A detailed account of the conditions and general operation of POW camps that held captured German soldiers on US soil during the Second World War. As many documents pertaining to this were (or even remain) classified, this study provides a particular unique perspective with the author speaking directly from his experiences working at a number of POW camps during the war
In 1942 successful Allied campaigns against Adolf Hitler\u27s Wehrmact in North Africa led to widesp...
North Dakota Prisoner of War Report by George Wenger (1915-2001) of Flasher. Wenger was a POW of Ger...
The McNair Scholars Program prepares undergraduate students for graduate studies by providing opport...
The purpose of this study is to examine and evaluate the development of prisoner of war administrati...
More than four hundred thousand prisoners of war were interned in the United States during World War...
An important aspect of the impact of World War II on the American homefront that has not been widely...
Despite the plethora of material written on the history of prisoners-of-war in the Second World War,...
These supplementary materials provide visual evidence of the location of German prisoners of war hel...
Little research has been conducted into the practices of American prisoner of war administration dur...
Local histories help explain the daily experiences of the average citizen on a micro level, leading ...
Located in the heart of Wisconsin between Tomah and Sparta, Camp McCoy was the prisoner of war base ...
The article examines the process of theoretical formulation and practical implementation of “denazif...
This dissertation examines German prisoners of war (POWs) in the USSR from 1941 to 1956. The Soviet ...
World War II left thousands of Allied POWs in the hands of Japanese and German military officials. P...
Among the many German immigrants to the United States over the years, one group is unusual: former p...
In 1942 successful Allied campaigns against Adolf Hitler\u27s Wehrmact in North Africa led to widesp...
North Dakota Prisoner of War Report by George Wenger (1915-2001) of Flasher. Wenger was a POW of Ger...
The McNair Scholars Program prepares undergraduate students for graduate studies by providing opport...
The purpose of this study is to examine and evaluate the development of prisoner of war administrati...
More than four hundred thousand prisoners of war were interned in the United States during World War...
An important aspect of the impact of World War II on the American homefront that has not been widely...
Despite the plethora of material written on the history of prisoners-of-war in the Second World War,...
These supplementary materials provide visual evidence of the location of German prisoners of war hel...
Little research has been conducted into the practices of American prisoner of war administration dur...
Local histories help explain the daily experiences of the average citizen on a micro level, leading ...
Located in the heart of Wisconsin between Tomah and Sparta, Camp McCoy was the prisoner of war base ...
The article examines the process of theoretical formulation and practical implementation of “denazif...
This dissertation examines German prisoners of war (POWs) in the USSR from 1941 to 1956. The Soviet ...
World War II left thousands of Allied POWs in the hands of Japanese and German military officials. P...
Among the many German immigrants to the United States over the years, one group is unusual: former p...
In 1942 successful Allied campaigns against Adolf Hitler\u27s Wehrmact in North Africa led to widesp...
North Dakota Prisoner of War Report by George Wenger (1915-2001) of Flasher. Wenger was a POW of Ger...
The McNair Scholars Program prepares undergraduate students for graduate studies by providing opport...