Sheet by: Isabella Insolvibile
General data
Town: Vigolzone
Province: Piacenza
Region: Emilia-Romagna
Location/Address: Veano - Vigolzone
Type of camp: Prisoner of War camp
Number: 29
Italian military mail service number: 3200
Intended to: officers
Local jurisdiction: Difesa Territoriale Milano
Railroad station: Ponte dell’Olio
Accommodation: military quarters
Capacity: 200
Operating: from 05/1942 to 08/09/1943
Commanding Officer: Lt. Col. Enrico Poggiali (5.1942-3.1943), Lt. Col. (later Col.) Giancarlo Cornaggia Medici (4.1943-8.9.1943)
Brief chronology:
Spring 1942: the Allied prisoners were brought to the camp.
8 September 1943: the Allied prisoners left the camp. Many took part in the Resistance.
Allied prisoners in the Vigolzone camp
Date | Generals | Officers | NCOs | Troops | TOT | |
1.5.1942 | 15 | 60 | 75 | |||
1.6.1942 | 96 | 60 | 156 | |||
1.7.1942 | 86 | 61 | 147 | |||
1.8.1942 | 182 | 50 | 232 | |||
1.9.1942 | 2 | 199 | 61 | 262 | ||
30.9.1942 | 3 | 201 | 60 | 264 | ||
31.10.1942 | 3 | 195 | 58 | 256 | ||
30.11.1942 | 4 | 207 | 59 | 270 | ||
31.12.1942 | 4 | 206 | 59 | 269 | ||
31.1.1943 | 4 | 205 | 2 | 61 | 272 | |
28.2.1943 | 4 | 205 | 2 | 60 | 271 | |
31.3.1943 | 2 | 189 | 1 | 60 | 252 | |
30.4.1943 | 2 | 179 | 1 | 59 | 241 | |
31.5.1943 | 205 | 2 | 60 | 267 | ||
30.6.1943 | 206 | 2 | 60 | 268 | ||
31.7.1943 | 202 | 62 | 264 | |||
31.8.1943 | 206 | 2 | 60 | 268 |
Camp’s overview
PG 29 was established in a villa which had previously been used as a summer residence for the students of the Collegio Alberoni of Piacenza, a seminary for aspiring priests. Until the end of 1942, the reports of the Red Cross and of the Protecting Power described the camp as «excellent», despite small issues such as temporary overcrowding and some shortages of water and sanitary materials (which were also obsolete). During the summer of 1942, the diet of the prisoners was largely based on Red Cross parcels, as was noted by the delegate report of July 1942 [TNA, FO 916/369]:
Breakfast: Coffee
Lunch: Seasoned rice (from the Red Cross parcels); Carrots, salad, cheese, plums
Tea: Tea (from the Red Cross parcels)
Dinner: Tomato soup; Meat pie (from the Red Cross parcels); Potatoes and peas; rice dessert
As time passed, the situation deteriorated. In 1943, accommodation for the PoWs was still inadequate, and so were the outhouses, the lighting, and the water supplies. There were no spare lightbulbs to replace broken ones, nor enough water to allow more than one shower per month for each prisoner. The lodgings were overcrowded and under-equipped, and there was no room to study or conduct recreational activities. Moreover, the captors arbitrarily confiscated the prisoners’ goods – for example, all the books concerning mathematics, engineering, and mechanics – and they did not forward the prisoners’ letters of complaint to the Protecting Power. However, since the camp was at least heated and the food was good (although expensive) the situation in Veano remained better than elsewhere, keeping the PoWs and the guards on good terms as well.
The officers in Veano organised many different activities in the camp, as recalled by Admiral Walter Cowan, captured in May 1942 and repatriated in the spring of 1943 because of his old age (he was 71, which did not prevent him from returning to the Italian front in 1944):
The main activity of the prisoners was, however, planning and executing escape plans, which were numerous but never successful. In the summer of 1942, a prisoner attempted to escape hidden in a barrel:
Another attempt was made by Lt. Col. Stray in July 1943. Stray dyed a pyjama shirt blue, to make it resemble an Italian worker’s overall, put on an Italian army coat and a pair of khaki trousers. The colourful jumble was noticed by the guards and the attempt failed.
