More than four hundred thousand prisoners of war were interned in the United States during World War II. Of the total number of prisoners, 87 percent were German, 12 percent Italians, and one percent Japanese. In order to accommodate these prisoners new prisoner-of-war base and branch camps were constructed throughout the country. Most of the camps were located on existing military reservations, and some were constructed strictly for the internment of prisoners of war. By April, 1945, there were one hundred and fifty base camps and over three hundred branch or temporary camps in the United States. During the war the War Department substituted the policy of maximum utilization for maximum security of the prisoners. The third section of Part ...
In lieu of an abstract, below is the first paragraph of the paper. After the American involvement in...
Like many states during World War II, Maine faced a severe labor shortage at a time when wartime nee...
Of the approximately 130,000 American prisoners of war (POWs) in World War II (WWII), 27,000 or more...
The purpose of this study is to examine and evaluate the development of prisoner of war administrati...
In 1942 successful Allied campaigns against Adolf Hitler\u27s Wehrmact in North Africa led to widesp...
A detailed account of the conditions and general operation of POW camps that held captured German so...
During World War II the United States housed over 400,000 Prisoners of War across the United States....
World War II left thousands of Allied POWs in the hands of Japanese and German military officials. P...
Despite the plethora of material written on the history of prisoners-of-war in the Second World War,...
Local histories help explain the daily experiences of the average citizen on a micro level, leading ...
This article explores the contradictions between the bracero program and the tempo-rary labor progra...
An important aspect of the impact of World War II on the American homefront that has not been widely...
The purpose of this study is to fill the void in scholarly literature on Mexican American Prisoners ...
Located in the heart of Wisconsin between Tomah and Sparta, Camp McCoy was the prisoner of war base ...
The Italian prisoners of war who came to the United States from North Africa and worked in the camps...
In lieu of an abstract, below is the first paragraph of the paper. After the American involvement in...
Like many states during World War II, Maine faced a severe labor shortage at a time when wartime nee...
Of the approximately 130,000 American prisoners of war (POWs) in World War II (WWII), 27,000 or more...
The purpose of this study is to examine and evaluate the development of prisoner of war administrati...
In 1942 successful Allied campaigns against Adolf Hitler\u27s Wehrmact in North Africa led to widesp...
A detailed account of the conditions and general operation of POW camps that held captured German so...
During World War II the United States housed over 400,000 Prisoners of War across the United States....
World War II left thousands of Allied POWs in the hands of Japanese and German military officials. P...
Despite the plethora of material written on the history of prisoners-of-war in the Second World War,...
Local histories help explain the daily experiences of the average citizen on a micro level, leading ...
This article explores the contradictions between the bracero program and the tempo-rary labor progra...
An important aspect of the impact of World War II on the American homefront that has not been widely...
The purpose of this study is to fill the void in scholarly literature on Mexican American Prisoners ...
Located in the heart of Wisconsin between Tomah and Sparta, Camp McCoy was the prisoner of war base ...
The Italian prisoners of war who came to the United States from North Africa and worked in the camps...
In lieu of an abstract, below is the first paragraph of the paper. After the American involvement in...
Like many states during World War II, Maine faced a severe labor shortage at a time when wartime nee...
Of the approximately 130,000 American prisoners of war (POWs) in World War II (WWII), 27,000 or more...