Camp Ruston: German P.O.W.'s in Louisiana | 2007

This documentary was an independent production by Director/Producer Michael Campisi.
This documentary tells the story of the German prisoners of war who were shipped to Camp Ruston in Northern Louisiana in 1943. The prisoners housed at the camp include two German U-Boat Crews, Kreigsmarine in German, and German soldiers from the elite North Afrika Korp under the command of General Erwin Rommel, who were considered the best in Hitler's Third Reich. The program includes photos and other archival material along with re-enactments of the activities at the camp.
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This documentary from September 20, 2004, focuses on the 4,315 German prisoners of war from World War II who were housed at Camp Ruston in Ruston, Louisiana, from 1943-1946. The prisoners of war served in General Erwin Rommel’s North Afrika Korps and the Kriegsmarine, or German Navy. The documentary touches on: Camp Ruston’s first role as a training site for the Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps; life at Camp Ruston for the German POWs; and the secret capture of German U-boat U-505 and subsequent detention of the crew at Camp Ruston.

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  • @zippymufo9765
    @zippymufo9765 Жыл бұрын

    There was one legendary story about how a farmer pretty much turned over the entire farm management to the POWs, who had all been raised on farms in Germany. When it was announced that all POWs had to be returned to Germany (as the Geneva Convention requires) he protested that "But my business will fall apart without these guys running it!"

  • @rickbar123
    @rickbar123 Жыл бұрын

    I worked for a POW. He was captured and sent to one of these camps. After the war, he went home and became a policeman. He hated it and moved to America, just outside Philadelphila. He opened a restaurant and raised a very nice family. The food was fantastic and the beer was even better. My sister was a barmaid and worked her way thru college, earning enough to pay her own way. I was a busboy and a dishwasher. He paid well and treated us very good. He was loved by many people.

  • @Grenadier311

    @Grenadier311

    11 ай бұрын

    Back when the American dream was a reality. Thanks for sharing.

  • @coldfrostice

    @coldfrostice

    10 ай бұрын

    My father was a POW and was in one of these camps. He was 2 years in USA and 1 year in UK. He was captured in Normandie in the fall 1944. He was a good father and married my mother here in Norway. We was of course often in Germany with his family. He was 18 when he volunteered and his brother was 16.

  • @vrvaughn

    @vrvaughn

    9 ай бұрын

    @@Grenadier311the American Dream is still a reality.. We just need to bring back strong unions and get corporate executive pay back into a realistic scope. Don’t tell me that higher medical costs are the cause of high monthly payments for seniors and then pay 11 top executives of one health insurance company over 75 million dollars

  • @TheJackBaker

    @TheJackBaker

    5 ай бұрын

    very much agreed!!@@vrvaughn

  • @taliabraver

    @taliabraver

    5 ай бұрын

    Cant say the Germans treated our Americans the same,monsters!

  • @patsadventures6381
    @patsadventures63813 жыл бұрын

    My uncle told me of the story when the guards took some POW's into town for some work and supplies. The guards then decided to stop at a bar and told all of the POW's to stay in the truck. Hours passed and finally a couple of the POW's went into the bar to find the guards passed out drunk. The POW's drug the guards back to the truck, loaded them in, and the POW drove the truck back to the camp. The POW's did not want any problems apparently.....funny story.

  • @lucymanet3297

    @lucymanet3297

    3 жыл бұрын

    Ha, like the time when Newkirk transported Schultzie back to Stalag 13 in a wheelbarrow after (Newkirk made sure that) Schultz got drunk at the town bar.🤣 (Hogan's Heroes.) Never had a clue that the US ever held POW's in America.

  • @armybeef68

    @armybeef68

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@lucymanet3297 Educate yourself. There's probably a lot you don't know but are quick to assume.

  • @tomservo5347

    @tomservo5347

    3 жыл бұрын

    I think the German officers realized that escaping was out of the question in the middle of nowhere, plus why ruin such marvelous privileges? All the POW's agreed that the mess hall was really good (along with the harvest meals farm families would lay out for their workers). I've heard countless times of guards needing to use the latrine, and handing their rifle to a POW to watch. I also read in various camps a Nazi Party member would try taking over the camp-and the regular officers and enlisted POW's put a stopper on it. Rather unfair how history lumps them altogether.

  • @claypiper8374

    @claypiper8374

    3 жыл бұрын

    Well, not all German soldiers were SS troops or even a Hitler fanatic. Some of those soldiers were drafted into the war and wanted nothing but to go home to their families. Late in the war Germany got so desperate for soldiers they were declaring Poles in the Polish Corridor "ethnic germans" and drafting them. Sometimes unwillingly. So I can understand alot of those P.O.W.'s just wanting to behave and go home.

  • @sittinonthegodamcornerdoindope

    @sittinonthegodamcornerdoindope

    3 жыл бұрын

    The way you used the word “drag” in the past tense made me re read the paragraph like 3 times 😂😂😂

  • @jacksonbiggs4291
    @jacksonbiggs42913 жыл бұрын

    My mom and her sister took food and supplies to the P.O.W.'s there. They were treated good. My dad was a put into a German POW camp in Germany B-17 pilot shot down then captured. He and a buddy escaped in a snow storm. They found a house with a woman that took them in fed them and darned their socks and repaired.uniforms. they asked why she was so nice and she pulled out a picture of her only son. She said he was in the USA in a Ruston louisiana POW camp AND he'd gain weight and looked so much better than when he left for the war. I am trying to thank your Country for taking such great care of him. German soliders showed up to take them back but the woman said she'd look after them while they gathered up the other prisoners and they could come back to pick them up. Tht gave her a chance to make them more food and they got a chance to dry off more. My mom didn't even know my dad at that time. Met after the War. I could tell so many stories about this time.

  • @never2late454
    @never2late4543 жыл бұрын

    My uncle was a guard at this camp. He had a couple of the P.O.W.s who were cabinet makers during peacetime, they made my grandmother a hutch that I still own to this day. The workmanship and quality is top notch. Growing up I always heard stories of how they were extremely well behaved and very friendly.

  • @Anthony-vx1tx

    @Anthony-vx1tx

    3 жыл бұрын

    Ya... extremely well behaved, especially in the concentration camps all over the Europe.

  • @toastnjam7384

    @toastnjam7384

    3 жыл бұрын

    My dad was a POW camp guard. He said they were a industrious bunch, always making stuff out of scrap wood to sell. Some made all wood coo-coo clocks.

  • @beatrixbrennan1545

    @beatrixbrennan1545

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@Anthony-vx1tx maybe it was a change of their environment that changed their behavior.

  • @pawelpap9

    @pawelpap9

    3 жыл бұрын

    Of course they were well behaved, they had no arms.

  • @davesy6969

    @davesy6969

    2 жыл бұрын

    You keep your grandmother in a hutch?

  • @mcedd54
    @mcedd543 жыл бұрын

    While serving with the US Army in the early 1980's, 1/33 Armored Battalion, 3 Armored Division, Gelnhausen, West Germany, my wife and I lived in an apartment not too far from the Kaserne. My landlord was a WWII veteran who had served in the Kriegsmarine throughout most of the war. In the Spring of 1945 his naval unit no longer had a mission so they were absorbed into a rag-tag battalion of the Wehrmacht. Given rifles they were placed in defensive positions to hold back the Allied forces that were approaching. They were soon attacked by a British armored column, quickly overrun and forced to surrender. He and his best buddy were sent to a rear area and placed in a hasty POW camp. After a few days he and his Bud decided that the Brit chow was not to their liking. They heard a rumor that the Americans were just a bit South of them and made an escape attempt that night and succeeded. They crept through the night and later the next day encountered and surrendered to the first Americans they spotted. They both decided that the risk they took was well worth their while as the GI 'cuisine' was much better with real coffee, an adequate supply of American cigarettes and even the rare gift of a Coca Cola. After VE day he was eventually processed out and sent home. He told me he never forgot the decent treatment he'd received from the Americans and the respect he had gained by seeing the time and effort the USA put into rebuilding and healing his country. He was a great landlord and also became a very dear friend. I will always remember his humor and kindness.

  • @b.wright1597

    @b.wright1597

    2 жыл бұрын

    🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸 GOD bless

  • @fligemon

    @fligemon

    2 жыл бұрын

    3AD Divarty in Hanau 79 to 81……….Gelnhausen 2nd Brigade was our supported unit

  • @jackjohnsen8506

    @jackjohnsen8506

    Жыл бұрын

    I was in the US Army in 1966 to 1967 in Southern Germany in a Dental lab that had many Germans employed, who were in the German Military, during WW 2. I had a group I ran that had a German named Victor Zimmerman, who followed my direction. He was a survivor of Stalingrad, and three years of prison camp, by the Russians. I didn't speak German, and He didn't speak English, so we came to a new Language, call Gerlish....and knew just what the other was saying. He died while I was there at age 56, because of the abuse he got from the Russians. My whole command went to the funeral in class A uniform, 90 miles away....with my commander, leading..an 06

  • @derrick4544

    @derrick4544

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jackjohnsen8506 ...and you're proud of that?

  • @billkaldem5099

    @billkaldem5099

    Жыл бұрын

    @@derrick4544 you’ve obviously never been in the military. You no conception of the respect one soldier has for another.

