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Mainz  
        Photos at United Nations archives:
        We have photo # UN22340: Ukrainiens DPs in Mainz-Kastel IRO Camp, US zone of Germany.
        Please let me know if you would be interested in obtaining hi-res scans ($3 each) or prints ($ 7 each) of them. Best regards, Clara Gouy photolibr@un.org, Photo Librarian, United Nations City archives: Rheinallee 3 B
        55116 Mainz
        0 61 31 - 12 21 78
        0 61 31 - 12 35 69
        http://www.mainz.de/kultur/index.htm 
Maczkowo (British Zone), 3,500 Polish DPs, etc. 
        Hello from Brussels, 
      I make a biography about the Polish grandfather of my wife, who was soldier in the 1st Polish armoured Division of General Maczek. 
      I
      found in a friend of mine who was director of UNRRA in Maczkow from 1945
      to 1946, British zone, original documents and pictures. If any persons
      who looks some documents about it, IÕll send it free with
      pleasure. 
      Best regards. Gilles LAPERS gilles.lapers@skynet.be
Magdeburg
      "Unknown to
        us at the time of the beginning of the Battle of Magdeburg, was the
        fact that there was a substantially sized slave labor camp housed
        in the outskirts of the city.  This slave labor camp was actually
        liberated on 13 April 1945.  It held American and British POW’s,
        many of whom were air force crews who had bailed out of their planes
        as they were being shot down, as well as many Allied POW’s
        who had been taken prisoner during the preceding months.  Among
        them were many Displaced Persons from many of the surrounding overrun
        countries of the past several years.  Last but not least,
        was a large contingent of about 2,500 Jewish slave laborers, who
        had been spared a trip to the main ‘death camps’, due
        to the fact that they were young, strong and able to work hard
      and long hours in some of these factories, up to 18 hours a day."...
In previous cases, where smaller slave labor camps had been over-run and liberated, the local German citizens “were ordered” to take some of them into their homes, and to care for them until the appropriate authorities were able to organize centers, where they would be processed and then attempts made to return them to their native homelands.
 For more see: http://www:30thinfantrydivision.org````
      Submitted by Alan
      Newark braveheart562002@yahoo.com 
Malterdingen 
        Park at Malterdingen: http://www.europa-park.com  I am trying to determine what camp we were in, found one document
        dated Nov. 15, 1949 from Malterdingen 266, Kreis Emmendingen, French
        Zone, another document that appears to be an International Certificate
        of Smallpox vaccination dated Jan 17, 1950 in Rastatt. Helen
        Bartkowski email: Helen@HelenBartkowski.com 
Manching 
        Thank You for your
        reply.  Just
        today I looked at my birth certificate which is a translation reads as
        follows:
        I was born in 1945, my Mom Genowefa Chochol, nee Dworzynska was living
        in the DP Camp at Manching. I also found I spelled my Mom's
        maiden name incorrectly, it should be Dworzynska
The certificate is dated: Ingolstadt 2.2.1951, Sub Unit Ingolstadt, Legal Counsellor Doc. Mrg. M. Sobolski, Legal Counsello. A stamp reads: IRO, sub area team 7, Ingolstadt, Legal Counsellor.
Thank You in advance for any information you can glean for me. Donna Morris dmorris@wvi.com
Manheim 
        City archive: 
        Collini-Center
        68161 Mannheim
        Rufen Sie vor Ihrem Besuch an
        Tel: 06 21 / 29 37 139
        http://www.mannheim.de
        City museum
        C 5, Zeughaus
        68159 Mannheim   RE: Polska Kompania Wartownicza 4227 Labor Service Co.
Seeking information as to the subject army unit in which my dad, now age 75 years young served as military police with the US Army in Eberstadt with the 97th Labor Supv. Co. from 1945 until emigrating to New York from Butzbach, Germany in September, 1949. My dad was at Manheim Kaefertal 7711 Military Labor Service Training Center Koscuisko from 1945 to 1946. I would appreciate it if any one has any information to please contact me. Thank you so much.
