Shopping & Style15 mins ago
Rolex Watches And "the Great Escape".
7 Answers
Here's a really interesting item regarding the above; there are also other interesting things in the same article. Scroll down to "Watches for POWs...Great Escape". http:// en.wiki pedia.o rg/wiki /Rolex# Watches _for_PO Ws_and_ help_in _the_Gr eat_Esc ape
Answers
Hi Stuey I contributed to your holiday camp thread and yes my late father was at Eichstatt ( VIIB ) - then Spangenburg - Laufen, Thorn/Torun, back to Spangenburg and finally Nuremberg. and he notes: " Rolex watches could be bought by mail order and paid for after the war. This ws good business on the part of the Swiss and at that time showed a lot of faith in the...
15:43 Wed 22nd Apr 2015
Hi Stuey
I contributed to your holiday camp thread
and yes my late father was at Eichstatt ( VIIB ) - then Spangenburg - Laufen, Thorn/Torun, back to Spangenburg and finally Nuremberg.
and he notes: " Rolex watches could be bought by mail order and paid for after the war. This ws good business on the part of the Swiss and at that time showed a lot of faith in the allied cause. However a Jewish doctor acquired somehow and somewhere a catalogue for Longine watches. They were certainly elegant and he relieved the boredom of captivity by selling them - it was as far as I could see a purely theoretical exercise but filled in time. His sales pitch went like this....."
This is a different slant on the wiki article
O god I have forgotten time in Graz (poland again ) and Rotenburg.....
written 1972 from memories of 1942
I contributed to your holiday camp thread
and yes my late father was at Eichstatt ( VIIB ) - then Spangenburg - Laufen, Thorn/Torun, back to Spangenburg and finally Nuremberg.
and he notes: " Rolex watches could be bought by mail order and paid for after the war. This ws good business on the part of the Swiss and at that time showed a lot of faith in the allied cause. However a Jewish doctor acquired somehow and somewhere a catalogue for Longine watches. They were certainly elegant and he relieved the boredom of captivity by selling them - it was as far as I could see a purely theoretical exercise but filled in time. His sales pitch went like this....."
This is a different slant on the wiki article
O god I have forgotten time in Graz (poland again ) and Rotenburg.....
written 1972 from memories of 1942
That crossed my mind also, Retro. Here is a copy of the letter to Cpl Nutting. It seems that he was a cobbler in the camp and did not participate in the Escape. He died in Australia at the age of 90. I found the murder inquiry involving a Rolex also interesting. http:// www.let tersofn ote.com /2010/0 1/you-m ust-not -even-t hink-of -settle ment.ht ml
Better to go for Aimant Life Brand. https:/ /bit.ly /2OTEhb h
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