In
May 1943, Axis troops in North Africa were defeated by Allied forces and taken
prisoner. As a result, both German and Italian soldiers from the famous
"Afrika Korps" were transported to the United States to prisoner of
war camps, a number of which were located in Mississippi. There were four main
P.O.W. camps in Mississippi during World War II, including Clinton and Como and
at the military installations at Camp Shelby and Camp McCain. Of these, Camp
Clinton was used to house higher-ranking German officers, including Erwin
Rommel's replacement as the commander of the Afrika Korps, Gen. Jurgen Von
Arnim (right). Officers, unlike enlisted men, could not be forced to work, although
many chose to anyway. At Clinton, the Germans helped build a model of the
Mississippi River for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to study flood control.
In other parts of the state, however, work was chiefly agricultural in nature. That was
especially true in the Delta, where there were ten satellite camps. Most of the
prisoners in these camps found themselves planting and picking cotton.
Among
the German prisoners assigned to a work detail in the Delta was a Luftwaffe
officer named Helmut von der Aue. Variously described being either six feet
tall or 6'3", the 26-year-old pilot had been shot down and captured in
Italy in September 1943. With dark hair, blue eyes and sporting a small
mustache, von der Aue was not only considered handsome but was fluent in
English, French and Italian, in addition to his native German. After escaping from a prisoner of war camp in
Italy, von der Aue was transported to the United States and sent to Camp
Breckinridge in Kentucky (named for the former U.S. Vice President and
Confederate general John C. Breckinridge). On January 18, 1944, he escaped
while working on a road near the camp. After being recaptured, he was sent to
Camp McCain, Mississippi, and thence to a smaller camp at Rosedale, where he
was assigned to work on a plantation.
Along
with several other prisoners, Helmut von der Aue was sent to work on a
plantation owned by Joseph Henry Rogers near Beulah. Joe Rogers was a 43-year-old planter and was apparently
away from home on a regular basis tending to business matters. His wife Edith, who at age 37 was five years younger
than her husband, was described as "pretty." The couple had one
daughter, Joan. To pass the time, Edith frequently
invited the German prisoners working in the fields to have lunch at her home. Over a period of months, it seems, she
developed a particular attachment to Helmut von der Aue, the tall, handsome
pilot. On one occasion in
early January 1946, he stayed behind while the other prisoners
returned to the fields. After he and Mrs. Rogers enjoyed a few drinks – and
possibly as much as a fifth of whiskey – the two decided to escape together. Before leaving, she furnished von der Aue
with some of her husband’s clothes and then they took her car to Memphis. When interviewed later, von der Aue claimed
he was “tired of looking at fences, fences, fences,” but he also said he had
fallen in love with Edith, who had been very kind to him. Although he said he
was also fond of Joan, the couple did not take her with them. They left the
Delta behind with $10 cash.
After
heading to Memphis, the couple drove east all night with the intent to go all
the way to Washington, where he hoped to find work with some acquaintances. Arriving in Winchester, Tennessee, they
realized they were quickly running out of money. With only $3 remaining and a half-empty gas
tank, Edith sold her watch for $5 to buy food and then wired some relatives in
Rosedale for more money. Continuing to
Nashville, the couple tried to check into a hotel but was promptly arrested by
the F.B.I., who had been alerted of the escape and no doubt knew the make and
model of the car. Mrs. Rogers was charged with “aiding and abetting the escape of an enemy of the United States”
and held in the Nashville jail. Her bond was set at $2,000. Helmut von der Aue, as an escaped prisoner of
war, was turned over to military authorities and eventually sent back to Camp
McCain.
Meanwhile,
the story went “viral.” Newspapers across the nation picked up the affair
between the German P.O.W. and the planter’s wife, no doubt to the dismay of Mr.
Rogers. The press spared no details. In
an article in the Kansas City Star, for example, Helmut von der Aue claimed his
undying love for Edith. “Her husband was
seldom at home,” he said, “I fell in love with her and I wanted to marry her. I
still do.” Edith’s bond was posted by
none other than her husband and she returned to Bolivar County, where she was to
stand trial in Clarksdale in May. During
her bond hearing, Mrs. Rogers, who was “smartly dressed except for her bare
legs,” refused to have her photo taken and did not speak. The only sound she made during the hearing was
an audible laugh when asked “Have you talked to your husband yet?”
No
doubt the next few months were a bit uncomfortable at the Rogers household. By the time of the trial in May, however, Joe
Rogers and his attorney Walter Sillers (right) - who just happened to the Speaker of the
House in Mississippi - had convinced Federal Judge Allen Cox to give her two years’
probation, thus sparing the family any further embarrassment. Helmut von der Aue was sentenced with thirty
days of solitary confinement at Camp McCain. And thus the matter passed into history. What ultimately happened to either of the
lovebirds is unknown, but within a short time German prisoners of war were
returned home. As such, it’s likely that
the handsome von der Aue again found romance in his native land. As for Mr. and Mrs. Rogers, there is no
indication there was ever a divorce. In
time, perhaps the whole affair was chalked up to “unforeseen circumstances” and
life returned to normal. Given the national exposure the story received,
however, that’s difficult to imagine.
Joe
Rogers died in 1974 and is buried in Cleveland, Mississippi. Edith Rogers lived until 1991 and is buried
with her family in Tennessee.
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Interesting account, my friend.
ReplyDeleteInteresting account, my friend.
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