German prisoners of war in the United States
Members of the German military were interned as
. In all, 425,000 German prisoners lived in 700 camps throughout the United States during World War II.World War I
Hostilities ended six months after the United States saw its first action in World War I, and only a relatively small number of German prisoners of war reached the U.S.[1] Many prisoners were German sailors caught in port by U.S. forces far away from the European battlefield.[2] The first German POWs were sailors from SMS Cormoran, a German merchant raider anchored in Apra Harbor, Guam, on the day that war was declared.[3]
The
World War II
Background
After the United States entered World War II in 1941, the government of the United Kingdom requested American help with housing prisoners of war[11] due to a housing shortage in Britain, asking for the US to take 175,000 prisoners.[12][13] The United States reluctantly agreed to house them,[14]: 5 [11] although it was not prepared. Its military had only brief experience with a limited POW population in the last world war, and was unprepared for basic logistical considerations such as food, clothing and housing requirements of the prisoners.[15] Almost all German-speaking Americans were engaged overseas directly in combat efforts, and the American government feared the presence of Germans on U.S. soil would create a security problem and raise fear among civilians.[13]
Despite many "wild rumors" about how the
The Geneva Convention
The camps
The
Other than barbed wire and watchtowers, the camps resembled standard United States or German military training sites,
Work
The Geneva Convention's mandate of equal treatment for prisoners also meant they were paid American military wages.[22]: 78 [23] They could work on farms or elsewhere only if they were also paid for their labor, and officers could not be compelled to work. As the United States sent millions of soldiers overseas, the resulting shortage of labor eventually meant that German POWs worked toward the Allied war effort by helping out in canneries, mills, farms, and other places deemed a minimal security risk.[24][23]
A typical day for a German prisoner in Garden Grove, California:[25]
- 5:30 am - Reveille
- 7:30 am - Work begins at fruit orchards around Orange County, California. Quota is 36 boxes of oranges per prisoner
- Noon - Lunch. Prisoners who filled their quota return to camp
- 4:30 pm - End of work day
- 5:30 pm - Dinner
- Evening - Educational classes, films, and live performances by prisoners
- 10 pm - Bedtime
Prisoners could not be used in work directly related to the military or in dangerous conditions. The minimum pay for enlisted soldiers was $0.80 (equivalent to $15 in 2023) a day, roughly equivalent to the pay of an American private. In 1943 the government estimated that prisoner labor cost 50 to 75% of normal free labor. While language differences and risk of escape or unreliable work were disadvantages, prisoner workers were available immediately on demand and in the exact numbers needed. While prisoners on average worked more slowly and produced less than civilians, their work was also more reliable and of higher quality.[22]: 79, 82, 98 Prisoners who did not meet work quotas were imprisoned with bread and water as rations.[24]
Part of their wages helped pay for the POW program. The workers could use the rest at the camp canteen,[24][23] where fellow prisoners sold snacks, reading and writing material, playing cards, and tobacco products.[11] They were paid in scrip. All hard currency was confiscated with other personal possessions during initial processing, for return after the war as mandated by the convention. The concern was that money could be used during escape attempts.[26][22]: 78 The government received $22 million in 1944 from prisoner wages, and that year it estimated that it had saved $80 million by using prisoners in military installations.[14]: 6
Newspaper coverage of the camps and public knowledge were intentionally limited until the end of the war, in part to comply with the Geneva Convention and in part to avoid the fear of an enemy presence in such large numbers.
Labor Reports
Twice each month each prisoner of war camp was required to fill out WD AGO Form 19-21 and mail it to the Office of the Provost Marshal General, Washington 25, D.C., Attention: Prisoner of War Operations Division.
The report included the camp's name and address, the nationality of the prisoners, the total number of prisoners broken down by the number of officers, NCOs and privates, and the number of man-days worked by project in that camp during the reporting period. Sometimes additional remarks were included on the back of the form. For example, the additional remarks from Dos Palos POW Branch Camp for the period ending 12 February 1946 stated "1692 [German POWs] waiting for Repatriation CAMP CLOSED 12 February 1946."
