During World War II, Nazi prisoners of war (POWs) were primarily held in military camps across the United States. The most notable facilities included camps in states like Texas, California, and Florida. These camps were designed to accommodate large numbers of POWs and were managed by the U.S. Army, often under the Geneva Conventions' guidelines. Many prisoners were utilized for labor on local farms and industries during their incarceration.
P.O.W.'s or Prisoners of War
The only Nazi camp that tattooed prisoners was the Auschwitz group, where prisoners selected for work were tattooed. Prisoners at other camps and those sent immediately to be gassed at Auschwitz were not tattooed.
Those in charge of the cruelty and death that were being enacted in the camps. Often times, however, the Nazi guards would round up all the prisoners and force them on death marches, which would always end with the guards forcing the prisoners into a body of water and machine-gunning them.
High-status prisoners often had reasonable accommodation, but the rest were often held in dungeons.
Prisoners were told the gas chambers were showers.
Amersfoort was a Nazi concentration camp. Between 1941 and 1945 there were over 35,000 prisoners that were kept in the camp.
P.O.W.'s or Prisoners of War
prison
it is a dunghen...
Red was used for all political prisoners.
American soldiers
The only Nazi camp that tattooed prisoners was the Auschwitz group, where prisoners selected for work were tattooed. Prisoners at other camps and those sent immediately to be gassed at Auschwitz were not tattooed.
Dungeon
I am guessing it was dauchau... might be wrong
To identify them as Jewish
While in use a total of 12,123 Confederate soldiers were kept there.
In a dungeon