First of our three sites visited today with myself, Madmax & Tims.
After Petzlheads visit here recently, we thought it look very interesting and decided to have a look for ourselves...
Amazing... this place is completely untouched, behind a modern Garden Centre knowone even bats an eyelid that its there anymore! Well worth the visit if you are in the area, especially if you are into Military stuff.
Quotes from:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/ww2peopleswar/stories/55/a3981855.shtml
'The labour force at spud-yacking time included, as well as schoolboys, women from the area who were earning some extra pin money and, more colourfully, prisoners of war from the Pingley P.O.W. camp on the road out of Brigg towards Bigby. Here an area had been securely fenced off and huts erected on land belonging to Pingley Farm. It can’t have been a strong security prison like Stalag Luft 17 or Colditz and it housed both German and Italian prisoners, more of the latter. We rarely held conversations with these Jerries and Eyties and we never got to know much about them, but we did admire their facility in carving rings out of pieces of perspex and in making cigarette lighters out of bullet cases'.
A few pics from this afternoon... enjoy.
After Petzlheads visit here recently, we thought it look very interesting and decided to have a look for ourselves...
Amazing... this place is completely untouched, behind a modern Garden Centre knowone even bats an eyelid that its there anymore! Well worth the visit if you are in the area, especially if you are into Military stuff.
Quotes from:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/ww2peopleswar/stories/55/a3981855.shtml
'The labour force at spud-yacking time included, as well as schoolboys, women from the area who were earning some extra pin money and, more colourfully, prisoners of war from the Pingley P.O.W. camp on the road out of Brigg towards Bigby. Here an area had been securely fenced off and huts erected on land belonging to Pingley Farm. It can’t have been a strong security prison like Stalag Luft 17 or Colditz and it housed both German and Italian prisoners, more of the latter. We rarely held conversations with these Jerries and Eyties and we never got to know much about them, but we did admire their facility in carving rings out of pieces of perspex and in making cigarette lighters out of bullet cases'.
A few pics from this afternoon... enjoy.