List of prisoners of war

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Senior officers held captive in Oflag IV-C in Colditz Castle, including Admiral Józef Unrug and General Tadeusz Piskor.
Winston Churchill in Durban after escaping from captivity in 1899. He had written the Boer Secretary of War a polite departure note, "I have the honour to inform you that as I do not consider that your Government has any right to detain me as a military prisoner, I have decided to escape from your custody..."[1]

This is a list of famous prisoners of war (POWs) whose imprisonment attracted media attention, or who became well known afterwards.

A[]

  • Ron Arad — Israeli fighter pilot, shot down over Lebanon in 1986. He has not been seen or heard from since 1988 and is widely presumed to be dead.
  • Everett Alvarez, Jr. Navy Commander who endured one of the longest periods as a prisoner of war (POW) in American history. Alvarez was the first American pilot to be shot down and held as a POW in North Vietnam. He spent over 8 years in captivity, making him the second longest-held POW in American history.

B[]

C[]

  • : Worked for various Intelligence Agencies, captured in 2007. Imprisoned by the Taliban, rescued the following year.
  • Anthony Chenevix-Trench; future headmaster of Eton, artillery officer, prisoner 1942-45 at Changi Prison and on the Burma Railway.
  • Winston Churchill — during the Second Boer War; escaped
  • James Clavell — prisoner in Singapore, based his novel King Rat on his experiences during World War II
  • George Thomas Coker — U.S. Navy aviator, POW in North Vietnam, noted resistor of his captors
  • John Cordwell — forged documents to help fellow English soldiers get out of Germany as part of the Great Escape

D[]

E[]

G[]

  • Henri Giraud — French general, escaped German captivity in both World War I and World War II
  • Albert Goldenstedt, German Resistant, Camp 383, 381, El Daaba, 379, Quassassin (Egypt), Wilton Park
  • Ernest Gordon — Japanese POW in World War II, author of "To End All Wars" and former Presbyterian Dean of Princeton University chapel

H[]

J[]

K[]

  • Bert Kaempfert — German Orchestra conductor in World War II at a Danish prisoner of war camp.
  • Emil Kapaun — Roman Catholic priest in the US Army that was a Medal of Honor recipient, and a candidate for sainthood in the Roman Catholic Church.
  • George Kenner — German artist interned as a civilian POW in Great Britain and the Isle of Man during World War I. Documented his experience in 110 paintings and drawings.
  • Tikka Khan — Japanese POW during World War II, Chief of Army Staff of the Pakistani Army.
  • Wajid Khan Canadian politician — former Pakistan-India War 1971 fighter pilot.
  • Yahya Khan — German POW during World War II, last president of a united Pakistan.
  • Maximilian Kolbe — Roman Catholic priest from Poland, interned in Auschwitz, and canonized as a saint by the Roman Catholic Church.
  • Tadeusz Bór-Komorowski — Commander of the Polish Home Army in the Warsaw Uprising.
  • Gustav Krist — Adventurer and traveler, Austrian soldier in World War I, captured by Russians in 1914. Interned in Russian Turkestan.
  • Sam Kydd — British actor.

L[]

M[]

N[]

  • Airey Neave — British politician made the first British home run from Colditz on 5 January 1942.
  • A. A. K. Niazi — commander of Pakistan Army in East Pakistan who surrendered along with nearly 93,000 prisoners.

O[]

  • Richard O'Connor; British General who commanded the Western Desert Force 1940-41.

P[]

  • Friedrich Paulus — German field marshal, surrendered Stalingrad to the Soviets in 1943
  • Pete Peterson — American diplomat and member of Congress who spent more than six years as a prisoner of war from 1966 to 1973. An Air Force pilot, his plane was shot down over Vietnam during the Vietnam War.
  • Donald Pleasence — English film and stage actor. Was shot down while serving in the RAF during World War II, taken prisoner, and placed in a German prisoner-of-war camp. He later acted in the film The Great Escape.

R[]

  • John Rarick – Former U.S. Representative from Louisiana
  • Pat Reid — non-fiction/historical author.
  • James Robinson Risner — USAF Brigadier General. First living recipient of the Air Force Cross.
  • Yevgeny Rodionov — Russian soldier captured by rebel forces in Chechnya and beheaded for refusing to convert to Islam.
  • Giles Romilly; Nephew of Winston Churchill, war correspondent, celebrity prisoner-of-war (Prominente) in Germany 1940-45.
  • James N. Rowe — Colonel, U.S. Army Special Forces, held by the Viet Cong from October 1963 until December 1968. One of only thirty-four U.S. soldiers to escape captivity in Vietnam. Author of Five Years to Freedom. Assassinated by the New People's Army in the Philippines on April 21, 1989.
  • Helmut Ruge -- Active duty member of the German Navy captured on civilian German freighter ODENWALD on November 6, 1941. Proclaimed as the "first German prisoner of war captured by the United States" in a classified Navy report published March 12, 1942 and since declassified by the National Archives.

S[]

T[]

  • Floyd James Thompson — America's longest-held POW; he spent 9 years in POW camps in Vietnam (1964 — 1973).
  • Josip Broz Tito — president of Yugoslavia, Austrian soldier in World War I, captured by Russians in 1915.
  • András Toma – Last known WWII POW. A Hungarian soldier, he lived in a psychiatric asylum in Russia for 55 years after being captured. He was identified and returned home in 2000.
  • Jakow Trachtenberg — A Russian Jewish mathematician who developed the mental calculation techniques called the Trachtenberg system.
  • Mikhail Tukhachevsky — Soviet military leader and theorist, captured by Germans in World War I.

U[]

V[]

W[]

Z[]

  • Louis Zamperini — American athlete, member of Olympic team, captured by Japanese forces in 1943.[4]

References[]

  1. ^ Sir Winston S. Churchill (10 December 1899), The Boer War: London to Ladysmith via Pretoria and Ian Hamilton's March, Bloomsbury, p. 70, ISBN 9781472520838
  2. ^ Gordon, Ernest. (2005). Miracle on the River Kwai. Royal National Institute of the Blind. p. 173. OCLC 939628465.
  3. ^ Sparks, Jared: The Writings of George Washington, Vol VII, Harper and Brothers, New York (1847) p. 211.
  4. ^ Hillenbrand, Laura (2010). Unbroken: A World War II story of survival, resilience, and redemption. New York, NY: Random House. ISBN 978-0-81297-449-2.

Don Helmut Ruge (2008) The Story of Helmut Ruge of the Graff Spee http://www.ww2pacific.com/ruge0.html

and http://www.ww2pacific.com/ruge.html

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