Tak til Hugh Watkins og Bodil Madsen
Jeg vil nu gå i gang med kilderne I henviser til. Da jeg bor i Nordborg, og
kender H.C. Lorenzen fra tidligere, kan det være, jeg kan finde den nævnte
folder: Lorenzen har lukket sin virksomhed, men jeg prøver lokalt.
mvh Ole
"Bodil Madsen" <bodil@fjernmig.nyraad.net> skrev i en meddelelse
news:eac96$47a18216$5518327d$7977@news.arrownet.dk...
> Hej Ole!
>
> Jeg har en lille folder med titlen:" En beretning om dansksindene
> sønderjydske krigsfanger i Feltham".
>
> Da det er en del år siden, jeg købte den, ved jeg ikke om den stadig kan
> købes. Udgiver: H.C.Lorenzen, Nordborg. Tryk: Nord-Als offset, Nordborg.
> M.v.h.
> Bodil Madsen
>
>
>
>
> "Hugh Watkins" <hugh.watkins@gmail.com> skrev i en meddelelse
> news:60d778F1q589cU1@mid.individual.net...
>> Ole Kristian Boje wrote:
>>> Min svigerfar, fra Vester Sottrup, blev engelsk krigsfange kort før
>>> 11.11.1918, men i hans militærpapirer står intet om hvor lejren var. Kan
>>> nogen lede mig på sporet?
>>> Boje
>>
>> relevant english records if they exist will be at Kew
>>
>>
http://nationalarchives.gov.uk/
>>
>> "While from the First World War onwards most surviving files are
>> concerned with general administrative and policy matters and the
>> implementation of conventions and agreements etc"
>>
>> . First World War 1914-1918
>>
>> The National Archives does not hold lists of First World War enemy PoWs.
>> At the time lists of names of enemy prisoners and internees were
>> routinely forwarded to the Prisoners of War Information Bureau (PWIB) in
>> London, which in turn informed the International Red Cross Headquarters
>> in Geneva (for address see section 7).
>>
>> Unfortunately, bombing in 1940 largely destroyed the lists and other
>> documentation compiled by the Bureau. However, two specimen lists of
>> German subjects interned as PoWs, both within the United Kingdom and
>> Overseas during 1915-1916 are in WO 900/45 and WO 900/46 . The list is
>> divided into army, naval and civilian prisoners, and gives the regiment,
>> ship and usually the home address of each prisoner, place of internment,
>> remarks regarding wounds, illnesses and death, and date of transfer to
>> internment in a neutral country. The work and history of the PWIB is
>> summarised in WO 32/10252 .
>>
>> Although only occasionally mentioned by name, enemy PoWs can be searched
>> for within the card index to the General Political Correspondence of the
>> Foreign Office located in the Research Enquiries Room at Kew,
>> particularly the correspondence of the Prisoners of War and Aliens
>> Department. In addition between 1915-1918 each year includes a dedicated
>> PoW section arranged by country and subject. In most cases if an entry is
>> found in the index this will convert to an FO 383 reference.
>>
>> The general field of responsibility for enemy prisoners of war was rather
>> vaguely defined. Both the War Office and the Foreign Office had a
>> Prisoners of War Department. The War Office PoW department was in fact
>> attached to the Home Office, presumably because the Home Office
>> administered the internment camps (for internment, see our research guide
>> Internees: First and Second World War: Domestic Records Information 51).
>> Files concerning the employment of enemy PoWs in Britain are among the
>> records of the Ministry of National Service (Labour Supply Department),
>> and can be found in NATS 1/567 to NATS 1/571 .
>>
>> Correspondence about enemy merchant seamen taken prisoner is in MT 9
>> (code 106) and MT 23 .
>>
>>
>>
>> research guide
>>
http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/catalogue/RdLeaflet.asp?sLeafletID=7
>>
>> ask again on news:soc.genealogy.britain naming names dates places that
>> you know
>>
>> Hugh W
>
>