Camp life
There were insufficient American guards, especially German speakers. They mostly supervised the German officers and NCOs who strictly maintained discipline.[15][28][14]: 33–34 [18] After an American guard who had fought in the Battle of the Bulge killed prisoners in Texas, other guards were given psychiatric tests and removed from duty if necessary.[23]
The Germans woke their own men, marched them to and from meals, and prepared them for work;[29] their routine successfully recreated the feel of military discipline for prisoners.[14]: 34 Prisoners had friendly interaction with local civilians[29][23] and sometimes were allowed outside the camps without guards on the honor system[16]: 104, 223 (Black American soldiers, including Rupert Trimmingham,[30] noted that German prisoners could visit restaurants that they could not because of Jim Crow laws.[22]: 52–53 [25]), luxuries such as beer and wine were sometimes available, and hobbies or sports were encouraged.[17] Alex Funke, who served as military chaplain to fellow PoWs at Camp Algona, wrote: "We all were positively impressed" by the U.S. and that "We all had been won over to friendly relations with" the U.S.[31] Indeed, unauthorized fraternization between American women and German prisoners was sometimes a problem.[23][18] Several camps held social receptions with local American girls, and some Germans met their future wives as prisoners.[16]: 25–26 [21]
Rations
When I was captured I weighed 128 pounds. After two years as an American POW weighed 185. I had gotten so fat you could no longer see my eyes.
— A German prisoner of war[16]: 208
Many prisoners found that their living conditions as prisoners were better than as civilians in
Groups of prisoners pooled their daily beer coupons to take turns drinking several at a time. They also received daily rations of cigarettes and frequently meat, both
Entertainment and education
Funke stated that "Nobody could become bored [as a prisoner]."
After the liberation of the Nazi concentration camps, films of the atrocities of the Holocaust were shown to the prisoners with armed Military Police present.[11] The footage engendered shock, anger, and disbelief; amazed and disbelieving prisoners nicknamed them knochen films ("films of bones"). However, many prisoners accepted the films as factual; after compulsory viewing of an atrocity film, 1,000 prisoners at Camp Butner burned their German uniforms.[18][22]: 119 Prisoners at other camps called on Germany to surrender. In an idea seriously considered but ultimately rejected by American military officials, a few prisoners even volunteered to fight in the war against Japan.[35]
Camps built libraries to organize their reading material[23] and prisoners often purchased their own, but they never had enough reading material, with an average of one half book per prisoner. The YMCA printed thousands of copies of books for the camps, and even provided bookbinding material so camps could repair them due to frequent use.[22]: 113
As a highly effective tool of reeducation after
Camps had subscriptions to American newspapers, and every camp published its own newspaper[33] with poetry and short stories, puzzles and games, listings of upcoming events, and classified ads.[21] Camp authorities recognized the periodicals' value in serving as creative outlets and as accurate indicators of the prisoners' views. The tone of their articles varied; some promoted Nazi ideology and foresaw German victory.[22]: 110–111 Even as Germany's defeat neared in early 1945, eight of 20 camp newspapers advocated Nazi ideology.[14]: 22
Many future German CEOs benefited from education they received as prisoners in the United States.[21] Educated prisoners such as future German cabinet member Walter Hallstein[16]: 150 taught classes on their areas of expertise including German, English and other foreign languages, business, and mathematics. The systematically taught courses were so successful that in May 1944 the German Ministry of Education and the OKW sent through the Red Cross detailed procedures for students to receive credit at German high schools and universities.[33] Some prisoners took correspondence classes through local universities, and German universities also accepted their credits after returning home.[15]
Prisoner resistance
Relying on Germans to discipline themselves, while efficient, also permitted committed groups of Nazi prisoners to exist despite American attempts to identify and separate them.[18] Members of the Afrika Korps, who had been captured early in the war,[11] during Germany's greatest military successes,[16]: 150–151 often led work stoppages, intimidated other prisoners, and held secret kangaroo court for those accused of disloyalty. Those convicted were sometimes attacked or killed in a process known as the "Holy Ghost"; most prisoner "suicides" were likely murders.[8][19][18] The U.S. military executed 14 Germans after the war for murdering other prisoners in three incidents. Eight others served time in prison in two separate murders.[37] However, dozens of such murders may have occurred.[16]: 158–159 Many devoted Nazis remained loyal to their political beliefs and expected a German victory until the Allies crossed the Rhine in March 1945; their faith amazed prisoners captured during and after the Battle of Normandy, who had more realistic views of the likely outcome of the war. In turn, the earlier prisoners often viewed the others with contempt, calling them "traitors" and "deserters". Fear of secret punishment by such men caused one prisoner to later state that "there was more political freedom in the German army than in an American prison camp." He and other anti-Nazis were sent to Camp Ruston to protect them,[16]: xx, 27, 114–115, 151, 153, 157, 161, 167–168 while an Oklahoma camp received Waffen-SS and prisoners who were violent or criticized cooperation with the captors.[18][24]
Prisoners regardless of ideology often taunted their captors, such as saluting with
On December 23, 1944, 25 German POWs broke out of Camp Papago Park in Arizona[38] by crawling along a 178-foot (54 m) tunnel.[39] By January the escapees were caught, in part because a river they intended to travel down by raft turned out to be a dry river bed.[40]
Special Projects Division
The OPMG began a formal reeducation program for German prisoners in fall 1943. Named the Special Projects Division (SPD) and directed by a group of university professors, the program published
SPD's efforts were unsuccessful. Many in the OPMG opposed the program, in part because they believed that changing most adults' basic philosophies and values was impossible and, if successful, might cause them to choose
After the war
The 3 years in the camp were no lost, useless time for us in the course of our lives, but a lifting experience, which has shaped us.
