Joe
Klein and Doris, Baton Rouge Nat. Convention 1998
Last
Name: KLEIN
First
Name Middle Initial:
JOSEPH
Nick
Name:
'JOE'
Street:
14803 CORTLAND DR
City
& State: HUDSON, FL
E-Mail:
Zip:
34667-3310
Phone:
(727) 868-9426
Spouse:
DORIS
Conflict:
WW II
Service
Branch: ARMY
Unit:
1 INF DIV CO A 16
Theater:
Where
Captured: NORTH AFRICA
Date
Captured: 03/28/43
Camps
Held In: TUNIS, CAPULA (VII, IIIB, IIIA GERMANY)
How
Long Interned: 801 days
Liberated
/ repatriated:liberated
Date
Liberated: 06/06/45
Age
at Capture: 25
Medals
Received: ETO MEDAL, AMERICAN DEFENSE SERVICE MEDAL, COMBAT
INFANTRY BADGE, BRONZE STAR, GOOD CONDUCT MEDAL, POW MEDAL
Military
Job: RIFLEMAN
Company:
A. ALPORT & SONS WHOLESALE PLUMBING & HEATING
Occupation
after War: REFRIGERATION SALES AND SERVICE
Bio:
Joseph Klein of Hudson, Florida was a Corporal in a rifle squad and
graduate of Military Intelligence School assigned to A Company, 16th
Infantry, 1st Division.
On November 8, 1942, Joe and his Division were in the North African
invasion at Arzew. They fought their way across North Africa to El
Ghitar. On March 28, 1943 at the age of twenty-five, was taken prisoner
outside of Tunis by the Germans with some of his Company. They were put
into a stockade to await transportation to Germany. A small hunk of
black bread and very little water was the only ration they received. A
week later they were loaded on trucks in a convoy. En route they were
strafed by British Spitfires. Joe and two others jumped off the truck
and found a gully to take cover in. Soon after some Arabs with
pitchforks rousted them out and returned them to the convoy. From there
they were taken to an airstrip and loaded onto some German JU52s. These
planes had big spaces in the floor, which came in handy for those who
had dysentery while they flew across the Mediterranean to Capua, Italy.
Once in Italy, Joe and others were loaded onto already overcrowded
boxcars with only one bucket of water per car. The next morning a German
guard opened the door to give them a ration of bread and fill the bucket
with water. He found the empty bucket had been used as a commode. It so
angered him, he threw it back into the car covering many of them.
Joe was sent to Stalag 7A in Munich, Germany where he was interrogated.
There the Non Coms were separated from the Privates, whom they never saw
again because they went to work camps. The Non Coms were sent to Stalag
IIIB in Furstenburg, Germany. On Joe’s first day in Stalag IIIB the
Germans corralled them in a corner of the compound. A German Officer
informed them that in a short time they would be crawling on their hands
and knees like the starved Russians were doing. The interpreter was told
to tell the guard this would never happen and that he would go to the
Russian front first. The guard stomped off calling them choice names.
While in Stalag IIIB, Joe and other prisoners aggravated the guards with
anything that would upset them. However, when they received Red Cross
parcels, they would use them to bride the sentries for articles that
would help them get radios and other useful items that could be used to
escape or just exist.
Russians were advancing. On that march they were given a small piece of
black bread. After a few days they were very hungry, but as they
marched, they saw a farm. Joe and a few others went in the barn where
Joe milked a cow into his helmet for some fresh milk. An S.S. on
horseback found him and managed to kick Joe in the head before returning
him to the march. His injury made him struggle to keep up with the
others.
Joe endured twenty-five months of suffering before he was liberated on
June 6, 1945. After being discharged on September 9, 1945, he became a
refrigeration sales and serviceman. He worked twenty-five years for A.
Alport & Son Wholesale Plumbing and Heating, Inc. as a salesman.
Joe received many medals for his Army duties including the American
Defense Medal, Combat Infantry Badge, Bronze Star Medal, American
Ex-Prisoner of War Medal, Good Conduct Medal, Distinguished Service
Medal and European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign Medal.
Joe is presently Commander of Department of Florida, American
Ex-Prisoners of War.
Message to Future Generations:
Joe’s message to our future generation is, "Our loss of freedom
gave you your freedom to keep."