  • @gateway8833
    @gateway88333 жыл бұрын

    I went to High School with a guy that his Dad was a German POW, when he got to the US he asked what he had to do to become a citizen of America. He was a great guy.

  • @nole8923

    @nole8923

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Abby Babby. If I was a German soldier in Africa or on the western front I would surrender at the first opportunity. I would say take me to a prison camp in America, anywhere but Louisiana.🤣

  • @onionhead5780

    @onionhead5780

    3 жыл бұрын

    Min Tin Tell that to a victim of the Holocaust.

  • @tk9839

    @tk9839

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Min Tin I don't mind the Germans but ask the French, Dutch, Belgium, Poles, and Russians ..they'd probably disagree vehemently.

  • @gljay

    @gljay

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@tk9839 Russians weren't anything to write home about either. Germans ran to the American zone to get away.

  • @tk9839

    @tk9839

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@gljay never said the Russians were angels but the revenge factor made them vicious and numb...It appears the Canadian soldiers were the most decent...

  • @gabydersch1482
    @gabydersch14823 жыл бұрын

    My father was one these German prisoners. He was 20 years old. We have his pictures and documents of his 2 year stay at a POW camp in the US. He gained weight and said they treated him very well. He then spent another 2 years building roads in Great Britian. He then finally arrived back home to Germany in 1947. Thank you for the post. God bless you.

  • @philzolth4710

    @philzolth4710

    3 жыл бұрын

    My uncle was at camp gruber in oklahoma , when he died in the 1980s my dad was sent some of his stuff well all my dad got was his documents from camp gruber they were facinating to read because my dad didn’t talk about the war , my uncles documents said he was shot twice and put in hospital and there were also his German ID with nazi stamps on them, my dad burned it all just before he died i was a bit annoyed because I wanted that stuff

  • @softailspringer9915

    @softailspringer9915

    3 жыл бұрын

    I’ve wondered how the children of Nazi soldiers wrap their minds around what their fathers did

  • @jakisfly

    @jakisfly

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@softailspringer9915 pretty easily I’m sure

  • @theluckyegg3613

    @theluckyegg3613

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@softailspringer9915 You really should study history first, before you make comments like that. It has never been easier to gather information than now. Internet 4G / 5G.

  • @theluckyegg3613

    @theluckyegg3613

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@jakisfly You really should study history first, before you make comments like that. It has never been easier to gather information than now. Internet 4G / 5G.

  • @gondolfozarzana1527
    @gondolfozarzana15273 жыл бұрын

    While stationed in Germany 1961-64, I had a German husband and wife as close friends. He did not want to go in the German Army, he was soon a POW housed Arkansas when the war was over he begged to stay in the U.S. His wife during the war hid downed pilots in her basement and helped them return to England. Both received good jobs with the U.S. facilities in Germany after the war because of her heroic efforts.

  • @gondolfozarzana1527

    @gondolfozarzana1527

    2 жыл бұрын

    How did they do it? I never asked for detail, but the did it. The wife received an honorable award from the U.S. military for her actions. Both are deceased so I can't get an answer for you. She did show me the cellar where the pilots were hidden in Limburg.

  • @tyroniousyrownshoolacez2347

    @tyroniousyrownshoolacez2347

    Жыл бұрын

    🤣🤣🤣🤣👉 Bravo Sierra. Never happened rube.

  • @blockmasterscott
    @blockmasterscott Жыл бұрын

    My mom was born in 1946 in Louisiana. She told me that as a little girl in the 50s she met former German POWs in Louisiana that decided to live there and had no intention ever of going back to Germany. She also told me that in grade school there were a lot of kids whose fathers were former POWs that decided to live in the States.

  • @johnj.flanagan-songsoffaith
    @johnj.flanagan-songsoffaith2 жыл бұрын

    You know why they were mostly smiling? For them, the war was over, no chance of being sent to fight the Russians in the frozen fields of Siberia. After the war, some of them settled in Louisiana and learned how to barbecue baloney, southern style. We had lots of German POW's imprisoned upstate New York. I ran into a bunch of these ex-vets in Brooklyn, and more than a few moved into German neighborhoods in the city, and worked in some of the meat packing plants. They were hard and excellent workers, very reliable and conscientious, ethical, and disciplined. I think they adapted to America very well, and being half German myself, I can see how they assimilated quite well.

  • @unclemikeb
    @unclemikeb2 жыл бұрын

    Near Rockford, IL, there was a camp with Germans and Italians. After about six months one of the Italian guys became a trustee such that he was allowed to accompany guards to town on errands to get needed supplies. He was stunned by how modern things were. He could not believe that every house had phones and electricity. The grocery stores made his eyes pop open. When the war ended, he protested being sent back to Italy, he wanted to stay. But per the terms of geneva convention he HAD to go back. It only took a few years for him to save up money for a boat trip and he came back to Rockford, got work, by then his English was quite good. He ended up working at the plant with me.

  • @mynamedoesntmatter8652

    @mynamedoesntmatter8652

    Жыл бұрын

    Italy was floundering in fascism and war and Mussolini, until they seized control over their country enough to get rid of that bad dictator. Those people didn’t stand a chance until after the war when they rebuilt, caught a breath and caught up with the world a bit.

  • @jackjohnsen8506
    @jackjohnsen8506 Жыл бұрын

    My Father was a Naval officer on a US Navy troop transport called the USS Dorothea L Dicks. The ship was in north Africa, picking up German Prisoners of war, and they were all naked as they went trough their personal articles. One German soldier, stood before my Dad, buck naked, and saluting and clicking his heels together and pointing at one sailor, and gesturing. My Dad asked the sailor what he did, and the sailor denied taking something, my Dad said give it back right now, and the sailor gave an Iron cross, back to the German, and The German, saluted my dad, and thanked Him... If anyone in Germany has heard this story, and were a relative of that German, My Dad is now dead, and his name was Ray A Johnsen My Dad said he was very impressed with The professionalism of the Africa Corp....

  • @georgeh.7238
    @georgeh.72383 жыл бұрын

    My dad a WWII vet, mentioned one time when he was being transported through Louisiana at a train depot a bunch of German POWs (probably from Africa) were passing by and he said he has never seen more fit, handsome, and tan soldiers in his life until he saw them.

  • @paulazemeckis7835

    @paulazemeckis7835

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yummy!!!

  • @benbasinger7547

    @benbasinger7547

    3 жыл бұрын

    The Afrika Corps were good soldiers and were very well led. My Dad when he came back from the South Pacific after being wounded was in the MPs ,guarded and transported some POWs at Camp Blanding in Florida . The local farmers used these POWs as farm labor and especially liked the Afrika corp because most were acclimated to the heat and humidity of Florida.

  • @poetcomic1

    @poetcomic1

    2 жыл бұрын

    Afrika Korps were respected by their enemies and like the sailors in 'Das Boot' submarines, they didn't think much of Hitler.

  • @sassycat6487

    @sassycat6487

    4 ай бұрын

    Those Germans were very admired while in America. I've read stories about how they constantly were having to fire women working in the camps because they were getting frisky with the boys. I also read teenage girls were climbing the fences of the camps to get to them 😹

  • @robinmorris5416
    @robinmorris54163 жыл бұрын

    My best friend I grew up with, his mother grew up in Nuri burg germany. She told me for the last 2 years of the war, all her family had to eat were turnips. Also, while out walking home with her friends, an American p51 saw them, and dived at them, but luckily for some reason he didn't fire at them, only scared them half to death. She said she can still remember seeing the pilots face, and he was smiling at them. Anyway, my buddies father, who was a staff sargent during the war, somehow met, and fell in love with her, married her and brought her over to the states. She worked her whole life and was a model citizen. I loved that lady, as she was like a 2nd mother to me and now all I have are their memories. My friend, his mom, and dad are now all gone. But I still love, and miss them terribly.

  • @73THUNDERDOME73

    @73THUNDERDOME73

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thank for sharing this! Don’t ever let those memories go

  • @robinmorris5416

    @robinmorris5416

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@73THUNDERDOME73 yeah, she was an awesome lady, a hard worker, and a great example of a 2nd mom. Luckily, she wasn't ever radicalized in the nazi party. Her family participated in what they had to for the regime, but they secretly were praying for the u.s. and britain to come in and liberate the citizens. She told me, most families didn't practice pure naziism, only what they were forced to endure. She was 18 at the end of the war, and that's when my buddies dad, found her amongst the rubble of nuremberg and brought her home to Georgia. Thanks for the comment.

  • @robinmorris5416

    @robinmorris5416

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@user-oj7hu4lc8v it's a typo dude, the "n" that's supposed to be there didn't print, & I'm to lazy to edit. Btw, I actually misspelled it, the word and town is Nuremberg, now hopefully this will satisfy your "german" curiosity of the geography of your country. Thanks for asking!

  • @jimmyraythomason1

    @jimmyraythomason1

    3 жыл бұрын

    A lady I knew back in the 1960s was a native born Japanese who married a U.S. Navyman. She was a young girl at the end of the war and said they had to glean what they could from the rice fields for what little food they had. She said that many times they were strafed by their own fighter planes and had to dive into ditches the avoid being killed.

  • @captainpinky8307

    @captainpinky8307

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@jimmyraythomason1 why were Japanese civilians being strafed by the Japanese air force for???

