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Camp Nordland in a Bund publication. Camp Nordland was a 204-acre (83 ha) resort facility located in Andover Township, New Jersey. From 1937 to 1941, this site was owned and operated by the German American Bund, which sympathized with and propagandized for Nazi Germany in the United States. This resort camp was opened by the Bund on 18 July 1937.
At Oppdal Municipality was Stalag 308, supplying forced labor for the construction of the Nordland Line. [14] At Orkdal Municipality was Fannrem concentration camp where the prisoners were sent to work on the Orkdal Line. [8] (This camp was a utekommando [8] —satellite camp of the Grini concentration camp.) In Trondheim was Vollan prison.
This was to be the so-called "Polarbanen" (English: Arctic railway). Some ruins of the camp, the foundations of the causeway for the railway, a tunnel, and roads can still be observed in the area. A small cemetery for fallen Russian soldiers is located close to the camp. The Camp Commander was considered by the locals to be quite "humane".
Andover Township is a township in Sussex County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey.As of the 2020 United States census, the township's population was 5,996, [9] [10] a decrease of 323 (−5.1%) from the 2010 census count of 6,319, [19] [20] which in turn reflected an increase of 286 (+4.7%) from the 6,033 counted in the 2000 census.
The film Joy Division (2006) portrays a member of the BFC, Sergeant Harry Stone, among the German troops and refugees fleeing the Red Army advance into Germany. In the film it is the aggressive Stone who appears to be the only convinced Nazi remaining among the Hitler Youth with whom he is grouped. He is seen attempting to recruit British POWs ...
Edge of Darkness (a.k.a. Norway in Revolt) is a 1943 World War II film directed by Lewis Milestone that features Errol Flynn, Ann Sheridan, and Walter Huston. [4] The feature is based on a script written by Robert Rossen which was adapted from the 1942 novel The Edge of Darkness by William Woods.
History section will be divided into sections: (1) brief intro of DAB/AV (1935, Kuhn, etc.) and German-Americans in region, fringe ideologies gaining promimence during the Depression, (2) opening and early operation of camp, tolerance from locals, later intolerance, (3) DAB-Klan rally 1940, (4) 1941 Quick Raid and closure, (5) Aftermath ...
Fritz Klein, later executed for atrocities, amid a pile of victims at Belsen.He was interviewed for the documentary. Sidney Bernstein, a cinema entrepreneur, had been an advisor to the Ministry of Information since 1940, and from 1942 onwards had been in charge of supply of British films to cinemas in areas freed from Axis control.