Wyoming POW Camp (revisited)
#1

Recently I have been working in the town of Douglas, Wyoming near the site of an old World War II Prisoner of War Camp. Sherry Mullinex, of Douglas was nice enough to allow me to tour the old Officers Club and tell me a little history of the the camp. The original camp was nearly one square mile and resembled a small town. The entire camp with streets, hospital and over 100 buildings was built in less than ninety days.

Nearly two thousand Italian prisoners captured in North Africa were originally housed in the camp until the surrender of Italy in 1944. At that time over three thousand German prisoners were then brought in until the end of the war. Most of the prisoners were well behaved but the hard-core SS continually tried to convince the other prisoners that it was their duty to escape and several attempts were made. One group escaped and was found hiding in a haystack at a ranch about sixty miles from Douglas. When found one of the escapees asked the sheriff what country they had gotten to. The sheriff replied that they had made it about ten miles from the county line. The counties in Wyoming are actually larger than many European countries.

The Officer’s Club has many murals painted by the Italian prisoners and have survived the years intact. They are actually painted on the wallboard so it is amazing they are in such good condition. The Italian artists perception of the west were mostly influenced by the early Westerns of the 1920's and 1930's.

The building is currently owned by the Oddfellows.. The roof has started to leak at one end of the building and the Oddfellows do not have the funds for repairs. The State of Wyoming cannot get involved due to the private ownership issue. I posted on this topic several years ago but

the links I referenced had expired so I decided to start a new one for the pictures.

 

Chris

POST1.jpg

 

This is the original blueprint layout.Sorry I was not able to get a better picture

POST1A.jpg

 

The skull is over the doorway to the pool room.

POST2.jpg

POST3.jpg

POST4.jpg

POST9.jpg

POST8.jpg

POST10.jpg

 

Most of the murals are signed and an attempt was made to find the artists but they have been unsucessful so far.

POST11.jpg

Reply
#2

Interesting post. A piece of the home front, which we seldom see here or elsewhere.

 

Thanks Chris. Also nice to hear from you.

 

Hey, do you think you will be able to attend the reunion this year? Would be great!!!

Marion J Chard
Proud Daughter of Walter (Monday) Poniedzialek
540th Engineer Combat Regiment, 2833rd Bn, H&S Co, 4th Platoon
There's "No Bridge Too Far"
Reply
#3

I haven't been checking in as often as I would like due to out of town work and my wife had a perforated ulcer. We had a cold rainy day today in Wyoming so I had a chance to get to a few things.

I could have a little time open in Sept. but its hard to tell now.

Reply


Possibly Related Threads…
Thread Author Replies Views Last Post
  Born in a death camp: A miracle baby and her mother Walt's Daughter 1 3,010 04-16-2011, 09:51 PM
Last Post: Caryl-280ECB
  Italian POW camp - Port Johnson - NJ Walt's Daughter 0 2,725 02-09-2011, 08:52 AM
Last Post: Walt's Daughter
  Wyoming Veterans Memorial Museum twobisquit 2 4,089 11-11-2007, 04:01 PM
Last Post: Walt's Daughter
  CAMP HOWZE TEXAS Cadetat6 0 2,246 02-01-2006, 11:12 AM
Last Post: Cadetat6
  German POW Camp Walt's Daughter 0 73,764 05-15-2005, 10:50 AM
Last Post: Walt's Daughter



Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)