  • @jamesjohannes1442
    @jamesjohannes1442 Жыл бұрын

    My father, who was fluent in German, was one of the first American guards at Camp Ruston. Much of what he told me about that experience is captured in this film. For many years he corresponded with one of the prisoners.

  • @hubertkaiser8581

    @hubertkaiser8581

    Ай бұрын

    Gefangenschaft in den USA schweissst zusammen...nur in Russland nicht.... Warum wohl?

  • @patsmith8523
    @patsmith85233 жыл бұрын

    One of the greatest ironies of the war was how we treated German POW's. I read a story of how American families had German POW's in their homes during Thanksgiving. The Germans did not understand the holiday, but they did understand the hospitality. If I remember correctly, these same POW's did some carpentry work for the family during their stay. They volunteered to do it.

  • @scratchy996

    @scratchy996

    2 жыл бұрын

    It's weird they didn't understand, since the Germans have "Erntedankfest", literally “harvest thanksgiving festival”.

  • @patsmith8523

    @patsmith8523

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@scratchy996 I don't know for sure, but it may have been that they were indoctrinated by the Nazis.

  • @marcusaurelius3487

    @marcusaurelius3487

    2 жыл бұрын

    Common German man was honorable and wanted nothing with the circus going on

  • @tomservo5347

    @tomservo5347

    2 жыл бұрын

    At the time, farm families would have 'harvest meals' laid out on a long table with wash basins and towels for the harvest crews. The crews were of course German POW's who couldn't believe all of the food laid out for them.

  • @streetsofgold100

    @streetsofgold100

    Жыл бұрын

    look up Rhine Meadows death camp

  • @Biloxiblues77
    @Biloxiblues77 Жыл бұрын

    My Grandfather was a POW in the US. I don't know exactly where, I think some where in the southwest, but to his dying day he repeated that if he had known all the shit he had to endure with his wife, my grandmother, he would have stayed in America! My guess is he really liked it there!!! On his behalf I would like to thank the US for the hospitality he received.

  • @alfnoakes392
    @alfnoakes392 Жыл бұрын

    My grandmother in North Nottinghamshire had a German PoW allotted to her to help her grow food (she lived on the edge of town and had a large garden). He was a volunteer and was delivered by a truck in the morning (with other PoWs being taken to other workplaces) and picked up in the evening. He came back to visit in the late 60s, he had become a Pastor and seemed a really decent chap. He said he had promised his God that if he survived the War he would serve Him ... he had been a Despatch Rider, which he described as basically providing target practice for snipers.

  • @isaiahvillarreal4512

    @isaiahvillarreal4512

    Жыл бұрын

    Great story. I was a dispatch rider ( motorcycle courier) in LOS ANGELES for 37 yrs. Only time I got shot at was during the LA RIOTS of 92. Got hit in the knee by a 22. Hurt like hell.

  • @darrickmalloy6909

    @darrickmalloy6909

    Жыл бұрын

    Man will never turn down some good ole slave labor.😞

  • @EthanDyTioco

    @EthanDyTioco

    Жыл бұрын

    @@darrickmalloy6909 what, you'd rather this guy get shot in the war? manual labor in a country an ocean away from fighting wasn't so bad for a lot of them.

  • @MisterApol

    @MisterApol

    11 ай бұрын

    @@darrickmalloy6909 Workers were paid. They were not slaves.

  • @billwilson-es5yn

    @billwilson-es5yn

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@@darrickmalloy6909 Made them work like Hebrew slaves, too.

  • @chrisw2119
    @chrisw21193 жыл бұрын

    I met many (more than ten) Ex prisoners from Germany who stayed in America after the war ,They became Good American citizens,Many of them had no home in Germany left.They started a new life here in the U.S.

  • @3John-Bishop

    @3John-Bishop

    3 жыл бұрын

    Every time we have a war we always end up with the refugees

  • @TDL-xg5nn

    @TDL-xg5nn

    3 жыл бұрын

    None of them wanted to go back if they were going to be in the Russian zone.

  • @adscri

    @adscri

    3 жыл бұрын

    Trump supporters no doubt.

  • @raysalter2270

    @raysalter2270

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@adscri TRUMP 2020 LOVE FROM a German POW

  • @jorgebravo415

    @jorgebravo415

    3 жыл бұрын

    Helt riktig.

  • @jamesb.9155
    @jamesb.91553 жыл бұрын

    I met a friends father in his 90's who spent the war years from 1940, interned at one of the Canadian PW camps. He was a U-Boat officer captured in the English Channel. The camp commander sponsored his return to Canada with his wife where they later became American citizens. His children and even some grandchildren can speak German because he asked that German be spoken daily at the dinner table! It was a very interesting meeting and conversation with that gentleman.

  • @donalddumas6987

    @donalddumas6987

    2 жыл бұрын

    There was a few POW camps in Northern Ontario Canada. Lowther Ontario was one of them. My Grandfather supervised POW's on logging crews. Many learned to play French Canadian fiddle tunes and brought some of the French Canadian culture back with them. Likewise some French Canadians musicians learned to play polkas and other European music.

  • @hunterglass1840
    @hunterglass18403 жыл бұрын

    My mother was a resident in Ruston, La. during this time. She said that her neighbor worked at the camp and they said that the POWs were well behaved and courteous. She said there was an apparent issue when a group tried to start or take over the camp with a Nazi Party push. This was apparently unwelcomed and was squashed by the other inmates. This was the first time she learned all Germans were not Nazis.

  • @tracyo6553

    @tracyo6553

    3 жыл бұрын

    Cool story! I bet your Mom has more stories that we don’t read about in history books. Hope you get to record all of them.

  • @ReneStover

    @ReneStover

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@tracyo6553 There is much you won't read about in the history books!

  • @MrHoefnix

    @MrHoefnix

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Clorox Bleach We will not be intimidated by Black lives matter, Antifa and gender-neutral toilets.

  • @jamessilberschlag1705

    @jamessilberschlag1705

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Clorox Bleach Nazis aren't left wingers, dolt. Our conservatives and evangelicals are closest to the mindset of the Nazis - loyalty to the president, not to the Constitution and body of laws.

  • @joshmartin1938

    @joshmartin1938

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@jamessilberschlag1705 Listen up nitwit. Nazis took wealth, power and guns away. Please do some reading / research.

  • @thomaslastname3500
    @thomaslastname35003 жыл бұрын

    I grew up in Ruston, later joining the U.S. Army as an interrogator for 25 years. I'm now teaching Soldiers about detention facility operations, interrogations, enrollmes, etc. I had no idea the history that town held and am deeply appreciative of my uncle Dale for finding this.

  • @thomaslastname3500

    @thomaslastname3500

    3 жыл бұрын

    @CharlyRomeo2009 35M Human Intelligence Collector to be exact

  • @kateeilers574
    @kateeilers5743 жыл бұрын

    Chatted with an Austrian who was a POW in Kansas. He remembered his internment fondly because one of their tasks was to pick apples for the local farmers. As time went on they were allowed to go into town for the dances. As he spoke it was apparent he went away and was probably dancing with a robust Kansas girl.

  • @darrickmalloy6909

    @darrickmalloy6909

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah. I hear they were treated better than African Americans.

  • @darrickmalloy6909

    @darrickmalloy6909

    Жыл бұрын

    Ah the good ole days

  • @tdirtyatl

    @tdirtyatl

    Жыл бұрын

    @@darrickmalloy6909 They were.

  • @sassycat6487

    @sassycat6487

    4 ай бұрын

    @@darrickmalloy6909 they were! And it's interesting reading about how Black Americans were treated better sometimes by the Germans than Americans. I saw a story recently about a German POW married a Black lady who was working at the camp. I also was reading a story about someone who was liberated by Americans in a concentration camp and he woke up in the Army hospital and saw a Black soldier and a German woman together if you know what I'm saying.

  • @catherinelw9365

    @catherinelw9365

    Ай бұрын

    @@sassycat6487 And yet many black servicemen were tortured and executed by the Nazis. So your story is irrelevant. A German woman with a black soldier, not the same thing.

  • @dennischallinor8497
    @dennischallinor84972 жыл бұрын

    When I lived in Calgary a neighbour of mine was a POW at Seebee AB and he said they hadn't eaten that well in 10 yrs. He eventually worked for a farmer who hired him back after his repatriation. A good man!!!

  • @unclemikeb
    @unclemikeb2 жыл бұрын

    A guy from work told me of an uncles farm that got German pow to help with chores. In time they became friends with the pow and helped them write letters home. The Germans told them life even at the pow camp was better than life had been in the military. The men were glad to have a good life since they had a good deal of freedom when they went to the farms. Some of them even migrated to the US and wrote letters to the farm owners letting them know they were grateful for how they were treated. That's success.

  • @darrickmalloy6909

    @darrickmalloy6909

    Жыл бұрын

    Wow! But I get it. But propaganda has no to do with it. People like who they like.😞

  • @latsnojokelee6434

    @latsnojokelee6434

    Жыл бұрын

    There’s a video about the POW camp in Minnesota and it’s very similar to this where the Germans had plays and skits they put on, worked in the fields for the locals, and a lot of them went back to Germany and then brought their wives back and immigrated back to the US. US.

  • @deanronson6331

    @deanronson6331

    Жыл бұрын

    @@darrickmalloy6909 It's pretty obvious who is under the thrall of propaganda.

