The Shower of Frogs chapter follows. The attached is a contemporary Google Maps image of Stalag XIIA's location.
Saturday, October 24, 2020
Chapter 17: Stalag XIIA
Stalag XIIA, outside Limburg in northwestern Germany [see separate graphic], was set up to accommodate about 1,000 prisoners. There were now, we understood, 4,000. It was crowded, that was unmistakable. The excess numbers put a pressure on every activity in the compound. It was now the first week in October, and it had rained for three weeks.
The yards around the barracks were slithering in mud. Bunks were long-since filled, so that new arrivals found places on the crowded floors. German guards, whom we learned to call Postens, wandered in and out of the barracks, patrolling, searching, making trades. In this situation Stubbs and I were drawn closer together. Stubby hammered a couple of tin cans into cups with handles, manufactured a few utensils out of wire and wood. He began work in a blower-a contraption made from powdered milk cans and meant to speed up heating with a minimum of precious wood. I gathered old cans and wood from work details.
Gradually we settled into a routine. The day began at five o'clock with ersatz coffee or hot tea. This was followed by roll call in the wet yard. It lasted from thirty minutes to two hours. At seven we might get soup, barley, parsnips, or an assortment of weeds. It was better not to examine too carefully the contents of the soup. If there was no air alert we had soup again at eleven-that is, sometimes.
Occasionally we got molasses. We were given a sixth of a loaf of sawdust bread and three potatoes each day. The distribution of food was a scene of chaos. Americans, who for months had lined up for chow, now ignored lines and grabbed what they could. The apportioning of food was a wild scramble of quarreling, arguing, bitching; childish, distempered Americans. The filthy Nazis, "the Master Race," had to step in and discipline us in order that each American got his share.
No two men in two thousand wore identical uniforms. Cotton shirts, wool shirts, green fatigues, woolen trousers, olive drab jackets, wool jackets, helmets, overseas caps, helmet liners, knitted caps, belts, no belts, socks, no socks, a few gloves, fewer overcoats, and a multitude of insignia clothed us, a fantastic and motley army.
Within days trading became a way of life. Money, all money, was of no value. Clothing, watches, rings, and cigarettes were the articles of trade. The bargaining was mainly for bread. After our watches, rings and clothing disappeared into the German army and civilian population; we were left with cigarettes. Trading took place among French, Polish, British, Russian, Serbian, and American POWs, but mainly between American soldiers and German guards and civilians. Trading was strictly forbidden and was done sub Rosa.
"Stubby," I said, "I had an offer today for my paratroop boots. Three loaves of bread and another pair of shoes." "Don't take it," he said. "I have no intention," I replied. "Some guy traded his wedding ring for five loaves of bread." "Christ." "I spent the day burying potatoes: great piles of them covered with earth. They watched us like hawks, as if the lousy potatoes were scarce. I swiped a couple."
"Let's bake 'em," said Stubby. We went outside, found a dry spot, and built a fire, and I started to hold the potatoes on a stick. "Put them in the hot ashes, Bill," Stubby said. I realized that I had never baked a potato before. We toasted the bread we'd saved from noon, heated the soup we'd just got, grabbed the blower, and raced inside to sit on our blankets to eat dinner.
"When do you think we'll get Red Cross boxes?" Stubby asked. "Any day now, I hope," I replied. We'd heard about the boxes, even seen the remains of some. The Germans were supposed to distribute them, one to a man, approximately every two weeks. The boxes were to supplement a POW's daily ration. We waited and waited and waited.
After five weeks the Red Cross boxes arrived from Switzerland. Some of us thought that they did not just arrive but were on hand all the time and finally distributed by the Germans. The evening we received them was reminiscent of the joyous getting and giving on Christmas morning. Stubby and I got one box apiece. We spread our blankets over the bricks and opened the boxes. All around us the air was bouncing with laughter and conversation.
There was the smell of fish, meat, and cigarettes. The cardboard boxes were about fourteen inches square and six inches deep. Each box contained cans of meat, fish, cheese, candy, jelly, crackers, powdered coffee, tea, sugar, and chewing gum; necessities like razors, and blades; toothbrush and washcloths. And there were American cigarettes, each cigarette worth almost literally its weight in gold.
"Stubby, do you want some of my meat?" I asked. "Don't open yours till later." "No, sir, I'm hungry. I intend to eat the whole can right now." "All right, so will I," I said. With Stubby's homemade utensils we spread beef on crackers anal feasted. Between bites I said, "Stubby, since I don't smoke, what'll we do with my cigarettes?" "I'11 swap you for some of them," Stubby said. "OK," I agreed. "Take the cheese and the candy," Stubby said. "I don't like 'em anyhow." "How many cigarettes?" I asked. "Whatever you want," he replied. We worked out a deal. I saved some cigarettes for trading and built up a stock of food. We continued to eat and examine each article over and over, reading every word on the labels. Stubby had, of course, long since lighted a Camel and was enjoying deep drags. "Let's make some coffee," Stubby said. Except for ersatz coffee, we had not tasted American coffee since we flew from England.
