List of Prisoners of War

This is a list of notable prisoners of war (POW) whose imprisonment attracted notable attention or influence, or who became famous afterwards.

  • Ron Arad — Israeli fighter pilot, shot down over Lebanon in 1986. He has not been seen or heard from since 1988 and is widely presumed to be dead.
  • Everett Alvarez, Jr. Navy Commander who endured one of the longest periods as a prisoner of war (POW) in American history. Alvarez was the first American pilot to be shot down and held as a POW in North Vietnam. He spent over 8 years in captivity, making him the second longest-held POW in American history.
  • Bowe Bergdahl — U.S. Army Private First Class soldier captured by the Taliban on June 30, 2009.
  • Douglas Bader — British fighter pilot, Wing commander in Battle of Britain
  • Leonard Birchall — The "Saviour of Ceylon"
  • Fernand Braudel — the famous historian, was a POW in World War II.
  • Frank Buckles — the last American veteran of World War I, was imprisoned by the Japanese during World War II, as a civilian.
  • Winston Churchill — during the Second Boer War; escaped
  • James Clavell — prisoner in Singapore, based his novel King Rat on his experiences during World War II
  • George Thomas Coker — U.S. Navy aviator, POW in North Vietnam, noted resistor of his captors
  • John Cordwell — forged documents to help fellow English soldiers get out of Germany as part of the Great Escape
  • Charles de Gaulle — French general and political leader, captured at Verdun, POW 1916-1918
  • Dieter Dengler — a United States Navy pilot who escaped a Pathet Lao prison camp in Laos
  • Jeremiah Denton — Awarded the Navy Cross for resistance in captivity during the Vietnam War
  • Roy Dotrice — British actor
  • Werner Drechsler — killed by fellow German POWs during World War II for informing on other prisoners
  • Sir Edward "Weary" Dunlop — an Australian surgeon and legend among prisoners of the Thai Burma Railway in World War II
  • Yakov Dzhugashvili — Joseph Stalin's first son, was captured by Germans early in World War II. lived in Sachsenhausen concentration camp in 1943.
  • Denholm Elliott — British actor
  • Henri Giraud — French general, escaped German captivity in both World War I and World War II
  • Ernest Gordon — Japanese POW in World War II, author of "To End All Wars" and former Presbyterian Dean of Princeton University chapel
  • Tom Greenway — American actor, imprisoned for more than a year in Italian and German camps during World War II
  • James Hargest — Brigadier in World War II. Highly decorated New Zealand politician in World War I and World War II. Escaped from captivity into Switzerland.
  • Heinrich Harrer — Austrian mountaineer, sportsman and author, detained in British India during World War II until he escaped in 1944, as related in his autobiography Seven Years in Tibet.
  • Erich Hartmann — "The Blond Knight of Germany". Number one air ace of all air forces in World War II.
  • Bob Hoover — American World War II pilot, test pilot and airshow performer; captured in 1944 and escaped from Stalag Luft I
  • Wilm Hosenfeld — Soviet prisoner in World War II, most remembered for saving Polish pianist and composer Władysław Szpilman from death in the ruins of Warsaw.
  • Andrew Jackson — Seventh President of the United States, captured in the American Revolutionary War as a thirteen-year-old courier
  • Charles R. Jackson — captured in Battle of Corregidor and notable for memoir I Am Alive: A United States Marine's Story of Survival in a World War II Japanese POW Camp
  • Stanley D. Jaworski — Polish POW freed by American soldiers
  • Harold K. Johnson — U.S. Army Chief of Staff 1964; captured at Bataan (1942–1945)
  • Bert Kaempfert — German Orchestra conductor in World War II at a Danish prisoner of war camp
  • George Kenner — German artist interned as a civilian POW in Great Britain and the Isle of Man during World War I. Documented his experience in 110 paintings and drawings.
  • Tikka Khan — Japanese POW during World War II, Chief of Army Staff of the Pakistani Army
  • Wajid Khan Canadian politician — former Pakistan-India War 1971 fighter pilot
  • Yahya Khan — German POW during World War II, last president of a united Pakistan
  • Tadeusz Bór-Komorowski — Commander of the Polish Home Army in the Warsaw Uprising
  • Gustav Krist — Adventurer and traveler, Austrian soldier in World War I, captured by Russians in 1914. Interned in Russian Turkestan
  • Desmond Llewelyn — went on to a notable acting career, most famously as Q in the James Bond film series
  • Jessica Lynch — American servicewoman during the Iraq war.
  • Keith Matthew Maupin — captured on April 9, 2004. Date of murder unknown. Remains found March 30, 2008.
  • Charles Cardwell McCabe — a prisoner and chaplain at Libby Prison during the American Civil War
  • John McCain — American political leader and Republican nominee for president in 2008, prisoner for over five years in Vietnam
  • Olivier Messiaen — French composer
  • George Millar — Journalist, British soldier, SOE agent, writer
