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ESCAPES
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In many respects Stobs was in the ideal position for the location
of a Prisoner of War camp. It was surrounded on all sides by the bleak hills and the large training garrison and
there were very few ways out of the area. But these facts did not stop a succession of escape attempts from 1915
onwards.
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The first breakout was also perhaps the most audacious for the four escapees
left Hawick on the afternoon train for Edinburgh! Two of the men were quickly recaptured, one at Granton and the
other at Leith Docks. One of the men had been a boatswains mate on the 'Blucher'. The eventual fate of the other
two escapees is not recorded.
Two months later, another former sailor on the 'Blucher' escaped, this time in a southerly direction, Carl Michalski
being recaptured near Newcastleton.
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He had discarded his POW camp coat with its distinctive blue patch in the centre,
which all the prisoners at Stobs had to wear, but the trousers, with their distinguishing patch on the hips, could
not be disguised and he was recaptured.
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The most amazing, and nearly successful bid for freedom, was detailed in the Hawick Express
of September 21st, 1917:
'It transpires that
the 6 escaped German prisoners who were captured by the British naval patrol in the North Sea a fortnight ago were
the men who got away from Stobs. They made their way across the hills and moors, and were supposed to have made
for Newbigging Point, where they hoped a boat would be in readiness for them. They struck the coast a few miles
north of the point, just below Amble, where they succeeded in buying provisions, and in the neighbourhood of the
little fishing village of Cresswell they came across a boat which they seized. The boat was sighted by a trawler
170 miles from land, and a passing destroyer took them prisoner. There were submarine prisoners among them, and
some of them had revolvers. Two had Iron Crosses.'
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Three weeks later, another group of prisoners broke out of the camp, the headlines in the Hawick Express
reading: 'FIVE HUNS AT LARGE'. The men were from the German navy and still wore their
naval uniforms or the camp corduroy.
If their particular style of dress did not raise suspicions then the fact that the prisoner Julius Pilz had a fractured
left leg when he escaped may have given their game away. Of his fellow escapees, Paul Schultze had a tattoo on
his left arm, while both George Giffers Hominn and Renhold Kreft bore scars. Only Wilhelf Borehurstand was fortunate
enough not to rate a description in the press. |
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The last of the prisoners of war left Stobs for their homes in Germany towards the end of 1919.
They left behind over 40 of their number buried in a foreign land.
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Nikolaus Trieschmann was a Prisoner of war in Stobs camp from
April 1917 to Nov 1919.
He was captured in January, 1917, on the Somme near Le Sars in
France.
His photos are courtesy of Bernd Koch, Nikolaus's grandson of Gelnhausen
near Frankfurt, Germany.
The picture was in the form of a postcard taken at Stobs by the
photographer J.P.Couper from Glasgow
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