The Okie Legacy: List of World War II Prisoner of War Camps in the USA

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Volume 14 , Issue 17

2012

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List of World War II Prisoner of War Camps in the USA

In the United States, at the end of World War II there were 175 Branch Camps serving 511 Area Camps containing over 425,000 prisoners of war (mostly German). The camps were located all over the US but were mostly in the South because of the expense of heating the barracks. Eventually, every state with the exception of Nevada, North Dakota, and Vermont had POW camps.

The following is an incomplete list of POW camps in the United States during World War II.

  1. Newton D. Baker, Martinsburg, West Virginia
  2. Boston Port of Embarkation, Boston, Massachusetts
  3. Camp Antigo, Wisconsin
  4. Bradley Field, Connecticut
  5. Camp Adair, Oregon
  6. Camp Albuquerque, New Mexico
  7. Camp Algoma, Idaho
  8. Camp Algona, Iowa
  9. Camp Aliceville, Alabama
  10. Camp Allen, Norfolk, Virginia
  11. Camp Alva, Oklahoma
  12. Camp Andrews, Boston Harbor, Massachusetts
  13. Camp Angel Island, California
  14. Camp Ashby, California,
  15. Camp Ashford, West Virginia,
  16. Camp Atlanta, Nebraska,
  17. Camp Atterbury, Indiana,Housed 3,500 Italians and later 10,000 Germans
  18. Camp AuTrain, AuTrain, Michigan,
  19. Camp Barkeley, Texas,
  20. Camp Barron, Wisconsin,
  21. Camp Bassett, Arkansas,
  22. Camp Bastrop, Texas, Kurt Richard Westphal escaped in August 1945 and was recaptured in Hamburg, Germany, in 1954.
  23. Camp Bayfield, Wisconsin,
  24. Camp Beale, California,
  25. Camp Beaver Dam, Wisconsin,
  26. Camp Billy Mitchell, Wisconsin,
  27. Camp Blanding, Florida,
  28. Camp Bowie, Texas,
  29. Camp Brady, Texas,
  30. Camp Breckinridge, Kentucky,
  31. Camp Briner, North Carolina,
  32. Camp Bullis, San Antonio, Texas,
  33. Camp Butner, North Carolina, Kurt Rossmeisl escaped on 4 August 1945 and surrendered in 1959.
  34. Camp Cambria, Wisconsin,
  35. Camp Campbell, Kentucky,
  36. Camp Carson, Colorado,
  37. Camp Chaffee, Sebastian County, Arkansas,
  38. Camp Chase, Ohio,
  39. Camp Chickasha, Grady County, Oklahoma,
  40. Camp Chilton, Wisconsin,
  41. Camp Claiborne, Louisiana,
  42. Camp Clarinda, Iowa,
  43. Camp Clark, Missouri,
  44. Camp Clinton, Mississippi,
  45. Camp Cobb, Wisconsin,
  46. Camp Columbus, Wisconsin,
  47. Camp Como, Mississippi,
  48. Camp Concordia, Kansas,
  49. Camp Cooke, California,
  50. Camp Croft, South Carolina,
  51. Camp Crossville, Tennessee,
  52. Camp Crowder, Missouri,
  53. Camp David, Maryland,
  54. Camp Dawson, West Virginia,
  55. Camp Deming, New Mexico, Georg Gärtner escaped on 21 September 1945, and finally surrendered in 1985. He was the last escapee, having remained at large for 40 years.
  56. Camp Dermott, Arkansas,
  57. Camp Douglas, Wyoming,
  58. Camp Eau Claire, Wisconsin,
  59. Camp Edwards, Falmouth, Massachusetts,
  60. Camp Ellis, Illinois,
  61. Camp Eunice, Louisiana,
  62. Camp Evelyn, Alger County, Michigan,
  63. Camp Faribault, Minnesota,
  64. Camp Fannin, Tyler, Texas, Located on the campus of the now University of Texas Health Science Center at Tyler.
  65. Camp Florence, Florence, Arizona, Largest all-new prisoner of war compound ever constructed on American soil.[2] It is now used as United States Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS).