P.S.Your web site is not only informative, but very helpful. AGemstone, AGemstone7801855@aol.com
Marburg
      Stadtbüro
      Marburg
      Frauenbergstrasse 35 
      35039 Marburg   e-mail: stadtbuero@marburg-stadt.de
      http://www.marburg.de
      Tel: 0 64 21/2 01-8 01 or 8 02
      Fax: 064 21/2 01-8 28   We visited the Marburg administration building, and you are absolutely correct about the documents.  I got copies of my Dad's and Mom's papers.  We found the 2 places Mom and Dad lived at from '47 to '51 from the addresses on the papers.   Marburg in late '40s and early '50s was a farming area.  Marburg is absolutely beautiful - just like a typical German village with the fancy buildings you see in the school books in the 50s and 60s.  Its a German college town now and I believe there are a lot of millionaires living there because there's so many nice cars and houses and the people are well dressed, etc.  A Sucharew
    
Mariendorf 
      Mariendorf lies between Tempelhof to the north and Marienfelde to the south. 	Between 1946 -1948, Mariendorf's Eisenacher Strasse was the site of a displaced persons camp which houses roughly 3,250 persons. 
Marienthal, #2933, Land Niedersachsen (British Z.) mostly Polish 
        9/26/06 Dear Olga,
        My mother Krystyna grew up in the DP camp Marienthal Horst. I am now undertaking a Phd research project which will look at memories people have of  the Polish DP camps. As such, I would like to find contact information for people who spent time at the Marienthal Horst camp who would be prepared to be interviewed. I am also looking for more information on this camp in general - could you advise any further links?
        
        Many thanks and best regards, Tamara West, United Kingdom T.West@mmu.ac.uk 
Marktredwitz, Bavaria, Latvian 
        Marktredwitz is a municipality in the district of Wunsiedel, in Bavaria, Germany, close to the Czech border. It is situated 22 km west of Cheb, 50 km east of Bayreuth and 50 km south of Hof/Saale.
        http://en.wikipedia.org 
        City archive:
        Egerstr. 2
        95615 Marktredwitz 
City website search form: http://www.marktredwitz.de
I, with my family, lived at the Marktredwitz from Oct 3 1945 to Sept 9 1947, please contact: Silvia Wolff . Sand1999@cornhusker.net
Dear Ms. Kaczmar:
        My name is Hermann Trojanowski and I have been conducting research relating to my father Aleksander Trojanowski's time in Germany during World War II. 
He was captured by the German Army in November 1939 and send to a prisoner of war camp (POW) in Mecklenberg where he remained until November 1940 when he was transferred to a POW camp in Marktredwitz.
He was liberated in April 1945 and then remained at the displaced persons camp in Marktredwitz until October 1945.
In October 1945, he joined the United States Army's 112th Labor Service Center and was stationed in Bamberg and Nuremberg where he met my mother. We immigrated to the United States in December 1951.
I have not been able to find any information about the Marktredwitz POW or Displaced Persons Camps except on the "German DP Camps" website.
Do you know of any other sources relating to the Marktredwitz POW and DP camps?
        I thank you in advance.
        Hermann J. Trojanowski hermann3492@att.net
        Greensboro, North Carolina
Jews in camp: Google translate
Marx, Wittmund 
        http://www.wittmund.de/ 
        Municiple offices:  Kurt-Schwitters Platz I, 26409 Wittmund
        Tel: 04462/983-0
        e-mail: rathaus@wittmund.kdo.de  
        Stadt archive e-mail to: Hier Klicken elke.luerkens@stadt.wittmund.de
      or Tel.: 04462-983-220 
Mattenberg Poles, Lithuanians, Yugoslavian, Russians 
        City archives: Stadtarchiv Kassel,
        Marstallgebaeude
        Wildemannsgasse 1
        34117 Kassel
        Germany
        Phone: 49-561-787-4050 or 4013
        Fax: 49-561-787-4060  March 22, 2007 
Dear  Olga!
        I was for short time in DP camp Mattenberg-Kassel. There was Polish,
        Lithuanian, Yugoslavian and some Russians. Anyone with information, please
        contact me. Sincerly R. Polchaninov, email: rpochaninov@verizon
        net. My husband was born in 1946 in Mattenberg-lager, near Kassel Germany.
        His birth name was Janis Libergs, his mother was Lucija Libergs. He was put into Bad
        Aibling orphanage at age 3, then sent to USA for adoption in 1950. His mother
        was sent to a TB sanitorium in Amberg, Bavaria, where she died in 1950.
        Do you have any other information about Mattenberg? My husband has terminal kidney
        cancer and is now in home hospice. I am trying to find out any other information
        about his past. Please let me know if you have any information or know where
        I might search. Thank you, Kitty Thvedt, kt71424@cox.net Tucson, AZ  A place Mattenberg  is not listed in a book containing all places in Germany
        in 1949. But in the city Kassel exists a street named Mattenbergstrasse.
