Stalag XI-A

Möckern, ,Germany
Stalag XI-A Stalag XI-A is one of the popular Landmark & Historical Place located in ,Möckern listed under Landmark in Möckern ,

Contact Details & Working Hours

More about Stalag XI-A

Stalag XI-A was a German World War II prisoner-of-war camp, located just to the east of the village of Altengrabow and in the south of Dörnitz in Saxony-Anhalt, about 90km south-west of Berlin.Camp historyPre-warThe camp was located on Truppenübungsplatz Altengrabow, which had been in use by the German Army since 1893, and had served as the prisoner-of-war camp Dörnitz Altengrabow during World War I, holding around 12,000 POW of various nationalities.World War IIIn September 1939 it again became a prisoner-of-war camp, and was designated Stalag XI, before it was renumbered Stalag XI-A in November 1939. The camp housed French, British, Belgian, Serb, Russian, Italian, American, Dutch, Slovak and Polish POW, all in separate compounds, and served as the centre from which most of the POW were assigned to Arbeitskommando ("Work camps"). On 1 January 1945 more than 60,000 POW were registered there.On 25 April 1945, one of the last airborne operations of the ETO, code named Operation Violet, took place. Six teams composed of officers and men of Commonwealth, French and United States armed services and under the command of Major Worrall were to be dropped near the camp to assure the protection of the PoWs, to assess the humanitarian need of the PoWs and to ensure a peaceful handover of the camp into Allied authority. However the teams were scattered during the drop and all members were soon captured and transferred to the Altengrabow camp. There, the new PoWs urged the Camp Commandant, Col. Ochernal to cooperate and a radio link between the camp and SHAEF, then SAARF Headquarters was established.

Map of Stalag XI-A