the daily issue per man was of cially announced in March 1945 as
Meat 35grams Potatoes 320grams Margarine 31gram
Butter 25grams Sugar 25grams Bread 75gram
Salt 20grams Coffee (ersatz) 5gram
The difference between this sub-sustenance diet and the good meals actually eaten by
PW was made up by Red Cross food. One parcel per PW was drawn each week and
90% of all Red Cross food was given to the kitchen to improve German rations. Usual-
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ly the stock on hand consisted of 4 month's supply. Even in Sept. 1944 when the order
was given to cut food reserves to a very minimum, Wetzlar authorities allowed PW to
keep 4 weeks' supply on hand. In March 1945, anticipating a possible evacuation from
Wetzlar to the interior of the Reich, the SAO authorized the issue of 2 Red Cross food
parcels per man per week, both to strengthen PW for the march to come and to pre-
vent the loss of food which would be abandoned in the event of a sudden move
The kitchen - staffed by Americans - was well equipped with 2 large cooking ranges, 3
boilers, a dishwashing room, a potato-peeling room, a tin-opening room and an adja-
cent storeroom
HEALT
The sick bays were able to accommodate 40 men in beds, 2 of which were in a separate
room reserved for contagious diseases. The medical inspection room was described as
adequate and all necessary medicines and instruments were made available either
from Red Cross sources or - to a lesser extent - from the Germans. Good medical
treatment was received from the German staff doctor who cooperated rst with Lt. An-
thony S. Barling, RAMC, and then with Capt. Peter Grif n during their brief stays in
camp
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Each man received a hot shower upon his entrance to the compound and was subse-
quently permitted to take one each week. Although the barracks washroom taps ran
only cold water, hot water could usually be drawn elsewhere some hours during the
day. A 10-seat outdoor latrine was supplemented by satisfactory toilets of the modern
ush type
Although many men arriving from Oberursel were wounded and exhausted, the gen-
eral state of health was considered good
CLOTHIN
Large numbers of PW arrived without outer uniforms, and sometimes without under-
clothing or shoes. Each new arrival was equipped with at least the following articles -
all of which were supplied not by the Germans but by the Red Cross
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Initially, the shortage of American stocks necessitated the drawing of British clothing.
Later, however, most of the clothing issued was of American origin, and eventually it
was possible to keep adequate stocks of British and American items separately. In
March 1945 it was no longer possible to provide PW with neatly packed “captive cas-
es” a sort of suitcase containing the articles listed above, for the supply was exhausted
WOR
Since air force personnel consisted solely of commissioned and non-commissioned of-
cers, no work beyond some of their own housekeeping chores were required of them
PA
PW received no pay, but when the camp opened in the summer of 1944, the nance
committee of Stalag Luft 3, Sagan, sent the permanent staff a fund of over 4000 Re-
ichemarks
MAI
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Transients were allowed to send their rst letter or a postcard form informing next-of-
kin of their status and address, but received no incoming mail. The permanent staff
drew the usual allotment of letter forms and received incoming mail as well. Some air
mail from the United States was received within three weeks. Average time for both air
mail and surface mail was four months. As with all Luftwaffe camps, letters were cen-
sored at Sagan
MORAL
The Senior Allied Of cer agreed with statements of the Swiss Delegates and German
camp authorities that Wetzlar was an excellent camp and that “such favorable condi-
tions are hardly to be found elsewhere in Germany.” Morale of men leaving Oberursel
was usually at its lowest ebb, and it is small wonder after receiving food, clothing and
mingling in comparative freedom with their fellow Americans, that their spirits soared
back to a level approaching normality. Most of them left Wetzlar prepared to face the
dif culties of their new lives as PW
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WELFAR
The Protecting Power visited Wetzlar in May, July, November 1944 and March 1945
each time forwarding the complaints of the Senior Allied Of cer and making a com-
plete report on camp conditions
The Red Cross supplied PW with practically all their food, clothing and medical sup-
plies but made no visit until Jan. 1945, when they wrote a report of their inspection
From the YMCA, the camp received most of its library, which eventually totaled 1,500
books, and equipment for indoor games and outdoor sports
RELIGIO
For some months the only religious activity was the regular Sunday service conducted
by Warrent Of cer Hooton, RAF, a Methodist. Early in 1945 Captain Daniel McGowan,
a Catholic priest, conducted both Catholic and Protestant services every Sunday
RECREATIO
New arrivals were usually in such condition as not to want strenuous exercise. Games,
therefore, were as a rule limited to milder sports such as deck tennis. Once a week
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some PW were permitted walks outside the camp. The most popular indoor pastimes
were reading, playing cards, discussing the new experience of being a PW and playing
some of the table games provided by the YMCA
EVACUATION & LIBERATION: The Wetzlar camp log from 27 through 30 March fol-
lows
27 March 194
0530 German order to evacuate all those able to walk with the exception of few per-
manent staff, who should remain to run the place. 143 remained including Col. Stark,
Lt. Jaros, Lt. Comdr. Jennings, Capt. Grif n, Lt. Gille and Capt Rev. McGowan. Ger-
man' personnel left were 107 men, 34 women, including Maj. Dornseifer, Lt. Weyrich,
and Mr. Rickmers
0730 Transport left (82 men
0830 We hear gun re and sounds of approaching vehicles. Germans from across the
road move into our shelters
0945 Hear our troops are 4 kms west of us. Heavy gun re all around
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1030 Heavy ring continues all around us. German guards are voluntarily laying
down their arms
1200 Col. Stark calls Mr. Rickmers & Lt Weyrich into of ce and states that all guards
turn in weapons and a system of joint sentry duty be posted. They agree and he is now
in full command - Maj. Dornseifer cooperating fully in this
1430 Activity has been heavy all around us all afternoon
1700 Fairly quiet for the moment. Col. ordered 2 privates to be put in the guard house
cells as they are obviously drunk. German guards brought liquor into camp. He has is-
sued orders for no drinking including the Germans
2030 Col. sent F/Lt. Lyons, Sgt. Hanson and Mr. Rickmers to try contacting our forces
in the west and report our location
2300 Still very active all around us - M.G. re and artillery
2400 Still a good deal of ring. Most of the personnel sleep in shelters
28 March 194
0630 Fairly constant gun re and activity all night
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1000 Dr. Grif n takes wounded Pfc. into Wetzlar for operation. Armored column pass-
ing to east of us
1200 Lt. Valentine arrives in jeep. Boy, are we happy to see a Yank
1500 Col. Stark and Capt. Grif n are off to Staff HQ with Lt. Valentine
1700 Sgt. Hanson and Mr. Rickmers return. There has been heavy ring around us all
day
1800 German paratroopers walk into camp and surrender. They are locked up
1830 Col. Stark returns with 3 War News Correspondents including Belden
2400 Things are fairly quiet
29 March 194
0940 Spot cub plane landed on play eld
0945 Dogs were shot
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1000 Lt. Col. Grant of 7th Armored Division (?) arrived in jeep advising us of 750 PWs
he had picked ·up. Limburg PWs are lousy and half starved. We have sent for them
and will put them up here
1200 Four Piper Cubs landed
1300 Maj. McDougall (?), Medical Of cer, arrived and will stay the afternoon in order
to help with Limburg PWs
1400 Col. Stark and party go out to recc'y some German motor equipment
1415 Maj. Dornseifer gave Col. Stark a list of his people who he is anxious to have out
of camp as they have strong party sympathies and might make trouble. Col. Stark
turns them over to an Infantry Patrol. They include the following: Sgt. Lehmann, Sgt.
Hackmann, Cpl. Busch, Cpl. Stoecket and Cpl. Schaaf
1420 First lot of distressed PWs arrived and are deloused, bathed and clothed
1530 Maj. Teese, PWX-SHAEF executive, arrives with load of PWs
1745 We are to be loaded with PWs. They have been arriving all PM
2130 Finished feeding for night. 400 odd still to-be deloused
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30 March 194
Work continues thru the day, delousing and feeding PWs' arr1v1ng in camp. Maj.
Teese returns and advises us to expect 320 PWs from Hadamar in the morning. This lot
will include 14 General of cers and 79 Field Grade of cers. Seven PWs return from
our last transport, including W/Comdr. Carling-Kelly. Today the remaining German
personnel were of cially put to work in the of ce, on kitchen detail, policing camp,
etc. They are dealt with thru Maj. Dornseifer, Mr. Richmers·and Sgt. Keller
Work is going on to prepare for the maximum number this camp will hold. Medical of-
cers have arrived and are organizing their departments. They hope to start evacuat-
ing the worst cases shortly. The Hadamar contingent started arriving at 1100
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With the arrival of British of cers who outranked him, Col. Stark was no longer Senior
Allied Of cer present. Major Teese of PWX-SHAEF, suggested that the staff remain
and help in processing PW expected to arrive within the next few weeks. A stay of
such length did not seem necessary to Col. Stark and at 0515 in the morning of 31
March he drove away in a German car with Cmdr. Jennings, USNR, and S/Sgt. Lee
Hughes, AAF, leaving a note for Lt. Gille. He proceeded by motor and air transport to
Paris, arriving 3 April 1945
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CHAPTER 7
The Air War And Stalag Luft III
The Great Escape of March 1944 triggered a tragically severe reaction from the Germans. The diversion from Germany's desperate war effort necessary
to recapture the 76 men who got away through the escape tunnel reached Hitler's personal attention and he ordered 50 of the recaptured men to be
shot
After this event, escape became more dangerous but attempts continued. In the confusion in Germany as the end of the war approached, especially af-
ter the Stalag Luft III Kriegies reached Moosburg, escape became easier and less dangerous. When it became obvious that the end was near, even the
most ardent advocates of escaping decided to wait it out
After the execution of 50 escapees during the Great Escape was known and the urns of their ashes were returned to the camp, the British PWs of North
Compound built an impressive monument to their memory in the local Stalag Luft III cemetery. It remains to this day and the small cemetery is main-
tained by the local Polish people.
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THE AIR WA
Statistics published after the war by the Army Air Forces tell a dramatic story about
the air war against Germany. During the course of the war, 1,693,565 sorties were
own -- a sortie de ned as one aircraft airborne on a mission against the enemy. Of
these missions, 89% were deemed effective. Mission accomplished! Flying these mis-
sions were 32,263 combat aircraft. Fifty- ve percent of these planes were lost in action.
On the other hand 29,916 enemy aircraft were destroyed. On the human side, there
were 94,565 American air combat casualties. Killed in action accounted for 30,099, with
13,660 wounded and evacuated. The remaining 51,106 were missing in action, PWs,
evaders, and internees. Miracles of survival were numerous. Stalag Luft III held many
iers whose planes exploded in the air -- disintegrated -- yet one, two or more crew
members survived. Some were blasted unconscious into the sky, and came to on the
ground, their open parachutes beside them. Others were literally dug out of the
wreckage of their crashed airplanes -- horribly injured, yet survivors
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There were countless instances of men surviving the catastrophic destruction of their
aircraft high in the sky. The accounts of explosion and re which left men unconscious
in the air only to have them land safely by parachute were so common that in Stalag
Luft III such survivors had dif culty nding an audience for the story.
