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Luftwaffe and Axis Air Forces Please use this forum to discuss the German Luftwaffe and the Air Forces of its Allies. |
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Stalag IIIa and Stalag Luft IV Question
I'm trying to resolve some confusion I have about Stalag Luft IV and Stalag IIIa (Luft IIIa?). I have a friend who was a ball turret gunner, therefore an NCO, on a B17 late in the war. He was shot down and taken prisoner by Serbians. I've heard him mention that he was in Stalag IIIa and being forced to march for a month or two to another camp before being liberated at the end of the war.
I looked up his name in the US POW registry and it says that he was in"Stalag Luft IV Gross-Tychow (formerly Heydekrug) Pomerania, Prussia (moved to Wobbelin Bei Ludwigslust) (Usedom Bei Savenmunde) 54-16." I doubt that he was marched from IIIa to IV because I understand that Stalag Luft IV was the starting point for the "Death March" of 1945. Could Stalag IIIa have been the final camp from which he was liberated? Can anyone shed some light on this? Thanks, Paul |
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Re: Stalag IIIa and Stalag Luft IV Question
Paul,
Stalag IIIA was, as you no doubt know, at Luckenwalde south of Berlin. According to Nichol and Rennell's "The Last Escape" the Stalag Luft IV evacuation route was from Gross Tychow via Swinemunde, Gallin, Ludwigslust and finally to Stalag XIB and 357 at Fallingbostel.(map page 106). Another POW evacuation route was from Stalag Luft VII at Bankau (on the Polish border), to satalag 355 at Lamsdorf, Stalag VIIIA at Goerlitz and hence to Stalag IIIA at Luckenwalde. (Map pages151/2). I would have to say that I am currently reading this book and am on page 120 which is part way through the "Death March" from Stalag Luft IV so cannot add any more info at this time. Hopefully someone else has read this book completely and can add some additional detail about these harrowing marches.
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Best Regards Andy Mitchell LuftwaffeData Wiki including the history of Aufklgr. 122 |