Beneath the Desert: Arizona’s Forgotten World War II Prison Camp Escape


© Benjamin H. Groff II — Truth Endures / benandsteve.com

May 22, 2026


 The Great Escape on Arizona’s Gila River

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Most people who visit Papago Park today see hiking trails, red sandstone buttes, the nearby zoo, and one of the most photographed desert landscapes in Arizona. Families picnic there. Tourists stop for photographs. Children climb the rocks and stare out across the Valley of The Sun.

World War II P.O.W. Camp near Phoenix, Arizona

Few realize that beneath that peaceful desert landscape once stood one of the strangest and most remarkable wartime stories in American history.

During World War II, the area near Papago Park became home to a prisoner-of-war camp that housed mostly German naval prisoners captured during combat operations in the Atlantic. Many of the men held there had served aboard German U-boats and were considered disciplined, intelligent, and highly organized. The camp itself eventually became the site of what historians now recognize as the largest Axis prisoner escape ever carried out on American soil during the war.

Prisoners held near Phoenix during World War II

In December 1944, twenty-five German prisoners vanished into the Arizona desert.

Their escape was not impulsive. It was carefully planned with patience and engineering precision. The prisoners secretly dug a tunnel approximately 176 feet long beneath the camp grounds. According to stories that have survived through books, archives, and family memories, the tunnel entrance was hidden beneath a Faustball court — a German sport similar to volleyball. The prisoners worked quietly for months, removing dirt without attracting major suspicion.

When the escape finally happened, the men believed they could navigate southward toward Mexico using river systems and waterways shown on maps. What they did not understand was the brutal reality of the Arizona desert.

Much of the waterways they expected to follow were dry.

Instead of flowing rivers, they encountered sand, heat, isolation, and terrain unlike anything many of them had ever seen. Some reportedly stayed close to the camp. Others attempted elaborate plans. One story says a pair even tried building a makeshift boat for travel along the Gila River, only to discover there was barely enough water to float it.

One by one, the escapees were captured or surrendered.

Some reportedly walked back into custody exhausted and defeated. Others were recognized by locals, questioned by authorities, or tracked down after wandering across the desert countryside. In the end, every escapee was eventually returned to custody.

Prisoner of War Camp in Arizona
From the Great Escape on the Gila River

Yet the story survived.

Not only through military records and history books, but through the memories of Arizona families who grew up hearing the tales firsthand.

Some longtime Arizona residents still recall parents and grandparents speaking about German prisoners being seen around the area during the war years. Others remember stories of encounters so ordinary they almost sound surreal today. One Arizona family recalled a German prisoner politely asking to borrow children’s bicycles for a quick ride before returning them with gratitude. Another remembered hearing how former prisoners later returned to Arizona after the war because they had grown to love the desert landscape and people they encountered here.

The wartime years also left another difficult and important reminder in Arizona history. Many people today forget that Arizona was also home to major internment camps involving Japanese Americans during World War II. Those chapters remain part of the larger story of fear, conflict, and civil liberties during wartime America.

History often hides in plain sight.

papago park in arizona
Camelback Mountain and Papago Park areas

Drivers pass through the area every day without realizing that beneath the desert soil once existed guard towers, barracks, military patrols, and a tunnel dug by desperate men thousands of miles from home. What remains today are fragments of memory, scattered photographs, forgotten foundations, and stories passed from one generation to another.

Arizona is filled with places like that.

Locations where the landscape appears quiet, but where history still echoes just beneath the surface.

For many Arizonans, the Great Papago Escape remains one of the strangest forgotten stories ever to unfold in the desert — a wartime drama involving German submariners, hidden tunnels, dry rivers, failed escape plans, and the harsh reality of the American.

Every thing they planned went south, including the dry river bed.
German Prisoners Plan Their Escape On The Gila River

And perhaps that is what makes the story endure.

Not simply because prisoners escaped.

But because in the middle of a global war, one of history’s most unusual prison breaks unfolded beneath the Arizona desert where almost no one would expect it.


— benandsteve.com | Truth Endures