  • Dusty Miller — Executed for his faith during internment under the Japanese in Thailand in 1945.
  • François Mitterrand — French president, captured during World War II in 1940, escaped 6 times before arriving home in Dec. 1941
  • W. H. Murray — German POW during World War II, Scottish mountaineer
  • Airey Neave — British politician made the first British home run from Colditz on 5 January 1942
  • A. A. K. Niazi — commander of Pakistan Army in East Pakistan who surrendered along with nearly 93,000 prisoners
  • Manuel Noriega — Ex-Panamanian dictator captured by U.S. troops in 1990 then jailed for drugs trafficking offences. Only detainee in held by U.S. authorities presently officially designated as a POW by the federal government.
  • Friedrich Paulus — German field marshal, surrendered Stalingrad to the Soviets in 1943
  • Donald Pleasence — English film and stage actor. Was shot down while serving in the RAF during World War II, taken prisoner, and placed in a German prisoner-of-war camp. He later acted in the film "The Great Escape".
  • Pat Reid — non-fiction/historical author
  • James Robinson Risner — USAF Brigadier General. First living recipient of the Air Force Cross.
  • Yevgeny Rodionov — Russian soldier captured by rebel forces in Chechnya and beheaded for refusing to convert to Islam
  • James N. Rowe — Colonel, U.S. Army Special Forces, held by the Viet Cong from October 1963 until December 1968. One of only thirty-four U.S. soldiers to escape captivity in Vietnam. Author of Five Years to Freedom. Assassinated by the New People's Army in the Philippines on April 21, 1989.
  • Jean-Paul Sartre — French philosopher and writer, POW 1940-1941
  • Kazuo Sakamaki — First POW captured by U.S. forces in World War II
  • Ronald Searle — English cartoonist
  • Léopold Senghor — Senegalize writer and political leader, captured 1940 in France
  • Gilad Shalit — Israeli soldier captured in 2006 by Hamas. He was released in a prisoner exchange on October 18, 2011.
  • Vladek Spiegelman — Polish private captured by Germany on September 1, 1939, father of Art Spiegelman
  • William Stacy — lieutenant colonel of the Continental Army, captured during the Cherry Valley massacre; General George Washington attempted to orchestrate a prisoner exchange for Lt. Col. Stacy but was unsuccessful.
  • James Stockdale — candidate for Vice President in 1992; decorated member of the U.S. Navy; POW in Vietnam
  • E W Swanton — captured by Japanese in Singapore; after war, was renowned BBC sports commentator.
  • Floyd James Thompson — America's longest-held POW; he spent 9 years in POW camps in Vietnam (1964 — 1973)
  • Josip Broz Tito — president of Yugoslavia, Austrian soldier in World War I, captured by Russians in 1915
  • András Toma – Hungarian soldier, lived in a psychiatric hospital in Russia for 55 years after being captured as a POW. He was identified and returned home in 2000.
  • Jakow Trachtenberg — A Russian Jewish mathematician who developed the mental calculation techniques called the Trachtenberg system.
  • Mikhail Tukhachevsky — Soviet military leader and theorist, captured by Germans in World War I
  • Charles Upham — Most decorated British soldier of World War II. Awarded the Victoria Cross twice.
  • Laurens van der Post — South African writer and war hero, captured by Japanese 1942
  • Walther von Seydlitz-Kurzbach — German general captured at Stalingrad
  • Kurt Vonnegut — American writer; captured in the Battle of the Bulge and witnessed the Bombing of Dresden in World War II
  • Jonathan Wainwright — Commanding General U.S. forces in Philippines; captured at Bataan (1942–1945)
  • George Washington — first U.S. President, captured in 1754 by the French during the French and Indian War.
  • D. C. Wimberly — POW in World War II from Springhill, Louisiana; educator and a past commander of American Ex-Prisoners of War
  • Louis Zamperini — American athlete, member of Olympic team, captured by Japanese 1943

Famous quotes containing the words list of, list, prisoners and/or war:

    A man’s interest in a single bluebird is worth more than a complete but dry list of the fauna and flora of a town.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    Feminism is an entire world view or gestalt, not just a laundry list of women’s issues.
    Charlotte Bunch (b. 1944)

    Your notions of friendship are new to me; I believe every man is born with his quantum, and he cannot give to one without robbing another. I very well know to whom I would give the first place in my friendship, but they are not in the way, I am condemned to another scene, and therefore I distribute it in pennyworths to those about me, and who displease me least, and should do the same to my fellow prisoners if I were condemned to a jail.
    Jonathan Swift (1667–1745)

    You went to meet the shell’s embrace of fire
    On Vimy Ridge; and when you fell that day
    The war seemed over more for you than me,
    But now for me than you the other way.
    Robert Frost (1874–1963)