        So perhaps there was the camp your are searching. Wolfgang.Strobel.Bonn@t-online.de
        Update: This camp existed in 1946, was situated in Kassel-Oberzwehren and that
      at that time the UNRRA team 77 worked in this camp. Wolfgang Strobel 
Mauthausen - See Slave page M-N
Mecklenbeck (British zone)
Meerbeck, Lower Saxony, (British
        zone); entire village was the camp; mostly Latvians
        Meerbeck mentioned on this postage
        site: http://www.sossi.org/ 
        Latvian Immigration History Research
        Center: http://www1.umn.edu/ 
Mein Meinleus (U.S. zone) Russian Boy Scout troops in camp.
Meierwik - Meierwik
        was a German Marine barracks until 1945, then a DP camp (2,500 Poles) until
        about 1948. 
        On 8/23/09 Wolfgang Strobel w.strobel@netcologne.de supplied
        this:
        Meierwik lies between the towns of Flensburg and Gluecksburg on the Baltic
        Sea in Northern Germany. In Meirwik existed a DP camp at least between November
        1947 and June 1949, possibly already before and still after this period.
        Meierwik was a small place near Muerwik. Muerwik is a suburb of the town
        of Flensburg. Today Meierwik forms part of the town of Gluecksburg. 
When you google Meierwik you should get some results., for instance: 
        http://www.ferienhaus-gluecksburg.de 
        click on Gluecksburg (history)
      
1950 wird das Kasernengelände in Meierwik, bis dahin Unterkunft für 3000 displaced people, meist zwangsverschleppten Menschen, die nicht mehr in ihre meist osteuropäische, nun kommunistisch gewordene Heimat zurückkehren können oder wollen, von den Briten freigegeben. Es entsteht dort ein Gewerbegebiet. Weiterhin werden ein neuer Schulanbau und am Friedeholz und in Ulstrupfeld neue Wohnungen gebaut.
The DP camp, 3000 people, was in former German Marine barracks which were under control of the British Occupation Army until 1950.
Kaserne
        Glücksburg-Meierwik Camp
        Glücksburg-Meierwik
        Lage: Etwa 4 km nordöstlich von Mürwik. It
        was 4 km north of Mürwik. Die
        Kaserne wurde wurde 1939 fertiggestellt und diente zunächst nur der Ausbildung
        für Unteroffiziersanwärter der Marine. Ab 1942 auch Ausbildungvon
        Offiziersanwärtern . Hier hatte der Oberbefehlshaber der Kriegsmarine,
        Generaladmiral Hans-Georg von Friedeburg , sein Quartier und hier verübte
        er am 23.Mai während seiner Verhaftung Selbstmord durch Gift. Nach der
        Kapitulation 1945 Unterkunft für DP`s (2500 Polen) und ab etwa 1948 Unterkunft
        für Heimatvertriebene und Flüchtlinge, nach 1956 Übernahme
        durch die Bundesmarine.
      
Meldorf
      Stadtarchiv Meldorf in Meldorf
        Bütjestr. 2, 25704 Meldorf
        Tel.: 04832 6000614 *
      Fax.: 04832 6000617 
Standesamter in Meldorf
        Im Bereich Standesamt in Meldorf (Dithmarschen (Kreis)) sind Sie auf der Suche nach Adressen, Tipps und Anbietern? Sie finden bei uns zu diesem Thema ein Branchenbuch mit Dienstleistern, die folgendes anbieten: Standesamter, Hochzeit und heiraten. In der Region Meldorf (Dithmarschen (Kreis)) sind 0 Adressen zum Bereich Standesamt nachfolgend nach Aktualitat geordnet mit vorhandenen Kontaktdetails, wie Postadresse mit Telefonnummer, Website mit E-Mail-Adressen und ggf. Offnungszeiten und Bewertungen fur Sie dargestellt.
Computer Translation:
        Attorneys at law in Meldorf
        Are you looking for addresses, tips, and vendors in the area of Mamt (Dithmarschen (Kreis) ? On this subject you will find an industry directory with service providers who offer the following: marriages, weddings and marriages. In the Meldorf (Dithmarschen (Kreis)) area, you will find 0 addresses for the area department according to the current situation with available contact details such as postal address with telephone number, website with e-mail addresses and opening times and ratings where applicable.
      
Memmingen airport (U.S. zone),
        UNRRA Team 155,
      Lithuanians published a daily news called the 'Mintis',  Russian Boy Scout troops in camp. 