Stubby grabbed some wood and the blower and went outside to brew some water. I watched the boxes Some men sat alone, silently going through their boxes, relishing the luxury of having more food before them than they could eat at a single sitting. They examined each article, selecting, rejecting, sampling, putting away. Men in twos and threes sat around their boxes, eating, swapping, exuberantly kidding, and griping over the dividing and the worth of each article. Some men were passing among others swapping, bargaining, trading. Stubby returned with the hot water and mixed the powdered coffee, and we sat, talked, and munched on food. It was a little like being back in our tent in England, where we had done exactly the same thing. After one cup Stubbyraced out and heated some more water. We drank four cups. We were getting silly. The effect on my nervous system was like an injection of dope. The place was jumping'. When the Germans turned out the lights at ten o'clock I was wide awake. Stubby and I talked for hours, nibbling away on some crackers and jam. Before dawn I fell asleep. At roll call the next morning I said to Stubby, "I was ha/itching and turning all night. What a coffee jag." He laughed and said, "I went to the latrine during the night. It wasn't only the coffee that disturbed you. A couple of rats ran over us."
Going to the latrine at Stalag XIIA was an experience. Inside our barracks there was a milk can. It was placed near the entrance and overflowed onto the muddy floor. It was hours before a detail came to clean it up. Outside, on my way to the latrine building, it was wet and sloppy. Within the brick building the floor was a slithering mass of mud two inches deep. In the dimly lit latrine there were a few partitioned stools, but most were lined up along the walls--thirty to forty on the longest walls. Excrement, which filled most of the stools to overflowing, oozed about in the mud. The contents of the stools was collected manually in small wooden wagons and carted away, in some cases to be used as fertilizer. If the stools were once operated by flushing water they were no longer. Needless to say, there were none of the amenities of a toilet. Men walked guardedly, as upon eggs, in this building. The smell that rose from the latrine was straight out of Hell. The fear of an epidemic became my greatest terror.
The overcrowded conditions, improper diet, obnoxious latrines, and increasing cold weather as we ended October in northern Germany led to illness. Diarrhea and dysentery, old familiar enemies, returned. In POW camp, without the American medics and their supplies, any disease was ominous. It was rumored that in order to get to a hospital one needed to be nearly dead. We saw no reason for the Nazis to take any special precautions with us.
Soon after I arrived in Limburg I lost track of Sergeant Birdwell and Corporal Gerry. As noncommissioned officers, they were separated from privates. I thought of them often. I remembered our many arguments, our long, long miles together, our many bivouacs in Louisiana, Carolina, Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Italy, England; I remembered our Christmas together in North Ireland, our terrible days together in Normandy. I missed them. I never saw them again.
As private soldiers Stubby and I were required, by the Geneva Convention (we were told), to work. In Stalag XIIA that meant digging pits for potatoes, removing rubble from bombings, and digging ditches. On one such detail we walked to the edge of Limburg and were given shovels and told to dig. One bright and knowing POW asked the German guard what we were digging. "just dig," he grunted. "Are these gun emplacements?" the POW questioned. "Yes," said the guard, and pointing to the earth he added, "Dig." The POW refused. There was a big argument. Other POWs joined the argument. A Luftwaffe officer came over, and the POW explained, "By the Geneva Convention we are not allowed to dig gun emplacements against our own troops." More verbal exchanges. Big talkers. Big joke. From the argument I gathered we had two choices: resist and take the consequences-probably solitary confinement and no food-or dig. My notes inform me that we all dug. Not willingly; under protest, at the end of a rifle or a bayonet. But we dug; with infuriating slowness and like stumblebums, we dug.
While we worked, one newly captured POW who had recently been in the States enheartened us with, "You should see what the German POWs get at home." We paused to listen. He went on, "They have clean barracks. They get GI chow." "So?" someone said. "And who cares?" The guy went on, "They even mix with American soldiers and civilians." "Yeah, Americans are softhearted." Who could refute the reporter? So we argued these international problems while we dug a few lousy holes for the Germans to hold out against the coming of our buddies. It was as funny as hell.
If ever there was a buddy system in some units of the U.S. Army, by October in POW camp it was no longer discernible. Prison life, indeed the boxcar ride, saw the buddy system collapse. Hunger for food and cigarettes dominated our lives. All we had lots of was hunger. All we had to share was hunger. We started begging butts when a man reached for a cigarette. The butt, pinioned on the point of a toothpick or held tightly at the tips of a tweezer, was passed around among ten to twelve men while it burned the last one's lips. We watched our buddies snipe butts from the latrine floors. They begged butts from Nazi guards, from German civilians, while the latter looked on in contempt and the former with withering scorn.
... to be continued ...