Barryton, Mecosta County, Michigan (branch camp under Custer, MI)
Wayne (Fort), Detroit, Wayne County, MI
There were several other camps in Michigan. See link
POW Camp #1 at Fukuoka, Japan.
Heppenheim was not a designed as a POW camp, it was a sub-camp of Dachau Concentration Camp. See the link.
No, it was a concentration camp/extermination camp but it did have many POWs
Germany
they did a lot of secs
internment area for POW's
POW is the abbreviation of "Prisoners Of War". Its purpose is to hold the former combatants.
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Not good
Hogan's Heros
Yes, in Sioux Falls and Yankton. Edit: The Sioux Falls and Yankton camps were branch POW camps of the main POW camp in Algona Iowa. The POW camp in Algona had a total of 34 branch camps in IA, MN, SD and ND. There was also main POW camp in Igloo SD that administered six branch POW camps in western SD, including POW camps at Ft Meade (near Sturgis) and Belle Fourche. POW's did much of the stone work on the grounds of the Ft. Meade VA hospital and they were used for farm labor in the wheat and beet fields in the area.
Yes. The book Chronicle of a Prairie Town: Arlington Heights, IL indicates that the first prisoners arrived on May 4, 1944. The camp was turned into a Nike base on August 19, 1957.