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Letter from Peter Peterson to Secretary of War Edwin Stanton Requesting the Back Pay of His Invalid Brother, Samuel Peterson, to Help Pay the Medical Bills Due After His Return from Andersonville Prison

Record Group 94: Records of the Adjutant General’s OfficeSeries: Letters ReceivedFile Unit: File for Samuel Peterson, 8th USCT Infantry Regiment

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Source: catalog.archives.gov

    • #archivesgov
    • #may24
    • #1865
    • #19th century
    • #us civil war
    • #andersonville prison
    • #pow
  • 2 months ago
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Women’s Army Corps Cpl. Barbara Fenster (left) and Cpl. Genevieve E. Guethlein secure information from German prisoner of war Pvt. Frederick Bonk, captured in Tunisia. September 7, 1943, at Hampton Roads Port of Embarkation.
“Record Group 336:...
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Women’s Army Corps Cpl. Barbara Fenster (left) and Cpl. Genevieve E. Guethlein secure information from German prisoner of war Pvt. Frederick Bonk, captured in Tunisia. September 7, 1943, at Hampton Roads Port of Embarkation.

Record Group 336: Records of the Office of the Chief of Transportation

Series: Photographic Albums of Prints of Hampton Roads Port of Embarkation

Image description: Inside a tent, a young man in a German uniform with “AFRIKAKORPS” on his sleeve stands to the side of a desk. Seated at the desk are two women in Women’s Army Corps uniforms, who are writing. In the background are more desks and more German prisoners of war. 

Source: catalog.archives.gov

    • #archivesgov
    • #September 7
    • #1943
    • #1940s
    • #World War II
    • #WWII
    • #military
    • #U.S. Army
    • #Women's Army Corps
    • #POW
    • #prisoners of war
    • #cw: nazis
    • #cw: swastika
    • #hopefully not actually visible at this resolution
  • 1 year ago
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Sergeant Ronald L. Ridgeway of the USMC, on April 9, 1973, after his release from five years as a POW during the Vietnam War. 

Ridgeway had been declared killed in action in 1968, and was presumed dead until his release. 

Record Group 127: Records of the U.S. Marine Corps

Series: Black and White Photographs of Marine Corps Activities in Vietnam

File Unit: Divider/Subject - 280 - Operation Homecoming (Repatriation of U.S. Marine POWs)

Image description: SGT Ridgeway is seated indoors next to a flag. He is wearing a service dress uniform and holding a cigarette in loose fingers. He is not smiling. 

Transcription: 

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Source: catalog.archives.gov

    • #archivesgov
    • #April 9
    • #1973
    • #1970s
    • #military
    • #U.S. Marine Corps
    • #USMC
    • #POW
    • #Vietnam War
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A wounded American serviceman salutes a United States representative as the serviceman is released from Viet Cong custody on March 5, 1973.

Record Group 127: Records of the U.S. Marine Corps

Series: Black and White Photographs of Marine Corps Activities in Vietnam

File Unit: Divider/Subject - 280 - Operation Homecoming (Repatriation of U.S. Marine POWs)

Image description: A servicemember raises his hand from one of his crutches to salute a man in a dark-colored uniform whose back is to us. They are outdoors in a tiled area. In the background we can see North Vietnamese soldiers, and other people watching the event. 

Transcription: 

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    • #archivesgov
    • #March 5
    • #1973
    • #1970s
    • #Vietnam
    • #Vietnam War
    • #POW
    • #prisoners of war
    • #Operation Homecoming
    • #military
  • 2 years ago
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Today is Vietnam War Veterans Day. Thank you to those who served! Here, a formation of Vietnam veterans joins the state funeral procession for the Unknown Serviceman of the Vietnam Era, 5/28/1984
“Series: Combined Military Service Digital...
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Today is Vietnam War Veterans Day. Thank you to those who served! 

