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Though S. He came to learn that Rutherford Winner of Hydra's Pygamlion project was still operating freelance with the man intending to force someone to kill him as S. This saw Fury attempting to track him down and eliminate him as he was one of the dark secrets from his father Nick Fury's time.

During this time, he encountered the Daughters of the Dragon who had become targets of Winner who had been hired on behalf of someone to eliminate the two vigilantes.

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Daughters of the Dragon - Marvel Digital Original v1 2. Following his capture by Orion, followers from Leviathan were responsible for slashing his left eye and plucking out the eyeball thus making him lose that eye. Battle Scars v1 5. Fury believed that the world needed S.

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Thus, when it was disbanded, he sought to ensure that the hidden mistakes of his father never resurfaced as it would mean that the agency would return quickly. Thus, he came to consider the history of S. It was this reason that he worked as a spy to clean up those mistakes and ensure that they never affected the organization. He deeply cared for his mother to the point that he believed that a world without her made no sense. According to him, everything that he was due to her and that she was all he had in the world.

Phil Coulson or Cheese he regarded as being his best friend. Despite initial appearances, and some accusations of collaboration with the Germans, the permanent staff, headed by Day, had set up an escape committee with other members of the staff, including Squadron Leader Roger Bushell and Lt Cmdr Jimmy Buckley RN. Buckley was a pilot in the Fleet Air Arm and as such the Germans had placed him, with all other FAA aircrew, under the responsibility of the Luftwaffe. Several tunnels were started, but the first two ran into problems of extreme flooding, however they were not discovered.

The third tunnel ran westwards from the westernmost barrack block under a sentry tower on the south-western corner of the camp. This was completed in the spring of , and was used by 17 British officers mostly RAF in June The exact date of the escape is not known, but many sources quote it as occurring during the Whitsun weekend. Roger Bushell is believed not to have used the tunnel, instead escaping on the same night from a goat shed in the camp grounds. It is understood that he wished for a slightly earlier start to catch a train for his intended escape route. He was also recaptured.

All the recaptured escapers were well treated, and after serving their solitary confinement as punishment for the attempt were all transferred to Stalag Luft I. It is reputed that the German Camp Commandant at the time Major Rumpel , gave the escapers a case of champagne with the words "Better luck next time, even if I'm not supposed to say so". All locations are named as the German title and the present day country they are located. Suffixes on camps relate to their parent camp: i. The camp, located just south of Prenzlau on the main road to Berlin, and was originally built in as a barracks for Artillery Regiment With an area of about 7 hectares 17 acres the camp was divided into two compounds: Lager A which contained four three-storey prisoner blocks, and an administration and canteen block, and Lager B which contained various garages and workshops, some of which were used as additional prisoner accommodation.

The camp was surrounded by a double barbed-wire fence with seven watchtowers. The camp was liberated by the Red Army on the morning of 12 April Infrastructure of the camp consisted of four two-storey blocks, a gymnasium, two administrative buildings, four garages, and a large parade ground.

The area was fenced with barbed double fence height. Named Arnswalde II B, which meant, Arnswalde - the name of the town where the camp was situated - Choszczno , II - the number of the military district in this case, Stettin Pomerania , Mecklenburg , B - the sequence of the camp in the district - the second.

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The first transport numbering POWs officers and other ranks arrived at the camp on 6th November November 21st brought hundreds of wounded prisoners from the field hospitals. The next larger transport prisoners arrived on December 7th, also from Stargard, Oflag II-d. In the camp there were eight medical officers, the seriously ill were treated in the prison hospital in Stargard.

Food was very scarce and below starvation rations. Size salary was dependent of your military rank and was for Colonel eg, Brigadier , Col. Part of the wages earned was transferred to a Mutual Fund. The Fund's operations include assistance to widows and orphans of fallen colleagues in the country, the fees for the lawyers defending prisoners before German courts, the payment of salaries of the cadets and soldiers, as well as cultural and educational activities.

The first group of French prisoners of war were brought to Choszczna just after the fall of France in June , The senior officer being Colonel Gonnard. The French stay was relatively short. On November 8th all French were then transported to Oflag IIa in Prenzlau, however later in the camp became almost all French with transfers from other officers camps.

The camp was divided into three groups of Some took the opportunity to escape at this point. The march lasted until February 25th and ended up in the town of Waren where they were liberated by the Russians soon after. The camp housed Polish officers and orderlies and had an area of 25 hectares 62 acres with 25 brick huts for prisoners and another six for kitchens, class-rooms, theatre, and administration. Work on the camp began in October when Polish prisoners from the September campaign arrived to build the camp, and who lived initially in tents. In May as the building work progressed small groups of Polish officers were transferred in from other POW camps.

They were divided among the 25 huts to work as orderlies, in addition to the lower ranks that were already doing this work. The number of inmates reached its peak of 5, officers and orderlies.

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In October a small number of higher ranking officers arrived from the Warsaw Uprising. There were several escape attempts, but only two were successful. In early three officers managed to hide inside empty boxes in a truck that was unloading food supplies. They were successful. On Christmas Eve a number of officers arranged a fight outside one of the huts. While the guards were engaged in breaking up the fight, toward which the searchlights were all directed, three officers managed to cut through the barbed wire and escape from the camp. A larger scale attempt was unsuccessful.


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In a tunnel was being dug from a hut closest to the wires. About officers were preparing to get out through it. Unfortunately, as the tunnel was within a few feet of its end it was discovered. In September two Stalags, Stalag and Stalag were established to house Polish prisoners from the German September offensive. By February there were 3, officers and orderlies in the camp. In a large camp Stalag was built for Soviet prisoners, it was located at the other end of the training ground. Conditions in this camp were deplorable, as the rules of the Third Geneva Convention were not observed for Soviet prisoners.

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In October most of the officers from the Warsaw Uprising were brought to this camp. The roster of 1 January showed that there were 5, officers and orderlies in the camp. When the offensive of the Soviet Red Army resumed in , all inmates were marched westward on 28 January Only those too sick to walk were left behind.

After an eight-week kilometres mi march in bitterly cold weather they reached Stalag X-B and Marlag und Milag Nord in Sandbostel. The prisoners were liberated there by units of the British Army on 5 May After some time the officers were separated out and placed initially in the garages of the adjoining German Army armoured division.

Then a separate camp, Oflag II-E, was built for them on the west side of the road. By February most of the officers had been transferred to other Oflags.

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Only Dutch officers and a few Russian officers remained. The camp was renumbered Oflag It was liberated by a Soviet armoured division on 28 April The castle was first used as a camp in , named KZ Hohnstein. As a Schutzhaftlager "protective custody camp" , it held political prisoners, mostly members of the Communist Party, who were forced to work in a nearby quarry.


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The camp was reopened in 1 October to house Polish generals and their staffs captured during the German September offensive. By September the prisoners at the camp were mainly French, with officers up the rank of colonel, and 28 generals. There were also seven Dutch and 27 Polish generals, with orderlies. By the end of October all these prisoners had been transferred to other camps, and the castle was then used to accommodate evacuee children from Hamburg and Berlin. At the start of the war most high-ranking Polish officers were imprisoned there.

The staff officers were imprisoned in the casemates and the generals in one of the forts.