Afrika Corps Soldiers near what would become the Villages.

Closed Thread
Thread Tools
  #1  
Old 03-28-2017, 08:14 AM
Taltarzac725's Avatar
Taltarzac725 Taltarzac725 is offline
Sage
Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 49,374
Thanks: 9,429
Thanked 3,316 Times in 2,053 Posts
Default Afrika Corps Soldiers near what would become the Villages.

Quote:
German soldiers once built houses and picked fruit in Lake County. During World War II, the area fronting U.S. Highway 441 and in front of the Lake-Sumter State College Learning Center served as a prisoner-of-war camp for German soldiers and pilots. The quarters had been the temporary home of the 313th Air Corps Fighter Squadron, while they trained for the invasion of Normandy on June 6, 1944, across the street at the U.S. Army Air Base — now Leesburg International Airport. The first batch of prisoners — about 250 from Field Marshall Erwin Rommel's elite Afrika Korps — arrived in March 1944.
This was on The Daily Commercial Facebook page and I thought some people on TOTV would enjoy seeing it. I have always been a history buff getting my 2nd BA in History. And writing historically themed papers for the U of MN Law School on the Antarctic Treaty and enforcing it as well as another on loopholes MN lawyers found in the Prohibition Laws.

I believe there is a small dog park in that area where the Rommel troops might have been in 1944 till until they shut it down.
  #2  
Old 03-30-2017, 12:53 PM
Bavarian Bavarian is offline
Veteran member
Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: Bridgeport Village at Laurel Valley
Posts: 778
Thanks: 55
Thanked 4 Times in 4 Posts
Default

There needs to be a historic monument placed there to honor the bravery of the Afirka Korp interned there.
__________________
Kyrie Eleison
Philadelphia(Germantown) 20 years, Brandywine Hundred, DE 3 years, St. Mary's County, MD 38 years, Villages
  #3  
Old 03-30-2017, 04:24 PM
manaboutown manaboutown is offline
Sage
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: NJ, NM, SC, PA, DC, MD, VA, NY, CA, ID and finally FL.
Posts: 7,410
Thanks: 12,939
Thanked 4,619 Times in 1,763 Posts
Default

My very best friend during grade school had emigrated with his parents from post war Germany. His father, a physician specializing in high altitude and aviation medicine, had been stationed with the Afrika Korps for two years. His father later worked with US astronauts. My friend became a research oriented MD who in the early 1980's went back to Berlin where he became a professor/researcher.
__________________
"No one is more hated than he who speaks the truth." Plato

“To argue with a person who has renounced the use of reason is like administering medicine to the dead.” Thomas Paine
  #4  
Old 03-30-2017, 07:01 PM
Taltarzac725's Avatar
Taltarzac725 Taltarzac725 is offline
Sage
Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 49,374
Thanks: 9,429
Thanked 3,316 Times in 2,053 Posts
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by manaboutown View Post
My very best friend during grade school had emigrated with his parents from post war Germany. His father, a physician specializing in high altitude and aviation medicine, had been stationed with the Afrika Korps for two years. His father later worked with US astronauts. My friend became a research oriented MD who in the early 1980's went back to Berlin where he became a professor/researcher.
That's really good story. Thanks manaboutown.
  #5  
Old 03-30-2017, 10:29 PM
RickeyD's Avatar
RickeyD RickeyD is offline
Soaring Eagle member
Join Date: Sep 2014
Posts: 2,410
Thanks: 0
Thanked 5 Times in 5 Posts
Default

My father was working Shore Patrol in Brooklyn, 1946. A German POW who at that time were allowed to walk the streets asked him for a light. Dad slipped on his brass knuckles and put him down. A small piece of unwritten history that poor soldier probably never forgot.
  #6  
Old 03-31-2017, 07:45 AM
NotGolfer NotGolfer is offline
Sage
Join Date: Dec 2011
Location: The Villages
Posts: 3,900
Thanks: 2,573
Thanked 962 Times in 391 Posts
Default

I grew up in Southern Minnesota but didn't learn until recent years that there was a German prisoner of war camp not far from there. I don't recall the town now...but it may have been Owatonna. I would venture to guess there were several throughout the U.S. during that time.
  #7  
Old 03-31-2017, 08:44 AM
Taltarzac725's Avatar
Taltarzac725 Taltarzac725 is offline
Sage
Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 49,374
Thanks: 9,429
Thanked 3,316 Times in 2,053 Posts
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by NotGolfer View Post
I grew up in Southern Minnesota but didn't learn until recent years that there was a German prisoner of war camp not far from there. I don't recall the town now...but it may have been Owatonna. I would venture to guess there were several throughout the U.S. during that time.
The secret history of prisoner-of war-camps in Minnesota | Minnesota Public Radio News

Looks like Minnesota had more than 15 POW camps for German prisoners. 400,000 men came to MN. They picked up a lot of the labor shortage from Minnesotans fighting in WWII.

As an aside, have you watched the movie Fargo or seen the Series of the same name? They seem a bit heavy on the Minnesotan accent. I met hundreds of Minnesotas in Middlebrook Hall (an about 12 story residence hall on the U of MN Minneapoils campus) and was at the U of MN Law School first as a student and then as a cataloging/reference librarian. I cataloged all the WESTLAW files for a national project started by one of the U of MN Law Librarians among others. This was from late Summer of 1986 through late November of 1991 that I lived in the Twin Cities.

Also like to see how the books by John Sandford ( various Prey books and other series) portray Minnesota, Wisconsin and other places.

I had never been to Minnesota in 1986 but my double cousin Tom married into a very large Irish family in Edina, MN and they said that I would like it there. For the most part they were right. And the U of MN was the highest ranked of the law schools I managed to get into at about 17th in the US according to some of the rating systems.
  #8  
Old 03-31-2017, 10:21 AM
manaboutown manaboutown is offline
Sage
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: NJ, NM, SC, PA, DC, MD, VA, NY, CA, ID and finally FL.
Posts: 7,410
Thanks: 12,939
Thanked 4,619 Times in 1,763 Posts
Default

New Mexico had several POW camps. They housed not only German POWs but Japanese and Italian as well. The largest was just outside Roswell (so the later alleged UFO landing did not bring the first aliens to Roswell). Most of the prisoners worked on farms. Some even worked in Roswell itself.

POW Camps in New Mexico

The Iron Cross war memorial is in a park there. Roswell German Iron Cross and POW/MIA Park - War Memorials HQ

Ironically the atomic bomb was being developed just a couple hundred miles away in Los Alamos. Its test occurred near Alamogordo, not very far from Roswell.
__________________
"No one is more hated than he who speaks the truth." Plato

“To argue with a person who has renounced the use of reason is like administering medicine to the dead.” Thomas Paine
Closed Thread

Tags
soldiers, , air, history, u.s


You are viewing a new design of the TOTV site. Click here to revert to the old version.

All times are GMT -5. The time now is 01:01 AM.