  66. Camp Fond du Lac, Wisconsin,
  67. Camp Forrest, Tullahoma, Tennessee, First attempted escape by two German POWs on 5 November 1942.
  68. Camp Fox Lake, Wisconsin,
  69. Camp Fredonia, Little Kohler, Town of Fredonia, Wisconsin,
  70. Camp Freeland, Michigan,
  71. Camp Galesville, Wisconsin,
  72. Camp Gene Autry, Ardmore Army Air Field, Oklahoma,
  73. Camp Genessee, Wisconsin,
  74. Camp Germfask, Germfask, Michigan,
  75. Camp Grant, Rockford, Illinois,
  76. Camp Greeley, Greeley, Colorado,
  77. Camp Green Lake, Wisconsin,
  78. Camp Gruber, near Muskogee, Oklahoma,
  79. Camp Hale, Pando - Leadville, Colorado,
  80. Camp Gueydan, Louisiana,
  81. Camp Hartford, Wisconsin,
  82. Camp Hearne, Hearne, Texas,
  83. Camp Hereford, Deaf Smith County, Texas
  84. Camp Hobart, Oklahoma,
  85. Camp Hoffman, Maryland, Close to Fort Lincoln and held over 5,000 confederate soldiers Camp Hood, Texas,
  86. Camp Horseshoe Ranch, Hickory, Oklahoma,
  87. Camp Hortonville, Wisconsin,
  88. Camp Houlton, Maine,
  89. Camp Howze, Texas,
  90. Camp Hulen, Palacios, Texas,
  91. Camp Huntsdale, Pennsylvania,
  92. Camp Huntsville, Texas,
  93. Camp Indianola, Nebraska,
  94. Camp Janesville, Wisconsin,
  95. Camp Jefferson, Wisconsin,
  96. Camp Jerome, Arkansas,
  97. Camp Kaplan, Louisiana,
  98. Camp Lake Keesus, Wisconsin,
  99. Camp Las Cruces, Las Cruces, New Mexico, Werner Paul Lueck escaped in November 1945 and was recaptured in Mexico City in 1954.
  100. Camp Lee, Virginia,
  101. Camp Livingston, Louisiana,
  102. Camp Lockett, California,
  103. Camp Lodi, Wisconsin,
  104. Camp Lordsburg, Lordsburg, New Mexico, 1942-1945: held Japanese-American internees, and then German and Italian POWs.
  105. Camp Mackall, Hoffman, North Carolina,
  106. Camp Markesan, Wisconsin,
  107. Camp Marshfield, Wisconsin,
  108. Camp McAlester, Oklahoma,
  109. Camp McCain, Mississippi,
  110. Camp McCoy, Wisconsin, German POWs
  111. Camp McKay, Massachusetts, Constructed for prisoners, later reused for housing after the war
  112. Camp McLean, Texas,
  113. Camp Mackan, North Carolina,
  114. Camp Maxey, Texas,
  115. Camp Mexia, Texas,
  116. Camp Milltown, Wisconsin,
  117. Camp Myles Standish, Taunton, Massachusetts,
  118. Camp Monticello, Arkansas,
  119. Camp Montgomery, Minnesota,
  120. Camp Natural Bridge, West Point, New York, (German)
  121. Camp New Cumberland, Pennsylvania,
  122. Camp New Ulm, New Ulm, Minnesota, Fortuitously located outside a city where many locals still spoke German. The camp buildings are preserved in Flandrau State Park and are available for rent as a group center.
  123. Camp Oakfield, Wisconsin,
  124. Camp Ogden, Utah,
  125. Camp Oklahoma City, On site of Will Rogers World Airport, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma,
  126. Camp Ono, San Bernardino, California, (Italian)
  127. Camp Opelika, Alabama
  128. Camp Owosso, Shiawassee County, Michigan,
  129. Camp Owatonna, Minnesota,
  130. Camp Patrick Henry, Virginia,
  131. Camp Papago Park, Arizona, Germany's "Great Escape" was from a 200-foot (61 m) tunnel by 25 prisoners on 24 December 1944.