      City Archvie: Stadtarchiv Memmingen
        Ulmer Strasse 19
        D-87700 Memmingen
        Mail: Postfach 1853, D-87688 Memmingen  Tel: +49 (8331) 850 143
        Fax: +49 (8331) 850 149
        E-mail: stadt@memmingen.de
      Homepage: http://www.memmingen.de/
5/17/05  Hi,
        Sometime in 1942 my father was taken as a forced labourer. He was in Zagreb. As I understand it he tried to escape a couple of times, once by attempting to walk over the mountains into Switzerland.
        In 1944 he was in Memmingen, Germany. I don't know if he was in a camp or not, the photographs indicate
        that he may have had some sort of autonomy. Can you suggest any camps that might be possibilities. Thanks Paul matosic@speed-mail.co.uk 
Menden, #3108, #34/108, N.
        Rhine-Westphalia (British zone), mostly Poles, 
        Stamps from dp camp: http://www.jaypex.com 
Meppen, #2612, Land Niedersachsen (British zone) 
      Meppen, located in the heart of Emsland, presents itself to you as a dynamic city of approximately 35,000 inhabitants. 
Dalum -Camp XII , cc Sub-kdo of Kdo Veerssen of Neuengamme.; see researching British zone.
cc Kdo. of Neuengamme - Jan 16, 1945 2064 prisoners
Strafgef. Arbeitskolonne (workers colony)
Meppen-Veerssen, Strafgefangenenlager (convicts' camp), Camp V Neusustrum, worked for Hoch-Tief, Neuengamme - Engineerig type of work; 3/11/1944- Mar 25, 1945; 2064 prisoners, a small Kdo. (The Emsland Case. Brit War Crames Group), (from Neuengamme records).
      
Mayor: Ihr Bürgermeister
        Jan Erik Bohling
        Telefon: 05931/153-116
        Fax: 05931/153-5-116
        E-Mail: j.bohling@meppen.de
 Sep 15, 2014 1:19 AM, Dear Olga,
        I am writing from a genealogical company in Budapest, Hungary.
      We are searching the information about Szelucha family that was in a Polish DP camp. 
Unfortunately, we do not know the name of this DP camp. All we know is that our Wlodzimiersz Szelucha, born in 1916, married Owczarek Janina, born in 1923, in Meppen, 30 January, 1947. I wonder, whether some records left for Meppen for this time and whether you know what DP camps existed near Meppen during that time.
Any information that you can provide will be very fruitful for us. 
        Kind regards,
        Natalia Shkaeva shkaeva@familytree.hu 
      http://www.meppen.de
Meschede (British zone), Yugoslavs
Mesmerode, Lower Saxony (British zone)
Mettman, Poles
Michelsdorf (White Russian), 1947
Box 15 Declassifield NND 993068	 file #XE257685 
        http://www.archives.gov 
Minden has its own page. (British zone)
Minden city home page http://www.minden.de/
        archives: http://www.archive.nrw.de sites
        in German   Kommunalarchiv
        Stadt Minden und Kreis Minden-Lübbecke
        Tonhallenstr.7
        32423 Minden
        Tel: 05 71 - 8 94 75
        Fax: 05 71 - 8 94 75
        http://www.minden.de 
How can I find information regarding my birth in either Minden or Menden DP Camp which ever is next to Hanover. I'm assuming its Hanover because Minden was near Hanover but now I know different. Until I saw your website I did not realize that there were two DP camps, similar in spelling and both had British presence. We came to the United States on 1950 (Boston). Julian Palinski PalinskiJ@si.edu
Mittenwald, has its own page
Moenchengladbach (N.
        Rhine region) and Münster (Westphalia region). See Münster. 
        Dear Olga, 
        Months ago I asked you for help in finding relatives of my parents Mykola Jemeljanenko and Weronika Alpina and I am very grateful to you for your advice.   I have finally received information from the archives that you suggested. They were Ukrainian but living in Poland before WW2. My father lived in Maciejew and my mother in Lipno.  During the war they were sent to Germany. My father was sent to Duisburg in 1943 then Nordhurn in 1945 then in 1946 to Bathurn Lingen DP Camp until 1948. My  mother was in Datel Recklinghausen then Haltern, Muenster DP camps then worked at 18DPACS in Muenchen-Gladbach until 1948. I would appreciate it if you could give more information on those places. They migrated to Australia separately in 1950, My mother from Naples in Italy my father from Bremen, Germany so there is 2 years that they do not account for. Could you please place this on your web site again please Olga? Thank you in anticipation. 
