PG 117 - Ruscio

Sheet by: Costantino Di Sante

General data

Town: Monteleone di Spoleto

Province: Perugia

Region: Umbria

Location/Address: Ruscio - Monteleone di Spoleto

Type of camp: Work camp

Number: 117

Italian military mail service number: 330

Intended to: NCOs – Troops

Local jurisdiction: XVII Army Corp

Railroad station: Serravalle-Cascia

Accommodation: huts

Capacity: 200

Operating: from 08/1942 to 09/1943

Commanding Officer: Captain V. Romano (August – September 1942); Captain Arnaldo Mutti (October 1942 – September 1943)

Brief chronology:
August 1942: the camp opened.
October 1942: a few Allied PoWs were registered in the camp.
April 1943: the camps began to be used for the internment of civilians

Allied prisoners in the Monteleone di Spoleto camp

Date Generals Officers NCOs Troops TOT
31.10.1942       5 5[1]
31.12.1942       6 6[2]
31.1.1943       1 1[3]
31.3.1943       1 1[4]
[1] Plus 99 Yugoslavian PoWs.. [2] Plus 99 Yugoslavian PoWs.. [3] Plus 99 Yugoslavian PoWs.. [4] Plus 99 Yugoslavian PoWs..

Camp’s overview

Work camp n. 177 Ruscio was used almost exclusively to hold Yugoslavian PoWs and civilian internees who worked in the local lignite mine. The few Allied PoWs present in the camp belonged to «various nationalities».
The camp was born to satisfy the request of the Società Mineraria Umbra, made in June 1942 to the Fascist Party Direttivo nazionale, to receive some PoWs to use as workers. Therefore, the camp was opened in August 1942. It consisted of one hut used as a dormitory and a kitchen and another as a storehouse. Outside of the wire fence, two more huts housed the guards and the camp’s Command.
Although PoWs worked in a mine in harsh conditions and were housed in a wooden hut which was far from comfortable, their situation was deemed «acceptable». The main complaint made by the PoWs was about the lack of water. The camp lacked a lavatory, and the plumbing system was inefficient, forcing the PoWs to gather their water from a stream using canteens.
In April 1943, the camp became intended exclusively for Yugoslavian internees and no longer for PoWs. It would be relabelled as a detachment of PG 115 Morgnano (PG) in the following months.
After the Armistice, the camp was closed and the internees (the vast majority were Montenegrins) were probably transferred to Colfiorito camp from which they originally came.

Archival sources

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