  132. Camp Pauls Valley, Oklahoma,
  133. Camp Peary, Virginia,
  134. Camp Perry, Ohio,
  135. Camp Philips, Kansas,
  136. Camp Pickett, Virginia,
  137. Camp Pima, Arizona,
  138. Camp Michaux, Cumberland County, Pennsylvania, Near Pine Grove Furnace State Park (same commander as Gettysburg Battlefield camp)
  139. Camp Plymouth, Wisconsin,
  140. Camp Polk, Louisiana,
  141. Camp Pomona, California,
  142. Camp Popolopen, New York,
  143. Camp Pori, Upper Peninsula, Michigan,
  144. Camp Pryor, Oklahoma,
  145. Camp Raco, near Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan,
  146. Camp Reedsburg, Wisconsin,
  147. Camp Reynolds, Pennsylvania,
  148. Camp Rhinelander, Wisconsin,
  149. Camp Ripon, Wisconsin,
  150. Camp Jos. T. Robinson, Arkansas,
  151. Camp Rockfield, Wisconsin,
  152. Camp Roswell, 14 miles SE of Roswell, New Mexico, 1942-1946: German POWs.
  153. Camp Rucker, Alabama,
  154. Camp Rupert, Idaho,
  155. Camp Ruston, Louisiana,
  156. Camp Santa Fe, New Mexico,
  157. Camp Thomas A. Scott, Fort Wayne, Indiana, Camp Scott held more than 600 German POWs from the Afrika Korps from late 1944 until the camp closed in November 1945.
  158. Camp Scottsbluff, Nebraska,
  159. Camp Shanks, (Point of embarkation) New York, camp in McMillan Woods, Gettysburg Battlefield, Pennsylvania, same commander as Camp Michaux camp
  160. Camp Sheboygan, Wisconsin,
  161. Camp Shelby, Mississippi,
  162. Camp Sibert, Alabama,
  163. Camp Sidnaw, Sidnaw, Michigan,
  164. Camp Somerset, Maryland,
  165. Camp Stark, New Hampshire,
  166. Camp Stewart, Georgia,
  167. Camp Stockton, California,
  168. Fort Strong, Boston, Massachusetts,
  169. Stringtown POW Camp, Atoka, Oklahoma,
  170. Camp Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin,
  171. Camp Sturtevant, Wisconsin,
  172. Camp Sutton, North Carolina,
  173. Camp Swift, Bastrop, Texas,
  174. Camp Thornton, Illinois,
  175. Camp Tipton, Oklahoma,
  176. Camp Tishomingo, Oklahoma,
  177. Camp Tonkawa, Oklahoma, Site of murder of Johannes Kunze by five fellow German POWs, who were subsequently tried, found guilty, hanged, and buried in the Fort Leavenworth Military Prison Cemetery.