        Yours
        Sincerely, 
        Anna McClure nee Jameljanenko.
        Contact me at pmcclure@iprimus.com.au. 
City archives:  Stadtarchiv
        Mönchengladbach
        Aachener Str. 2
        41050 Mönchengladbach
        Germany
        Tel.: 49-2161-253241
        Fax: 49-2161-253259
        Email: stadtarchiv@moenchengladbach.de
        Web: http://www.archive.nrw.de 
Monchehof (U.S. zone), near
        Kassel; Russian Boy Scout troops in camp. 
        Dear Olga,
      My father, Rostislav Polchaninoff, has been
      in contact with you regarding Russian DP Camps.
      This is a photograph of a January, 1948, Christmas  Pageant "Snow
      White" in the Russian DP camp in Moenchehof near Kassel, Germany.
      Thank you, Ludmila
      Polchaninoff-Selinsky
Moschendorf-Hof 
      9/4/04 I'm looking for information Josef Kramer who might have been in this camp, we have some information that he was not released until around 1950?  Any information would be helpful.  Thanks, Jackileen R. Rains. jackileenrains@sympatico.ca  
Mühlenberg / Muehlenberg, #2718, Land Niedersachsen (British zone)
Mühlenteich /Muehlenteich (British zone)
Mühlhausen
        Stanislaw
        Pastusiak and Olga Minakowa, my parents married twice while in DP Camps
        in Germany: one was a civil registration marriage in Mühlhausen in Thuringen (which I have a copy of); the second marriage took place in Ulm (it was a group wedding in a stable converted into a church by a Polish priest), how would go about finding out anything about this and hope to get a copy of it, where would these records be held? My family were in these dp-camps Mühlhausen,
        Ulm, Bissingen/Teck and Altenstadt between 1945 and 1949.  These places were in the American zone about June 1945. Any ideas or help would be gratefully appreciated. 
        Julia Dyer 
Mülheim
        / Muelheim / on the Ruhr #41/170, (British zone), Ukrainians, Poles 
        Archives: 
        Stadtarchiv Muelheim
        Aktienstrasse 85
        45473 Muelheim a.d. Ruhr
        Germany Muelheim 1933-1945 text in German Muelheim-Ruhr 1933- 1945 text in German 
        City archive- Stadtarchiv
        http://www.kulturbetrieb.de
        http://www.kulturbetrieb.de
        E-Mail: stadtarchiv@stadt-mh.de 
Mülheim and der Ruhr Mulheim an der Ruhr (on the Ruhr River)
        Google search
        http://www.muelheim-ruhr.de
        http://de.wikipedia.org
        http://www.muelheim-ruhr.de
Maybe this is a new address: Stadt Mülheim an der Ruhr
        Post box 10 19 53
        45466 Mülheim an der Ruhr
Street address: Ruhrstraße 1
        45468 Mülheim an der Ruhr
Telefon 02 08 / 45 50
        Telefax 02 08 / 4 55 99 99
Müllheim, Baden, Wurtemburg
Münchehagen (British zone)
München / Munich has its own page, (US zone) See also Warner Kaserne Munich Freimann warner.html.
MünMster or Muenster, (with umlaut)
#3152 (Poles) , #3161 (Poles, Balts), #3210 (Poles, Balts Yugoslavs), #31/161, (sometimes written incorrectly as Munster), North Rhine-Westphalia, British Zone, 4 DP Camps in June 1945: Camp V1, army barracks at Hoher Heckenweg, (former POW camp #3152 (Poles) , #3161 (Poles, Balts), #3210 (Poles, Balts Yugoslavs), #31/161, (sometimes written incorrectly as Munster), North Rhine-Westphalia, British Zone, 4 DP Camps in June 1945: Camp V1, army barracks at Hoher Heckenweg, (former POW camp Stalag VIF), closed in July 1946. Camp V3, army barracks in Gremmendorf, closed in August 1945. Camp V9, schools, private houses and army huts in Mecklenbeck, closed November/December 1945. talag VIF), closed in July 1946. Camp V3, army barracks in Gremmendorf, closed in August 1945. Camp V9, schools, private houses and army huts in Mecklenbeck, closed November/December 1945. Camp V20, wooden huts in Mecklenbeck (former civil workers camp), closed November / December 1945. Münster has it's own page.