  • @darrickmalloy6909

    @darrickmalloy6909

    Жыл бұрын

    @@deanronson6331 did you drink the cleanser? Just try it what do you have to loose? Lol 😂 drink up my friends. Please

  • @deanronson6331

    @deanronson6331

    Жыл бұрын

    @@darrickmalloy6909 It's also obvious that you, as a true-blue trumpoid, imbibed some Lysol when the orange bozo suggested that you should.

  • @jimfillingim1523
    @jimfillingim15233 жыл бұрын

    I had an uncle ...a veteran of the Kriegsmarine who was captured and sent to a camp in Texas. After the war he married and lived in Florida.

  • @philzolth4710

    @philzolth4710

    3 жыл бұрын

    My uncle was in the kriegsmarine and was at camp gruber oklahoma as a pow he went back to Germany, my dad was a boy soldier in the kreigsmarine and came to Australia 🇦🇺

  • @a.w.wehmeier3970

    @a.w.wehmeier3970

    3 жыл бұрын

    Sounds like possibly camp.fannin. which is outside of Tyler texas.

  • @joecastillo7638

    @joecastillo7638

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@a.w.wehmeier3970 I was in the Air Force and went through added training at Camp Bullis outside of San Antonio. There were wooden barracks there and we were told that they were used for holding German POWs. Not sure if that was true.

  • @vivians9392

    @vivians9392

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@a.w.wehmeier3970 Or, maybe Huntsville, TX?

  • @Lucyinthskyy

    @Lucyinthskyy

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@vivians9392 there was a camp in Hearne, TX as well

  • @SloMo2723
    @SloMo2723 Жыл бұрын

    In 1975 I got to spend Christmas with a German man who was captured by the Americans and was sent to a Texas POW camp. The stories he told me was amazing! One of the most memorable I've experienced.

  • @JeromeGardiner
    @JeromeGardiner2 жыл бұрын

    My father was taken prisoner during the battle of the bulge. He was a POW for 6 months, and escaped as the war was coming to an end. He weighed 86 pounds when he was taken to an Army hospital. The guards, he said were all starving as well. It was the coldest winter in history and constant allied bombing of the marshaling yards had stopped the rail systems completely, Food on the farms rotted on the farms while men and women starved. During it all, the guards were friendly and professional. His stay at Stahlag 13B was as good as it could be, When Red Cross Care Packages came in for the prisoners, they were shared with the guards as well. The Red Cross with our care packages coming in from home kept many a man alive during Feb, 1945. They lived on cabbage soup. The treatment of US prisoners has a great deal to do with the treatment of German POWs in the states. Every Nazi in the beginning were German, but not all Germans were Nazi's.

  • @mynamedoesntmatter8652

    @mynamedoesntmatter8652

    Жыл бұрын

    I’m very that found your comment. I’m thankful your father survived that ordeal; none of us can ever understand what that generation went through during the war, regardless where they were. My father served in Italy where he was wounded twice, almost fatally the second time. He spent a year total in hospital. I have a lot pictures of him in those first years after he was discharged, some in his uniform. I have his dress jacket. I’m a small woman and it fits me. My father was about six feet tall, not a small man. God bless you and your family ~~~~~ IMO your comment should be pinned, and it definitely should be read by everyone.

  • @anthonyfoutch3152

    @anthonyfoutch3152

    11 ай бұрын

    If they couldn't get food from the farms i wonder how they got the red cross packages there?

  • @JeromeGardiner

    @JeromeGardiner

    10 ай бұрын

    @@anthonyfoutch3152 Red Cross had the advantage of markings and mutual agreement which allowed them access, (limited of course) to the camps. German Red Cross members would pick up the packages and move them inside Germany.

  • @tomservo5347
    @tomservo53473 жыл бұрын

    My German mom's cousin was sent to Huntsville, Texas POW camp where he developed a love for Pepsi-Cola, and the kind ranch family he worked for.

  • @vivians9392

    @vivians9392

    3 жыл бұрын

    Huntsville is the one I remember as a 3 yr old. I live in Houston, and we would pass there on road trips. They seemed to like baseball.

  • @barryguyer8174

    @barryguyer8174

    2 жыл бұрын

    Cool

  • @frankmontez6853

    @frankmontez6853

    2 жыл бұрын

    hmmm there's a regular DOC prison there . I wonder if they made it from this ?

  • @tomservo5347

    @tomservo5347

    2 жыл бұрын

    As Tocqueville stated 200 years ago, 'America is great because it's people are good.' You can bet the German POW's were immensely relieved when they found out they were going to the US for internment. POW's on trains remembered being greeted in German by people on the platform of German descent.

  • @SBS_Auto

    @SBS_Auto

    2 жыл бұрын

    I live a few miles south in montgomery. Necer heard of this till now. Had no idea they kept pow's in the us

  • @mechengineer4894
    @mechengineer4894 Жыл бұрын

    Didn't have time to watch this vid, but there's quite a few heartwarming details of German POW's held in the US. Quite a few had the liberty to leave the camp unescorted to help out farms in the area and became very good friends. Most notable was when one of the farmer's wives just had a baby and a German POW all distraught because he also became a father just before he was captured and sent to the US. So he got the POW working on the farm with the new family member to ask if it was OK to let him hold their baby just for a few minutes. So the wife handed him their baby and he started sobbing like a little schoolgirl which caused everyone else in the room to start sobbing like little schoolgirls. Apparently, this happened quite often with the POWs.

  • @vivians9392
    @vivians93923 жыл бұрын

    I remember (vaguely)driving past the POW camp at about age 3, located at Huntsville, TX. We saw prisoners out playing baseball, and my Dad would drive slowly to observe them. He had a fascination seeing them up close and would probably have liked to converse with some of them, since his parents had come to America as immigrant teens, before WWI. He was fluent in German and was a great mechanic, later owning his own Body Works/Mechanics shop in Texas. I used to be mesmerized when he and his large family would get together at family reunions, all speaking Deutsch! He was 6'3", had blond hair and turquoise blue eyes, with looks similar to Gary Cooper. I was so thankful he was born an American!!

  • @darrickmalloy6909

    @darrickmalloy6909

    Жыл бұрын

    I hear they were treated better than the African Americans. Ah the good ole days

  • @heli-crewhgs5285

    @heli-crewhgs5285

    Жыл бұрын

    You should not have been driving aged three! 👶🏻 🚗

  • @JP2GiannaT

    @JP2GiannaT

    Жыл бұрын

    Tex Duetch! My Oma grew up speaking it too. :) She didn't pass it on to her kids though, sad to say.

  • @Ashton351

    @Ashton351

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@darrickmalloy6909 I hear the African Americans were treated better.

  • @chas6648
    @chas66483 жыл бұрын

    My dad was a camp guard for German POW's in the western US. He said they were a industrious bunch. They were constantly making stuff out of scraps. Some would make Coo-Coo clocks out of scrap wood to sell to the locals and guards.

  • @ButterBallTheOpossum

    @ButterBallTheOpossum

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thats super cool. I wonder if any of those clocks survived and exist today? It would be cool to see.

  • @EddieLeal

    @EddieLeal

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@ButterBallTheOpossum Google it and see what pops up. You never know.

  • @supernova5107

    @supernova5107

    3 жыл бұрын

    Where do you think the term German engineering comes from?🤔

  • @supernova5107

    @supernova5107

    3 жыл бұрын

    @angela williams are you offended because I'm trying to throw a little humor in the topic?

  • @crosisofborg5524

    @crosisofborg5524

    3 жыл бұрын

    The proper spelling is cuckoo clock

  • @64mustangfan
    @64mustangfan3 жыл бұрын

    This is a warm story about decency and humanity, what binds us rather than what separates us. I am of German decent, but interestingly discovered that one of my ancestors died at the battle of Gettysburg, 119th NY Infantry.

  • @agwbcfjc2

    @agwbcfjc2

    Жыл бұрын

    During the war of 1861, Lincoln was running out of soldiers. Many northern men did not want to die in that conflict. So Lincoln offered land to European men (If they survived.) who would come to this country to fight. I wonder if your ancestor was one of those men who responded to the offer. BTW, many Irishmen came here in response to that proposition as well.

  • @timothydavidcurp

    @timothydavidcurp

    Жыл бұрын

    Many of the Germans who came over to the US prior to the Civil War were political refugees from the failed effort to create a more free Germany in 1848 (they wanted a more unified but also democratizing reality in various German spaces - since I realize "Germany" was not yet a political reality at that time). Most of them became fierce supporters of the Union (they looked at slavery and the Southern planters as being too much like the aristocracy who had driven them from their homes/dashed their hopes of a more democratic Germany).

  • @agwbcfjc2

    @agwbcfjc2

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@timothydavidcurp Those early German immigrants of 1848 probably went on to fall prey to the propagandistic lies that the "civil" war was a civil war and that the war was fought over slavery. America is still paying for that lie. Lincoln's War was fought over whether or not the United sates would be led by a confederation of states joined by mutual agreement or a country led by a CENTRAL AUTHORITY. Lincoln and the central authoritarians won. Look at how the government has insinuated itself into every facet of our daily lives. The government controls how much water is used in your toilet! I know this is hard for you to read; and it may be too late in America's history to get back onto the right track, as laid down by our founding fathers; but still I owe a debt to the truth to try to speak that truth to my fellow countryman.

