Monday, November 3, 2014

The timeline

Beverly Pigg

April 22, 1941: 21st birthday, eligible for draft. Several months later, draft notice arrives. Ordered to report to a physical exam at Washington-Lee High School

Oct. 4, 1941: ordered to report to Union Station for trip to Fort Lee, Va. Pay is $21 per month, less $1.50 for laundry and $6.40 for a $10,000 insurance policy. Training at Camp Croft, South Carolina for 3 weeks of basic training. 

December 7, 1941: Pearl Harbor. Sent for the end of basic training to Fort Dix, N.J. Issued a BAR ad assigned as Asst. Gunner and Ammunition Carrier. 

April 12, 1942: Address changed to APO 34, New York for overseas delivery. Sailed on the Aquitania from New York to Halifax, Nova Scotia. Then to Scotland, where they were transferred to tenders bound for Londonderry, Northern Ireland. 

July 21, 1942: Orders came to report to Enniskillen. Issued M-1. Ferried to Invernary, Scotland to train with British Commandos. Motor convoy to Paisley, near Glasgow, Scotland. Lived in tents through Sept. Motored to Liverpool, lived aboard the Otranto. Passed through Gibraltar, at dawn attacked by German fighters. 

Nov. 8, 1942: three landings made, is Northwest of Algiers. Motor convory to Tunisia. Desert retreat/attack. Combat in Senede and Zidi Bou Sed, small desert villages.  Fiad Pass. Stanley Stepanek shot in the leg. 

Feb. 14, 1943: Stuka dive bombers attack an hour before dawn. Surrounded, stranded on a hill 800 feet high with no cover. 3 days later, ordered to destroy all equipment and march west. 

Feb. 19, 1943: Germans attacked, they surrendered. 

Feb. 20, 1943: Marched back through the pass. 70 miles to Sfax. Outside Sfax, adjacent to RR tracks, held in enclosures and 300 men were loaded into boxcars. 

March 4, 1943: in  Junkers JU-52 tri-motor plane to Sicily and then Naples.

March 18, 1943: reached Moosburg to Stalag 7A.

April 21, 1943: 500 Americans sent to Villingen to Stalag 5B. Worked in Friedrickschafen, a 10-mile walk from camp. 


Happy birthday!


The mail


Home, sweet home


On the march



What was in a Red Cross parcel

Note: One full Red Cross parcel was a box about 3" deep and 12" square and contained the minimum amount of food required to sustain a man for one week at approximately 1700 calories per day. In an American box were small portions of spam, corned beef, powdered eggs, jelly or jam, powdered milk, soda crackers, dried raisins or prunes, powdered coffee, cigarettes, sugar, a chocolate "D" bar, salt and pepper.



Stalag Luft IV room


POW WOW


German camps and hospitals where American POWs were held


Moosburg camp layout


Seattle Daily Times: NAZIS QUIT!


Stalag Luft IV camp map


We can take 'em!


Wartime humor


Stalag Luft II camp map


Stalag artwork





Death march routes


A Sad But True Story, Stalag Luft 1


The Stalag newsletter, Barth Hard Times


Map of Kasserine Pass


Stalag IIB