There were 23 members of Jehovah's Witnesses incarcerated in the armed forces detention barracks because they refused to carry out the legal obligation for all male citizens to serve in the armed forces.
22.
Its use as an internment camp was not long lived; it was used as a military detention barracks for a period, but spent much of the next fifteen years in a state of disuse.
23.
The congregation asked in vain to be exempt on religious grounds, and when the men were called up and refused to handle weapons, they were mistreated in the detention barracks and one man reportedly died.
24.
Libera's exhibit consists of seven boxes that bear the Lego logo and photos of what can be built with the pieces inside : detention barracks, gas chambers with huge chimneys, helmeted guards in black, and skeletons.
25.
Libera's exhibit consists of seven boxes which bear the Lego logo and photos of what can be built with the pieces inside : detention barracks, gas chambers with huge chimneys, helmeted guards in black and skeletons.
26.
The Detention Barracks, a military prison, stood on Windmill Hill for many years and was described by the English traveller Reginald Fowler as " clean, admirably arranged, and the discipline very strict " when he saw it in 1854.
27.
In 1865, a naming system for the batteries was adopted that saw each of their emplacements described by a letter, from Emplacement A on the west end near Detention Barracks to Emplacement R on the east side by the Retrenched Barracks.
28.
Giddins argues against the long-prevailing opinion that Young's talent was diminished after 1945 because of his traumatic Army court-martial and stay in a detention barracks ( hence the title of his subsequent record, " D . B . Blues " ).
29.
The CF MP Gp is composed of the Canadian Forces National Investigation Service ( CFNIS ), Military Police Security Services ( MPSS ), Canadian Forces Service Prison and Detention Barracks ( CFSPDB ), and Canadian Forces Military Police Academy ( CFMPA ).
30.
Erie camp was a military detention centre and was built on the Land of Nod estate owned by Major L Whitaker; it was designated by the War Office as a " Military Prison and Detention Barracks " from at least 1946 to 1948.