The camp, located just south of Prenzlau on the main road to Berlin, and was originally built in 1936 as a barracks[1] for Artillery Regiment 38.[2][3]
It was opened as a POW camp in September 1939 and housed mainly Belgian and Polish officers. With an area of about 7 hectares (17 acres) the camp was divided into two compounds: Lager A which contained four three-storey prisoner blocks, and an administration and canteen block, and Lager B which contained various garages and workshops, some of which were used as additional prisoner accommodation. The camp was surrounded by a double barbed-wire fence with seven watchtowers.[1]
On 17 March 1945, a group of evacuated sick Polish officers from the Oflag II-C camp reached Oflag II-A.[4]
On 12 April 1945 two bombs dropped by a Russian aircraft hit Block B killing eight POWs, and injuring several others. The camp was liberated by the Red Army on the morning of 28 April 1945.[3]