In the last year of the war the German leadership actually encouraged enraged civil-
ians, who had captured Allied airmen who were destroying their cities and killing
their women and children, to wreak their vengeance on them indiscriminately
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Dulag Luft, located near Frankfurt am Main, was the Luftwaffe Aircrew Interrogation
Center to which all Allied airmen were delivered as soon as possible after their cap-
ture. There each new prisoner, while still trying to recover from the recent trauma of
his shoot-down and capture, was skillfully interrogated for military information of
value to the Germans. Frank mentioned that he was
The German interrogators claimed that they regularly obtained the names of unit
commanders, information on new tactics and new weapons, and order of battle from
naive or careless U.S. airmen, without resort to torture. New prisoners were kept in
solitary con nement while under interrogation and then moved into a collecting camp.
After a week or ten days, they were sent in groups to a permanent camp such as Stalag
Luft III for of cers or Stalag VIB for enlisted men. A nearby hospital employing cap-
tured doctors and medical corpsmen received and cared for wounded prisoners.
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INTRODUCTIO
“For you the war is over." That was the almost universal greeting to shot-down Amer-
ican airmen when they fell into the hands of the German enemy, a statement as far
from the truth as any lie concocted by the Third Reich's propaganda machine. The war
was not over for the new PW; it just became a different war, a war not without its own
brutal casualties
For the average World War II ier who
ended up at Stalag Luft III -- the prison
camp for downed airmen run by the
Luftwaffe -- his last mission became the
Longest Mission. Typically, his mission
began before dawn at an air eld some-
where in England, North Africa, or Italy.
It ended months or years later with the
liberation of Stalag VII-A on April 29,
1945
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While at Stalag Luft III, his mission continued unabated, but not his role. He went
from ier to prisoner of war in a matter of minutes. His new task was to contribute to
the war effort as a Kriege, from the German term for prisoner of war, Kriegsgefan-
gener. His duty now was survival, communication, and escape. He no longer en-
gaged his enemy in the air, but met him in the isolation of an interrogation cell at Du-
lag Luft or at another enemy installation.
He met him behind the barbed wire at Stalag Luft III, on a forced-march in the dead of
winter, or in the mare's nest of Stalag VII-A
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THE CAM
Stalag Luft III was located 100 miles southeast of
Berlin in what is now Poland. The PW camp was
one of six operated by the Luftwaffe for downed
British and American airmen. Compared to other
prisoner of war camps throughout the Axis
world, it was a model of civilized internment. The
Geneva Convention of 1929 on the treatment of
prisoners of war was complied with as much as
possible, but it was still war, still prison, and still
grim. With a madman on top, there was the ever-
present threat that authority above the Luftwaffe could change things on a whim.
Kriegies always knew that they were living on the razor's edge
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THE AMERICAN
The of cer airmen who were PWs in the German camps at Stalag Luft III arrived there
through an accident of war. They varied widely in age, military rank, education, and
family background, but had several common experiences
They all volunteered to go to war as airmen
They all managed successfully to complete ying training
They all entered into combat ying in airplanes
They all were survivors of a traumatic catastrophe in the air
This unique selection process seemed to give these men some common characteristics.
They had an uncommon love of country and a loyalty to each other. They were very
resourceful and applied great skill to improve their living conditions and to conduct
escape and other clandestine activities. They indeed became a band of brothers
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In retrospect, most later acknowledged that their experience as prisoners was not sim-
ply an unpleasant waste of time but that they came out of it with, among other things,
a clearer sense of values, a strengthened love of country, improved leadership skills,
and an improved ability to live in harmony with others under dif cult circumstances
After the war the majority continued their comradery by staging many heart-warming
reunions and by establishing at the Air Force Academy Library a central location for
the preservation of their memorabilia and the records of their incarceration. Many
went on to complete successful and distinguished careers in the Air Force, or in civil-
ian life, some as political appointees in government, others in the professions, includ-
ing the ministry
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THE GERMAN
The German garrison of Stalag Luft III was
composed of non- ying Luftwaffe of cers and
enlisted personnel who were generally not qual-
i ed for frontline duty. Many of the guards were
old and uneducated. Some had been wounded
in combat and wore the patches of famous bat-
tles on the Eastern Front against Russia. For the
enlisted men, guarding prisoners was probably
regarded as better than duty in the East, but for
the of cers it must have been one of the least desired assignments. Some of cers and
men of the camp's garrison were genuinely hated by the prisoners. Most of the others
tried to be decent to the PWs, often under dif cult circumstances and the threat of se-
vere punishment if they were caught doing anything that could be considered contrary
to Germany's war effort. This general feeling of mutual respect is re ected in the fact
that Gustav Simoleit and Hermann Glemnitz were invited as guests to the 20-year re-
union of the American Former Prisoners of Stalag Luft III. They were warmly received
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FOO
Food was always very close to a prisoner's
heart. Germany, involved in a total war, had
dif culties enough feeding its own people.
Feeding PWs was well down on the list of
priorities. The German PW rations were
insuf cient to sustain health and failed to
meet the requirements of the Geneva Conven-
tion. Had the International Red Cross not
shipped food parcels to all Allied PW camps
except to the Russians, serious malnutrition would have been common. The Red Cross
offer to feed the Russian PWs was spurned by Stalin
The receipt of the Red Cross food parcels suffered from the uncertainties of the
wartime rail service in Germany and the caprice of the Germans who would withhold
delivery of the food as group punishment. Kriegies stashed food for special occasions.
A few spoons of British cocoa here or a few lumps of sugar there all went into a special
reserve for what the Kriegies called a bash. Loosely speaking a bash was the Kriegies'
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way of celebrating a special event, perhaps the Fourth of July, Christmas, or even a
birthday. Its ingredients had been saved laboriously for months. It was a feast
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YMC
The International Young Men's Christian Association (Y.M.C.A.) with headquarters in
Geneva, Switzerland, undertook to preserve the quality of life for thousands of prison-
ers of war on both sides in World War II. The International Red Cross provided food,
clothing, and medicines, while the Y.M.C.A. provided library supplies (largely books),
athletic equipment, musical instruments, and chaplains' supplies. Both were major ef-
forts and contributed immensely to the well-being of PWs. Volunteers from neutral
countries, such as Switzerland and Sweden, with great dedication and at considerable
personal risk, served Allied camps in Germany throughout the war
Swedish lawyer Henry Söderberg, as the representative of the
International Y.M.C.A., was responsible for the region of Ger-
many in which Stalag Luft III was located. He visited the camp
regularly and went to great efforts to procure and deliver items
requested by the various compounds. As a result, each com-
pound had a band and orchestra, a well-equipped library, and
sports equipment to meet the different British and American na-
tional tastes. Chaplains also had the necessary religious items to
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enable them to hold regular services. In addition, many men were able to advance, and
in a few cases, complete their formal education
Söderberg remained in touch with many of his American friends by coming from
Sweden to attend their reunions until his death in 1998. He kindly donated his rich col-
lection of of cial reports, photograph albums, letters, and other materials document-
ing his work on behalf of the prisoners of many nations to the U.S. Air Force Academy
Library. It is available to scholars, other researchers, and cadets alike
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ESCAPE
The Great Escape of March 1944 triggered a tragically severe reaction from the Ger-
mans. The diversion from Germany's desperate war effort necessary to recapture the
76 men who got away through the escape tunnel reached Hitler's personal attention
and he ordered 50 of the recaptured men to be shot. After this event, escape became
more dangerous but attempts continued. In the confusion in Germany as the end of
the war approached, especially after the Stalag Luft III Kriegies reached Moosburg, es-
cape became easier and less dangerous. When it became obvious that the end was
near, even the most ardent advocates of escaping decided to wait it out
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In the barracks following Colonel Goodrich's dramatic announcement, there was a
frenzy of preparation -- of improvised packsacks being loaded with essentials, distrib-
ution of stashed food, and of putting on layers of clothing against the Silesian winter
As the men lined up outside their blocks, snow covered the ground six inches deep
and was still falling. Guards with sentinel dogs herded them through the main gate.
Outside the wire, Kriegies waited and were counted, and waited again for two hours
as the icy winds penetrated their multilayered
clothes and froze stiff the shoes on their feet.
Finally, the South Camp moved out about
midnight
This photo was taken with a clandestine camera. It shows one of the
many sleds that were hastily hammered together from bed boards. It
proved easier to pull a load of up to six backpacks than to carry
them on one's back
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At 2:00 a.m. on January 29, they stumbled into Muskau and found shelter on the oor
of a tile factory. They stayed there for 30 hours before making the 15.5-mile march to
Spremberg, where they were jammed into boxcars recently used for livestock. With 50
to 60 men in a car designed to hold 40, the only way one could sit was in a line with
others, toboggan-fashion, or else half stood while the other half sat. It was a 3-day or-
deal, locked in a moving cell becoming increasingly fetid with the stench of vomit and
excrement. The only ventilation in the cars came from two small windows near the
ceiling on opposite ends of the cars. The train lumbered through a frozen countryside
and bombed-out cities.Along the way, Colonel Goodrich passed the word authorizing
escape attempts. In all, some 32 men felt in good enough condition to make the try. In
36 hours, all had been recaptured
The boxcar doors were nally opened at Moosburg and the Kriegies from the South
and Center Compounds were marched into Stalag VII-A
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Sources
http://www.usafa.edu/df/d ib/SL3/SL3.cfm?catname=Dean%20of%20Faculty
http://www.comstation.com/afhi/museum/stalag/capture.html
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PHOTOGRAPHS FROM THE 60TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE MARCH FROM
STALAG LUFT III SAGAN (January 2005
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Source
http://www.muzeum.eline2.serwery.pl/index.php?id=23&lng=eng&op=galeria
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FOO
Food is adequate only because of regular arrival of Red Cross food parcels although
for a time during March, 1944 PWs received only German rations insuf cient for sub-
sistence. Vegetables from individual garden plots lend variety to diet. Food parcels are
pooled and men in each room take turns at cooking. One stove is available, or each 100
of cers. A food exchange is maintained by PWs Cigarettes serve as the medium of ex-
change
CLOTHIN
Clothing is furnished by the Red Cross. Germans issue only booty and very little of
that. Men need summer issue underwear
HEALT
Health of PWs is good. Calisthenics are compulsory by order of the Senior American
Of cers. Adequate medical care is provided by British & French doctors. Dental care is
not satisfactory, and dif culty is experienced in obtaining glasses. Washing & toilet fa-
cilities are adequate although hot water is scarce
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RELIGIO
Complete religious freedom is observed. Services are held in specially constructed
chapels by 9 chaplains, 7 of them Protestant, 2 Catholic. One chaplain is Lt. Eugene L.
