Pte Hamilton remembers the US daylight bombing raid on the IG Farben complex on 20/8/44 when over 30 British POWs were killed. ‘They were bombed by US on IG Farben, 39 British POWs were killed because they were standing outside watching. Later the Russians came in so low that there was no warning and they were bombing everything.’
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In early 1945, Hamilton and the other British POWs were part of the infamous ‘Death March’ west to avoid the advancing Russians. ‘Started marching away with Germans to guide them, sleeping in fields, if vegetables in the field they were digging them up and eating them. When in Austria they started being billeted in farms until they reached a point where they were liberated by Americans.’
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The first page from Pte Hamilton’s 1945 diary listing the tortuous course of this long trek, is reproduced above. The march began on 21/1/45. The gruelling routine for the POWs over this period was two days marching and one day’s rest, with only the shortest of rations and the constant threat of attack by Allied aircraft. The towns passed through are listed on the left and the distance covered, in kilometres, is on the right of the page reproduced above and those following. The diary is very difficult to read at this resolution, so a partial transcript is provided on the right of each page. Corrections to the spellings and any further information on these towns and villages most welcome. After over two months on the road, Hamilton was eventually liberated by US troops at Stalag 7A on April 30th 1945 and flown home to the UK via Rheims in France.
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For the second page of the diary click here
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For the third page of the diary click here
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For the fourth page of the diary click here
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For Pte G R Hamilton’s 1945 ‘Register Form for Recovered Prisoners of War’, which records his capture on 2/3/43 (note the misspelling of Sedjenane) and his liberation at Stalag 7A on 30/4/45, click here
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And for a general overview of the British POW experience in Camp E 715, these two external sites are both recommended:
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The Wollheim Memorial (and notice the photo on their page is of a different group of E 715 British POWs in the same locale).
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16 DLI HOME
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