Europa Newswire.
Photo by Tech. Sgt. Jeffrey Wolfe.
It is said that everyone has a story to tell. If that is true, Stan
Angleton's story would be on the best seller's list. Angleton, a World
War II veteran and prisoner of war, took the time to talk with the
Thunderbolt about his experiences as a POW for 15 and a half months at
prison camp Stalag 17B in Krems, Austria.
After being drafted into the Army Air Corps Nov. 5, 1942, Angleton, a Kansas native, trained as a flight mechanic in Texas.
"They told me, 'You are going to Wichita Falls, Texas, for A&M
training at Sheppard Field,'" Angleton recalled. "I spent six months
there learning the airplane. They taught us on the B-25 and B-26s.
After that, they sent me to gunnery show down in Harlingen, Texas, for
about six weeks. After I graduated from gunnery school, they sent me to
El Paso, Texas, to join my flight crew. From there, we started flying
all over making bomb runs, dummy runs, all over the country."
After training, Angleton and the nine other members of his crew, headed
to Topeka, Kansas, to pick up their brand new B-24 bomber. By way of
Maine, Iceland, England, and Casablanca, they finally arrived at the
city of Benghazi in North Africa, where they joined the 376th Heavy
Bomb Group.
"We made nine missions out of Bengasi and then they (the Allied Forces)
took over enough of Italy, we moved up to San Fangrazio, Italy, located
across from Bari, which was one of the main hubs to come in by ship,"
he said.
After flying 15 successful missions out of Italy, 18 B-24s with the
376th HBG took off Dec. 28, 1943, to bomb a ball bearing base in
northern Italy.
"We had been to the same place Christmas day and bombed, but we missed
one big building," Angleton remembered. "Command said, 'You are going
back on the 28th.' When we went the first time, there were no fighter
pilots or anything. Those kinds of missions we called milk runs; we
flew over, dropped our bombs and came back. But the 28th of December,
that was a different story.
The ambush
"It was kinda overcast that day, and we were late taking off. We were
supposed to rendezvous with another crew , but we were 30 minutes late
getting to rendezvous point. (The) rule was if you missed your
rendezvous, you were supposed to turn around. The other group saw we
didn't make it and turned around. But we got there and the lead captain
said it was another milk run, and we could make it without the
fighters."
So the group went on, one short of their normal 18 because one
plane had engine trouble and had to turn around. Just after coming in
off of the Adriatic coast between 75 and 100 Luftwaffe German fighters
hit. According to Angleton, the Germans knew the group was going
because they intercepted radio transmissions between the Americans
asking if the group should go on or turn back.
"We didn't even get to drop one bomb before they attacked," Angleton
said. "The Luftwaffe just picked us off one after another. But we got a
lot of their airplanes too."
Angleton's plane was hit and caught fire. Cliff Wendell, the pilot,
described what he saw when he was alerted the craft had been hit.
"Through the small window in the bomb bay door I saw a blazing
inferno," Wendell said in a letter to a friend dated Aug. 15, 1948.
"All our gasoline and oxygen was burning around 8,000 pounds of bombs
we had there."
At the time the plane caught fire, Angleton was flying waist gun,
meaning he was in the fuselage shooting a 50-caliber machine gun out of
the side of the airplane.
"There were airplanes blowing up all over the place," Angleton said,
who had just turned twenty one three months earlier. "I saw three
airplanes blow up and not a soul got out of them. That is 30 men lost
right there. The pilot gave the order to bail out when he saw the fire.
The other waist gunner had shot down two fighters, but was burnt pretty
bad. The flames had got to him and caught him on fire. I and the lower
ball bearer gunner helped him put on his parachute and got him to the
camera door where he could drop out."
After making sure the badly injured waist gunner got out of the plane,
Mr. Angleton hooked on his parachute and jumped, his flight suit aflame.
Angleton made it to ground safely, his suit no longer on fire, but he
had been burned badly on his back and neck. A number of Italian
civilians rounded up the survivors and brought them to a house where an
Italian woman put salve on Mr. Singleton and other injured members.
"She said she would like to let us go, but she didn't dare to, telling
us her son had been killed by the Germans," Angleton said. "She said
the German's would shot them if they let us go."
Two hours later, the Germans showed up. The 20 or so survivors were
herded into a big truck and taken to Frankfurt, Germany, where they
were interrogated for five days.
"I was in a little cell, maybe six foot by four foot," Angleton
recalled. "The only time I would get out of it was when they would try
to ask me questions. I wouldn't tell them. They would ask me what group
I was with, what was my commander's name. They already knew it, they
knew more about the base then we did!"
After the interrogation, the Americans were loaded into a troop train.
Mr. Angleton recalled that there were so many men packed in the box
car, that you couldn't sit unless someone else was going to stand up.