Daniel, an American; the others are British
PERSONNE
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RECREATIO
This camp has the best organized recreational program of the American camps in
Germany. Each compound has an athletic eld and volleyball courts. The men partici-
pate in basketball, softball, boxing, touch football, volleyball, table tennis, and fencing.
Leagues have been formed in most of these sports. A re pool 20'x22'x5' is occasionally
used for swimming. Parole walks are sometimes permitted. In each of the compound
theaters built by the PWs, plays & musical comedies are frequently presented. Top-
ight swing bands & orchestras perform regularly, and several choral groups take part
in religious services & camp entertainments. Other recreational activities include
bridge tournaments, building of model planes, visits to occasional movies, listening to
phonograph recordings. Competent instructors teach a wide range of cultural & tech-
nical subjects, & lectures & discussions are numerous. A-newspaper posted 4 times
weekly is edited by the PWs. Each of the compounds has a well-stocked library
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WOR
Of cers are not required to work. However, a small tin-shop voluntarily make plates
and cooking pans from biscuit and other produces brooms largely from Red Cross
wrapping cord is staffed by PWs who tins, while a broomshop – produces brooms
largely from Red Cross wrapping cord
PA
Men are paid on a sliding scale according to rank. Lts. receive 81 marks monthly in
lagergeld of which 40 are deducted for food & orderly services. The remainder may be
used at the canteen which has weak beer 4 times a year and a meager supply of har-
monicas, pottery, and gadgets
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************
AMERICAN PRISONERS OF WAR IN GERMAN
Prepared by MILITARY INTELLIGENCE SERVICE WAR DEPARTMEN
STALAG LUFT
(Air Force Of cers
1 November 194
LOCATIO
Until 27 Jan. 1945, Stalag Luft 3 was situated in the Province of Silesia, 90 miles south-
east of Berlin, in a stand of r trees south of Sagan (51°35'N latitude – 15°19'30" East
longitude)
In the Jan. exodus, the South Compound & Center Compound moved to Stalag 7A,
Moosburg (48°27' North latitude – 11°57' East longitude). The West Compound &
North Compound moved to Stalag 13D, Nürnerg-Langwasser (49°27' North latitude –
11°50' East longitude) and then proceeded to Moosburg, arriving 20 April 1945
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STRENGT
On 14 April 1942, Lt. (j.g.) John E. Dunn, 0-6545, U.S. Navy, was shot down by the
Germans and subsequently became the 1st American yer to be con ned in Stalag Luft
3, then solely a prison camp for of cers PW of the Royal Air Force. By 15 June 1944,
U.S. Air Force of cers in camp numbered 3,242, and at the time of the evacuation in
Jan. 1945, the International Red Cross listed the American strength as 6,844. This was
the largest American of cers' camp in Germany
DESCRIPTIO
When the rst Americans arrived in 1942, the camp consisted of two compounds or
enclosures, one for RAF of cers and one for RAF NCOs. The rapid increase in strength
forced the Germans to build 4 more compounds, with USAAF personnel taking over
the Center, South, West and sharing the North Compound with the British. Adjoining
each compound the Germans constructed other enclosures called "Vorlagers" in which
most of the camp business was transacted and which held such of ces as supply, ad-
ministration and laundry
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Each compound enclosed 15 one-story, wooden barracks or “blocks." These, in turn,
were divided into 15 rooms ranging in size from 24' by 15' to 14' by 6'. Occupants slept
in double-decker bunks and for every 3 or 4 men the Germans provided simple wood-
en tables, benches & stools. One room, equipped with a cooking range, served as a
kitchen. Another, with 6 porcelain basins, was the washroom. A 3rd, with 1 urinal &
two commodes, was the latrine
A "Block" could house 82 men comfortable, but with the growth in numbers of PW,
rooms assigned for 8 men began holding 10 and then 12, and the middle of September
of 1944 saw new PW moving into tents outside the barracks
Two barbed wire fences 10' high and 5' apart surrounded each compound. In between
them lay tangled barbed wire concertinas. Paralleling the barbed wire and 25' inside
the fence ran a "warning wire" strung on 30-inch wooden posts. The zone between the
warning wire & the fence was forbidden territory, entrance to which was punishable
by sudden death
At the corners of the compound and at 50-yard intervals around its perimeter rose 40'
wooden guard towers holding Germans armed with ri es or machine guns
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U.S. PERSONNE
Lt. Col. Albert P. Clark, Jr., captured on 26 July 1942, became the rst Senior American
Of cer, a position he held until the arrival of Col. Charles G. Good rich some 2 months
later. The enforced seclusion of individual compounds necessitated the organization of
each as an independent PW camp. At the time of the move from Sagan, camp leaders
were as follows
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The basic unit for organization was the barrack building or block. Block staffs were or-
ganized to include the same functions as the Compound Staff, and the blocks them-
selves were sub-divided into squads of 10 men each
Each compound had a highly organized Security Committee
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GERMAN PERSONNE
The original commandant of Stalag Luft 3 was Oberst von Lindeiner, an old-school
aristocrat with some 40 years of army service. Courteous and considerate at rst sight,
he was inclined to ts of uncontrolled rage. Upon one occasion he personally threat-
ened a PW with a pistol. He was, however, more receptive to PW requests than any
other commandant
After the British mass escape of March 1944, Oberst von Lindeiner was replaced by
Oberstleutnant Cordes, who had been a PW in World War I. A short while later Cordes
was succeeded by Oberst Braune, direct & business-like. Stricter than his predecessors,
he displayed less sympathy toward PW requests. Nevertheless, he was able to stop
misunderstandings such as the one resulting in guards shooting into the compounds.
In general, commandants tended to temporize when dealing with PW, or else to avoid
granting their requests entirely
Most disliked by PW were the Abwehr or Security of cers - Hauptmann Breuli and his
successor Major Kircher
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The Luftwaffe guards were 4th rate troops either peasants too old for combat duty or
young men convalescing after long tours of duty or wounds received at the front. They
had almost no contact with PW. In addition to uniformed sentries, soldiers in fatigues
were employed by the Germans to scout the interiors of the compounds. These "fer-
rets" hid under barracks, listened to conversations, looked for tunnels and made them-
selves generally obnoxious to the PW. The German complement totaled 800
Occasionally, as after the March 1944 mass escape, Gestapo groups descended upon
the camp for a long, thorough search
TREATMEN
Because of their status as of cers and the fact that their guards were Luftwaffe person-
nel, the men at Stalag Luft 3 were accorded treatment better than that granted other
PW in Germany. Generally, their captors were correct in their adherence to many of the
tenets of the Geneva Convention. Friction between captor & captive was constant and
inevitable, nevertheless, and the strife is well illustrated by the following example
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On 27 March 1944 the Germans instituted an extra Appel (roll call) to occur any time
between the regular morning & evening formations. Annoyed by an indignity which
they considered unnecessary, PW fought the measure with a passive resistance. They
milled about, smoked, failed to stand at attention and made it impossible for the lager
of cer to take a count. Soon they were dismissed. Later in the day another Appel was
called. This time the area was lined with German soldiers holding ri es & machine
guns in readiness to re. Discreetly, PW allowed the Appel to proceed in an orderly
fashion. A few days later, nevertheless, probably as a result of this deliberate protest
against German policy, the unwonted extra Appel was discontinued
Since the murder of 50 RAF yers has been attributed to the Gestapo, acts of atrocious
mistreatment involving the regular Stalag Luft 3 guard complement may be narrowed
down to two
About 2200 hours, 29 December 1943, a guard red a number of shots into one barrack
without excuse or apparent purpose. One bullet passed through the window and seri-
ously wounded the left leg of Lt. Col. John D. Stevenson. Although Col. Stevenson
spent the next 6 months in hospitals, the wound has left him somewhat crippled
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About 1230 hours, 9 April 1944, during an air raid by American bombers, Cpl. Cline C.
Miles was standing in the cookhouse doorway. He was facing the interior. Without
warning a guard red at "a man" standing in the doorway. The bullet entered the right
shoulder of Cpl. Miles and came out through his mouth killing him instantly
FOO
German rations, instead of being the equivalent of those furnished depot troops, com-
pared with those received by non-working civilians - the lowest in Germany. While in-
suf cient, these foods provided the bulk of staples, mainly through bread & potatoes.
A PWs average daily issue of foods, with caloric content included, follows
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American, 25% British, 25% Canadian and 10% miscellaneous such as New Zealand
parcels, Christmas parcels and bulk issue from the British colony in Argentina. These
were apportioned at the rate of 1 per man per week during periods of normal supply.
If the International Red Cross at Geneva felt that transportation dif culties would pre-
vent the usual delivery, it would notify the camp parcel of cer to limit the issue to ½
parcel per man per week. Such a situation arose in Sept. 1944 when all Stalag Luft 3
went on ½ parcels. Average contents of American & British parcels were as follows
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Since the kitchen equipment of 10 boilers & 2 ovens per compound was obviously in-
adequate, almost all food was prepared by the various room messes in the blocks.
These messes obtained from the kitchen only hot water and, 4 times a week, hot soup.
Cooking within the block was performed on a range whose heating surface was 3
square feet. During winter months, PW were able to use the heating stoves in their
rooms as well. With few exceptions, each room messed by itself. All food was pooled,
and room cooks were responsible for serving it In digestible & appetizing, if possible,
form. Since the stove schedule provided for cooking periods from 3 p.m. to 9 p.m.,
some rooms ate their main meal in mid-afternoon, while others dined fashionably late.
