Here is another which has arrived in the morning post. It is a card from a POW in Munster Camp in Westfalen, addressed to Portugal. It bears a number of stamps, some of which I cannot make out, one is a stamp applied in the camp and another is a Portuguese receiving stamp dated 14 Jan 18.
One I can read is London EC PAID 8 JA 18. The card itself is dated on the reverse 19th October 1917.
Can anyone enlighten me as to the route this would have taken to get to Portugal, which clearly involves it passing through London. Also, how long would it reasonably take for mail from a POW camp to get to its destination?
Hi Alan,
There is a small circular postmark Münster (Westf) dated 3.12.17/1-2 N/2 and Figueira da Foz 14 JAN 18. The German purple camp handstamp probably reads Briefstempel Münster IV in the center and around Postuberwachungsstelle des Kriegsgefangenenlager. suppose that this card went accross the border with the Netherlands at Emmerich and from Hoek van Holland to England and as such London before being forwarded to Portugal.
I hope this helps
Marc
Marc
Many thanks for this detail. I will write the card up sometime and include the information. Unfortunately, it will probably be about a year, given all the material in the "to do" pile!