Munsterlager (no umlaut)
        , Niedersachsen (British zone) 
        Municple offices: Stadt
        Munster 
        Wilhelm-Bockelmann-Str. 32 
        29633 Munster
        Tel: +49 5192 130-0
        Fax: +49 5192 130-215
        Email: stadtverwaltung@munster.de
        Internet: www.munster.de 
 2/21/06 
        I really hope you can help my family. My mother's maiden name is GONCHAROV.
        On her birth certificate it says she was born in Muenster oerrel, kreis
        soltau, dp camp 39. My grand parents names were Frieda and Wasyl Goncharov
        . Can you tell me anything about this camp or my family? I looked through
        your site and couldn't find anything about this camp. I would really appreciate
        all your help. Thank you Kathy 
 While
        in Germany during the second world war Mrs. Irene Ozarchuk nee
        Kowal gave birth to a baby girl, Olga. When Olga was a few weeks old,
        she got sick and was taken to the hospital. The nurse which admitted
        the baby said to Mrs. Ozarchuk,  "Oh my name is the
        same Irene Kowal (Canadian Ukrainian). A few days later, the
        nurse brings the pillow and blanket of the baby and said the
        baby died.
        The mother did not see the baby after her death. As the Russian soldiers
        were moving the people, she did not leave her barrack. All these years
        she presumed her daughter was dead until a few years ago she receives
        this picture stamped at Sydney Australia and at the back it is written
        in Polish: "Olga is a well and beautiful lady." No
        other information is given. So we presume Olga was sold as a baby in
        Germany because at that time they were stealing children and selling
        them. We presume this is the baby Olga, grown up and somebody knew
        about Mrs. Ozarchuk because the enveloppe was sent to her to Northam.
        That is why were are trying to locate her. The
        hospital was Soltau. The mother was in a displaced person's Camp named
        Munster. (Click  photo to enlarge.)
We wrote to Germany
        and we received Olga's birth certificate but there is no
        record of her death. The hospital destroyed their records after
        30 years so we couldn't get the information of when she was discharged
        and when they took Olga from the hospital.
        
        We
        went to the Salvation Army police missing
        persons unit, but
        they all say they cannot help us.
        So we have tried different channels but to no avail. The
        mother is elderly and not too well,
        therefore, I would like to see them reunited because
        I really feel this is her daughter. If not then
        al least we'll clear the case. So if
        you have any further suggestion I would appreciate
        to hear from you. Thank you kindly for your
        time. 
        Sr. Muriel  Zemliak / Ozarchuk family, mzemliak2@bigpond.com
Murnau 
      Oct. 1, 2013
      Hanna Abaszidze (nee Trebert) 1916-1950
        Hanna was born in Warsaw, and married  in 1937  to Wachtang Abaszidze, a Captain of the 13th Division of the Polish Army.  She is a distant relative of my wife, whose family history I am researching.  I hope this post may generate some additional info about Hanna.  
Wachtang was Georgian, having fought in the Russian Civil War 1917-20 on the White Russian side, and escaped via Constantinople to be recruited into the new Polish Army. Captured in September 1939, he was released in December 1939. Hanna and Wachtang passed the war in Warsaw, but so far as one can gather they drifted apart towards the end. Hanna managed to get away from Warsaw before the Uprising broke out on 1st August 1944, and at the end of the war found herself in the area east of Munich. As she spoke several languages fluently, she quickly found herself employed by the American forces as an interpreter, and then soon joined the International Refugee Organisation as a welfare officer (see photo below).
She worked in various camps from 1945 to 1950, so far as I can identify, as follows: Hammerau, Murnau, Freilassing, Laufen, Ainring and Bad Reichenhall. She was employed at Bad Reichenhall twice, and this was her last posting when on Saturday 13 May 1950 she drowned in a river above Bad Reichenhall trying to save the dog of a friend which had fallen into the river. She had a very large funeral, and people came long distances to attend. She would have been very well known in the camp network, being an outgoing and gregarious personality. She was buried at St Zeno Church in Bad Reichenhall, where a stone on her grave was maintained by someone until about 2006. I found the site of her grave a few years ago.
 I have asked for this information to be posted on the Dpcamps website in the hope that it may ring bells with people interested in any of the camps listed.  Maybe fragments of information exist here and there which will help me build up a richer picture of this young woman whose life was cut off so prematurely.
         
        Eamonn Judge ejjudge@googlemail.com
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