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Chapter 6 - Well fed and plenty of freedom

Autonomy and independence in German captivity

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 November 2019

Aaron Pegram
Affiliation:
Australian War Memorial
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Summary

Six months after his capture at Fromelles, Captain Charles Mills was at a camp for Allied officers at Hanoversch Münden in Lower Saxony, where he wrote to his commanding officer describing life as a prisoner of war. ‘Our daily life is much as we make it. Daily routine is in our own hands, and except for a roll call at 9.30 morning and night, we are left alone, which suits us very well.’ Mills spent his days reading, exercising, studying French and German, and enjoying walks beyond the prison walls. His captors were ‘uniformly courteous’, and the food was decent and better than expected. His greatest concern was the uncertainty of the war’s duration. ‘Time hangs! Day after day with absolutely nothing to do! I have led a busy and active life and find this enforced lack of occupation very trying.’

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Chapter
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Surviving the Great War
Australian Prisoners of War on the Western Front 1916–18
, pp. 129 - 150
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2019

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