Held in Minnesota: Untold WWII POW Stories
World War II left a severe labor shortage on Minnesota’s farms – threatening the state and nation’s food supply at a critical time. Men who usually worked the fields left to fight overseas, paradoxically created a void that was filled by over 4,000 German and Italian POWs from overseas. Held in Minnesota: Untold WWII POW Stories is a Pioneer PBS documentary film about the forgotten history of twenty-one POW labor camps in Minnesota during WWII by way of a major POW camp in Algona, Iowa. Initially, communities were uneasy about dangerous enemies living among them and feared the prisoners would escape and seek revenge, bringing the war to their doorsteps. But curiously, the POWs and community members were inexplicably drawn to one another, especially in communities heavily populated with German Americans, like in New Ulm. In some cases, the prisoners formed tight bonds with Minnesotans, attended church together, drinking at bars together and working side by side. Only one significant escape was noted when two German POWs attempted to return to the motherland in a stolen boat down the Mississippi River. The POWs were capture several days later—making headlines. Held in Minnesota explores the stories of these communities coming to bumpy terms with the enemy not only on their soil but tilling it, during an extraordinary time in Minnesota’s history and the world’s. #ww2 #pows #minnesota Support Pioneer PBS to help us continue telling your stories. Become a member today: https://www.pioneer.org/supportpioneer/

Cold War Secrets of Northern Minnesota | Full Documentary

A German POW in Pennsylvania--At 101, He Tells His Story

101-Year-Old Bodybuilder Recalls Intense WW2 Combat | Andy Bostinto

Nazi Town, USA | Full Documentary | AMERICAN EXPERIENCE | PBS

Why Francis Sherman Currey Was The Scariest Soldier of WW2

The Real Life of Civilians under the Nazi Regime

Stunning restored footage of the Japanese Surrender on the USS Missouri, today 2 Sept. 80 years ago!

How I Interrogated Nazis as a Jewish-American Soldier | Frank Cohn

The Rise and Fall of America's Flour Capital: Minneapolis, Minnesota

German POWs Were Shocked By America’s Industrial Might After Arriving In The United States

Cambodia 1975: Inside the Khmer Rouge Takeover of Phnom Penh - Documentary Historical - AMP

How Did Germany Get Rid of the Nazis after the End of World War II?

Judging Japan: How the Tokyo War Crimes Trial Went Wrong | FULL DOCUMENTARY

What German Soldiers Found Shocking About American Equipment

Nazi POWs in Louisiana Couldn't Believe What Americans Considered 'Prison

Verdun, the Battle of the Great War

German POWs in Oregon Thought They’d Been Sent to Heaven

What Was Life Like In Germany Immediately After The Fall Of The Nazis?

What Longstreet Understood About Grant That Lee Refused to Accept Until It Was Too Late