  • @scotscotty8075
    @scotscotty80753 жыл бұрын

    I had the honor of meeting Hans Goebeler, a crew member aboard the U505 when it was captured. He told me that he was the one who opened the seawater valves on the sub in an attempt to scuttle it. He was a PW and Camp Ruston.

  • @jaynekranc8607

    @jaynekranc8607

    10 ай бұрын

    The new U-505 exhibit in Chicago is amazing. I'm so glad they got it indoors. The weather was destroying it.

  • @mikesummers6880
    @mikesummers68802 жыл бұрын

    My uncle was a German Pow in Canada. He was fighting in Africa with Rommel and was captured at Al emayne I think he was glad to get out of the War after being in it for so long there's only so much a human can take stress etc he always said that the war was hell not like Hollywood portrayed it but a lot worse. After the war he ended up in England Leicestershire where he met and fell in love with a English girl and later married her ,he never returned to Germany as he lost everything his home was now part of Poland.

  • @christianbrother4724
    @christianbrother47243 жыл бұрын

    What a great film. My parents were children in Louisiana during World War II. I had always heard that my Grandfather was a guard at one of the German POW camps. I am not sure which one. My mother always said that he would bring home many arts, crafts and handmade items that the German prisioners would make. Thanks for this film.

  • @josharmour1549
    @josharmour15493 жыл бұрын

    I grew up in Reynolds, Pennsylvania. Site of Camp Reynolds where German POW's were held. Years later my cousin and I joined the Air Force Security Police in which my cousin was stationed in Germany. While there, he met a man who was a POW in Camp Reynolds. He said as German POW's, they were treated better than African American soldiers. Got to eat in the dining facilities, while the African American soldiers had to eat around the back of the kitchen. Crazy!..

  • @gokarengo

    @gokarengo

    3 жыл бұрын

    Why am I not surprised....

  • @jleeharris4743

    @jleeharris4743

    Жыл бұрын

    True. There was a camp near Roswell new Mexico that was called orchard park.evey thing you just said is true.. the only thing left is the foundations.

  • @jeffersonspace
    @jeffersonspace3 жыл бұрын

    Dad served in WWII playing upright bass for the Air Transport Command based in Miami Beach. Before enlisting he was a student of Louisiana Tech. After the war he returned to finish his Bachelors in Music degree. While he was there he made friends with a man named Johnny Parrot. Mr. Parrot became the Mayor of Ruston during the 60's, and 70's. I visited there back in 71 on the way to California. Interesting video. Beautiful country. Thanks, and bless.

  • @veteransfortrump8916
    @veteransfortrump89163 жыл бұрын

    Being from Pennsylvania many POWs housed here, settled here and became Americans. Enemies in War, Brothers in Peace.

  • @YeOldeTowneCryer

    @YeOldeTowneCryer

    3 жыл бұрын

    In the 1940's if t hey had any interaction with locals they would have heard some German words being used as many Germans settled in the PA prior to 1940.

  • @martentrudeau6948

    @martentrudeau6948

    3 жыл бұрын

    The Pennsylvania Dutch, that settled in PA, were basically Germans. Pennsylvania and Germans are like peas and carrots, they go together.

  • @thebeatnumber

    @thebeatnumber

    3 жыл бұрын

    While black comrades in arms were treated like 3rd class citizens.

  • @kennethprice8710

    @kennethprice8710

    3 жыл бұрын

    Well,that makes sense there is a Germantown,Pennsylvania afterall.

  • @daltonlocklear3399

    @daltonlocklear3399

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@thebeatnumber don't forget about the native Americans, some of us are still around uk

  • @starfox198077
    @starfox1980773 жыл бұрын

    My grandfather was a MP at the camp. He said he felt sorry for the prisoners because they were not allowed to write letters home to Germany. He also said an American G.I. Raped a local girl from the town next door. The police brought the American soldier back to the camp and the commander of the camp sentenced him to a firing squad. My grandfather guarded him while he dug his own grave. After he finished digging he was shot on the spot and thrown in.

  • @CurmudgeonExtraordinaire

    @CurmudgeonExtraordinaire

    3 жыл бұрын

    Actually, Camp Ruston is not really located in what is considered "Ruston" these days. It is between Grambling (which is to the west of Ruston) and Simmsboro. At that time, rape was a capital offense.

  • @gokarengo

    @gokarengo

    3 жыл бұрын

    Omg

  • @Stevenowski

    @Stevenowski

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@CurmudgeonExtraordinaire It still should be.

  • @jamesdarcy3902

    @jamesdarcy3902

    3 ай бұрын

    As former radio host Ken Hamlin used to say " Good riddance to another load of human trash"

  • @starckmad1779
    @starckmad17793 жыл бұрын

    My Dad and Mom were stationed at camp Claiborne near present day Forest Hill. It was an extension of Camp Ruston. Dad, a Tech Sargent taught Italian POWS auto mechanics. Mom was Civil Service in the accounting office. I’ve listened to many stories about life in Louisiana! The Germans worked in the bakery. Oh...Mom loved the smell!

  • @gw5309
    @gw5309 Жыл бұрын

    My Dad was an Army 1st Lt stationed in New Orleans in late 1945. He got to know the chef at the O club, who was a POW. He had been a chef at a exclusive hotel in Germany before the war. Dad would bring him cigars and he would save the best steaks for Dad.

  • @gspaulsson
    @gspaulsson3 жыл бұрын

    El Alamein is in Egypt, not Tunisia. Trivia aside, making it known that PoWs were well treated surely encouraged many soldiers to surrender- especially near the end of the war, when whole units went west to surrender to the Americans rather than the Soviets.

  • @salimyilmaz9342

    @salimyilmaz9342

    3 жыл бұрын

    That’s only the half truth. A lot of the Germans pov suffered in the Rheinwiesenlager. They didn’t get food and the international Red Cross wasn’t allowed to enter the camp. Maybe it was an act of revenge from the allies for what the Germans did with the Jews. Also these Soldiers weren’t recognized as POW, rather the western allies recognized them as disarmed enemy forces, so they didn’t fall under the laws of the Geneva convention. So they could used the Germans for forced labour and dangerous jobs like minesweeping for instance. All in all you could say that the Germans were threaded best by the British, than the Americans and very bad by the french and worst by the soviets. It is also true that German pows in the us Canada and England were much better treated than the Germans in France and Germany. Maybe because the allies did this because they saw the atrocities what their Germans did there in the concentration camps.

  • @AndyBeck1970

    @AndyBeck1970

    3 жыл бұрын

    Unless there is another El Alamein in Tunisia, it is in Egypt. Even in 1942. It was the Tunisia campaign, though.

  • @maddyg3208

    @maddyg3208

    3 жыл бұрын

    @LUIS VELEZ Yes El Alamein definetely was, and still is, in Egypt. But now it's also in Melbourne, Australia, where the suburb of Alamein is named after the location of the big victory.

  • @maddyg3208

    @maddyg3208

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@AndyBeck1970 The El Alamein battle was before the Tunisian campaign

  • @salimyilmaz9342

    @salimyilmaz9342

    3 жыл бұрын

    LUIS VELEZ nah thats to easy explained. For example in the Baltic countries they really loved Germans, also in western Ukraine, Hungary, Croatia and White Russia the hated the communists so much that a lot them really loved their Germans, also there were historical bounds because a lot of these countries had historical bounds with the Astro-Hungarian Empire and the German Kaiserreich. A lot of these Countries had first positiv feelings towards the Germans later this changed partly because of German Atrocities against civilians, but not in every Country. The most negativ Feelings towards Germans are from Polish and Czech people, because of the cruel German occupation politics against them and the forced Germanization. The funfact is that especially the region of western Poland (the part in 1945) eastern Germany and western Bohemia (Czech Republic) aren’t homogeneous like whole Europe), they are Slavic-Germanic mixed. You find today a lot traces of this. A lot of Slavic city or villiage names (even Berlin is a Slavic cities) and a lot of Germanised Slavic surnames in Germany and also a lot of Slavic surnames and citynames in Bohemia and Poland which had a German origin. Back to topic. Also an open secret is that a lot of the polish people signed after the defeat the German Volksliste, that means if the had an German ancestor the were catigorized as Germans, so they didn’t had to suffer under the occupation that hard like other fellow poles. That also means that these Poles had to serve in the Wehrmacht. In Czechia they had very similar laws so also a small amount of Czechs fight more or less voluntary in the Wehrmacht. Also there were ethnicities which are originally were more Slavic but cultural or religious they felt more close to the Germans, like the kashubians , silesians and masurians. Most of them were forced to leave Poland, eastern Prussia and Bohemia after the War, because they were recognised as Germans and Nazi collaborators but a small amount of them stayed their. So there was a common test after the war in Poland for these people or other polish citizens with more German blood then polish in their venes. They had to say the Lords Prayer in polish so the are allowed to stay in Poland.

  • @walboyfredo6025
    @walboyfredo60253 жыл бұрын

    I recall the Tuskegee Airmen said that they were disgusted that the German POW were treated better then they were!

  • @simonroh4958

    @simonroh4958

    3 жыл бұрын

    I heard about that from Hart's War.

