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Revisit a critical and little-known piece of WWII history that had a profound impact on Illinois and the nation.
During WWII, the United States was home to almost half a million POW's --German, Italian, and Japanese soldiers captured overseas and then brought to the US. The POWs were housed in various large camps set up in 44 of the nation's then 48 states. One of those states was Illinois. At its peak, Illinois housed three major base camps and 20 branch camps, stretching from the Rockford-Chicago area down to Camp Pomona, near Murphysboro. When not housed in these camps, POW's were put to work, on the state's farms and in its factories, to alleviate the country's serious wartime labor shortages. By the end of the war, there was no part of Illinois that was not touched by these prisoners of war.
Author Cary O'Dell sheds light on a largely forgotten element of homefront WWII history.
Revisit a critical and little-known piece of WWII history that had a profound impact on Illinois and the nation.
During WWII, the United States was home to almost half a million POW's --German, Italian, and Japanese soldiers captured overseas and then brought to the US. The POWs were housed in various large camps set up in 44 of the nation's then 48 states. One of those states was Illinois. At its peak, Illinois housed three major base camps and 20 branch camps, stretching from the Rockford-Chicago area down to Camp Pomona, near Murphysboro. When not housed in these camps, POW's were put to work, on the state's farms and in its factories, to alleviate the country's serious wartime labor shortages. By the end of the war, there was no part of Illinois that was not touched by these prisoners of war.
Author Cary O'Dell sheds light on a largely forgotten element of homefront WWII history.
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