Below is a typical day's menu
Breakfast – [illegible] Two slices of German bread with spread, coffee (soluble) or tea
Lunch- [illegible] (on alternate days), slice of German bread, coffee or tea
Supper – [illegible] potatoes, one-third can of meat, vegetables (twice a week), slice
German bread, coffee or tea
Evening snack – [illegible] Dessert (pie, cake, etc) coffee or cocoa
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drugs, began to arrive in the autumn of 1944. PW were also glad to receive a small u-
oroscope and thermometers
Most common of the minor illnesses were colds, sore throats, in uenza, food poison-
ing and skin diseases. When a PW needed an x-ray or the attentions of a specialist, he
was examined by a German doctor. It usually took months to obtain these special at-
tentions. Cases requiring surgery were sent to one of the English hospitals, as a rule
Lamsdorf or Obermassfeld. Emergency cases went to a French hospital at Stalag 8C,
one mile distant
Dental care for the North, West & South Compounds was provided by a British dentist
and an American dental student. In 14 months, they gave 1,400 treatments to 308 PW
from the South Compound alone
Sanitation was poor. Although PW received a quick delousing upon entry into the
camp, they were plagued by bedbugs and other parasites. Since there was no plumb-
ing, both indoor and outdoor latrines added to the sanitation problem in summer. PW
successfully fought ies by scrubbing aborts daily, constructing y traps and screening
latrines with ersatz burlap in lieu of wire mesh
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Bathing facilities were extremely limited. In theory the German shower houses could
provide each man with a three-minute hot shower weekly. In fact, however, conditions
varied from compound to compound and if a PW missed the opportunity to take a hot
shower he resorted to a sponge bath with water he had heated himself - the only other
hot water available the year around
CLOTHIN
In 1943, Germany still issued booty clothing of French, Belgian or English derivation to
PW. This practice soon ceased, making both Britons & Americans completely depen-
dent on clothing received from the Red Cross. An exception to the rule was made in
the winter of 1943 when the camp authorities obtained 400 old French overcoats from
Anglo-American PW
Gradually, Americans were able to replace their RAF type uniforms with GI enlisted
men's uniforms, which proved extremely serviceable. When stock of clothing permit-
ted, each PW was maintained with the following wardrobe
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PA
The monthly pay scale of of cers in Germany was as follows
F/O & 2d Lt. 72 Reichsmarks 1st Lt. 81 Reichsmark
Capt. 96 Reichsmarks Major 108 Reichsmark
Lt. Col. 120 Reichsmarks Col. 150 Reichsmark
Americans adhered closely to the nancial policy originated by the British in 1940-42.
No money was handled by individual of cers but was placed by the accounting of cer
into individual accounts of each after a suf cient deduction had been made to meet the
nancial needs of the camp. These deductions, not to exceed 50% of any of cer's pay,
took care of laundry, letter forms, airmail postage, entertainment, escape damages and
funds transmitted monthly to the NCO camps, which received no pay until July 1944
Of cers at Stalag Luft 1 contributed 33% of their pay to the communal fund, and the
entire policy was approved by the War Department on 14 October 1943. Since the
British Government unlike the U.S.A. deducted PW pay from army pay, Americans
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volunteered to carry out all canteen purchases with their own funds, but to maintain
joint British-American distribution just as before
Because of the sudden evacuation from Sagan, Allied PW had no time to meet with
German nance authorities and reconcile outstanding Reichsmark balances. The
amount due to the U.S.A. alone from the German Government totals 2,984,932.75 Re-
ichsmarks
MAI
Mail from home or sweetheart was the life-blood of PW. Incoming mail was normally
received 6 days a week, without limit as to number of letters or number of sheets per
letter. (German objected only to V-mail forms.) Incoming letters could travel postage
free, but those clipper-posted made record time. Correspondence could be carried on
with private persons in any country outside of Germany; Allied, neutral or enemy.
Within Germany correspondence with next-of-kin only was permitted. A PW could
write one letter per month to next-or-kin in another PW camp or internees' camp
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The travel time reverted to 11-12 weeks in the autumn of 1944, with airmail letters
sometimes reaching camp in 4 to 6 weeks. All mail to Luftwaffe-held PW was censored
in Sagan by a staff of German civilian men and women
Outgoing mail was limited, except for special correspondence, to 3 letter forms and 4
cards per PW per month. Of cers above the rank of major drew 6 letters & 4 cards
while enlisted men received 2 letter forms & 4 cards. Protected personnel received
double allotments. PW paid for these correspondence forms & for airmail postage as
well
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WELFAR
The value of the Protecting Power in enforcing the provisions of the Geneva Conven-
tion lay principally in the pressure they were able to bring to bear. Although they
might have agreed with the PW point of view, they had no means of enforcing their
demands upon the Germans, who followed the Geneva Convention only insofar as its
provisions coincided with their policies. But the mere existence of a Protecting Power,
a third party, had its bene cial effect on German policy
Direct interview was the only satisfactory traf c with the Protecting Power. Letters
usually required 6 months for answer - if any answer was received. The sequence of
events at a routine visit of Protecting Power representatives was as follows: Granting
by the Germans of a few concessions just prior to the visit; excuses given by the Ger-
mans to the representatives; conference of representatives with compound seniors;
conference of representative with Germans. Practical bene ts usually amounted to mi-
nor concessions from the Germans
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PW of Stalag Luft 3 feel a deep debt of gratitude toward the Red Cross for supplying
them with food and clothing, which they considered the 2 most important things in
their PW camp life. Their only complaint is against the Red Cross PW Bulletin for its
description of Stalag Luft 3 in terms more appropriately used in depicting life On a
college campus than a prison camp
PW also praised the YMCA for providing them generously with athletic equipment, li-
braries, public address systems and theatrical materials. With YMCA headquarters es-
tablished in Sagan, the representative paid many visits to camp
RELIGIO
On 1 Dec. 1942, the Germans captured Capt. H.E. McDonald with a British Airborne
Division in Africa. Because he was "out of the cloth" they did not of cially recognize
him as a clergyman, nevertheless, he was the accredited chaplain for the camp and
conducted services for a large Protestant congregation. He received a quantity of reli-
gious literature from the YMCA and friends in Scotland
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In April 1942, Father Philip Goudrea, Order of Mary Immaculate, Quebec, Canada, be-
came the Catholic Chaplain to a group which eventually numbered more than 1,000
PW. Prayer books were received from Geneva and rosary beads from France
On 12 September 1943, a Christian Science Group was brought together in the South
compound under the direction of 2d Lt. Rudolph K. Grumm, 0-749387. His reading
material was forwarded by the Church's War Relief Committee, Geneva, as was that of
1st Lt. Robert R. Brunn active in the Center Compound
Thirteen members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, sometimes
known as the Mormon Church, held their rst meeting in the South Compound on 7
November 1943. 1st Lt. William E. McKell was nominated as presiding Elder and of -
ciated at subsequent weekly meetings. Material was supplied by the European Student
Relief Fund, the Red Cross, the YMCA and the Swiss Mission of the Church
RECREATIO
Reading was the greatest single activity of PW. The ction lending library of each
compound was enlarged by books received from the YMCA and next-of-kin until it to-
taled more than 2,000 volumes. Similarly, the compounds' reference libraries grew to
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include over 500 works of a technical nature. These books came from the European
Student Relief Fund of the YHCA and from PW who had received them from home
Athletics were second only to reading as the most popular diversion. Camp areas were
cleared and made t playing elds at rst for cricket and rugby and later for softball,
touch football, badminton, deck tennis and volleyball. In addition, PW took advantage
of opportunities for ping-pong, wrestling, weight lifting, horizontal & parallel bar
work, hockey and swimming in the re pool. The bulk of athletic equipment was sup-
plied by the YMCA
The "Luftbandsters", playing on YMCA instruments, could hold its own with any
name band in the U.S.A. according to those who heard them give various perfor-
mances. PW formed junior bands of less experienced players and also a glee club
Through the services of the YMCA, PW were shown 7 lms, somewhat dated Holly-
wood features and 2 German musical comedies
Other activities included card playing, broadcasting music and news over a camp am-
pli er called “Station KRGY” [note: short for Kriegie – a term used for prisoners of war
Kriegsgefangener] reading the "Circuit" and "Kriegie Times" journals issued by PW
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news room, attending the Education Department’s classes which ranged from Aero-
nautics to Law, painting, sketching and the inevitable stroll around the compound
perimeter track
SAGAN EVACUATIO
At 2100 hours on 27 Jan. 1945, the various compounds received German orders to
move out afoot within 30 minutes. With an eye on the advancing Red Armies, PW had
been preparing 2 weeks for such a move. Thus the order came as no surprise. In bar-
racks bags, in knotted trousers and on makeshift sleds they packed a minimum of
clothing and a maximum of food - usually 1 parcel per man. Each man abandoned
such items as books, letters, camp records and took his overcoat and one blanket. Be-
tween 2130 & 2400 hours, all men except some 200 too weak to walk, marched out into
the bitter cold and snow in a column of threes - destination unknown. Their guards,
drawn from the camp complement, bore ri es and machine pistols. They marched all
night, taking 10 minute-breaks every hour
The exodus was harrowing to PW of all compounds but especially those of the South,
which made the 55 kilometers from Sagan to Muskau in 27 hours with only 4 hours of
sleep. Rations consisted only of bread & margarine obtained from a horse-drawn wag-
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on. PW slept in unheated barns. At Muskau, on the verge of exhaustion, they were bil-
leted in a blast furnace, which was warm and an empty heating plant, which was cold.
Here they were given a 30-hour delay for recuperation. Even so, some 60 men inca-
pable of marching farther had to be left behind. The 25 kilometers from Muskau to
Spremberg on 31 Jan., the South compound, plus 200 men from the West compound,
went to Stalag 7A at Moosburg. They traveled 2 days and 2 nights in locked, un-
marked freight cars - 50 men to a car. On 7 Feb., the Center Compound joined them.
The North Compound fell in with the West Compound at Spremberg and on 2 Feb. en-
trained for Stalag 13D, Nürnberg, which they reached after a trip of 2 days
Throughout the march the guards, who drew rations identical with PW's, treated their
charges with sympathy and complained at the harshness they all had to undergo.
German civilian encountered during the trek were generally considerate, bartering
with PW and sometimes supplying them with water
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Stalag Luft II
Sagan, Polan
(Of cers
Location: In a pine woods area at Sagan, Poland about 168 km southeast of Berli
Opened: East Compound (British) rst occupied 21 March 1942; Center Compound 11
April 1942 - rst with British sergeants and later in 1942 with Americans; North Com-
pound (British) 29 March 1943; South Compound (Americans) September of 1943;
West Compound (Americans) July of 1944
PW Strength: Camp held over 11,000 Allied Of cer airmen when it was evacuated in
January of 1945. American strength was 6,844 - the largest American of cers' camp in
Germany
Camp Description: The camp had six compounds - Three used for American of cers
(South, Center and West) and three for R.A.F. Of cers (including East & North). Each
compound had fteen one story wooden hutments to house prisoners. Barrack rooms
were about 10 x 12 feet. The fteen men in each room slept in ve triple-decked bunks.
In one corner was a wood or charcoal burning stove. A high wire fence surrounded the
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buildings. A few feet inside the fence was a low strand of wire - the warning wire.
