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“…I remarked this was a bit like home. He replied 'Not quite' and it wasn’t long before I got what he meant.”

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   Ernest Nelson Thorp
Image of Ernest Nelson Thorp
Ernest Thorp [detail]
War: World War, 1939-1945
Branch: Army Air Forces/Corps
Unit: 452nd Bomb Group, 8th Air Force
Service Location: San Antonio, Texas; Chickasaw, Enid, Altus, Oklahoma; Salt Lake City, Utah; Sioux City, Iowa; Deopham Green, United Kingdom; Germany; European Theater
Rank: Captain
POW: Yes
Place of Birth: IL
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Even in summer, the North Sea is a cold place for a pilot to ditch his plane, but that’s what Captain Ernest Thorp did on August 4, 1944, when his bomber suffered irreparable flak damage during a run over Germany. Fortunately for Thorp, a fishing boat was in the area, and he was “rescued” and handed over to German authorities. He spent most of his time as a POW in two camps, with a six-week forced march as a kind of intermission. Food was never far from his mind; liberation day by Allied troops found Thorp in the camp kitchen, whipping up a batch of pudding. The detailed diaries he kept in captivity allowed him to write a memoir, which includes lists of books he read and the contents of every food parcel he received while imprisoned.

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»Photo Album (38 photos)
 Memoirs
»Bound diary "My Stretch In The Service 1943-45
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  The Library of Congress  >> American Folklife Center
  October 26, 2011
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