Here, a formation of Vietnam veterans joins the state funeral procession for the Unknown Serviceman of the Vietnam Era, 5/28/1984

Series: Combined Military Service Digital Photographic Files, 1982 - 2007

Record Group 330: Records of the Office of the Secretary of Defense, 1921 - 2008

Image description: A formation of men, most wearing a combination of camouflage uniforms, blue jeans, and civilian clothing, walk down a wide sidewalk. Their mouths are open as though they’re chanting or singing. At the front of the group they carry an American flag and two POW/MIA flags.

Source: catalog.archives.gov

    • #archivesgov
    • #Vietnam War Veterans Day
    • #May 28
    • #1984
    • #1980s
    • #Vietnam War
    • #POW
    • #MIA
  • 4 years ago
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“COMBAT CARGO, JAPAN–Clasping his wife tightly in his arms, aboard a Combat Cargo C-124 “Globemaster” just after it landed near Tokyo, Capt. Zach W. Dean of El Dorado, Kan., the third U.S. Air Force repatriate returned by the Communists, finishes the...
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“COMBAT CARGO, JAPAN–Clasping his wife tightly in his arms, aboard a Combat Cargo C-124 “Globemaster” just after it landed near Tokyo, Capt. Zach W. Dean of El Dorado, Kan., the third U.S. Air Force repatriate returned by the Communists, finishes the first leg of his long trip back from a Red prison camp…” 4/27/1953

Series: Black and White Photographs of U.S. Air Force and Predecessors’ Activities, Facilities, and Personnel, Domestic and Foreign, 1930 - 1975. Record Group 342: Records of U.S. Air Force Commands, Activities, and Organizations, 1900 - 2003

Caption continued:

“…Captain Dean, a former F-51 Mustang pilot with the 35th Fighter-Interceptor Wing, was shot down on April 22, 1951 and captured. He was flown to Japan aboard a 374th Troop Carrier Wing transport plane, Monday, April 27, 1953, where his wife, A Red Cross worker in Tokyo for the past two years, was waiting to meet him. With Captain Dean on the huge plane were 16 other repatriates, six of whom were litter cases and 10 ambulatory patients. “

Source: catalog.archives.gov

    • #Korean War
    • #KoreanWar65
    • #POW
    • #U.S. Air Force
    • #1950s
    • #1953
    • #April 27
    • #archivesgov
    • #reunion
    • #hug
  • 7 years ago
  • 29
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“American prisoners of war celebrate the 4th of July in the Japanese prison camp of Casisange in Malaybalay, on Mindanao, Philippine Islands. It was against Japanese regulations and discovery would have meant death, but the men celebrated the...
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“American prisoners of war celebrate the 4th of July in the Japanese prison camp of Casisange in Malaybalay, on Mindanao, Philippine Islands. It was against Japanese regulations and discovery would have meant death, but the men celebrated the occasion anyway.” 7/4/1942

Series: Photographs of American Military Activities, ca. 1918 - ca. 1981
Record Group 111: Records of the Office of the Chief Signal Officer, 1860 - 1985

Source: catalog.archives.gov

    • #Fourth of July
    • #World War II
    • #POW
    • #POWs
    • #ww2
    • #WWII75
    • #WWIIStories
    • #July 4
    • #July 4th
    • #1942
    • #1940s
    • #Philippines
    • #prisoners of war
    • #Archivesgov
  • 8 years ago
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Record of a Homecoming: Preserving Interviews with Doug Clower and John McCain“ Photograph of John McCain After Being Released as Prisoner of War. National Archives Identifier:	1633553
”
This post was written by Criss Kovac. Criss is the supervisor...
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Record of a Homecoming: Preserving Interviews with Doug Clower and John McCain

Photograph of John McCain After Being Released as Prisoner of War. National Archives Identifier: 1633553

This post was written by Criss Kovac. Criss is the supervisor of the Motion Picture Preservation Lab.

Sometimes you just never know what you’re going to find in a can, or in this case, four cans. What I did know is that it wasn’t going to be good, at least physically, because I could smell it from several feet away – that telltale smell of vinegar syndrome. Encountering vinegar syndrome is a lot like having a bag of salt and vinegar chips explode in your face, or getting an unintended tour of a vinegar distillation tank. The smell is merely a symptom, however; vinegar syndrome causes a whole host of preservation issues that can sometimes be fatal to a record.

