Some
480 German prisoners of war (POWs) worked in Outagamie County
in 1945. Guards accompanied the prisoners to farms and canneries
in Appleton, Hortonville, Shiocton, and Bear Creek. The prisoners
helped harvest and process peas, sweet corn, beets, and tomatoes.
POWs
came to Outagamie County from Fort Sheridan in Illinois. Local
War Manpower officials requested that the prisoners fill jobs
left by American men going to war. POWs lived in tent cities
in Appleton and Hortonville surrounded by fences and guarded
by military police.
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Learn more about POW branch camps in Wisconsin.
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Fuhremann Canning Company on West Eighth Street
in Appleton, 1939
OCHS # P82-78-127-6
Fuhremanns
contracted with the US government for POW labor. The Company
paid the government $29,473 in wages for the 1945 season.
One hundred and eighty POWs lived in a tent city called Camp
Appleton on Fuhremann property. They worked at the Company's
pea vine station on County Road JJ and at its canning facility
in Appleton. |

An
Army guard poses in front of the Hortonville POW camp, summer
1945
Courtesy of JoAnn Buchman Schwarz
This
guard protected the Hortonville community from POW escapes.
Three hundred POWs lived in this tent city located east of
Hortonville on Earl Buchman's farm on County Road MM. Hortonville
POWs worked for canneries in Hortonville, Clintonville, Shiocton,
Shawano, Seymour, Winneconne, Bear Creek, and Manawa. |