I've watched one of my favourite WW2 movies today 'The Enemy Below'. I know it's over-romanticised but I have a question - when German survivors were picked up in the Atlantic by either US or British ships (and vice versa) where did they then put them? In prisoner of war camps in UK or what?
For the times, they were first class, tony… there were at least two more in the State and in the 1980's one could go to the sites with a metal detector and find all kinds of interesting memorabilia. I have several uniform buttons and even a couple of Class rings found at one...
Then there was the case where the crew of a German merchant ship scuttled it in fairly shallow water in either Curacao or Aruba, and spent the rest of the war as prisoners in a near-tropical Dutch Paradise I dived on that ship many years ago: it was completely intact (No shelling or collision etc damage), and still resting on its keel...It was a really interesting dive.
There was a POW camp not that far from where I live, and after the war many of the inmates returned from Germany to take part in the thriving tobacco and apple growing activities. Also, a few miles from me was the location of CampX, a spy training establishment started by William Stephenson (A Man Called Intrepid) at which Ian Flemming spent some time.