Stalag 357

Discussion in 'Prisoners of War' started by eiledon, Feb 14, 2013.

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  1. eiledon

    eiledon Junior Member

    just wondering if any members were themselves, or knew of someone who was held in Stalag 357 Oerbke, Germany?
     
  2. Brigsy

    Brigsy Active Member

    The book "POW The Diary of a Prisoner of War" by David Nell shows that he was in Stalag 357 from Sunday 24th Sept 1944 until liberation after having been moved from Stalag IVB at Muhlburg.
     
  3. stamp

    stamp Member

    loads of Arnhem POWs
     
  4. maisie76

    maisie76 New Member

    My great uncle was a pow in stalag 357, he passed a few weeks ago :( there was a write up in the local paper.


    Norman Blair, who spent more than 1,000 days in some of the Second World War’s most notorious prisoner of war camps before making a daring escape from the Germans, has died in Dundee.
    He was 92. During his harrowing captivity, Mr Blair believed that only his ability to play the accordion saved his life.
    It also helped others survive. He played it to deaden the sound of tunnels being dug, and once hid a camp’s secret radio in its bellows during a snap inspection.
    Dundee-born, he went to Victoria Road School and Stobswell School and shone at music. He became an outstanding accordion player and counted Jimmy Shand among his friends.
    Shand, who could not read music, used to ask Mr Blair, who could, to play new pieces for him so that he could learn them by ear.
    Entering the war as an RAF ground gunner on airfield defence duties he survived several attacks — one bomb exploding just yards away and lifting the ground from beneath him.
    Absorbed into the Royal Air Force Regiment, he saw service in Egypt and Libya. After a desert march of 120 miles, Mr Blair’s section entered Benghazi and witnessed the chaos of war.
    Detached from comrades during bitter fighting, a wrong turning led his small group to a German roadblock — and for them the war was over.
    Initially he was handed to the Italians and placed in a cage. There followed another temporary prison in Libya before he was shipped to Brindisi in Italy.
    He spent time there in the Tuturano camp before being moved to Campo 65 at Gravina. Worse was to come when he learned he was moving to Fortress Gavi, the Italian equivalent of Colditz.
    There he ‘captured’ a piano accordion sent by the Red Cross. His playing became a diversion or distraction for several escape attempts, including one by Gavi’s “most valuable” prisoner, Lt Col David Stirling, founder of the SAS.
    He later recalled “a steady job holding impromptu concerts to the accompaniment of lots of singing and stamping feet” to cover the noise of tunnelling.
    After the Allies’ push into Italy in 1943, he was moved to Stalag XVIIIA in Austria. Under German conditions corporals and above could not be forced to work, and he became a ‘barbed-wire NCO’ by sewing sergeant stripes on to his tunic.
    During a snap inspection he used his accordion to conceal parts of the camp’s underground radio — and recalled how his hands shook as the officer asked him to play a tune.
    In 1944 he was moved to Stalag 357. As the war progressed Stalag 357 was moved into north-west Germany and located just a handful of miles from Belsen.
    On Friday April 13 1945, and with a friend called Doug, he made his escape by throwing himself into bushes as a party of 300 prisoners began the Long March into Germany as the Nazis retreated.
    After belly-crawling into trees in No-Man’s Land as the column moved on, they stumbled on for three days until they met an advancing British tank squadron.
     
    vitellino and eiledon like this.
  5. Brian Connor

    Brian Connor New Member

    yes my dad was there Robert Connor from Rothesay Isle of Bute scotland
     

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