The most notorious one was Andersonville, near Columbus, Georgia. Union prisoners were reduced to gang-murder, starvation and even cannibalism.
Conditions were so bad that the commandant (Wirz) was hanged after the armistice, even though the Union had promised no hangings for war-crimes.
Prisoner of war, usually said as POW camp.
Germany
Andersonville, Georgia.
The notorious one was Andersonville, Georgia.
Yes, there was a prisoner of war camp in Romulus, Michigan, during World War II. It was known as Camp Romulus and primarily housed German and Italian POWs. The camp operated from 1943 until 1946 and was part of a broader system of POW camps across the United States. After the war, the camp was closed and the site has since been repurposed.
Featherston prisoner of war camp happened in 1943.
Lom prisoner of war camp was created in 1940.
Prisoner of war camp FIRST
Camps for political prisoners have been called a detention center, a concentration camp, prisoner of war camp, labor camp, or gulag.
changi in Singapore or sandakan in borneo or what about cowra it was a prisoner of war camp for Japanese
Prisoner of war, usually said as POW camp.
An internment camp holds whomever the authorities want to hold. A "prisoner of war" camp is a special kind of internment camp, one that holds foreign soldiers captured in combat.
Yes. The Japanese ran a prisoner-of-war camp in Mindanao during World War II. If you have a more specific question about this, please go ahead and ask.
A commandant is the officer in command of either a prisoner of war camp OR a concentration camp.
A commandant was the head of a prisoner of war camp or a concentration camp.
It was originally a prisoner-of-war camp.
Andersonville