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ThinkPint.com
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#2512
Dienst Grad II
by Donald E. Phillips
Donald
Emerson Phillips entered the Air Force on November 27, 1941. He was awarded
navigator wings at San Marcos, Texas, on June 23, 1943. The following
month he went to England. On his second bombing mission on September 6,
1943, his plane went down over occupied France. He was captured and then
sent to Stalag Luft III in Sagan, 75 miles Southeast of Berlin. Stalag
Luft III was made famous in the 1963 movie, The Great Escape, which chronicled
the tunneling and escape efforts of the prisoners. Stalag Luft III consisted
of five compounds and Don was assigned to Center Compound, Block 44, Combine
C. His combine (or prisoner group) initially consisted of just 3 men,
but increased to as many as 14 as more prisoners were added. On January
29, 1945, Stalag Luft III was evacuated so the camp would not be captured
by the Russians. Ten thousand prisoners were marched out of the camp in
the late evening and early morning with little notice. After several days
of both walking and being transported by boxcars, the prisoners eventually
ended up in Stalag VIIA at Moosburg, another German prisoner camp. Don
and thousands of others were liberated on April 29, 1945, by General Patton
and his troops.
Don was 25
when he was captured and nearing 27 when he returned home to rural central
Illinois. He was the youngest child of Amelia and R.W.E. Phillips and
their only son. Amelia and R.W.E. had three older daughters, Blanche,
Bernice, and Dorothy who were all married to farmers, none of whom served
in WWII. All of Don's sisters had children by the time he entered the
war.
Don's
POW number was #2512 Dienst Grad II. In German dienst translates to rank.
What follows
are various pieces Don wrote over the years about his POW experience as
well as letters written during internment.
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