Luckily, in this case, we were able to preserve the reels before they fully deteriorated. The reels contained interviews with former prisoners of war John McCain and Claude Douglas Clower, recorded after their release from North Vietnam. The two men were shot down and captured by the North Vietnamese in the fall of 1967 and spent more than five years as prisoners of war under horrific conditions. They were released as part of Operation Homecoming on March 14, 1973. The interviews are unedited accounts of their experiences as POWs, their return journey, experiences with the press, and their gratitude at being brought home.

Listen to the preserved interviews here:

This item is sound-only. Although there was likely a picture, we do not have it in our holdings.

There are many reasons why vinegar syndrome happens – oftentimes it’s because acetate based film and soundtracks have been stored in hot and humid conditions, but it’s also kicked off by films with vinegar syndrome that are stored in close proximity. Vinegar syndrome is auto-catalytic meaning that the process is continuous, irreversible, speeds up over time and, for lack of a better term, is contagious to the films around it.

In addition to being incredibly stinky, vinegar syndrome can cause the film to become brittle, soft and sticky, or as hard as a hockey puck. The film is also likely to shrink horizontally and vertically, the emulsion may separate from the base, and plasticizer crystals can form.

image

A magnetic soundtrack with vinegar syndrome. This films is shrunken and curly, and therefore difficult to handle. The film’s plasticizer has also created a crystalline pattern on the surface and will shed during transfer or handling.

On this day, all four of the magnetic sound reels in front me were a level 3 on the Acid-Detection Strip Scale. There are three levels with three being the worst – this means that the reel is facing imminent loss through shrinkage, warping, and handling issues, and should be copied right away.  These reels were severely warped and had a shrinkage level of 2.2%, so it was going to be a challenge to preserve them.  

I inspected the reels–a mix of full coat magnetic track intercut with single stripe magnetic tracks– while wearing a respirator. The respirator wasn’t just to prevent the smell from reaching me – it protected me from irritation in my nasal passages, throat, and lungs while I was working on the soundtracks.

In order to save the content of the film I was going to need to transfer the reels on ourSondor OMA E and ingest the output signal into our digital audio workstation where we capture a WAV file using Wavelab. After that step is completed we create a new optical track using our MWA LLK5 optical sound laser film recorder printed out onto new, stable, polyester film stock.  You can learn more about this process in detail from a previous blog post.

Via Record of a Homecoming: Preserving Interviews with Doug Clower and John McCain | The Unwritten Record

Source: unwritten-record.blogs.archives.gov

    • #John McCain
    • #POW
    • #vietnam war
    • #eyewitness
    • #history
    • #vietnam
    • #prisoner of war
    • #NARA Media Labs
    • #preservation
    • #conservation
    • #March 14
    • #1973
    • #Doug Clower
    • #veterans
    • #archivesgov
  • 9 years ago
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preservearchives:
“ Uncovering the Past
Every so often preservation technicians in the Preservation Programs, St. Louis will come across something special in the military records that they preserve. Recently, a technician was working on a World War...
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preservearchives:
“ Uncovering the Past
Every so often preservation technicians in the Preservation Programs, St. Louis will come across something special in the military records that they preserve. Recently, a technician was working on a World War...
Zoom Info
preservearchives:
“ Uncovering the Past
Every so often preservation technicians in the Preservation Programs, St. Louis will come across something special in the military records that they preserve. Recently, a technician was working on a World War...
Zoom Info
preservearchives:
“ Uncovering the Past
Every so often preservation technicians in the Preservation Programs, St. Louis will come across something special in the military records that they preserve. Recently, a technician was working on a World War...
Zoom Info

preservearchives:

Uncovering the Past
Every so often preservation technicians in the Preservation Programs, St. Louis will come across something special in the military records that they preserve. Recently, a technician was working on a World War II record when they found a small metal disc taped to the lower corner of a document. By using a Holbein spatula, the technician was able to loosen the tape from the paper and remove it from the document without any damage from the tape’s adhesive. On further inspection, the small metal disc was a dog tag! This was unexpected as round dog tags were rarely used during World War II, during which time the rounded rectangular tag we commonly see today was adopted.