"We never got latrine breaks," he said. "They had five gallon cans,
three or four of them, and you can figure what they smelled like by the
time we got off. We were on (board) for about 4 days.
They took us to Krems, Austria, to prison camp Stalag 17B."
POW camp, Stalag 17B
Stalag 17B housed close to 5,000 American prisoners, and the other side
of the camp housed Italians, Poles and a few other nationalities. The
two camps were separated by two large fences. Angleton described the
barracks to be similar to duplexes, where one end would house 300 men
with a washroom in the middle, and the other side housing 300 more men.
Angleton was in barracks 19B.
"They turned the water on three times a day for two hours a time and
that was all the water they would let us have," he said. "And it was
all cold. There was no heat, no hot water at all. In the winter, it was
pretty cold, a lot of snow. I was wearing what I bailed out in, and we
did get G.I. overcoats that the government sent in."
As far as food, the POWs mainly ate rutabaga soup or potatoes.
"We would get Red Cross parcels that had a D-bar, which was a chocolate
bar, a small can of cocoa, a small can of powdered coffee," Angleton
said. "But by the time they got to us, the coffee had drawn dampness
and was harder than a rock. We would also get butter which we would
melt and we would stick rags down in the can to make a wick. We could
light that at night because they would shut off the electricity as soon
as it got dark."
The POWs were supposed to get Red Cross parcels weekly, but usually only got one or two every six weeks.
Overall, Angleton said he felt he was lucky because he was in one of
the better camps. The prisoners were able to write plays and perform
them every two weeks. Boxing matches and basketball tournaments were
allowed, and Mr. Angleton's barracks only lost one basketball game the
entire time they were in the camp.
Angleton learned some German while imprisoned, and became familiar with
a few of the German guards, with whom he started trading.
"About once a month, you could get a small package from home," he said.
"They would send stuff you could trade for something else. The German's
loved those D-bars, so you could get about anything you wanted for
those. We got some radio equipment and the guys made crystal sets. They
traded those for a small red radio that they were able to get BBC
signals on so they could tell what was going on. We knew more of what
was going on than some of the Germans."
When Angleton got to the camp, he was able to send a card to a family
member and let them know he was in a POW camp. They sent him cigarettes
and other items which he traded. There was only a few POWs, including
Angleton, who were willing to trade with the Germans because if they
got caught, the Germans would put them in a little cell and on bread
and water for seven, 15 or 21 days. Angleton spent the max in one of
those cells, a total of 43 days. But that didn't stop him. After his
third confinement, he continued trading but avoided detection.
The escape
After Angleton had been in the camp for 15-and-a-half months, the war
was nearing a close. The Germans decided to evacuate camp in two
sections trying to avoid capture. They marched the Americans out first
and then the other nationalities out second. Mr. Angleton and three
American friends thought they had a better chance of escape if they
marched with the non American group, so they bribed two guards with
cigarettes to let them move to the other side of the camp. The next
day, the Germans moved the American camp, and the day after they
started moving the other camp where Mr. Angleton was hiding.
After marching 20 miles the first day, Angleton, three other American
and two English soldiers fell to the back of the group and told two of
the German guards that they were planning on "taking out".
"The told us to be careful and not let the SS (meaning Schutzstaffel or
Shield Squadron) catch up because that would be the end of us,"
Angleton said. "We gave them cigarettes, they shook our hands and told
us to be careful. When they started around the hill we went the other
way."
For the next weeks, the group traveled by night and hid by day.
Eventually, they found a cave near Lintz, Austria, where they made
camp. By day, they could see where farmers planted potatoes, and at
night, they scavenged for food. Two weeks, passed and two of Angleton's
companions came across two German deserters on a steep hill when they
were scouting the area.
"They (the Germans) had been injured but were about well and they
were going to get sent back to the front," Angleton said. "They didn't
want to go back up to the front so they deserted by this little town
where their folks and a lot of their relatives lived. They invited us
up that night, and they fed us and gave us all the wine and schnapps we
wanted."
For the next three weeks until the war was officially over, Angleton's crew and the two Germans stayed together on the hill.
"When the war was over, we knew it right quick, because some of their folks came and told us," he said.
The group went down to the village, split up into groups of two and
lived with local families until American forces came through and picked
them up two weeks later.
When asked if he thought he'd made a good decision to escape from the
Germans, Angleton said he was glad he made that decision.
"We were glad we escaped, because we found out later that on their
march, if you got down or were sick or couldn't move or something and
if you didn't have a buddy to help you, that was the end of you. They
shot them right there. They didn't care because they knew the war was
about over. We thought we made a wise decision."
After the war, Angleton, now 87, worked and retired from Trans World
Airlines after 40 years of employment, traveled the world and will be
celebrating 64 years of marriage to his wife Hazel this spring.
Source: 56th Fighter Wing Public Affairs.
Story by Deborah silliman Wolfe.