— Alex Funke, PoW and chaplain
Although they expected to go home immediately after the end of the war in 1945, the majority of German prisoners continued working in the United States until 1946—arguably violating the Geneva Convention's requirement of rapid repatriation—then spent up to three more years as laborers in France and the United Kingdom.[16]: ix, xxii, 26–27 [31] (see also German prisoners of war in the United Kingdom). In May 1945 the OPMG limited available food and ended canteen food sales. Civilians had complained that the prisoners were eating too well;[11] as the Geneva Convention no longer applied, and because of the atrocities discovered at concentration camps, prisoners' rations were cut and work loads were increased.[18]
Before being sent home prisoners were required to watch documentaries of the Nazi concentration camps. Scholar Arnold Krammer noted that in his years of interviewing prisoners he never met one who admitted to being a Nazi, and most Germans had some knowledge of the camps; however, how much those captured in North Africa knew of the Eastern Front—where most atrocities occurred—is unclear.[18] Funke, whom the Gestapo had considered politically unreliable before capture in North Africa because of his participation in the Confessing Church, said that while aware of Nazi persecution of Jews and the existence of concentration camps, he only learned of the extent of the Holocaust from media reports after the camps' liberation.[31]
Despite the delay in repatriation, Krammer reported that "I've yet to meet a German prisoner who doesn't tell me that it was the time of their lives."
The camps in the United States are otherwise what the Associated Press later called an "all but forgotten part of history", even though some former inmates went on to become prominent in postwar Germany. About 860 German POWs remain buried in 43 sites across the United States, with their graves often tended by local German Women's Clubs.[17] Even in the communities which formerly hosted POW camps for Germans, local residents often do not know the camps ever existed.[20][32] Reunions of camp inmates, their captors and local townspeople such as those held in Louisiana,[11] Maine, and Georgia have garnered press coverage and local interest for this unusual and infrequently mentioned aspect of the war on the American home front.[17][41]
There is at least one recorded attempt by US authorities to extract information from German POWs through
A total of 2,222 German POWs escaped from their camps. Most were recaptured within a day.
See also
- Populations at World War II prisoner-of-war camps in the United States
- List of World War II prisoner-of-war camps in the United States
- Building 98
- United States home front during World War I
- United States home front during World War II
- German prisoners of war in the Soviet Union
- German prisoners of war in northwest Europe
- Barbwire Bowl Classic
- SS United States Victory, 1946 exchanges
References
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- ^ "Blow Up Corman, Interned Gunboat," The New York Times, April 8, 1917. Retrieved March 28, 2011
- ^ Conrad, Dennis (28 March 2017). "The War Begins: The United States Navy and the German Cruiser Cormoran". The Sextant. Histories and Archives Division, Naval History and Heritage Command. Retrieved 6 March 2021.