  • @gokarengo

    @gokarengo

    3 жыл бұрын

    They're black and am not surprised at all

  • @lucymanet3297

    @lucymanet3297

    3 жыл бұрын

    That would definitely be infuriating....but it sounds like these German POW's were treated better than ANY U. S. citizen, sheez. Reminds me of one of the modern day prisons for white collar criminals. Glad POW's were treated humanely but needn't have gone overboard when Americans were at the same time being killed by Germans in Europe and elsewhere.

  • @larrywheeler9917

    @larrywheeler9917

    3 жыл бұрын

    These POW Germans fit right in. Louisiana was Jim crow Dixie. Black American soldiers had to clean the tables after the Nazis ate.

  • @nycsongman9758

    @nycsongman9758

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yeah; I'm reading *all* of the misty-eyed remembrances here of "well-behaved", "courteous" and "smiling" *Nazi* POWs; *prisoners,* mind you, part of maniacal killing machine, and yet *they* were allowed to attend certain entertainment events, where, if an active-duty US Bl*ck *serviceman* had attempted to partake, he might risk getting his lights knocked out, or jail, *or both.*

  • @thejerseyj9422
    @thejerseyj94223 жыл бұрын

    Very interesting documentary, but the dramatizations prove one thing. We've gotten pretty chubby since the 40's.

  • @Carlos-nq7up

    @Carlos-nq7up

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank Junk food!

  • @harrisonratcliffe322

    @harrisonratcliffe322

    2 жыл бұрын

    You got pretty chubby

  • @davidjose9808

    @davidjose9808

    Жыл бұрын

    Their chubbiness really made the reenactment laughable…I could not watch it.

  • @outrageousalan7780
    @outrageousalan7780 Жыл бұрын

    Texas held 50,000 German POWs in WW2. Several of them had such great experiences during their incarceration in the Lone Star State that after the war, they were repatriated to Germany then turned around and returned to their new adopted state. I have met several of them. Wonderful people.

  • @ClancyWoodard-yw6tg

    @ClancyWoodard-yw6tg

    8 ай бұрын

    Yes That is very true where we go hunting at in East Texas is the site of camp Lufkin

  • @dancollins4755
    @dancollins47553 жыл бұрын

    In 1972 I met a Stuka pilot in Eau Claire Wi. He had married a local girl and made Wisconsin his home after the war.

  • @mikelawlor1533

    @mikelawlor1533

    3 жыл бұрын

    I would love to have heard his stories as the Stuka is my favourite war plane

  • @motorrebell

    @motorrebell

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Travis Bell Your Ass would been beaten :-)

  • @justinusberger3933

    @justinusberger3933

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Travis Bell You aren't man enough.

  • @Chris-hd3yc

    @Chris-hd3yc

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Travis Bell You sure about that? He was just a man, doing exactly what men across the world were doing. Fighting for their country. The simple fact that he ended up living in a country that was his enemy says alot. So you thinking you should and could beat his ass is quite comical on your part. Just sayin

  • @forddockery689

    @forddockery689

    3 жыл бұрын

    Interested in hearing a little more of the story if you can please that's fascinating

  • @TexasBarnRats
    @TexasBarnRats3 жыл бұрын

    Growing up in Texas, I knew several men who were former German POWs. Similar story for all of them. Went back to Germany only to find everything destroyed and no family. They were sponsored by Americans they met while POWs. In my area, the POWs typically worked on area farms and got to know local families that way.

  • @robertnielsen2461
    @robertnielsen24613 жыл бұрын

    I noticed a huge smile on the faces of some German prisoners after they were captured.Can you blame them.

  • @user-nq4sc4tg2r

    @user-nq4sc4tg2r

    3 жыл бұрын

    Jack pot

  • @bobbycapitaine3199

    @bobbycapitaine3199

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@user-nq4sc4tg2r nn n

  • @xxdomoxxkunxx

    @xxdomoxxkunxx

    3 жыл бұрын

    Going from heat so hot your shoes melt or cold so bad your skin falls off to drinking coke cola and eating legit Louisiana BBQ sounds pretty good

  • @Redpillpat

    @Redpillpat

    3 жыл бұрын

    Well they are happy it wasn’t the Russians.

  • @TheThatoneguy12121

    @TheThatoneguy12121

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@Redpillpat Exactly. A lot of German fighters surrendered and landed on US airfields knowing their fate was in a lot better hands with them than the Russians.

  • @mattskustomkreations
    @mattskustomkreations3 жыл бұрын

    My great uncle had state-side service during the war guarding Italian POWs at Camp Atterbury, Indiana. He may have gotten the gig because he was from an Italian immigrant family himself and thus could communicate with the prisoners. They were very docile and left some beautiful artwork and handcrafts behind, including a chapel that they built and decorated with intricate woodwork.

  • @silverstar4289

    @silverstar4289

    Жыл бұрын

    Atterbury is still an active military installation .

  • @sassycat6487

    @sassycat6487

    5 ай бұрын

    I read that as they left handcuffs behind 😹

  • @samkohen4589
    @samkohen45893 жыл бұрын

    Famous story here. There was this Black sailor when his ship was in port was unable to find a place where he could eat. He suddenly found the place there in Louisiana where the German POWs had their eating hall, so he decided to have a meal there. Within seconds of entering the place he was suddenly arrested by an MP for trying to eat in a place reserved for whites only. I guess there were no Black German POWs

  • @j.b.4340

    @j.b.4340

    3 жыл бұрын

    That story can't be true Mister KOHEN.

  • @softailspringer9915

    @softailspringer9915

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@j.b.4340 It certainly could have been true. Don’t you read any history?

  • @dawnandy7777
    @dawnandy77773 жыл бұрын

    My husband's father was born in 1924 in Austria. His mother was an orphan and raped in her 30s. My FIL was raised in poverty and social stigma. He used to say that his father didn't even give him the dirt under his fingernails. He was drafted into the German army. He was wounded and captured by Americans in 1943. While in camp, he claimed he never lived as well. The POWs wore hand-me-down American uniforms and ate the same rations as American soldiers. He learned how to speak English, which helped him immigrate to Canada in the early 1950s. His WWII experience was vastly better than that of my Polish family. Which included Nazi work camps, Soviet gulags, etc. Not to mention not being able to immigrate to Canada from Soviet occupied Poland after the war. My FIL knew he won the lottery by being captured by Americans.

  • @supernova5107

    @supernova5107

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for sharing. It's nice to hear a happy ending in so much pain and misery that war always has to offer.

  • @dawnandy7777

    @dawnandy7777

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Wally Reyes Germans after WWII recognized what the American corporatists were doing. In the 1970s they put laws in place to control their corrupt corporations. As a result, their current social democracy has a better capitalism than America does. E.g., They didn't de-industrialize when Reagan empowered China. This is a bipartisan corruption in America. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Codetermination_in_Germany

  • @wisconsinfarmer4742

    @wisconsinfarmer4742

    2 күн бұрын

    there are many great stories in the comments. This one brought a tear.

  • @dawnandy7777

    @dawnandy7777

    Күн бұрын

    @@wisconsinfarmer4742 They are all deceased now, hopefully at peace. Because both sides of my husband's and my family were deeply damaged psychologically. I weep for the victims of today's wars.

  • @billm777
    @billm7773 жыл бұрын

    I lived in Germany during the 80's and speak German due to US Army training. I was living in Munich and dating a girl from Hamelin, the town with the Pied Piper. Her father came down to visit her and I met him at lunch. I brought up that I had recently visited a sister in Washington state. The guy said, "Oh Washington! I have been there." I then asked - "Great! We you on vacation?" At that moment his face turned red as he slammed his fist on the table and shouted angrily - "I was a prisoner of war!" I glanced at my girlfriend who gave me a pained look while motioning - "Do not go there." I quickly changed the subject. He apparently didn't have any fond memories of his stay in the US as a POW. I wish I could have explored that subject.

  • @n4120p

    @n4120p

    3 жыл бұрын

    just chill out and open another bottle of whatever ....

  • @Lucyinthskyy

    @Lucyinthskyy

    3 жыл бұрын

    He should’ve been happy that the Russians didn’t catch him

  • @kickit59

    @kickit59

    11 ай бұрын

    @@Lucyinthskyy Most of the German POW's didn't survive the Russian experience!

  • @Garthinyus
    @Garthinyus9 ай бұрын

    My dad used to go watch the pows play soccer at a camp in a swampy area of SE Alabama close to the Florida line. He said that once a couple pows escaped and the guards didn't bother searching for them. He said that they showed up a couple days later covered in bug bites and leaches wanting back into the camp.

  • @martinmoffitt4702
    @martinmoffitt47023 жыл бұрын

    Yeah, most definitely better to be captured by Allied forces...as opposed to the Russians...Grew up with a kid whose dad got grabbed by the Canadians ended up in the states, his twin brother ended up in Russian hands ..they never heard from him again... The fortune and or misfortune of war

  • @TonyFreeman-LocoTonyF
    @TonyFreeman-LocoTonyF3 жыл бұрын

    My father, born 1931, used to tell me stories of seeing the German PWs at the camp in Opelika, Alabama, his home-town. I've personally seen the last remaining block building of it when I was a teenager in the 1970s. My father told me the Germans made knives of some sort in that building, as a camp industry. He didn't know what type. Someone should make a documentary about it, too.

