Ben Morasco
German POW at Camp Atterbury
"When I arrived at Camp Atterbury in the middle of September 1944 (I was wounded and taken prisoner on August 20th in Normandy) life in the POW camp was heaven. We received a new U.S. Army outfit, got as much to eat as we could eat and slept in a bed with a mattress.

"There were no German officers and no non-commissioned officers in Camp Atterbury, except for a short period of time when a few hundred officers passed through, which was probably late in 1945. The first few months I was working in one of the 12 kitchens within the POW camp, but I found this rather tiresome and volunteered for work outside the camp.

"There is hardly a menial job I didn't do during the next year; picking tomatoes and apples, working in a slaughterhouse, driving a tractor, pressing shirts and trousers, washing dishes and so on. Some of this work was done as far south a the Kentucky border and some as far north as Indianapolis..."
Source: Internet 2/2011
IMOPage last revised %Y" startspan -->08/31/2022tspan -->08/31/2022
James D. West
www.IndianaMilitary.org

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