- Camp Albuquerque
Camp Albuquerque was an American
World War II POW camp inAlbuquerque ,New Mexico that housed Italian and German prisoners of war. From this branch camp, the POWs did mostlyfarm labor, from 1943 to 1946. Most of these POWs were transferred fromCamp Roswell , which was a base or main POW camp for New Mexico.Camp Lordsburg , New Mexico, andCamp El Paso , Texas, were also base camps.History
Prisoners were transferred to Camp Albuquerque because it was closer to their work sites. These main and branch camps were part of a huge POW camp system spread across much of the United States. At its World War II peak, almost 426,000 prisoners - 371,683 German, 50,273 Italian, and 3,915 Japanese - were held in the United States. What began as a trickle with 1,881 POWs in the United States at the end of 1942, shot up to 172,879 by the end of 1943, and peaked at 425,871 on
V-E Day .From October 1943 Italian POWs were housed in
Rio Grande Park in formerCivilian Conservation Corps (CCC) barracks that had been built in the 1930s. The site was located north of the present dayRio Grande Zoo , founded in 1927. The Italian POWs all left six months later and as suddenly and inexplicably as they had arrived.From
25 July ,1944 until March 1946 German POWs, most of them captured in theNorth Africa campaign s, were housed in these same barracks buildings. The barracks had been hastily moved to South 2nd Street and onto eight acres at the north end of theSchwartzman property, and made ready for their arrival. Nervous Albuquerque citizens wanted them housed outside of the then city limits.Shifting prisoner populations and sudden transfers were the norm. This was done to weed out pro-
Nazi troublemakers, and to help break up escape attempts and their all important tunnel digging teams. In general, it kept the prisoners off balance. Still, three Germans did escape from Camp Albuquerque, but two were soon recaptured.At peak occupancy, sometime in 1945, there were 171 German POWs in branch Camp Albuquerque. They worked on the various farms from
Los Lunas toCorrales , helping in particular with the harvest in the fall. Presumably they also helped with the planting in the spring.ee also
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List of POW camps
*List of POW camps in Britain
*List of POW camps in Canada
*List of POW camps in the United States External links
*http://www.abqjournal.com/venue/travel/tourism/taste/355446metro05-29-05.htm
*http://www.abqjournal.com/venue/travel/tourism/taste/355448metro05-29-05.htm
*http://archives.nmsu.edu/rghc/index/pow/hanna.htmlFurther reading
*Billinger, Robert D. "Hitler's Soldiers in the Sunshine State: German Pows in Florida". 2000.
*Cowley, Betty. "Stalag Wisconsin: Inside WW II Prisoner of War Camps". 2002. ISBN 978-1878569837
*Fiedler, David Winston. "The Enemy Among Us: POWs in Missouri During World War II". 2003
*Gaertner, Georg. "Hitler's Last Soldier in America". 1985.
*Kiefer, Louis E. "Italian Prisoners of War in America, 1942-1946: Captives or Allies?" 1992.
*Koop, Allen V. "Stark Decency: German Prisoners of War in a New England Village". 1988.
*Krammer, Arnold. "Nazi Prisoners of War in America". 1996.
*Lewis, George C. and John Mewha. "History of Prisoner of War Utilization by the United States Army, 1776-1945". 1955.
*Moore, John Hammond. "The Faustball Tunnel: German POWs in America and Their Great Escape". 1978.
*Spidle, Jake W., Jr. "Axis Invasion of the American West: POWs in New Mexico, 1942-1946". "New Mexico Historical Review' (April 1974).
*Waters, Michael R. "Lone Star Stalag: German Prisoners of War at Camp Hearne". 2004.
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