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Lodge Moor POW Camp Ruins in Sheffield, England

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Lodge Moor POW Camp Ruins

In the midst of panoramic views of quintessential Derbyshire peaks and moors stands this odd patch of woods with a dark and dense history.

It is unnamed and unmarked, yet protected from the road by an old stone wall. If you follow a path into the woods, you will find rectangles of cement overgrown with grass and moss amongst the trees, steps that lead to nowhere, and the flooded remains of basements.

This is all that remains of Sheffield's only Prisoner of War camp, once known as "Redmires" or the Lodge Moor Camp.

The camp was established at the end of World War I to house the last of the war's POWs. Among those prisoners were several famed officers, including Admiral Karl Doenitz, head of the German navy, and the man who took over the Third Reich after Hitler committed suicide.

To avoid persecution as a war criminal (as captain of a U-Boat), Doenitz feigned psychotic mental illness and got transferred to Wythenshawe Hospital in Manchester.

In the 1940s, after being captured, enemy German soldiers were transported by boat to England and then herded into trains to camps like at Sheffield. Once they arrived they got interrogated and classified by allegiance to the Nazi cause. The true believers were classified as black and non-believers as white, but the majority were gray.

Thousands of men were imprisoned in Sheffield long-term until their classification was determined.

The camp was allegedly better than life in battle. The POWs were fed and educated, though sleeping conditions were dire. Overcrowding forced prisoners to sleep outdoors in tents, and by September 1944, the rain turned the ground upon which many of the prisoners slept into the bare mud.

Undeterred (or perhaps invigorated) by the conditions, numerous groups of "true believers" regularly plotted to sabotage the Allied war effort by escaping the camp. The remains of several attempted escape tunnels can still be explored near the camp walls to this day.


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