- Ewell Ross McCright
Ewell Ross McCright, (
4 December 1917 -24 April 1990 ) of Benton, Saline County,Arkansas was acaptain in theUnited States Air Force duringWorld War II who was famous for maintaining secret journals detailing information about fellowprisoners of war while held captive in a German prison camp. For his actions, McCright was awarded theLegion of Merit posthumously in 2004.McCright was a bombardier on a
B-17 Flying Fortress bomber that was shot down overFrance on23 January 1943 . McCright was captured by German forces and taken to a German prisoner of war camp atZagan, Poland . McCright remained a prisoner until29 April 1945 , when his camp was liberated by theThird United States Army under GeneralGeorge S. Patton .During his captivity, McCright detailed the personal backgrounds and wartime injuries of 2,194 of his fellow prisoners in four journals, which he hid under the floorboards of the prisoner barracks. When he was transferred to another POW camp, McCright secretly carried the journals on a 34-mile forced march in place of food.
McCright's ledgers contained prisoner accounts of the gas chambers at
Auschwitz and details of Nazi atrocities such as the use of dogs to attack prisoners and medical experiments conducted on the prisoners. McCright's journals were presented as evidence before the alliedwar crime s trials atNuremberg .The ledgers were published in 1994 by Arnold Wright of
Benton, Arkansas under the title "Behind the Wire: Stalag Luft III, South Compound". McCright's work provided comfort for many families seeking information about the status of their loved ones.In 2004, McCright was the first recipient of the
Legion of Merit to receive the award for activities conducted while a prisoner of war.McCright became an
attorney after the war and served in theArkansas House of Representatives from 1951 to 1953. He died on 24 April 1990 at the age of seventy-two. He is buried at SalemCemetery in Saline County.
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