- Yockelson, Mitchell, "The War Department: Keeper of Our Nation's Enemy Aliens During World War I,"Presentation to the Society for Military History Annual Meeting, April 1998. Retrieved March 28, 2011
- ^ Cunningham, Raymond K., Jr.,"Fort Douglas War Prison Barracks Three Prisoners Of War" Archived 2012-12-18 at the Wayback Machine, University of Utah Records Center. Retrieved March 28, 2011
- ^ Cunningham, Raymond K., Jr.,"German Prisoners 507 Strong, Join Interned Comrades" Archived 2012-12-18 at the Wayback Machine, University of Utah Records Center. Retrieved March 28, 2011
- ^ Lloyd, R. Scott, "Wreath-laying honors WWI German prisoners buried at Fort Douglas", Deseret News, November 14, 2010. Retrieved March 28, 2011.
- ^ a b Copeland, Susan, "Foreign Prisoners of War", The New Georgia Encyclopedia. Retrieved March 28, 2011
- ^ Janiskee, Bob, "Pruning the Parks: Chattanooga National Cemetery", NationalParksTraveler.com, December 25, 2009. Retrieved March 29, 2011
- ^ "Cemeteries - Fort Lyon National Cemetery," United States Department of Veterans Affairs. Retrieved March 29, 2011
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Camp Ruston: German P.O.W.'s in Louisiana (YouTube). Louisiana Public Broadcasting. 2007.
- ^ George G. Lewis; John Mehwa (1982). "History of Prisoner of War Utilization by the United States Army 1776-1945" (PDF). Center of Military History, United States Army. Retrieved 16 August 2020.
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- ^ ISBN 0-691-03700-0.
- ^ a b c d e Krammer, Arnold, "German Prisoners of War", Handbook of Texas Online. Published by the Texas State Historical Association. Retrieved March 28, 2011
- ^ ISBN 0-465-09120-2.
- ^ a b c d e f "Day of mourning will honor German POWs held in U.S.", NBC News.msn.com, November 15, 2004. Retrieved March 28, 2011.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Nazi POWs in America. History Channel. 2004-04-18.
- ^ a b c Corbett, William P., "Prisoner of War Camps" Archived 2017-12-28 at the Wayback Machine, Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture. Oklahoma Historical Society. Retrieved March 28, 2011
- ^ a b c d e Billinger, Dr. Robert D. Jr. (Spring 2008). "Enemies and Friends: POWs in the Tar Heel State" (PDF). Tar Heel Junior Historian. 47 (2). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-07-24.
- ^ ISBN 978-0275993009.
- ^ ISBN 978-1572337282.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Hawfield, Michael, "World War II camp had impact on city" Archived 2011-07-11 at the Wayback Machine, Fort Wayne News-Sentinel, December 15, 1990. Retrieved March 28, 2011
- ^ a b c d e f g Garcia, Malcolm J.,"German POWs on the American Homefront", Smithsonian.com, September 16, 2009. Retrieved March 28, 2011.
- ^ a b Lobdell, William (2004-04-12). "Story of Garden Grove's POWs Gathers Dust". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2023-01-07.
- ^ a b Sytko, Glenn, "German POWs in North America: The Journey to Prison Camps", Uboat.net. Retrieved 2012-09-06
- ^ a b Flynn, Jacob, "German POWs kept in Central Florida during WWII" Archived 2013-02-09 at archive.today, WestOrangeTimes.com. Retrieved March 28, 2011
- ^ a b Sytko, Glenn, "German POWs in North America", Uboat.net. Retrieved March 28, 2011
- ^ a b c Pepin, John, "POW Camps In the U.P.", The Mining Journal, Marquette Michigan. Retrieved March 28, 2011
- ^ Carroll, Andrew, ed. War Letters: Extraordinary Correspondence from American Wars (New York: Simon and Schuster, 2008), p. 315.
- ^ a b c d e Camp Algona POW Museum: Questions and Answers of Alex Funke Archived 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine, accessed April 2, 2011
- ^ a b Camp Algona POW Museum Archived 2011-07-25 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved March 28, 2011.
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- ISBN 978-1-58544-545-5, page 27.
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- ^ Robert C. Doyle (1999), A Prisoner's Duty: Great Escapes in U.S. Military History, Bantam Books. Page 317.
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External links
- Stibbe, Matthew: Enemy Aliens and Internment, in: 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War.
- Camp Atterbury — Italian and German POW Camp (Indiana)
- Camp Algona POW Museum (Iowa) Archived 2012-09-04 at the Wayback Machine
- Byu.edu: Extensive overview of World War I POW life
- Article describing World War I POW camp at Fort McPherson — Munsey's Magazine (1918).