  • @PacoOtis
    @PacoOtis2 жыл бұрын

    We're back! Showing your excellent video to some friends! This is so very well done and so informative! Thanks so much for educating and sharing and the very best of luck!!

  • @MrThailik
    @MrThailik3 жыл бұрын

    Nice to have a documentary without loud music blasting out in the background .

  • @WilliamViets
    @WilliamViets3 жыл бұрын

    Many POWs in Canadian camps used the honor system since there was no way any escapees could get anywhere far away in the Canadian Rockies.

  • @alfavulcan4518
    @alfavulcan4518 Жыл бұрын

    Heard a story at a POW museum near Waco of a German pow who kept escaping. He was well known a local bar and was never hard to re-capture

  • @ropadres
    @ropadres3 жыл бұрын

    The U505 sits in Chicago - My dad helped capture it - Love that sub -

  • @grammy965

    @grammy965

    3 жыл бұрын

    That's amazing !

  • @cliff8669

    @cliff8669

    3 жыл бұрын

    Read the story of that as a Teen. In the early 2000's I went to Chicago to see it. Amazed at how tight and cramped it was inside. I had the oddest feelings standing there and seeing in my minds eye the crew at work. My understanding is that it went to Chicago because that is where Admiral Gallery was from there.

  • @Dive-Bar-Casanova

    @Dive-Bar-Casanova

    3 жыл бұрын

    Can you imagine the Huevos it took to climb down in that sub to capture and save it?

  • @cliff8669

    @cliff8669

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@Dive-Bar-Casanova Lot bigger pair than some have today.

  • @dereknordbye1408
    @dereknordbye14083 жыл бұрын

    My goodness!!!! That former German POW STILL HAD THE BASEBALL THAT HE WAS TAUGHT TO THROW ALL THOSE YEARS LATER!!!!!!! Awesome tribute to a person's humane treatment of another!!!!

  • @tancreddehauteville764
    @tancreddehauteville7642 жыл бұрын

    The POWs who ended up in the US/Canada were the lucky ones. The ones who were classified as 'disarmed enemy personnel' at the end of the war were not. They were left to rot in the Rheinwieser camps and many thousands died.

  • @manuelbearley6711
    @manuelbearley6711 Жыл бұрын

    The chapel Matt's Kustom Kreations mentioned in his comment that Italian POW's built still exists at Camp Atterbery. It has been sealed off with plexiglass but is a beautiful example of their excellent craftsmanship.

  • @sandspar
    @sandspar Жыл бұрын

    German PoWs started a vineyard near the local camp in hopes of recreating the renowned wine of the Rhineland. Weather was too hot in the summer and too cold in winter, but it was a grand gesture at the time that I wish could have succeeded.

  • @royparker7856
    @royparker78563 жыл бұрын

    There were some held in Ga also. Some worked on our farm. My grandfather told me stories of the prisoners, some of whom were university educated men who had been conscripted into the military. This year I found a letter from one of them to my grandfather written in 1947.

  • @ivywilliams9427

    @ivywilliams9427

    3 жыл бұрын

    how intereating that they have kept good communication. thank you for sharing your story.

  • @MrOhmikey

    @MrOhmikey

    2 жыл бұрын

    post the letter.

  • @LPBTV
    @LPBTV3 жыл бұрын

    If you love this video, check out LPB's War & History playlist to find more programs to watch - kzread.info/head/PL7YPMkCACwzyY5Vn3S5JUgudxbLdGgEZX

  • @gwine9087
    @gwine9087 Жыл бұрын

    My step-father was a prison guard in Western Canada, during the war. He said they had no problems with the prisoners, mainly, because they had nowhere to go, if they escaped.

  • @wittwittwer1043
    @wittwittwer10433 жыл бұрын

    My Pappy was a 2nd Lt, part of the cadre forming the 164th Engineer Combat Battalion at Camp Swift, TX, when he wrote his wife a letter on Sept 14, 1943. Here is an excerpt: "There are a bunch of German Prisoners of war just across the street. They are really beautiful Physical specimens. There being worked like the devil to[o]. There is one German 1st Lt. in charge of the men, but guards are in charge of the Lt."

  • @charlesparker361
    @charlesparker3613 жыл бұрын

    I live not very faf from Ruston. There were smaller satellite camps nearby us.I was born in 46 so I don't remember them, but know many who do. One friend from Start, La knew a pow who came and worked on their farm . He stayed at their house often, and they liked him. He was not a Nazi, just a soldier.

  • @duaneoestreich2792
    @duaneoestreich2792 Жыл бұрын

    My Father was born here in 1926.. My grandfather sent him back when he turned 18 speaking fluent German. Drove for Patton, German officer's. Couldn't believe how old school his German was... I was the 2nd born here. 1966.... 🇩🇪 🇺🇸

  • @johnwood551
    @johnwood5513 жыл бұрын

    The Head of the Math Dept at my College in Texas was an ex PW from Germany. He said life was so much better in the camps than back in Germany he decided to stay here after the war . He became a U.S. Citizen and a math teacher . The people in the U.S. today that hate America have NO idea what Fascism REALLY is. Germany, Italy etc showed the world how NOT to Be.

  • @raymondmuench3266

    @raymondmuench3266

    8 ай бұрын

    I fear we might find out what real fascism is! How cavalier is the attire of some politicians to the Constitution they swore to uphold, protect, and defend.

  • @rongilbert4025
    @rongilbert40253 жыл бұрын

    We had a pow camp at the Rock Island Arsenal in Rock Island Illinois. Some of my aunts would recall that while they were attending movies, pows would be brought in and seated in the theater with them. Thinking on how the Japanese treated pows I would have rather been interned here in the States, lol, as a German.

  • @shubhamdubey1732
    @shubhamdubey17323 жыл бұрын

    Americans are really nice Love from Indian brothers🇮🇳❤🇺🇲

  • @hutch1111111

    @hutch1111111

    3 жыл бұрын

    Except these POWs, that had killed or tried to kill American soldiers had more rights than the Black citizens living in the area.

  • @achord9204

    @achord9204

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yes, and we are so incredibly stupid at times. The hate is unbelievable. We were way too nice to nazi’s

  • @davidjose9808

    @davidjose9808

    Жыл бұрын

    I have some dear Indian-American friends. Gracious, courteous, hard-working and family oriented. A definite asset to American life are these lovely folks.

  • @subatomic3600
    @subatomic36003 жыл бұрын

    4000 very lucky German men. I bet they all stayed after the war.

  • @tomservo5347

    @tomservo5347

    2 жыл бұрын

    Most of them had to do a few years time as prisoners in England. (Some even unlucky enough to get transferred to 'Soviet care'.) My relative who was a POW said he was sent to some cold, wet castle in Scotland for nearly 2 years where many of them became sick. He finally made it back to West Germany around 1947.

  • @michaelplanchunas3693
    @michaelplanchunas36932 жыл бұрын

    One of the stories I heard was a POW camp close to Phoenix had the city reroute a bus route to stop at the POW camp gate to let off POW escapees who wanted a 'night on the town'. Afterwards they would get on the bus and tell the driver "POW". They would be punished but said it was worth it.

  • @KPearce57
    @KPearce573 жыл бұрын

    My Father was a Merchant Marine WWII , on return trips from Europe they would haul POWs back to the USA, he had a wrist watch that he traded cigarettes for, he never wore it but kept it his keep sakes .

  • @PacoOtis
    @PacoOtis3 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the video as we found it quite thought provoking.

  • @billymule961
    @billymule9613 жыл бұрын

    Those re-enactors are a little too broad in the beam to be somewhat believable.

  • @davidjose9808

    @davidjose9808

    Жыл бұрын

    What a distraction…those fat Americans made me feel embarrassed

  • @wisconsinfarmer4742

    @wisconsinfarmer4742

    2 күн бұрын

    I know. it was still cute though

  • @alabamamothman2986
    @alabamamothman29863 жыл бұрын

    There were German POWs here in Alabama. They were allowed to work in shops and farms. Many stayed in the US after the war. We have a German community just down the road.

  • @movinginstereo40
    @movinginstereo403 жыл бұрын

    Interesting, back in 77, my mom and dad would take us out for a weekend picnic. We ended up one day outside of El Reno, Oklahoma at an area that was owned by OSU. It was agriculture extension if my memory is correct. They had a huge playground and just west of it a pretty good size cemetery that had a stone wall around it that was maybe three feet high. This cemetery had a divider stone wall within it running north to south. While walking on the stone wall and exploring my brother and I noticed the western divided side had unusual headstones. It turned out to be gravestones of German and Italian pow’s that passed away. They were also all officers, no enlisted men. Later on my dad found out it was a site of a WW2 POW camp. Strictly for officers only. I tried finding it a couple years back while traveling through Oklahoma but gave up on it as we didn’t have the time. I hadn’t been back to the area in couple decades as I joined the US Navy in 80 and my dad had transferred away having worked for the FAA around 84 timeframe.

  • @rikijett310
    @rikijett3102 жыл бұрын

    Looks like this camp was a better life than many people are living now 80+ years later.

  • @EddieLeal
    @EddieLeal3 жыл бұрын

    You know you ran a decent POW camp when you have people wanting to come back after the war to visit. 😉Unlike some places we would not like to mention.