This dog tag is even more special because it belonged to Nelson Apple, a Master Sergeant in the Coast Artillery Corps, who served in the Philippines during WWII.  He was captured in early 1942 and sent to the Cabanatuan POW camp, where he later died after being ill with malaria for 5 months.  The identification tag was found by a local Filipino approximately 3 years after the soldier’s death.  The tag was sent to the US War Department and filed with Apple’s record, which ultimately made its way to the NPRC in St. Louis.

The tag has been encapsulated in a polyester sleeve to secure it within Apple’s record. This prevents the artifact from getting lost in the record’s folder.  Rare finds like these provide a tangible connection to the soldiers that gave the ultimate sacrifice to their country.

    • #preservation
    • #World War II
    • #military records
    • #military personnel records
    • #POW
    • #national personnel records center
    • #reblog
    • #conservation
  • 9 years ago > preservearchives
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“Capt. Louis Zamperini of Los Angelos, California recently liberated after spending 28 months in Japanese Prison Camp, makes a broadcast to the United States over the (Manila Station of RCAC). To the right of Capt. Zamperini is Joe Laitin, (NBC and...
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Capt. Louis Zamperini of Los Angelos, California recently liberated after spending 28 months in Japanese Prison Camp, makes a broadcast to the United States over the (Manila Station of RCAC). To the right of Capt. Zamperini is Joe Laitin, (NBC and Reuters Correspondent).  9/27/1945.

Series: Photographs of American Military Activities, ca. 1918 - ca. 1981
Record Group 111: Records of the Office of the Chief Signal Officer, 1860 - 1985

In May 1943, Army Air Force bombardier (and former Olympic runner) Louis Zamperini’s B-24 airplane went down over the Pacific Ocean. Zamperini and his surviving crewmate drifted at sea for 47 days before being captured, spending the remainder of World War II in a Japanese POW camp.  Zamperini would go on to become the subject of several books and the motion picture film Unbroken.

Read more about Louis Zamperini and records related to his story at the National Archives:

  • Louis Zamperini: The Story of a True American Hero | The Unwritten Record
  • Prologue: Pieces of History » On Exhibit: Unbroken

Source: catalog.archives.gov

    • #Louis Zamperini
    • #unbroken
    • #World War II
    • #POW
    • #1945
    • #history
    • #September 27
    • #1940s
    • #vintage
    • #Joe Laitin
    • #radio
    • #radio broadcast
  • 9 years ago
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“General Jonathan Wainright and Mrs. Wainright Unveiling Japanese Surrender Documents, September 12, 1945
Series: Historic Photograph File of National Archives Events and Personnel, 1935 - 1975. Record Group 64: Records of the National Archives and...
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General Jonathan Wainright and Mrs. Wainright Unveiling Japanese Surrender Documents, September 12, 1945

Series: Historic Photograph File of National Archives Events and Personnel, 1935 - 1975. Record Group 64: Records of the National Archives and Records Administration, 1789 - ca. 2007

After Japan officially surrendered on September 2, 1945,  the Instrument of Surrender was presented to President Harry S. Truman at the White House on September 7, 1945, it was put on exhibit at the National Archives in Washington, D.C. and it was later formally accessioned into its holdings.

As the Allied Commander in the Philippines during the Fall of Corregidor, General Jonathan Wainright was taken prisoner in 1942 and spent the remaining three years of the war as the highest ranking American POW in Japanese captivity. After his release he was among those present at the official surrender ceremony, and can been seen standing immediately behind Douglas MacArthur in the photo of the signing.

The Instrument of Surrender will be on exhibit in the National Archives Museum  from August 27 through October 28, 2015, marking the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II. 

