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17-3-30 Garand Picture of the Day
He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain that which he cannot lose
There are no great men, only great challenges that ordinary men are forced by circumstances to meet.
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03-29-2017 12:39 PM
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It does make you wonder what the prisoners with raised hands had previously been told by their superiors as to what would happen to them if they were ever to surrender to American or British
soldiers.
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Most of those blokes look like they'd been recycled from 1914-18, so they probably weren't unfamiliar with what to expect having been there done that once before.
Now the young and impressionable new conscript; that would have been a different story.
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Originally Posted by
Paul S.
Most of those blokes look like they'd been recycled from 1914-18
And, they'd been through worse. That of course doesn't preclude the fear that grips you when under foreign guns.
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There use to be a German living just down the road, less than half a mile away from where I am now, who came to the U.K. as a P.O.W. and never did go back to Germany
because he liked living here. Or, as he use to say "I was treated so badly by the British
as a P.O.W. I decided to stay". I believe that quite a few ex German P.O.W.s stayed on in the U.K. after the war, arriving with absolutely nothing, but ending up making a life for themselves.
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Originally Posted by
Flying10uk
a few ex
German
P.O.W.s stayed on
A man I still know is second generation Canadian as his dad was Fallschirmjäger ... I ran parallel with him in service time... His dad was captured and sent to internment camp at Lethbridge Alberta to finish out the war. He worked on farms and such, learning English and what the farmland here was like. When he was force repatriated, as they all were, he grabbed his girl and returned to Canada
on the same ship as it sailed back. He built a life and lived so close to the same place he could stand on his roof and point out the old POW camp. His son was second gen Para as well...I think his dad is still living. I have a similar story about a Tiger tank commander...and his son.
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Not being a TR collector, but those uniforms look simiiar to Reichsbahn (Railroad) uniforms. That would account for the elderly men in uniform but not fighters.
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It's interesting that the P.O.W.s held in Canada
were "forced repatriated" at the end of the war because I believe that I'm correct in stating that the ones held in the U.K. had the option to simply stay on here.
There is a very interesting preserved German
P.O.W. camp here in the U.K. not far from York which is now open as a WW2/military museum and it is well worth a visit for anyone interested. The name of the place is Eden Camp. Award Winning Visitor Attraction, Malton, North Yorkshire - Eden Camp
Last edited by Flying10uk; 03-30-2017 at 01:41 PM.
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Our electron microscope tech at William Beaumont Army Medical center was a German
glider pilot in WW II. Our head of pharmacy at Med School had been a U boat commander in WW II. I met another man that was a German fighter pilot in WW II that was interned in the US and stayed after to go to school. They put him in with the rest of the vets in the dorm. He said they asked him if he was a veteran when he registered and he said yes. They didn't ask him which side. All very fine men.
Jerry Liles