Guards were permitted to shoot any prisoner crossing the warning wire. Guard tow-
ers, equipped with powerful searchlights were placed at strategic locations along the
fences. Armed guards with police dogs patrolled the interior and exterior perimeter of
the camp
Escape attempts: Escape attempts were started soon after Stalag 3 was established and
reached a scale that was hardly reached by any of the other German camps. Numerous
tunnels were started in the East and Center compounds and eventually in the North
(British) and South (American) compounds. Most were soon discovered by the Ger-
mans. Almost everyone in all compounds were involved in one way or another in es-
cape attempts. The major escape took place in the North (British) compound on 24
March 1944. It became known as "The Great Escape." A tunnel 336 feet in length, 30
feet below ground level, was constructed. Eighty prisoners made their way out and
only three made it back to Great Britain. The rest were recaptured. Fifty of the escapees
were executed by Gestapo ring squads
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Stalag 3 Sagan Evacuation: Russian troops were approaching Sagan, Poland. At 11:00
PM on 27 January 1945 Germans marched the PWs out of Stalag 3 with Spremberg for
their destination. The exodus was harrowing to PWs of all compounds, especially to
those of the South Compound who made the 55 kilometers from Sagan to Muskau in
27 hours with only 4 hours sleep. At Muskau they were given a 30 hour delay for re-
cuperation and then marched another 25 km to Spremberg. On 31 January the South
Compound men plus 200 men from the West Compound went to Stalag 7A at Moos-
burg in rail "forty-and eight" boxcars packed 50 men and 1 guard in each boxcar. The
trip took two days and two nights. On 7 February the men from the Center Compound
joined them. The North Compound fell in with the West Compound at Spremberg and
on 2 February entrained for Stalag 13D at Nurnberg, which they reached after a two
day trip
On April 13, 1945, after an approximate three month stay, the Americans were told that
they must evacuate Stalag 13D and march to Stalag 7A at Moosburg. The main body
reached Stalag 7A on 20 April 1945. Many PWs dropped out of the march en route to
Moosburg and the German guards made no serious attempt to stop them. The PWs
were liberated by General Patton's 14th Armored Division on April 29th
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Stalag Luft III - South Compound Ledgers: Maintained by 360th BS/303rd BG(H)
Bombardier 2Lt Ewell Ross McCright, MIA on his 3rd combat mission, 23 January
1943, in B-17F #41-24567 Beats Me (360BS) PU-J, 1Lt Joseph E. Haas Crew (7 KIA 3
PW). After capture Lt. McCright was placed in Stalag 3 - South Compound and be-
came very despondent.. The American Security head of the South Compound as-
signed McCright the task of maintaining records of all American prisoners in the camp
and of each new arrival. The job proved lifesaving to McCright as it kept his mind and
hands busy. The detailed ledgers, ultimately containing names of over 2,100, including
thirty 303rd BG(H) crewmen, were hidden from the Germans and would have resulted
in his execution if they had been discovered. They were discovered on one occasion
and he pointed to the ledger title page which stated that the records contained the
names and addresses of dead ying comrades. The discovering guard did not look fur-
ther into the ledgers but returned them courteously and respectfully to McCright. Lat-
er, another search party discovered the ledgers but were returned for a package of
American cigarettes. McCright presented the four volume set of ledgers to American
Authorities after his liberation. They were stamped "Top Secret" and were eventual-
ly own out of Germany. They proved helpful to the War Department post war
searches for casualty records and veterans proof of injuries. Lt McCright obtained his
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ledgers after the war and after his death on 24 April 1990 they were forwarded to
Arnold A. Wright in his hometown of Benton, Arkansas. Mr Wright published the
ledgers in a limited edition 1993 book "Behind the Wire, Stalag Luft III, South Com-
pound.
In October 2004 Lt McCright's unsel sh efforts were rewarded with the Legion of Mer-
it medal. It was presented to his sister, Marie Hall, by Major General Lewis E. Lyle (re-
tired) at a ceremony in Benton, Arkansas. More information is avaible in the February
2005 Hell's Angels Newsletter
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CHAPTER 8
Photographs Of Stalag Luft III
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The Stalag as it looked in August 194
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Commandant of Stalag Luft III, Oberst Oberst Braune, appointed to replace von
Friedrich Wilhelm von Lindeiner-Wilda Lindeiner-Wildau as Commandant after
the Great Escape
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Appell, or roll call. Keeping track of 10,000 prisoners twice a day -- more often after an
escape -- was a daunting task for the Germans. They constantly struggled to match
their count with the roster. Being counted twice, or not at all, was a skill some Kriegies
developed to an art to confound, confuse, or just annoy the counters
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These German personal record and I.D. cards were carefully kept up-to-date. In
addition to name, rank, serial number, home address, age, religion, and date and place
of capture, they included camps in which the PW was con ned, illnesses, escape
attempts, and a complete physical description
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CHAPTER 9
STALAG VII-A
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INTRODUCTIO
Stalag VII-A was a disaster. It was a nest of small compounds separated by barbed
wire fences enclosing old, dilapidated barracks crammed closely together. Reportedly,
the camp had been built to hold 14,000 French prisoners. In the end, 130,000 PWs of all
nationalities and ranks were con ned in the area. In some compounds the barracks
were empty shells with dirt oors. In others, barracks consisted of two wooden build-
ings abutting a masonry washroom with a few cold-water faucets. Wooden bunks
were joined together into blocks of 12, a method of cramming 500 men into a building
originally intended for an uncomfortable 200. All buildings were hopelessly infested
with vermin. As spring came to Bavaria, some
of the more enterprising Kriegies moved out of
the barracks into tents that had been erected to
accommodate the stream of newcomers still
coming in from other evacuated Stalags. Some
men chose to sleep on the ground, setting up
quarters in air raid slit trenches. The camp re-
sembled a giant hobo village.
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LIBERATION
On the morning of April 29, 1945, elements of the 14th Armored Division of Patton's
3rd Army attacked the SS troops guarding Stalag VII-A. Prisoners scrambled for safety.
Some hugged the ground or crawled into open concrete incinerators. Bullets ew
seemingly haphazardly.
Finally, the American task force broke through, and the rst tank entered, taking the
barbed wire fence with it. The prisoners went wild. They climbed on the tanks in such
numbers as to almost smother them. Pande-
monium reigned. They were free!
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The Longest Mission was nally over!
Sources
http://www.usafa.edu/df/d ib/SL3/moosburg/moosburg.cfm?
catname=Dean%20of%20Faculty
http://www.comstation.com/afhi/museum/stalag/liberation.html
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Stalag VII-
Moosburg, Bavari
(Enlisted Men & Air Force Of cer Evacuees
Location: In Bavaria, 1 km north of Moosburg, 35 km northeast of Munich, in a at
area surrounded by hills
Opened: In September 193
PW Strength: Was the camp for USAAF NCOs until 13 October 1943, when all 1,900
were transferred to Stalag 17B. As Germany collapsed in the spring of 1945, it became
the nal gathering place for 7,948 of cers and 6,944 enlisted men moved in from other
PW camps
Camp Description: Camp was a square divided into three main compounds which
were subdivided into small stockades. Seven guard towers and a double barbed wire
fence formed the camp's perimeter.
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Nordlager Compound - Held newly arrived PWs for two days while they were
searched, medically examined and deloused
Suedlager Compound - Held only Russian
Hauptlager Compound - Held PWs of other nationalities - French, Polish, Ju-
goslav (Serbs), British and some Americans
Barracks were rectangular wood building divided into A & B sections by a central
room used for washing and eating. PWs slept on triple-deck wooden bunks with gun-
ny sack mattresses led with excelsior. Gradually the number of men per barracks in-
creased from 180 to 400. Men slept on tables, oors and on the ground. The barracks
had no heat and were damp, cold and unhealthful
Man of Con dence (MOC): S/Sgt Kenneth J. Kurtenbach, 360thBS/303rd BG(H) Tail
Gunner, shot down on 12 December 1942 on 303rd BG(H) mission #6 to Rouen, France,
became the MOC (Enlisted Man Camp Leader) at Stalag 7A and later at Stalag 17B. He
performed invaluable counseling to newly arrived PWs, helped in escape plans and
forwarded serious complaints to the German Commanders. He was awarded the Le-
gion of Merit Medal after his liberation
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Transfers from Stalag 7A to Stalag 17B: 13 October 1943, 1,900 American NCOs were
moved to Stalag 17
In ux into Stalag 17B from Stalag 3: On 2 February 1945, 2,000 Of cers from Stalag 3
(South Compound) reached Stalag 7A. On 7 February 1945, 2,000 Of cers from Stalag
3 (Center Compound) reached Stalag 7A. They were placed in the Nordlager Com-
pound and then moved to the main camps. While in the Nordlager Compound no fa-
cilities were provided for washing, sanitation, cooking and only straw spread over the
barrack oors served as bedding. In the main camp, over 300 men were housed in bar-
racks normally holding fewer than 200. In early April 1945 PWs from other camps
throughout Germany evacuated to the vicinity of Stalag 7A. This new in ux brought
about a period of unbelievable overcrowding and confusion. Members of the former
Stalag 3 South Compound were moved into the enclosure occupied by men from the
Stalag 3 Center Compound. 4,000 men then lived in an area that had been unable to
support 2,000. Large tents were erected in whatever space was available and straw was
provided for bedding
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Liberation: On 19 April 1945 selected men from Stalag 7A drove in an American Red
Cross car to the American lines asking that an area of a few kilometers around the
Moosburg area be declared a neutral zone. The proposal was rejected by the American
Commanding General and a 2 1/2 hour war for Moosburg started. Several shells hit
one of the camp barracks injuring 12 guards and killing one. On 29 April 1945 Combat
Team A of the 14th Armored Division appeared at the camp entrance. The unresisting
guards were disarmed and the camp was liberated. The American ag went up at
Moosburg at 12:15 PM. At 1:45 PM jeeps and tanks rolled into the camp and received a
deafening ovation
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1945, it became the nal gathering place for no fewer than 7948 of cers and 6944 en-
listed men moved from other PW camps
DESCRIPTIO
Situated in a at area surrounded by hills, the camp was roughly a square divided into
3 main compounds which in turn were subdivided into small stockades. The NORD-
LAGER held newly arrived PW 2 days while they were searched, medically examined
and deloused. The SUEDLAGER hold only Russians. The HAUPTLAGER housed PW
of other nationalities - French, Polish, Jugoslav (Serb), British and American. Although
nationalities were segregated by compounds, intercommunication existed. No effort
was made to keep transient American PW from tue permanent inmates. Severn guard
towers and the usual double barbed wire fence formed the camps perimeter
Barracks were rectangular wooden buildings divided into 2 sections, A and B, by a
central room used for washlng and eating. In it were a water faucet, and water pump
and some tables. The barracks chief and assistant had a small corner room to them-
selves. PW slept on triple-deck wooden bunks and gunny-sack mattresses lled with
excelsior. Gradually the number of men per barracks increased from 180 to 400. Men
slept on tables, oors and the ground
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U.S. PERSONNE
Because of the camp's shifting population, leaders were changed frequently. Among
them were
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Maj. Fred H. Beaumont, Medical Corps Capt. Gordan Keppel, Medical Corp
Capt. Louis Salerno, Medical Corps 1st Lt. James Godfrey, Medical Corp
Capt. Garrold H. Nungester, Medical Corp
GERMAN PERSONNE
The guard was drawn from the Fourth Company of the 512th Landeschuetzen Battal-
ion. Four of cers and 200 men were employed on general duties. Ten sonderfuehrers
with the rank of of cers acted as Interpreters. Twenty civilian men and 20 civilian
