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Oh I Do Like To Be Beside The Seaside
Another interesting side story regarding WWI. Not a particularly relaxing "holiday camp" when you know where you're going at the end of your stay. http:// www.bbc .com/ne ws/uk-e ngland- 3213309 9
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.How horrifying stuey for these men, supposedly thought 'well' enough after a spell in camp to be sent back to face the very same thing that put them there in the first place. http:// en.m.wi kipedia .org/wi ki/Shel l_shock
Funnily enough stoo
There is a holiday camp link to the WW2
Long term prisoners in Germany were ( from 1940) given a holiday near Berlin to destress from war psychosis and all that sort of thing - in rotation.
Smallish groups were rotated to a camp near Berlin which had less barbed wire and better food. My father even as a recaptured escaper was not excluded.
Imagine my family's surprise when we read it now as a recruiting ground for the British Free Corps ( British renegade SS - which had a membership often as many as six or five ). Here - scroll down to "later recruits"
https:/ /www.je wishvir tuallib rary.or g/jsour ce/Holo caust/b ritishf reecorp s.html
My father certainly didnt remember it like that ....
the five or six recruits came to sticky ends
hanged, shot etc.... by the goodies that is
There is a holiday camp link to the WW2
Long term prisoners in Germany were ( from 1940) given a holiday near Berlin to destress from war psychosis and all that sort of thing - in rotation.
Smallish groups were rotated to a camp near Berlin which had less barbed wire and better food. My father even as a recaptured escaper was not excluded.
Imagine my family's surprise when we read it now as a recruiting ground for the British Free Corps ( British renegade SS - which had a membership often as many as six or five ). Here - scroll down to "later recruits"
https:/
My father certainly didnt remember it like that ....
the five or six recruits came to sticky ends
hanged, shot etc.... by the goodies that is
Those British who supported Nazi Germany were given short shrift at the end of the war. Although not guilty of any atrocities they were convicted of treason inasmuch as they had adhered to the King's enemies. The penalty for this was death. These included William Joyce (Lord 'Haw Haw') who was convicted for making broadcasts from Nazi Germany, and John Amery, the son of a Tory MP and brother of a later Tory MP, who was described by the executioner as 'the bravest man I ever hanged.'