Today, I wanted to write a post in celebration of a niece whose birthday it is. (She's actually a leap-year baby, but y'know.) Vino-niece, La Serenissima's oldest daughter, is a historian so I thought I'd do a quick Napa-history bit in her honour. How do I possibly connect my niece, history, England, Utah and Napa together? It could be tricky, but - with the help of an inconspicuous little plaque on the Silverado Trail, north of Yountville, against the fence of a Napa County corporation yard - I think I can pull it off.
I first spotted this modest plaque last year whilst I was stuck in traffic, but I wasn't able to photograph it until yesterday as I drove home from work on a deserted Silverado Trail. Erected by E Clampus Vitus (ECV), Sam Brannan Chapter 1004, an organisation dedicated to the preservation of the heritage of the American West, the plaque marks the location in the Napa Valley of a World War II prisoner-of-war (POW) camp. Apparently, the United States aided Great Britain with the detention of a surplus of POWs: Germans some of who, upon release, returned to Germany and then made their way back to eventually settle in the United States.
An interesting little history-factoid, or not? ECV's motto is, improbably, Credo Quia Absurdum which, roughly translated from Latin, means "I believe it because it is absurd." Titter, titter.
Happy birthday Vino-niece!
Thursday, February 28, 2019
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3 comments:
Happy birthday to the prof and happy taffy day.
Historically fascinating.
Thud: Dr. Vino-niece to you.
Happy St. D-Day too :)
NHW: Historically obscure.
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