campalgonapowmuseumatlobdell.weebly.com
Lt. Col. A.T. Lobdell
Lt Col. A.T. Lobdell. Lt Col. A.T. Lobdell. Lt Col. Arthur T. Lobdell commanded the camp at Algona from June of 1944 to its closing in February of 1946. He also was the first commander of the prisoner of war camp at Clarinda, Iowa from late 1943 until his transfer to Algona. Create a free website. Create your own free website. Start your own free website. A surprisingly easy drag and drop site creator. Learn more.
campalgonapowmuseumbuscher.weebly.com
Gib Buscher
I enjoyed listening to the soldiers telling about what they did and where they lived before they entered the service. In the winter we’d watch the prisoners march around the mile square and past our farm when they weren’t working. Also we were invited over to the camp for a special events, like the first showing of the Nativity Scene. I often wondered about mixed emotions my father must have had, having those prisoners on what had been part of our farm and at the same time having his two oldest sons serv...
campalgonapowmuseumcultural.weebly.com
Cultural Expression behind Barbed Wire
Cultural Expression behind Barbed Wire. Cultural Expression Behind Barbed Wire. Create a free website. Start your own free website. A surprisingly easy drag and drop site creator. Learn more.
campalgonapowmuseumdietherheycke.weebly.com
Diether Heycke
Diether Heycke was transported to America aboard a Liberty ship and sent to Camp Indianola. From there he was transferred to the Faribault, Minnesota Branch Camp of Camp Algona, where he worked picking and canning sweet corn. In the autumn of 1944, he was sent to Bena, Minnesota, where he worked felling lumber. Following the war, Heycke returned to Germany and found employment at the Magdeburg Machine Tool Factory, where he worked until his retirement in 1989. Create a free website.
campalgonapowmuseumernstkoening.weebly.com
Home
Ernst Koening was drafted into the German Army in 1944, and was captured by American Forces in Germany in March, 1945. He was then taken by truck and train to France, passing within 100 yards of his family home on the journey. He then boarded a Liberty ship bound for New York and then Boston. Then he was taken by train to Algona, arriving several days after the war with Germany ended. In his time as a prisoner, Koening worked harvesting peas, turnips, and corn, and canning vegetables.
campalgonapowmuseumernstkohleick.weebly.com
Ernst Kohleick
Ernst Kohleick was captured by Allied forces near Marburg, Germany on March 29, 1945. He was shipped to America on the USS Henry Middleton, a Liberty ship. He arrived in Algona in May, and remained there for the rest of the war. Kohleick returned to Germany to find his family home destroyed by Allied bombers, but his family was safe, and he was able to return to his studies. Create a free website. Start your own free website. A surprisingly easy drag and drop site creator. Learn more.
campalgonapowmuseumforthecountry.weebly.com
For the Country's Sake
For the Country's Sake. For the Country's Sake. Create a free website. Start your own free website. A surprisingly easy drag and drop site creator. Learn more.
campalgonapowmuseumgermanpows.weebly.com
German POWs in America
German POWs in America. German POWs in America. Create a free website. Start your own free website. A surprisingly easy drag and drop site creator. Learn more.
campalgonapowmuseumharman.weebly.com
Cpl. Harman
Corporal Eldred Harman recieved training as a Military Policeman, and then volunteered as a guard at Camp Algona. He spent much of the last half of 1944 and early 1945 in Algona as a guard. Part of his duty was to assist PWs in growing a garden on soil that had been severely compacted during construction of the camp. In 1945 he was transferred to Europe where he continued to serve as a guard of prisoners of war, returning to the United States in late 1946. Create a free website.
campalgonapowmuseumjenner.weebly.com
Capt. Jenner
Captain Clifford Jenner was a young officer in World War I, serving on active duty until 1926. He was reactivated in World War II and served in the Camp Algona system for most of its existence. While on post, he was in charge of the Day Room, theater, and worked with the USO to get shows into Algona. His family lived in Algona and his twin sons, James and Jerry, went to the local grade school. Create a free website. Create your own free website. Start your own free website.
campalgonapowmuseummarveischen.weebly.com
Marv Eischen
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