Jump to content

Stalags XI-B, XI-D, and 357: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Changed date of liberation from May 1945 to actual date of April 16, 1945.
Line 26: Line 26:
===External links===
===External links===
*[http://www.wv-amexpow.org/POW%20bios%20w%20pics.htm WV-AmExPOW.org]
*[http://www.wv-amexpow.org/POW%20bios%20w%20pics.htm WV-AmExPOW.org]
*[http://www.nzetc.org/tm/scholarly/WH2-1Epi-fig-WH2-1Epi-h007a.html Sketch of Kommando Barracks attached to Stalag XIB (from New Zealand official history)]


[[Category:World War II POW camps]]
[[Category:World War II POW camps]]

Revision as of 22:57, 18 June 2008

Stalag XI-B was a German Army POW camp near Fallingbostel in Lower Saxony, north-western Germany.

Timeline

  • Originally a work camp at the west end of the huge German Army training grounds Bergen, it was transformed into a POW camp at the end of 1939, to serve as a base for prisoners working in Arbeitslager.
  • In July 1941 over 10,000 Soviet army officers were imprisoned here. Thousands of them died in the winter of 1941/42 as a result of a typhoid fever epidemic.
  • Later prisoners of many other nationalities were incarcerated here.
  • On 11 October 1944 475 women fighters of the Warsaw Uprising were transported to Fallingbostel. 90 officers and 9 orderlies were transferred to sub-camp Bergen-Belsen, then later transferred to Oflag IX-C in Molsdorf. The balance were later transferred to Stalag VI-C in Oberlangen.
  • In December 1944 members of the US Army 42nd Division, Co. B and G, 232 Infantry Regiment captured during the Battle of the Bulge were brought to Stlag XI-B.
  • On April 16, 1945 the camp was liberated by the British 8th Army.

Arbeitskommando

Close to 1,000 smaller Arbeitslager, called Arbeitskommandos were operated by this stalag, including:

  • Eibia GmbH, Bomlitz - production of explosives and gunpowder. Under the Third Geneva Convention the use of POWs for this type of work was prohibited. However the German Army used Soviet prisoners because for them they disregarded this prohibition.
  • Army Ammunition Factory, Muna

'

See also

Sources