  • @Dbanj598

    @Dbanj598

    3 жыл бұрын

    Russland

  • @stefandulisch6234

    @stefandulisch6234

    3 жыл бұрын

    Guantanamo?

  • @georgesakellaropoulos8162

    @georgesakellaropoulos8162

    2 жыл бұрын

    Former POWs have visited Changi also. The fact that a prisoner of war was well treated doesn't mean they won't return, if only for some closure and to honor their dead friends.

  • @yourfriendlyneighborhoodcl4824

    @yourfriendlyneighborhoodcl4824

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@stefandulisch6234 its cia operated what did you expect

  • @rogerd777
    @rogerd777 Жыл бұрын

    At Camp Atterbury, Indiana which still exists as an active training post operated by the Indiana National Guard, there there was a large POW camp for German and Italian POWs. The Italians built a chapel where the prisoners sat outside on benches and the alter was inside. It was elaborately decorated by the POWs. It was restored in the 1990s and still stands today. It is the only remnant of the POW camp. Camp Atterbury was heavily used to train troops who were about to deploy to Iraq and Afghanistan in last 20 years.

  • @CatalinaThePirate
    @CatalinaThePirate3 жыл бұрын

    👍 Very interesting vid, thanks for posting. 😏 The U-505 U-boat was eventually acquired by Chicago's Science and Industry museum, and was put on exhibit. You were able to walk through a part of it. I grew up in a suburb of Chicago, and if our school took us on a field trip to the S&I museum I always wanted to visit the U-505. Fascinating. 😊

  • @CatalinaThePirate

    @CatalinaThePirate

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Legion 57 Ha, I really loved going in that U-Boat. It truly stirred the imagination. I know my classmates thought I was crazy, but I didn't care. They could go through the interactive section of the museum and push buttons and turn cranks all day. I was happy to be able to visit the U-505. 😏 We were lucky... Chicago has some of the best museums. 😼

  • @billkaldem1737

    @billkaldem1737

    3 жыл бұрын

    I’ve been through it a couple of times. Very interesting

  • @CatalinaThePirate

    @CatalinaThePirate

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@billkaldem1737 😏 It's been years since I've been back to Chicago, and to be honest I only had about a half day to run around to some old stomping grounds before I had to get back. I spent my time at the Art Institute, visiting some 'old friends' (paintings, sculptures). My next thought was to go to the Field Museum of Natural History... It's a wonder I didn't think about the old U-505... I live near Los Angeles CA now, but I miss Chicago. L.A. is a base, for me, but Chicago has my heart. 💕

  • @billkaldem1737

    @billkaldem1737

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@CatalinaThePirate my parents were from Joliet. Got to the museum while visiting. I don’t believe I’ve ever been through the entire thing

  • @timdodd979

    @timdodd979

    3 жыл бұрын

    They moved the U-505 indoors now. Great Museum.

  • @runninggirl2765
    @runninggirl27652 жыл бұрын

    My uncle was a POW in Germany. He weighed 185 pounds when captured and 115 when the war ended. His food was nearly rotten potatoes, bread and a thin soup most days. Although I enjoyed this video, it was hard to watch the German prisoners playing soccer, sleeping in clean barracks and eating good meals. Thank you for sharing this though. Very interesting.

  • @BasementEngineer

    @BasementEngineer

    Жыл бұрын

    R.G.: I'm sure you are aware that you Americans and the Brits bombed everything that moved in Germany, including transport trucks and trains trying to bring supplies to the prisoner camps. So if your uncle came home alive, thank a German. That your uncle came home a walking skeleton, thank a Brit or your countrymen.

  • @davidhoffman1278
    @davidhoffman12783 жыл бұрын

    The food issue is understandable. Army Quartermaster told to meet Geneva Convention standards for POWs He does so by providing similar rations that US Army troops would get at a stationary Army base in the UK. Some of those rations might include sugar and chocolate which were only available with ration vouchers in the USA. Similarly with other foods. It would have been an easy way to satisfy Red Cross inspectors and avoid accusations of not making an effort at feeding POWs properly. From what I have read the POWs had extensive vegetable gardens. These gardens allowed the creation of vegetable meals that the POWs were quite satisfied with. They didn't need meat dishes at every meal everyday. There was some fresh fruit also.

  • @G-Mastah-Fash

    @G-Mastah-Fash

    3 жыл бұрын

    Pretty sure they weren't used to that in Germany either.

  • @ytucharliesierra

    @ytucharliesierra

    3 жыл бұрын

    The cooks mentioned in this excellent documentary must have been naval cooks and traditionally these are of high standard.

  • @davidhoffman1278

    @davidhoffman1278

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@ytucharliesierra , Navy chefs make the best cinnamon rolls and the best cinnamon apple pies in the DoD.

  • @ytucharliesierra

    @ytucharliesierra

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@davidhoffman1278 They have to if they don't want to get keelhawled. Lol

  • @112chapters3
    @112chapters3 Жыл бұрын

    My grandfather had a terrible time in Germany at a pow camp. He ended up losing his leg, he fell from the guard tower.

  • @glennbrymer4065
    @glennbrymer40653 жыл бұрын

    Great video. Loved the ending. The info about the captured sub and Enigma code was news to me. Thank you.

  • @EricPalmerBlog

    @EricPalmerBlog

    3 жыл бұрын

    And you can visit the U-505 (Type IXC) in Chicago. 1941 an earlier variant of the U-505 a type IXB, the U-110 was captured. Not too long later in 1941, a Type VIIC was captured.

  • @jeffreymcfadden9403
    @jeffreymcfadden94033 жыл бұрын

    I knew a former German soldier from WW2. He came to the USA after the war and worked in a local hobby shop in Ohio after he retired. He was captured by the Brits in Denmark.(he had also fought on the eastern front.) Often, a customer would pick up a model of a T34 tank and ask he if he remembered these? Sadly, Ulrich passed away in the early 2000s.

  • @edgarvalderrama1143
    @edgarvalderrama11433 жыл бұрын

    I met an interesting P. W. that was sweeping the floor at Camp Campbell right after WWII. He claimed to be Finish and a nephew of Jan Sibelius. At the time a lot of them claimed they weren't German. I believe, though, that he was who he claimed to be. I was a classical music lover. (rare) We had great musical conversations and even managed to listen to music together.

  • @manjelos

    @manjelos

    3 жыл бұрын

    After 1943 due lack of men every body could join german army. There was Letonian, Estonian, Swedish, Norwegian, Dutch, Danish or even Bosnian, Serbian, Russian or French. In north Africa there was soldiers of Wehrmacht that was not really fit in Hitlers image of german soldier. Some of them was even black.

  • @carythompson1711

    @carythompson1711

    3 жыл бұрын

    Coming down from the top of the Pyrenees, I saw a rough-hewn man, with a musical folder open in front of him. I asked him what he was doing in he covered it self-consciously. I was in his inner mind. He said he taught infants to sing. And the language that's best to teach infants to sing in is Finnish, it's not Scandinavian.. Indo-asian, semi tonal. I said my daughter-in-law is from reaching up that, Country, Rekella. He said no, it's a street in a town and pulled out a receipt he had; with that on it. He had been there. As I told the story to a member of Mensa who had share that partner desk with my father, he said his grandmother hit song into sleep with songs in Finnish.

  • @chrille2409
    @chrille24093 жыл бұрын

    Very interesting report, was a pleasure to watch!

  • @niccadoodles
    @niccadoodles3 жыл бұрын

    I had no idea this was happening in 2007. Thanks you.

  • @Shelleyshelleyxyz
    @Shelleyshelleyxyz Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for sharing.

  • @oldman2800
    @oldman28003 жыл бұрын

    Same in Oz, Italian POWs were brought to a small town camp in isolated out back Australia then released to work locally employed ,many near the small town of Griffith. After the war many returned to Griffith with their families as Italy was destitute. Today Griffith is the most cosmopolitan city in Australia with migrants from all over the world in the outback of Australia ,my sister married a migrant Italian boy and today live in Wagga city with children who have married partners from Ireland, Korea, Italy and Britain. We reckon their grandchildren are pure bred Australians

  • @stevenmoomey2115
    @stevenmoomey21153 жыл бұрын

    They had a German PW Camp just down the road from where I live. Don’t know too much about the camp, pretty much everyone from back then has died. I do know that some German PW’s emigrated back to this area, after being returned to Germany. Would be nice if someone would do a documentary on this camp, that was so close to Washington DC.

  • @OcotilloTom
    @OcotilloTom3 жыл бұрын

    My mother in Monroe, Louisiana remembers a German prison camp there in West Monroe and seeing them working on the roads. They wore clothing with a big P.W. on the back of their shirts.

  • @hadleyscott1160
    @hadleyscott11603 жыл бұрын

    I’m in central Penna. At Fort Indiantown Gap, now hdqtfs. To the PA National Guard the German POWS there liked it because Many of the locals spoke a German/Dutch language and still do.

  • @ScottRothsroth0616

    @ScottRothsroth0616

    3 жыл бұрын

    Some of the POWs at Ft. Indiantown Gap probably had relatives in Germantown, Philadelphia, PA.

  • @Safari3601
    @Safari36013 жыл бұрын

    A camp was located in Welsh Louisiana, I was in the barracks as a teenager in the seventies. Building were being used by a local TV repair shop for warehouse.