Wilfred Ponsonby: a conjuror in captivity (Part 3)
By 1941, Captain Wilfred Ponsonby, professional army officer and amateur magician, had firmly established himself as an ‘escaper’ among his fellow prisoners of war. Identified as a grand-blessé (medically unfit prisoner of war) by the Germans, he very nearly got repatriated back to England in time for Christmas 1941/42. In the final part of a three-part blog, with hopes of repatriation dashed, he switches back to escaping... and gets home before the war is over. Poland for Christmas The grand-blessés were moved from Rouen, France to camps in Germany and Poland on 19 December 1941. Wilfred Ponsonby was chosen to head out to Stalag XXI-D, a POW cam p in Poznań (German: Posen), in Ge rman-occupied Poland. Allied prisoners were held in eighteenth century forts, 30 to 40 men per room in brick-built redoubts, or in houses nearby, in three-tier bunks. “We arrived at Posen on Christmas Eve 1941 and, we had no Red Cross parcels or...