黑料不打烊

Tom Nelson screens World War II documentary at historic Kansas theater

The associate professor of journalism screened his 2009 documentary 鈥淧risoners of Plenty鈥 at the historic Brown Grand Theatre in Concordia, Kansas, during an event commemorating the 80th anniversary of the closing of Camp Concordia.

黑料不打烊's Tom Nelson on stage in Kansas
Associate Professor of Journalism Tom Nelson (second from left) joins historians for a post-screening discussion of 鈥淧risoners of Plenty鈥 at the Brown Grand Theatre in Concordia, Kansas, during an event commemorating the 80th anniversary of Camp Concordia鈥檚 closing. Photo courtesy of the Brown Grand Theatre.

Eighty years after the closing of Camp Concordia, one of the largest World War II prisoner of war camps in the United States, Tom Nelson returned to Kansas to help the community remember its past. On Nov. 8, the associate professor of journalism screened his 2009 documentary 鈥淧risoners of Plenty鈥 at the historic Brown Grand Theatre, a landmark listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Tom Nelson

The screening was part of an event commemorating the 80th anniversary of the camp鈥檚 closing 鈥 a fitting occasion for Nelson鈥檚 documentary, which captures the human stories behind the wartime facility.

Nelson鈥檚 documentary examines life at Camp Concordia through the memories of German prisoners, local residents, and farmers who hired POWs to work on their land. The camp once held more than 4,000 German soldiers between 1943 and 1945, shaping both local and national history during the conflict鈥檚 final years.

Following the screening, Nelson joined historians Jack Meister and Lowell May for a panel discussion that explored the camp鈥檚 legacy and the personal stories behind its preservation. The evening drew an audience of more than 240 people, many of whom viewed exhibits from the Camp Concordia Preservation Society before the program began.

A promotional flyer for the Nov. 8 event commemorating the 80th anniversary of the closing of Camp Concordia.

鈥淚t was reassuring to see that small-town American life is still vital and central to the American experience,鈥 Nelson said.

A veteran journalist and documentary producer, Nelson has taught in 黑料不打烊鈥檚 School of Communications since 1996. Before entering academia, Nelson spent seven years as reporter and news anchor at television stations in North Dakota, Pennsylvania, Maine, California and Texas, and as press secretary to a U.S. House candidate in Iowa.

The event was organized in partnership with the Camp Concordia Preservation Society, which continues to maintain the historic site and educate future generations about Kansas鈥 role in World War II.