women were employed as clerks in the camp. This complement was increased in April
1945 with the arrival of the entire camp staff and guard personnel of Stalag Luft 3,
Nürnberg. Control of the camp, however, remained in the hands of the regular Stalag
7A staff
Commandant - Oberst Burge
Asst. Commandant - Oberstleutnant Wehle
Security Of cer - Hauptman Baumle
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It has been reported by some PW that Burger, Malheuim and Kluge, a fanatic of the
worst sort, were shot 3 days after the camp's liberation
TREATMEN
German treatment was barely correct. In addition to harsh living conditions caused by
extreme overcrowding, instances of mistreatment occasionally cropped up. Thus, at
one time the Germans tried to segregate all Jews among U.S. PW calling them in from
work detachments and allotting them a separate barrack. The MOC lodged a protest
with the Protecting Power immediately. When questioned, camp authorities stated that
the action was taken for the Jews' own protection against possible civilian acts of vio-
lence. Eventually, the attempt at segregation failed and Jews were not distinguished
from other American PW
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At the Munich kommando, guards jabbed PW with bayonets and hit them with ri e
butts. In the base camp an NCO reported being kicked, then being mistaken for a
Frenchman and choked during an argument and later handcuffed after an escape at-
tempt. Once an American, using a hole in the fence instead of the open gate to go from
one compound to another, was shot at but not hit. In April of 1943, a Russian was shot
on the compound wire and left hanging there wounded. An Englishman went to left
him off the wire and was shot but recovered. The Russian died
In July of 1943, 500 Americans without overcoats were forced to stand in formation for
5 hours in a heavy rain. The reasons, said the Germans, was that the Americans had
not been falling out at exactly 0800. During the rst 2 weeks of August, the camp dis-
cipline of cer had the PW fall out for roll call at 2100, 2400, and 0300. They were pun-
ished thus because many Americans had been escaping. PW showed no annoyance
and displayed such good morale that the Germans discontinued the practice, especial-
ly since both sides knew that the PW could sleep all day but the guards could not
Sonderfuehrer Kluge once marched 1100 PW for a whole day without food through
Nürnberg so they could see the devastation wrought by Allied bombing
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In September of 1943, when PW ventured out of the barracks to watch the bombing of
Munich, Germans came into the compound with dogs, one of which jumped into a
window and was stabbed by a retreating American. During the Regensburg raid when
PW were again outside their barracks contrary to Orders, a German night ghter y-
ing over the camp reported that someone in the American compound was signaling
with a mirror. After that PW were noti ed that anyone outside the barracks during an
air raid would be shot. One night a JU 88 with lights on made 2 runs over the camp
and dropped cement blocks. Germans then started propagandizing to the effect that
the Allies were bombing their own PW camps
FOO
Here too PW depended on Red Cross food for sustenance and nourishment. Until
Sept. 1944, each PW drew his full parcel per week, and a 2 months' reserve was kept
on hand in camp. Then the ration was cut to half a parcel per man per week and the
reserve not al-lowed to exceed one month's supply. With the in ux of PW in the be-
ginning of 1945, Stocks fell to an all time low. PW feared a complete collapse in the de-
livery of Red Cross food. Fortunately, this fear never materialized
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In July of 1943, the MOC porsuaded the Germans to issue each man a spoon and
crockery plate. Cooking utensils were improvised from whatever materials could be
found. Fifteen or 20 men formed mess groups, pooled their Red Cross rations and took
turns in preparing them. They cookcd over the small barrack's stove. Each barrack had
2 men on the chow detail, and the space around each stove was therefore quite crowd-
ed. At 0630 the detail brought hot water from the compound kitchen. Breakfast usually
consisted of coffee and a few biscuits only. At 1130 they brought the German dinner ra-
tion - usually potatoes boiled in their jackets - from the kitchen. Sometimes spinach-
type greens or barley soup were added. Five men divided one loaf of German issue
bread. For supper at 1700, PW drew more potatoes. On Sundays they received greens
with morsels of meat. Twice a week they had a small piece of margarine. At rst,
French cooks prepared the food in the compound kitchen, but since Americans
thought some of the victuals disappeared in the process, they later installed their own
cooks
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HEALT
Health was good. Several American doctors, captured early in the African and Italien
campaigns accompanied PW to Stalag 7A and were able to remain with them until
their transfer to permanent camps. The camp also had some British doctors and some
French. Men reported to the dispensary and if deemed ill enough for hospitalization
were kept in the compound in rmary which could accommodate 120 patients in 10
rooms. More serious cases went to the German camp lazaret outside the compound.
This installation consisted of 8 barrack-type buildings, 2 of which were equipped for
surgical operations
Allied doctors complained of a serious shortage of medical supplies. At rst they used
German drugs and such equipment as they could get. Later the Red Cross sent sup-
plies which alleviated the shortage but did not satisfy the doctors' demands
Despite delousings, lice and eas troubled PW a great deal. Americans, however, un-
like the Russians never contracted typhus. For a time they suffered from skin diseases
brought about by uncleanliness; washing facilities were completely unsatisfactory and
a man was extremely lucky to take a shower every 15 days
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Latrines were always a source of contention between PW and camp authorities. Com-
plaint was constantly made that the pits were emptied only when they threatened to
over ow and that there was no chloride or lime to neutralize the odor which permeat-
ed the surrounding area
Emergency dental treatment could be obtained in the German lazaret
CLOTHIN
Since the Germans issued practically no clothing and the ow of needy transients
through camp was heavy, the clothing shortage was always acute. From February of
1943 on, the reports of the Protecting Power repeatedly carried such paragraphs as the
following: The general condition of clothing is very bad. The American Red Cross
should send out clothing in suf cient quantities as the cold season is approaching.
Great coats and whole uniforms are badly wanted. The supply of uniforms issued by
the Detaining Power is mainly old French or British uniforms in a state of mending
which leaves no hope for long wear
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Clothing from the Red Cross did arrive, but not in suf cient quantity to provide for
equipping newly captured PW who were wearing only the clothes in which they were
captured and sometimes not even those. It was observed by a Man of Con dence that
4 warehouses in camp contained many new English overcoats and battle-dress out ts
as well as many articles of American clothing taken from PW as they entered the camp
or left it. These included aviators’ leather jackets, American coveralls, combat jackets,
pants, shoes, hats, and shirts. It was believed by the Man of Con dence that the cloth-
ing in storage was more than enough to alleviate the suffering of both American and
British PW, yet all pleas and efforts to have the Germans ameliorate the Situation were
to no avail
WOR
The original group of air force PW - comprised almost exclusively of NCO’s - was not
ordered to work, nevertheless, before going to Stalag 17B many volunteered for kom-
mando duty merely to get on the other side of the compounds barbed wire and have
more liberty. On the other hand, Germans insisted that ground force privates be as-
signed to labor detials. Camp authorities tried to have PW volunteer for duties - a
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practice which the MOC advised against except in the case of farm work, which was
less unpleasant than other kommando duty
Attached to the camp were as many as 83 work detachments ranging in size from 4
men (usually sent out to farms) to 900 men. The 3 main kommandos were situated in
Munich, Augsburg and Landshutt. After the heavy bombing of Munich on Oct. l, 1944,
a work detachment of some 1400 PW was formed. This party consisted of 60% Ameri-
cans and 40% British. It left the Stalag at 0500 and returned at 2000. PW traveled in cat-
tle cars from Moosburg Station, standing up all the way to Munich and back. The time
spent in the train going to and returning from work was 3½ hours. During their 8
working hours a day, PW cleared debris, lled bomb craters and dismantled damaged
rails. Men received 2 meals at Munich and their regular ration at the camp. In the
event of air attacks, adequate shelter was provided. There was instances of Germans
pricking with bayonets and hitting them with ri e butts to make them work faster and
harder
A model farm kommando was described as follows: Twenty PW live in a farmhouse
of 5 rooms, including a room with a stove for the cooking of Red Cross food. They
sleep in 3 of the rooms in double-tier beds with straw mattresses and eider-downs.
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Bathing and toilet facilities are primitive but similar to those used by their employer.
The men sometimes eat with the farmer for whom they work and their diet, supple-
mented with Red Cross food, is good. Medical supplies for minor injuries are on hand
and a civilian doctor takes sick parade twice a week. PW each possess 2 work uni-
forms, a dress uniform and 2 pairs of shoes. Fourteen of the men are free on Sundays;
the others do the essential farmwork, namely feeding cattle and cleaning stables. Razor
blades, beer and matches are available. PW have neither time nor facilities for sports.
The mail Situation is satisfactory except for the pilfering of parcels en route from the
stalag to the detachment. On only 3 occasions was the Man of Con dence permitted to
visit kommando camps for inspection. Although he turned in complaints, no im-
provement in conditions resulted
PA
In March of 1943, it was reported that the matter of paying of cers had not yet been
settled between PW and camp authorities. In the same month, an American enlisted
man on kommando was paid the equivalent of $13.00 a month. Another worker re-
vealed that the wage rate of .70 Reichmarks a day. In July this was increased to .90 Re-
ichmarks a day
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In April 1944, an advance of 50 Reichmarks was made to of cer PW of the Allies, but
in April 1945, the Senior British of cer stated that of cers were not being paid and that
they had not received any pay Statements for 7 months. Similarly, the 1400 man kom-
mando working daily in the debris of Munich was not paid because the labor per-
formed by them was considered by the Germans to be "emergency" labor to which
anyone resident in the Reich was subject without pay
In October 1944 it was announced that PW pay, which up to that time had been in
camp money or "lagergeld" would henceforth be in Reichsmarks
MAI
During their stay at camp, transient PW were allowed to send 1 postcard, usually their
rst, in which they informed next-of-kin of their German PW number and address. PW
permanently at 7A drew 2 postcards and 2 letter forms per month. Incoming mail, cen-
sored at camp, was unlimited in quantity but sporadic in arrival, especially at kom-
mandos, which received no incoming mail for months at a time. Both outgoing and in-
coming letters took 4 months in transit, as did personel parcels. The ow of such
parcels was light
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On 10 November 1944, 4 French PW were employed to unload coal into a bunker of
the German barracks situated in tho vicinity of the camp. They found that a large
number of both of cial and private letters and cards were scattered in the coal. They
picked up several loose letters as well as bunches tied together in small packages. Part
of the latter included of cial letters addressed to the spokesmen of the different na-
tionalities represented in the camp, coming from the Red Cross, the YMCA and other
organizations. The next morning the French, Brltish and American spokesmen went to
the Commandant's of ce to protest and demand explanations as well as the restitution
of the mail after inspection of the bunker in question. The following day, the camp
commandant made it known that he would take charge of the affair personally. After a
hasty censorship, a considerable number of letters (2 sacks weighing 88 pounds apiece)
were delivered to PW. These letters dated from the months of May, June and July 1944.
