CAMP KENEDY 1942
November 5th, 2007 @ 09:34
Posted by: John Whipple Sr.
Little by little I’m learning this picture (image) thing among other Word Press bells and whistles. This poor picture got as fuzzy as it is by being drug around the internet a few times. I didn’t do it right but I got it here. I know it has to be simpler than the path I took using my limited code knowledge but I have learned a lot.. . . .anyway. . . . .my story is. . . .
This picture is looking East probably from the corner of Graham Road and Highway 181 South. If you look along the skyline you can see the huge metal power lines that run along the top of the hill and separates grandfather’s farm from our farm (Whipple Family Farm) 161 acres left. My grandfather Levi Pullin, had a house well off the road and about half way up the hill. If you follow the skyline left to right and about 3/4 of the way across you actually can see his farmhouse. He had about 300 acres over on his side and we had about 250 acres. together we owned most all the land between 181 and the Overby highway 743 for miles. I became a farm hand from a city boy here.. . .and helped wear out a 46 Ford 7N tractor and that is hard to do.
What you see here is an interment (Prison) camp on my grandfathers farm in Kenedy, Texas. I remember it very well and I was 9 years old when I saw it for the first time. There was a guard house at the gate just off of highway 181 South of Kenedy about a mile from town. There were guard towers and high wire fencing and you had to pass through it to get to my grandfather’s farm..
I have been reading stories about the people in this camp and I can remember walking down the sandy dirt road barefooted. It was hot and protected with some serious sized red ants, horned toads, and Texas sized grass burrs and seeing the prisoners inside the fenced area. They often called to me and one time I stopped and went over to them and they showed me pictures of their wifes and kids from wallet photos.
I had a six pack of 5 cent assorted sodas that I was carrying back home that I had bought at the “beer joint” as it was referred to by my grandmother and later known as Schultz’s Inn with the bottle cap driveway that encircled the building. They gave me money to go back down the hill and buy more drinks. I gave them the sodas I had and when I came back by the second time. . . .They were gone. This had to be in the year 1946 when Camp Kenedy had been converted to a POW (Prisoner of War) camp.
It’s just a memory. . . . .
Someone, somewhere, somehow might want to hear. . . . .
email2friend
November 7th, 2007 02:51
Camp Kenedy housed only men, many of whom were separated from family members who were sent to other camps. The U.S. Army took over the facility in 1944 and Kenedy became a prisoner of war camp.
November 7th, 2007 05:42
KENEDY ALIEN DETENTION CAMP. The Kenedy Alien Detention Camp was one of several World War II internment campsqv established in the United States to detain alien civilians. In March 1942 the United States Border Patrol entered into an agreement with the town of Kenedy, Texas, to lease the former J. M. Nichols CCC Camp on the southern outskirts of town for the Immigration and Naturalization Service. The lease was made for the purpose of establishing an alien internment camp wherein aliens from the United States and Latin America who were considered dangerous to the public safety could be interned. At the outset of World War II,qv when conditions were bleak for the Allies, the United States undertook to protect its national interests by entering into agreement with Latin-American countries to arrest and intern for the duration of the war all resident aliens or citizens of German, Japanese, or Italian descent who could possibly aid the Axis war effort. Alien families would be sent to an internment camp at Crystal City, Texas, and single males would be sent to the internment camp at Kenedy.
The former CCC camp had nine barracks and several smaller buildings, which were refurbished. Additional facilities, including a large dining hall and kitchen, a headquarters, a hospital, officers’ and nurses’ quarters, officers’ kitchen and dining room, and 200 sixteen-by-sixteen-foot prefabricated building huts called “victory huts,” were constructed. Additionally, a ten-foot-high double barbed-wire fence was built around the detention area. Guard towers were erected at the four corners, at the entrance gate, and in the middle of the long side at the back of the camp.
A detail from the United States Border Patrolqv was sent to Kenedy to assist in putting the headquarters, liaison, supply, and surveillance departments into operation. Particular care was exercised to adhere to the terms of the Geneva Convention, whereby internees were not only humanely cared for on the inside but also were protected from adversaries and curiosity seekers on the outside. A Censorship Division was set up to examine all incoming and outgoing mail, which involved having interpreters qualified in the German, Italian, Japanese, and Spanish languages. All employees had to be investigated and given security clearance by the FBI and the State Department. All of the various sheriffs’ departments of Karnes and surrounding counties were briefed on procedures to use in case of escape. The total authorized strength of personnel at the camp was ninety.
On April 21, 1942, the Kenedy Alien Detention Camp received its first internees-456 Germans, 156 Japanese, and 14 Italians. The Japanese came mainly from Mexico, but the Germans and Italians came largely from Central and South America. In May 1942 another 355 aliens, mostly German, were received. In October 1943 the camp was at its peak of operation. More than 2,000 aliens passed in and out of its gates: 1,168 German, 705 Japanese, 72 Italian, and 62 miscellaneous (Rumanian, Hungarian, Bulgarian, Swede, Finn, Russian, and Korean). From the time the Kenedy Camp received its first internees on April 21, 1942, until it was phased out and converted into a prisoner of war camp on October 1, 1944, more than 3,500 aliens passed in and out its gates. The population of the camp varied between 700 and 1,200 detainees.
Turnover at the camp was frequent because of the significant number of internees that were repatriated to Germany and Japan. Repatriation was a diplomatic tool that the State Department used to secure the release of wounded American soldiers and American and Latin-American civilians who had been captured by the enemy. Arrangements were made by the State Department with the Axis powers to exchange enemy aliens on a one-by-one basis, using Lisbon, Portugal, as the neutral port of exchange. The principal exchange ships used by the allied and Axis powers were the SS Gripsholm, chartered by the Swedish government; the SS Drotningholm, chartered by the Swiss government; and the Serpa Pinta, whose registration is unknown. The first repatriation from the Kenedy camp took place on May 5, 1942, when twenty-one Germans were repatriated. By the end of 1943 a total of 975 internees had been repatriated. Eventually all the internees were repatriated, transferred, paroled, or released. The escape and recapture of Fritz Kuhn, leader of the German-American Bund, and twelve former sailors from the German pocket battleship Graf Spee, which had been scuttled on December 17, 1939, in Montevideo harbor, was widely noted.
The Kenedy Alien Detention camp continued in operation until October 1, 1944, when the United States Army took over its operation. Shortly after that, a trainload of wounded and disabled German army veterans from the Battle of the Bulge arrived. American soldiers who had been wounded in that battle served as their guards. The camp was disbanded shortly after World War II. In 1992 only two water towers, a concrete slab of the slaughtering house, and five graves of internees remained to mark the site.
Robert H. Thonhoff
November 7th, 2007 23:10
Awesome post! I put it up on the Karnes County genealogy website with a link back to you so that people can see the great work you have done. If you have anything more like this, I would love to post it!
November 9th, 2007 11:27
Thank You Kimm. . .
It is amazing how many lives had been touched by the Kenedy Camp and others. . . .I think 21 in all. 3 in Texas. I did not even know about the others till I learned about them on the web.
Seems like we could learn from these first hand experiences and I think the world wide web is going to do more in correcting injustices than any man made law or politics we ever trusted.
You just can’t get to a positive place on a negative path!