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Albert   Sidlovsky 1998 Co. B 109 Inf. 28 Div, 1941

  Story Of My Captivity
(Timeline)

On September 17, 1944 at the Siegfried Line in Germany, I sustained shrapnel wounds to my thigh and foot. The Germans counter attacked and I was taken prisoner in a pill box that I had taken refuge in. From the first moments of my capture I was under constant fear that I would be put to death by my captors or killed by friendly forces. Being a POW is humiliating and fearful, not knowing what would happen from day to day. Other POW’s carried me to a farmhouse that was being used by the Germans as a place to treat their wounded; here shrapnel was taken from my thigh without any anesthesia. I was then put in a house that was being used as a place to get healed. After six weeks I was put in a hospital run by captured American and English doctors. In the early part of January 1945 I was taken to Stalag 2B in Hammerstein, Germany. Conditions here were terrible. In the dead of winter we suffered terribly, sleeping on board with a little straw, no heat, nothing to keep us warm except the clothes we had worn. We were fed rutabaga soup and black bread about two inches thick that we sliced into very thin slices so that it would last longer. We received no toilet articles and tried to keep clean with cold water. We had outside toilets, which were a torture to use in the winter.

  I was at Stalag IIB for about three weeks until we were forced to leave and walk westward to avoid the Russians. This was the middle of a very bad snowstorm. After about 50 days, 200 of us were put in a stockade at a military air base in Hagenow, Germany. Living conditions here were no better but at least we received Red Cross parcels. Here again we were in fear of friendly aircraft from which we were under attack many times while working in and around the airport.

On May 2, 1945 we were liberated by elements of the 8th Infantry Division. Thank God!

My message to anyone reading this is: Freedom cannot be taken for granted, it must be protected and fought for. If you want to know about freedom ask one of us.

Timeline Of Evacuation Of POW Camp

EVACUATION OF POW CAMP STALAG IIB HAMMERSTEIN, GERMANY – JAN. 29, 1945 TO MARCH 19, 1945
By Albert J. Sidlovsky, 445 Canaan Road, Stratford, CT 06614-4516


Jan. 29, 1945
Stalag to HINTTEN 25 Km
Jan. 30, 1945
REST
Jan. 31, 1945
(1 a.m.) HINTTEN to EICHENBERG 15 Km
Feb. 01, 1945
Eichenberg to ALTKOPRIEBEN 15 Km
Feb. 02, 1945
Altkoprieben to KLAUSHAGEN 15 Km
Feb. 03, 1945
Klaushagen to GERDOF 15 Km
Feb. 04, 1945
Gerdof to KLUTZHOW 14 Km
Feb. 05, 1945
Klutzhow to SHIVELBIEN 15 Km
Feb. 06, 1945
REST
Feb. 07, 1945
REST
Feb. 08, 1945
Shivelbien to LABES 22 Km
Feb. 09, 1945
Labes to RADOW 16 Km
Feb. 10, 1945
Radow to FARBENZIN 16 Km
Feb. 11, 1945
Farbenzin to FRIEDRICKSBERG 14 Km
Feb. 12, 1945
Friedricksberg to BATZFALL 16 Km
Feb. 13, 1945
Batzfall toWIEDSOCK 10 Km
Feb. 14, 1945
REST
Feb. 15, 1945
REST
Feb. 16, 1945
Wiedstock to HAGEN TO WOLLIN 34 Km (Slept in Pritzerwoods)
Feb. 17, 1945
Crossed a bay and slept in a barn on a farm 18 Km
Feb. 18, 1945
SLEPT 10 Km East of ANKLAM 18 Km
Feb. 19, 1945
Anklam to MEDOW 18 Km
Feb. 20, 1945
Medow to CLEMPENOW 16 Km
Feb. 21, 1945
REST
Feb. 22, 1945
Clempenow to DAHLEN 36 Km (near Neubrandenburg)
Feb. 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29 & MARCH 1-6
LAYOVER 1 RED CROSS PARCEL PER MAN
Mar. 07, 1945
Dahlen to REINBERG 22 Km
Mar. 08, 1945
Reinberg to GURZENSDORF 20 Km
Mar. 09. 1945
Gurzensdorf to GROSS DAHLEN 19 Km
Mar. 10, 1945
Gross Dahlen to WARREN to LANOW 32 Km
Mar. 11, 1945
REST
Mar. 12, 1945
?
Mar. 13, 1945
? to BELOW 18 Km
Mar. 14, 1945
Below to BAMIN 24 Km
Mar. 15, 1945
Bamin to CRIVITZ to TRAMM 12 Km
Mar. 16, 1945
REST
Mar. 17, 1945
REST – 3 MEN ON A PARCEL
Mar. 18, 1945
Tramm to WITHYOOMIN 26 Km
Mar. 19, 1945
Withyoomin to HAGENOW 10 Km
May 02, 1945
LIBERATED BY #8 INF. DIV.
May 05, 1945
Left Haganow on G.I. Trucks for Airport Near Hannover to Be flown to Camp Lucky Strike in France. Eventually to be shipped back to USA.

At HAGENOW, about 200 POW’s were put in two buildings and were forced to work in and around a military air base. On one work detail near the airport we were strafed by friendly airplanes

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