Read more at Prologue: Pieces of History » On Display: The Japanese Instrument of Surrender

Source: catalog.archives.gov

    • #world war II
    • #Surrender of Japan
    • #Jonathan Wainwright
    • #National Archives
    • #history
    • #POW
    • #WW2
    • #black and white
    • #1945
    • #September 12
    • #Instrument of Surrender
  • 9 years ago
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““General of the Army Douglas MacArthur and Lieutenant General Jonathan Wainwright greet each other at the New Grand Hotel, Yokohama, Japan, August 31, 1945, in their first meeting since they parted on Corregidor more that three years...
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“General of the Army Douglas MacArthur and Lieutenant General Jonathan Wainwright greet each other at the New Grand Hotel, Yokohama, Japan, August 31, 1945, in their first meeting since they parted on Corregidor more that three years before.”

Series: Photographs of American Military Activities, ca. 1918 - ca. 1981
Record Group 111: Records of the Office of the Chief Signal Officer, 1860 - 1985

Source: catalog.archives.gov

    • #World War II
    • #Jonathan Wainwright
    • #Douglas MacArthur
    • #surrender of Japan
    • #POW
    • #Japan
    • #black and white
    • #history
    • #August 31
    • #1945
    • #Philippines
    • #Corregidor
    • #1940s
    • #U.S. Army
    • #Yokohama
  • 9 years ago
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“WWII: Europe: Wetzlar, Germany; “Sgt. Edward Hill, Manchester, England, captured five years ago at Dunkerque was freed when American Seventh Armored Division, First Army captured Dulag-Luft POW Camp”, ca. 3/29/1945
From the series: Franklin D....
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WWII: Europe: Wetzlar, Germany; “Sgt. Edward Hill, Manchester, England, captured five years ago at Dunkerque was freed when American Seventh Armored Division, First Army captured Dulag-Luft POW Camp”, ca. 3/29/1945

From the series: Franklin D. Roosevelt Library Public Domain Photographs, 1882 - 1962

Source: catalog.archives.gov

    • #World War II
    • #prisoner of war
    • #history
    • #Dulag Luft
    • #Germany
    • #POW
    • #POW camp
    • #prisoner of war camp
    • #1945
    • #March 29
    • #1940s
    • #black and white
  • 10 years ago
  • 202
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POW/MIA Recognition Day
“ “The families of the returning Prisoners of War waving and greeting the ship the General Nelson M. Walker as it docks at Fort Mason, California.”, 08/23/1953
”
Established by an Act of Congress, POW/MIA Recognition Day is...
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POW/MIA Recognition Day

“The families of the returning Prisoners of War waving and greeting the ship the General Nelson M. Walker as it docks at Fort Mason, California.”, 08/23/1953

Established by an Act of Congress, POW/MIA Recognition Day is observed on the 3rd Friday in September in honor of prisoners of war and those still missing in action.

    • #POW/MIA Recognition Day
    • #POW
    • #MIA
    • #veterans
    • #prisoners of war
    • #Korean War
    • #1950s
    • #1953
    • #August 23
    • #September
    • #You are not forgotten
  • 10 years ago
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Seeking a brother’s release
In this letter to the Union commander of the prisoner-of-war camp at Point Lookout, Maryland, one of four sisters asks the commander to release their brother. Writing on August 11, 1864, from Marietta, Ohio, Lou A. Briggs...
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Seeking a brother’s release
In this letter to the Union commander of the prisoner-of-war camp at Point Lookout, Maryland, one of four sisters asks the commander to release their brother. Writing on August 11, 1864, from Marietta, Ohio, Lou A. Briggs...
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Seeking a brother’s release

In this letter to the Union commander of the prisoner-of-war camp at Point Lookout, Maryland, one of four sisters asks the commander to release their brother. Writing on August 11, 1864, from Marietta, Ohio, Lou A. Briggs asks the commander to have pity as they were orphans and cannot “get along without him.” One sister was sick with consumption, she wrote, and “desires very much to see her brother once more in this world.”

Letter from Lou A. Briggs to the Commander of Point Lookout Military Prison Regarding Rufus Briggs, 08/11/1864 
From the series Personal Letters to Confederate Prisoners at Point Lookout, Maryland, 1889 - 1904

via DocsTeach

    • #POW
    • #Civil War
    • #POW Camp
    • #Maryland
    • #August 11
    • #history
    • #1860s
    • #1864
    • #CW150
  • 10 years ago
  • 70
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