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Dakota Datebook
October 3, 2003
"RRV POWs"
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On October 3rd, 1990, eleven months after East Germany
dismantled the Berlin Wall, East and West Germany became a united and
sovereign state for the first time since Germany's defeat in World War
II.
What many people dont know is that during World
War II, about 150 German prisoners of war were held in the Red River Valley.
With so many men overseas fighting, the U.S. was experiencing
a labor shortage, especially on farms. So the federal government offered
to civilian employers POWs as workers, as long as the jobs werent
dangerous or related to the war effort. They were seasonal workers, paid
$2.40 a week a poor wage even for the 40s. Henry Peterson
and Paul Horn took advantage of the offer and brought in 150 prisoners
from the prison camp in Iowa to work on their truck farms. Army inspectors
were sent to locate suitable housing for the POWs, and a large onion warehouse
in north Moorhead was chosen.
On May 28th, 1944, the first 40 Germans arrived, spending
the night in tents on Horns farm south of town. The remaining 110
POWs arrived three days later and were marched on foot from the NP Depot
to the prison camp. The POWs were put to work transforming the warehouse
into their barracks, installing a water and sewer system, and constructing
an eight-foot wire fence around the perimeter to discourage their own
escape.
The camps commander soon asked the city to close
traffic on the adjoining street, because hundreds of young girls and curious
motorists were causing traffic problems, and the Geneva Convention didnt
allow gawking at prisoners.
Farm trucks picked up the POWs and their guards six mornings
a week and delivered them back in the evening. The prisoners did general
farm maintenance, planted, weeded and harvested crops. Horn and Peterson
remembered most of the POWs as likable but a little reluctant to work.
Horn estimated that their output of work was about 65% compared to migrant
labor from South Texas. They just couldnt keep up, he
said.
A few prisoners, particularly those captured in North
Africa before Germanys decline, caused minor problems. A few prisoners
broke a pump with a sledgehammer and there was a sit-down strike that
ended with 14 prisoners spending a night in the Clay County Jail, but
that was unusual. Second in command, T. Sgt. Eric Brasch, told the Fargo
Forum, "They still think Germany will win the war. Theyre not
permitted to see newspapers or listen to the radio, and we dont
tell them anything, so what they know is what they knew when they left
the battlefields or whatever rumors they may have heard."
The majority of prisoners were typically viewed as ordinary
kids who looked no different than their American peers. Peterson sent
flowers and fruit to sick prisoners at Moorhead's St. Ansgar Hospital,
and Lt. Blair took the prisoners swimming on Sundays. Prisoners were also
treated to two trips to a movie theater and on Saturdays, "Bier and
cigarettes". Army regulations didnt allow the latter, nor would
Army command have approved the night the prisoners went to Moorheads
Magic Aquarium Bar.
The POWs used their camp fence for hanging laundry, and
the following year, the fence was simply taken down. Sgt. Roy Schultz
remarked, "(They) werent going anywhere. Those guys didnt
know where the hell they were."
After the war, one former prisoner wrote to Peterson,
"Now Im return from the United Staates [sic] to my homeland.
I have been over there 2_ years, a long time for me. But I did learn the
American people and the democratic politik of America.... It was a good
school for me. I want to be a democratic citizen here and the most population
will the same.... Today I will thank you again through my letter. We have
been [not] only good workmen, we have been good fellows, too. Every man
likes you and I will never forget your truck farm."
Related to this is an exhibit, Snow Country Prison: Interned
in North Dakota which opens tomorrow at United Tribes Technical College
in Bismarck. This tribal college is located on the former site of a WWII
internment camp. The exhibit provides a personal glimpse of the lives
of the German and Japanese men who were interned there. Its up through
November 30th.
This text and audio may not be copied
without securing prior permission from North Dakota Public Radio.
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