Camp Ashby (Virginia)

Summary

Camp Ashby in the Thalia community of Princess Anne County, Virginia was the largest Prisoner of War camp in South Hampton Roads during World War II. It housed 6,000 German troops, many of Adolf Hitler's Afrika Corps who had been captured in North Africa during the closing years of World War II.[1]

Camp Ashby was erected quickly in 1942 on land leased from the state. At the time, the property's dominant feature was the Tidewater Victory Memorial Hospital, a tuberculosis sanitarium at Virginia Beach Boulevard and Thalia Road.[2] That building became the camp's headquarters. The camp's low-slung barracks were scattered across 22 acres (89,000 m2) of woods and field north of the present main branch of the Virginia Beach Central Library and Loehman's Plaza shopping center.

In modern times, the original hospital building is part of the Willis Wayside Furniture complex. Although several barracks buildings were converted and are extant as private residences, little else remains of the original camp.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Messina, Debbie (2 July 1968). "German Revisits POW Camp Site". The Free Lance Star. Retrieved 7 August 2016.
  2. ^ Matray, Margaret (8 February 2013). "What's in a Name? Thalia in Virginia Beach". The Virginian Pilot. Retrieved 7 August 2016.

External links edit

  • Camp Ashby in Virginia Beach home to 6,000 P.O.W's during World War II - BROKEN LINK
  • History of Camp Ashby - BROKEN LINK
  • Memories of a former camp POW - BROKEN LINK

36°50′39″N 76°07′10″W / 36.844235°N 76.119493°W / 36.844235; -76.119493