It was impossible to say how long they had boen in the coal. The commandant stated
that an error had been made and that punishment would be in icted, but that no letter
had been burned
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The assistant American MOC was under the impression that mail - including outgoing
letters - de nitely had been burned. This impression was strengthened after the inci-
dent when the German issued additional new letter forms
MORAL
Initially morale was High. Air force NCO’s repeatedly made breaks from camp, and
before their transfer to Stalag 17B showed their hostility toward Lhe Germans by often
refusing to salute, by failing to come to attention when a German of cer entered the
barracks and by their careless, slouching, hands-in-pocket walk
After their sojourn in camps in Italy, ground force PW captured in 1942-43 were pleas-
antly surprised by the treatment accorded them in Stalag 7A which had been a model
camp for several years
In spite of a succession of able camp leaders, morale slumped when the camp grew so
crowded that PW had neither decent living quarters, nor satisfactory sanitary facilities
nor suf cient clothing. Early in 1944 the MOC reported that stealing among PW was
common and that ghts were inevitable. However, except for a period of 3 weeks in
December 1944 the strongest morale factor - food - was available. In the spring of 1945,
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although the camp was more crowded than ever, morale did not slump. Red Cross
food kept coming through, and the arrival of of cers with strong, experienced SAO’s
did much to prevent the spirit of PW from disintegrating
A representative of the Protecting Power made a routine visit to the camp every 6
months. In addition he would make a special trip whenever summoned. MOC’s were
permitted to talk to him privately, but despite oral and written protests about both
veneral and speci c affairs of the camp, very little improvement was ever effected. The
representatives repeatedly said that his hands were tied and there was nothing he
could do about it. One MOC feit that the representatives were characterized by indif-
ference, and inertia until the arrival of American of cers in the camp. Subsequently,
their attitude changed for the better
PW were indebted to the Red Cross for almost all their food, clothing and medical
supplies. While food parcels arrived regularly and in suf cient quantity most of the
time, the camp suffered a constant clothing shortage since the Stocks shipped from
Geneva were not enough to equip the many thousands of transient PW who passed
through the camp every few months
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The rst groups of PW arriving in camp reported the presence of recreational and ath-
letic equipment which had come from the YMCA. Later, however, as the stalag
evolved into a transit camp and work camp, need for such equipment was less evident
and little was received
RELIGIO
In 1943-44, camp chaplain was 1st Lt. Eugene L. Daniel who won the admiration of
both Americans and British. He had complete liberty to look after PW in the stalag,
and once a month went to visit the 2 work detachments near Munich. He also received
permission to visit the Wehrkreis PW hospital. In addition to Chaplain Daniel, Capt.
Arkell of the Church of England held Services for Protestants
Roman Catholics were permitted to attend weekly masses celebrated by French
priests
Jews were for a time segregated in separate barracks. Otherwise they were not dis-
criminated against. Nor were they offered any religious Services
Conditions on kommandos varied. A few were visited by PW chaplains or attended
local Services, but most had no opportunity for religious observances
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RECREATIO
Before their transfer to 17A, the air force NCO's main diversions were baseball and
bridge. They also played a good deal of volleyball. For a time they had a basketball
court, but tore down the backboards for fuel. They also played horseshoes. A camp
baseball league had many games between the "POWs", "Wildcats", "Bomber Aces",
"Luftgangsters", and so on. At rst they were allowed to use the soccer eld behind
their compound, a privilege later denied them. PW lacked suf cient space for recre-
ation, especially toward the end when the compound was so completely overcrowded
that Italians were sleeping in tents on the baseball diamond
The original study program included classes in Spanish, German, French, auto me-
chanics, economics, bookkeeping, accounting, and mathematics. The YMCA furnished
the books for these courses
A theater kept its 1943 participants interested and its audience amused. Plays were
given in a room between 2 barracks, and because of the limited accommodations, a
show could have quite an extended run. The program was well arranged to provide
continued and varied entertainment. One of the plays was "Our Town.” Another was
one written by the director of the group and called, "Uncle Sam Wants You.” The Ger-
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man censor cut some of the jokes from this piece, but he did not understand most of
them. The camp commandant attended one performance. There were also a minstrel
show and some singing performances. When the camp became so crowded during the
fall of 1943, a group of men used to go from barracks to barracks to sing each night.
The band was short of Instruments
In 1944 and 1945, conditions deteriorated. Ground force enlisted men indulged in little
or no sports or creation either because there was to'o little equipment for the transients
or because as regular members of kommandos they were too tired after the day's work
to play
INFLU
On 2 Feb., 2000 of cers of the South Compound, Stalag Luft 3, reached Stalag 7A, fol-
lowed on 7 Feb. by 2000 more from the Center Compound. They were placed in the
Nordlager from which small groups were taken to be searched, deloused and sent to
the main camp. No facilities were provided for washing, sanitation, cooking and only
straw spread over the oors of the barracks served as bedding. In somewhat less than
a week, all personnel had moved to the main camp, where conditions were little better
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Over 300 men were housed in barracks normally holding fewer than 200 men. In order
to provide bunks for this number in each building, the Germans arranged three-decker
in groups of 4, thus accommodating 12 PW per unit. The barracks had no heat and as a
result were damp, cold and unhealthful. The German administration was unprepared
for the in ux of new personnel and seemed completely disorganized. German rations
were unbelievably poor; no inside sanitary facilities existed and there was no hot wa-
ter. The 2000 PW of the Center Compound were quartered in 2 adjacent but separate
stockades some distance from the enclosure holding their mates from the South Com-
pound. At the rear of the barracks in each of the 2 stockades, a small open area - barely
large enough to hold the various units for counting - was available for exercise. Aside
from this, no facilities were provided for physical training or athletics. Nor was there
any recreational material other than books in a traveling library provided by the
YMCA
In March the Germans provided boilers and fuel enough to allow each man to draw a
pint of hot water twice daily. In order to improve the quantity and quality of German
rations issued to Americans, Col. Archibald Y. Smith, SAO, made a continuous effort to
place an American of cer and several enlisted men in the German kitchen. This was
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nally accomplished 24 March and henceforward rations improved steadily. The Ger-
man administration also consented to allow groups of 50 men under guard to gather
small quantities of rewood in the area adjacent to the camp. These improvements, al-
though falling far short of the provisions of the Geneva Convention, helped a great
deal to improve the mental and psysical state of all the PW. During all of this period
Red Cross food, initially on a half-parcel basis, was increased to füll parcels and the
health of the PW remained remarkably good. By this time, too, news of the Allied ad-
vances acted as a tonic on the men
The rst of April saw many PW from other camps throughout Germany evacuated to
the vicinity of Stalag 7A to prevent their recapture by Allied forces pressing toward the
center of the Reich. This in ux brought about a state of unbelievable overcrowding
and confusion. Members of the former South Compound were moved en masse into
the enclosure occupied by the Center Compound. Thus 4000 PW lived in an area
which had been unable to support 2000 satisfactorily. Large tents were erected in
whatever space was available; straw was provided as bedding. It was not uncommon
to see men sleeping on blankets in foxholes. Col. Paul R. Goode became SAO upon the
arrival of of cers from O ag 64 in mid-April. Air of cers from Nürnberg arrived on 19
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April. During the last 10 days of April it was felt that all PW would be left in camps,
following the agreement between the German Government and the Allies, and prepa-
rations were made accordingly. However, fearing that the Germans would move PW
to the Salzburg redoubt and there hold them as hostages was never absent
LIBERATIO
On 27 April two (2) representatives of the Protecting Power arrived at Moosburg to at-
tend and facilitate the transfer of the PW camp from German to American Authority.
On the 28th it was learned from Oberst Burger, the Commandant, that order was to be
assured by assigning PW of cers to various PW groups. Moreover, Colonel Burger
kept the entire German administrative staff in camp, as well as the complete guard
staff. Colonel Burger had not yet received from the German military authorities a reply
to his question concerning the avoidance of ghting in the vicinity of the camp. The
commandant asked the two (2) Swiss to act as intermediaries between himself and the
Men of Con dence
After a Conference with the Men of Con dence, the two (2) Swiss were recalled to the
commandant. It appeared that the unexpectedly rapid advance of the American forces
in the region necessitated an immediate Conference between the camp authorities, rep-
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resented by Oberst Braune, and the local German Army corps commandant in order to
propose the exclusion of ghting from the Moosburg region. The proposal, made by
Oberst Braune, and the Swiss representative, was accepted in view of Article 7 of the
Geneva Convention. Appropriate instructions were given to the commander of the di-
vision in the sector in question, and the proposal was formulated for presentation to
the advancing Americans. According to this proposal, an area of a few kilometers
around Moosburg would have to be declared a neutral zone
At dawn on the 19th, The Americans and British Men of Con dence, the Swiss repre-
sentative and an of cer from the SS ghting division in the region drove in a white
Red Cross car to the American lines. They were stopped by two ( 2) tanks commanded
by a colonel who drove them to the commanding general. After a long discussion with
the German spokesman, the general declared the proposal unfavorable and unaccept-
able. The German returned to his divisional headquarters and the Swiss then drove to
camp with the Men of Con dence
At 1000 hours , immediately alter their arrival, the battle started. The ensuing ght
lasted some 2½ hours, during which a shell hit one of the camp barracks injuring 12 of
the guards and killing one. PW remained calm although tank shots, machine guns and
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small arms re could be heard. Half an hour after the ghting abated, Combat Team A
of the 14th Armored Division appeared at the camp entrance. The guards, unresisting,
were disarmed. PW burst out rejoicing but did not try to leave camp. The supervision
of the camp automatically went to the Men of Con dence, and an of cial transfer did
not take place
By instruction of the American military commander, part of the German administra-
tive personnel remained at their posts. The remainder, including the guards, were tak-
en as PW. The Swiss reported that treatment of German camp authorities and guards
by American troops was correct
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CHAPTER 10
Photographs Of Stalag VII-A
The entrance to Stalag VII-A
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Stalag VII-A: Album 1939/4
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West fence and main watchtower. View from the southwest watchtowe
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East fence and east watchtower. View from the southeast watchtowe
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Northeast fence and northeast watchtower. View from the east watchtowe
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Burrow (storage?