After each escape attempt, the prisoners were subject to searches and, sometimes, collective punishment (in violation of the Geneva conventions): the escape of Brigadier G. H. Clifton, a New Zealander, through a hole in the wall of the room where he was lodged with other PoWs, caused the generals to be put temporarily in solitary confinement. Clifton managed to reach Como before being recaptured. He was later transferred to the punishment camp of Gavi, where he would try to escape three more times, the last one after the Armistice. Later, he would escape from German custody as well.
In the spring of 1943, heavy rain filled the water tanks of the camp, and this improved the PoWs’ hygienic conditions. However, they still did not have any quinine, and their protests were ignored. These conditions remained unaltered until the end: on 8 September 1943 the camp was overcrowded, water was scarce because of the summer drought, and there were severe hygienic issues (the prisoners did not shower for two months).
After the Armistice, the majority of the prisoners left Veano and managed to disappear. Among them, there were Gordon Lett, one of the protagonists of the “international” soul of the Italian Resistance, and Desmond Young, who instead would reach Switzerland and became, after the war, Rommel’s biographer.
In camp 19, the collective punishments and the refusal to forward the prisoners’ complaints to the Protecting Power were clear violations of the Geneva conventions. Other than these, however, no war crimes were reported.
After the war, the villa returned to its previous function. Today, it is used by the Fondazione Opera Pia Alberoni to host institutional and cultural events.
Archival sources
- Archivio Centrale dello Stato, Ministero dell’Interno, Direzione Generale Pubblica Sicurezza, A5G, II GM, bb. 116, 117, 118 e 140, Verbali e Notiziari della Commissione Interministeriale per i Prigionieri di Guerra
- Archivio Centrale dello Stato, Ministero dell’Aeronautica, Gabinetto, b. 70, Verbali e Notiziari della Commissione Interministeriale per i Prigionieri di Guerra
- Archivio Centrale dello Stato, Onorcaduti, b. 1
- Archivio Ufficio Storico Stato Maggiore dell’Esercito, L10, b. 32
- Archivio Ufficio Storico Stato Maggiore dell’Esercito, H8, b. 79
- Archivio Ufficio Storico Stato Maggiore dell’Esercito, H8, b. 79
- The National Archives, WO 224/112, 178
- The National Archives, FO 916/369
- The National Archives, WO 361/1884
- The National Archives, TS 26/95
Bibliography
- Absalom R., A Strange Alliance. Aspects of escape and survival in Italy 1943-45, Firenze, Olschki, 1991 trad. it. L’alleanza inattesa. Mondo contadino e prigionieri alleati in fuga in Italia (1943-1945), Bologna, Pendagron, 2011
- Insolvibile I., I prigionieri alleati in Italia 1940-1943, tesi di dottorato, Dottorato in "Innovazione e Gestione delle Risorse Pubbliche", curriculum “Scienze Umane, Storiche e della Formazione”, Storia Contemporanea, Università degli Studi del Molise, anno accademico 2019-2020,
- Lett B., An extraordinary Italian imprisonment: the brutal truth of Camp 21, 1942-3, Barnsley, Pen&Sword, 2014
- Minardi M. (a cura di), Prigionieri in Italia. Militari alleati e campi di prigionia (1940-1945), Parma, MUP, 2021
- Vannucci D., I campi per prigionieri di guerra nel territorio piacentino durante la Seconda guerra mondiale, Rezzanello, Cortemaggiore, Veano e Montalbo, Piacenza, Tip.Le.Co., 2018
Online resources
- https://archives.msmtrust.org.uk/?s=veano, in archives.msmtrust.org.uk
- https://www.gracpiacenza.com/i-campi-di-prigionia-a-piacenza.html, in gracpiacenza.com
- http://www.hmshood.com/crew/biography/cowan_bio.htm, in hmshood.com
- https://nonprendersisulserio.wordpress.com/2012/10/27/illustri-prigionieri-del-campo-29-a-veano-anticipazione-dellurtiga-n-1/, in nonprendersisulserio.wordpress.com
- http://nzetc.victoria.ac.nz/tm/scholarly/tei-WH2Pris-_N84741.html#name-000764-mention, in nzetc.victoria.ac.nz
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Herbert_Clifton#cite_note-FOOTNOTEGrayland1972157%E2%80%93158-23, in wikipedia.org