  178. Camp Tooele, Utah, POW Camp, Co.1, Tooele (original postage)
  179. Camp Trinidad, Colorado, A 150-foot (46 m) electrically-lighted escape tunnel was discovered by authorities.
  180. Camp Van Dorn, Mississippi,
  181. Camp Wallace, Galveston County, Texas,
  182. Camp Warner, Utah,
  183. Camp Washington[disambiguation needed ], Washington (near Peoria), Illinois, Reinhold
  184. Pabel escaped on 9 September 1945 and was recaptured in Chicago in March 1953
  185. Camp Waterloo, Michigan,
  186. Camp Waterloo, Wisconsin,
  187. Camp Waupun, Wisconsin,
  188. Camp Waynoka, Oklahoma,
  189. Camp Weeping Water, Nebraska,
  190. Camp Wells, Minnesota,
  191. Camp Weingarten, Between Farmington and Ste. Genevieve, Missouri,
  192. Camp Wharton, Wharton, Texas,
  193. Camp Wheeler, Georgia,
  194. Camp White, Oregon,
  195. Camp White Rock, Dallas, Texas,
  196. Camp Wisconsin Rapids, Wisconsin,
  197. Cushing General Hospital, Massachusetts,
  198. Camp Wolters, Texas,
  199. Corpus Christi Naval Air Station, Corpus Christi, Texas,
  200. Drew Field, Florida, Now Tampa International Airport and Drew Park Edgewood Arsenal, Maryland,
  201. Eglin Army Air Field, Florida,
  202. Fort Benjamin Harrison, Indiana,
  203. Fort Benning, Georgia,
  204. Fort Bliss, Texas,
  205. Fort Bragg, North Carolina,
  206. Fort Campbell, Kentucky,
  207. Fort Crockett, Galveston, Texas,
  208. Fort Curtis, Virginia,
  209. Fort Custer, Michigan,
  210. Fort Devens, Devens, Massachusetts,
  211. Fort Dix, New Jersey, Harry Girth escaped in June 1946 and surrendered to authorities in New York City in 1953.
  212. Fort Drum, New York,
  213. Fort DuPont, Delaware,
  214. Fort Eustis, Virginia,
  215. Fort Gordon, Georgia,
  216. Fort Jackson, South Carolina,
  217. Fort Kearny, Rhode Island,
  218. Fort Knox, Kentucky,
  219. Fort Lawton, Washington, A riot by Negro soldiers took place over preferential treatment given to Italian and German POWs. One Italian POW was lynched, and Leon Jaworski was the military prosecutor. The Italian and one German POW who committed suicide rather than be repatriated are buried just outside the post cemetery boundaries.
  220. Fort Leavenworth, Kansas,
  221. Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri,
  222. Fort Lewis, Between Olympia and Tacoma, Washington,
  223. Fort McClellan, Alabama,
  224. Fort Meade, Maryland, Fort Meade housed about 4,000 German and Italian POWs during World War II. Thirty-three German POWs and two Italian POWs are now buried in the post cemetery. The most famous of those buried on the installation is German submariner Werner Henke, who was shot while trying to escape from a secret interrogation center at Fort Hunt, Virginia. The captain is the sole German Navy officer buried among enlisted German Army soldiers.
  225. Fort Niagara, New York,
  226. Fort Oglethorpe, Georgia,
  227. Fort Omaha, Omaha, Nebraska,
  228. Fort Ord, California, A 120-foot (37 m) nearly-completed escape tunnel was discovered by authorities.
  229. Fort Patrick Henry, Virginia,
  230. Fort Reno, Oklahoma,
  231. Fort Riley, Kansas,
  232. Fort Robinson, Nebraska,
  233. Fort Rucker, Alabama,
  234. Fort D.A. Russell, Texas,
  235. Fort Sam Houston, Texas,
  236. Fort Sheridan, Illinois,
  237. Fort Sill, Lawton, Oklahoma,
  238. Fort Sumner, New Mexico,
  239. Fort F.E. Warren, Wyoming,
  240. Glennan General Hospital, Oklahoma
  241. Grider Field, Pine Bluff Arkansas
  242. Halloran General Hospital, New York,
  243. Hammond Northshore Regional Airport, Louisiana,
  244. Hampton Roads Port of Embarkation, Virginia,
  245. Indiantown Gap Military Reservation, Pennsylvania,
  246. Holabird Signal Depot, Maryland,
  247. Lovell General Hospital, Massachusetts,
  248. McCloskey General Hospital, Texas,
  249. Memphis General Depot, Tennessee,
  250. Naval Air Station Whiting Field, Milton, Florida,
  251. New Orleans Port of Embarkation, Louisiana,
  252. Olmstead Field, Pennsylvania,
  253. Port Johnson, New Jersey,
  254. Pine Bluff Arsenal, Arkansas,
  255. Richmond ASF Depot, Virginia,
  256. Tobyhanna Military Reservation, Pennsylvania,
  257. Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, Valley Forge General Hospital, later the Golf Course area
  258. Waltham Memorial Hospital, Waltham, Massachusetts,
  259. Westover Field, Massachusetts,
  260. Windfall Indiana World War II POW Camp, Indiana,
  261. Camp Tyson POW Camp, Paris, Tennessee
  262. Rose Hill[disambiguation needed ] Rocky Mountain Arsenal, Colorado
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