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Camp Kitche
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Barrack
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Typical PW stoves. Hundreds of them appeared when the camp became so crowded
that it was impossible for everyone to cook a hot meal on the single coal stove in each
barracks. Because of the smoke the stoves had to be used outdoors regardless of the
weather. Slowly the wood in the barracks partitions and oors was being consumed in
these stoves. With one man managing the re and one holding the pot and stirring, a
hot meal could be produced
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These little stoves appeared at Moosburg because
there were few proper cook stoves and little coal to
operate them. With one man operating the blower
and another feeding small bits of wood and paper
into the re, a pot could be brought to a simmer quickly. The smoke made it necessary
to use them only outdoors
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The latrine system from start to nish. The "honeywagon" at Moosburg was quite
modern; toward the end of the war, it was shot at several times by Allied ghters
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ID tag worn by a PW at Stalag VII/A, Moosburg, Germany, in 1943-44. The obverse of
the round "dog tag" carries the wearer's name, initials and service number
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A
699
700
701
702
Former PW
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Allied Comman
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Looking out a window at camp after the liberation. Notice the shell hole in the
opposite barracks from an American tank. Courtesy: U.S. Air Force Academy
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General Patton visited Moosburg on April 30, 1945. His 14th Armored
Division liberated the camp. Courtesy: U.S. Air Force Academy
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CHAPTER 13
Pamphlet For Returning Soldiers
717
the United States and has handled more sition Areas and the Billeting Of cer will
than two and a half million troops. assign you to a speci c barracks. Your
Named for Joyce Kilmer, the soldier-poet Unit or Group designation will appear on
of World War I whose home was in near- the front of the barracks. Note the num-
by New Brunswick, Camp Kilmer is an ber of your barracks and mark it down
installation of the New York Port of Em- below. This is a very large Post with ten
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areas exactly alike and it's very easy for We don't mind
those of us who've been here a long time working around
to get lost. Also, guard your wallet and the clock to ac-
your valuables complish this. But
you've got to help
us. Stay on the
ball. If you go
"goo ng off" so
that you miss
your processing or
miss a meeting
that is essential,
BE AVAILABLE AT ALL TIME
you not only
There's an awful lot of work necessary to jeopardize your chances of leaving but
get you out of here and on your way to the chances of all the men in your group.
the Personnel Center nearest your home. So play it smart — stay together and be
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available at all times as a group, until community — and hike up your morale
your entire processing is nished and and pride plenty to
your Unit or Group Commander dismiss- know you are
es you. Then check frequently as we may making a good
not be able to give you much advance no- impression. A
tice on your departure complete uniform
— including the
APPEARANCE AND CONDUC
cap and insignia —
You're the "returning hero" to your fami- is required on the
ly, friends, and community. They'll be post at all times. So
looking at you as the Army's representa- get in the swing of
tive. You will be on display, so to speak. things right away
So don't be a "Sad Sack." You've been
MILITARY COURTES
through a lot — why spoil it by looking
like anything but what you are — a good That's not just something they write
soldier. It'll mean a lot to everyone — manuals and Army Regulations about. It
you, your family, the Army, and the ties in greatly with your appearance.
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There are certain traditions in civilian life part of the same swell team. We insist on
which mean a lot to the folks and to soci- military courtesy on this Post to help you
ety. In the Army we also have very ne, "get into the groove" right away
deep-rooted traditions. You know them
INTOXICATING LIQUO
— but naturally have had other things to
think about while overseas. But now that We know you've been away for a long
you're back, just as you'll have to think a time and have had to do without a lot.
bit about your manners, stop and think But you're home now and will be able to
about your military courtesy. You get a do all the things you have probably
swell feeling inside when you toss a dreamed about. Don't ruin it right off the
snappy "highball" at an of cer and he bat by going out and getting "stinko" or
tosses one seeing if you can run the tap dry the rst
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all "slopped up" here you may get into tight schedule has been set up which re-
trouble and will miss your train. That cer- quires that you eat at the time designated
tainly won't be such a hot way to start off or else the whole thing will go haywire.
that long awaited stay at home. Honestly, For later meals a mess schedule is posted
it won't pay in your barracks. Enlisted men will take
with them their knife, fork, and spoon.
Of cers will not need them — but we'll
collect "two bits" on the line before each
meal from them
CHO
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is important — for your protection, ours, pital if that is indicated, so don't go over
and your family's there rst. The hospital area and build-
ings, including the PX, are off limits to all
personnel except those on of cial busi-
ness
MEDICAL ATTENTIO
dispensary can probably x you up in a As soon as you nish your processing,
few minutes. They'll send you to the hos- or earlier if directed by your Unit or
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Group Commander, you can call wherev- TELEGRAM FACILITIE
er you like to your heart's content. Phones
You can send as many telegrams as you
are located in the following buildings:
want. There are telegraph of ces in Build-
Telephone Centers — Buildings 250, 305,
ings 250, 305, 705, and 806. You can use a
705, 806, 1006, and 1321. Be sure to tell
prepared "canned" message or make one
your folks not to come here as you'll see
up yourself. However, use your code des-
them soon. And keep your calls brief —
ignation, such as E 310-7, after your sig-
there are other men waiting to call
nature. The main telegraph of ce is locat-
ed in Bldg. 1310 and is available for re-
ceipt of telegraphic money orders
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727
Camp Kilme phone centers, a post of ce, a 1,000-bed
hospital, 28 miles of roadway, and about
Toward the end of 1941, with the threat of
11 railheads that fed into the main line
war imminent, the War Department chose
a site between Edison and Piscataway, From its opening in 1942 through the end
New Jersey as a staging area for troops. of the War, Camp Kilmer was a major
They named the camp for the poet Joyce transportation hub for U.S. soldiers trav-
Kilmer, who enlisted in the U.S. Army eling to and from the European Theater.
during World War I and was killed in ac- More than 20 divisions with over
tion in the Aisne-Marne offensive. Con- 1,300,000 servicemen staged at Camp
struction began at Camp Kilmer in Jan- Kilmer before being deployed to Europe.
uary 1942 and was completed in six The site also hosted various Allied units
months. The facility covered over 1,500 before they were sent elsewhere for train-
acres and consisted of 1,120 buildings, in- ing
cluding rows of wooden barracks, seven
Camp Kilmer operated more like a small
chapels, ve theaters, nine post ex-
city than a typical army facility, and ser-
changes, a gym, three libraries, four tele-
vicemen enjoyed all types of entertain-
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ments and activities. The Camp had its troops a day would be entertained by the
own baseball and football teams and USO's eight-hour continuous shows
hosted exhibition games with profession-
New York Yankee star Joe DiMaggio and
al clubs from New York. There were 20
comedian Red Skelton, both serving with
softball diamonds, 30 volleyball courts,
the Army, were temporarily assigned to
and 160 horseshoe courts available for
the Camp. DiMaggio autographed base-
recreation. The Camp had their own band
balls for wounded soldiers and gave hit-
and orchestra, and there were also dances
ting and elding lessons, while Skelton
and movies
made unannounced visits to the hospital
USO-Camp Shows put on productions of for his version of "laugh therapy.
plays at Camp Kilmer, and the troops had
With the ending of hostilities in 1945, the
visits from professional athletes and top
Camp became the main receiving center
Hollywood stars. Benny Goodman per-
for soldiers returning from Europe and
formed at the rst radio program to be
the Paci c. By September 1945 over
broadcast from the Camp on March 15
300,000 of these returnees had been pro-
(1945?). As many as 21,000 returning
cessed, and at times over 5,000 a day were
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EDSION, N.J. -- As the bugler played "call hero, but known nationally and interna-
to assembly," the local community and tionally as a famous journalist and poet.
the Soldiers of the 78th "Lightning" Divi-
Kilmer was killed by a sniper during a
sion said goodbye Oct. 5, to the Sgt. Joyce
scouting mission at the Second Battle of
Kilmer Army Reserve Center and Camp
the Marne on the morning of June 30,
Kilmer
1918, and posthumously awarded the
The inactivation ceremony attracted Purple Heart by the U.S. Army as well as
many guests and high-ranking of cials, the Croix de Guerre by the French
including Brig. Gen. Walter B. Cha- Republic
hanovich, commanding general of the
The history of Camp Kilmer dates back to
78th Division; Senator Barbara Buono of
1941 when the Department of Defense,
New Jersey; and Councilwoman Antonia
then known as the War Department, used
Ricigliano of the Township of Edison, N.J.
the 1600-acre camp as a transportation
Camp Kilmer was named for local resi- hub processing over 20 divisions who
dent Sgt. Alfred Joyce Kilmer, known as a came to Camp Kilmer before being
fearless noncommissioned of cer and deployed to Europe during World War II
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Camp Kilmer served as one of the most With a limited military presence on the
essential processing and administrative last remaining 24 acres of government
posts in the United States during that owned land, the Defense Base Realign-
time. The camp was deactivated in the ment and Closure Commission recom-
fall of 1949 but reactivated at the outbreak mended in 2005 that the camp be closed.
of hostiles in Korea.
The 78th Division, the last major head-
Not as active during the Korean War as it quarters on Camp Kilmer, will relocate to
was in World War II, Camp Kilmer lost its the recently dedicated Maj. John P. Pryor
status as a major processing point to Fort Army Reserve Center at Army Support
Dix and was once again made inactive in Activity - Dix
1955
The sounds of children playing in the
In 1963, most of the 1600 acres was auc- background highlighted the sense of
tioned and sold to local universities and community as the narrator keyed in on
colleges. Today, Rutgers University, the the support shown by the people of Edi-
state university of New Jersey, maintains son
most of the camp as Livingston College
733
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"'This day closes an era that spans over 60 land and the town of Edison Public
years and through the years the township Works Center."
of Edison and its patriotic citizens has
Buono highlighted the importance of the
stood by in support of the Soldiers who
78th Lightning Division role as she
passed through Camp Kilmer, never
echoed the emotion of the day
wavering in this endeavor," he empha-
sized "This is a day of mixed emotions and
heavy hearts," Buono said. "The 'Jersey
Chahanovich seemed saddened by the
Lightning' played a very vital role in Op-
passing of history
eration Desert Storm and continues to
"My solemn duty today is to bring closure this day to give our brave men and
to an era as the last post commander and women on the front lines the training
the last commander of the 78th as an they need to be successful in their mis-
Army division," he stated solemnly. "The sions abroad so they can all come home
remaining area is currently planned for safely to their families and friends.
use as homeless shelters, recreational
734
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Buono also spoke on the history of the In a voice shaking with emotion,
facility and its importance to the Ricigliano spoke of Sgt. Joyce Kilmer.
community
"Joyce Kilmer would be proud of this
"To bid our nal farewell to a facility that Army base and the many uses it has had
has played such an important role in pro- in these almost 70 years," she said
tecting our nation against threats
As the ceremony drew to a close, it
aboard... this facility and the millions of
became apparent that those involved
men and women who have passed
with this historic base did not want the
through it over the years have served
memories to simply drift away with the
their country with distinguish," declared
years
Buono. "The mission of these hallow
grounds will now turn to preparing our "It is up to all of us to make sure that the
young people for the challenges they face years of history that unfolded here will
in a very dif cult and evolving world not fade away, will not be forgotten. We
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Source
https://www.army.mil/article/28760/
Historic_WWII_era_camp_shutters_-
door
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