Sennelager () is a village in Germany that forms part of the City of Paderborn. It is notable for its association with the military since the 19th century.
The word Senne itself derives from the old Low German word sinedi, meaning "sand".
During World War I a POW camp here housed British and French soldiers as well as, in a distinct section, various civilians.International Committee of the Red Cross - Comité International de la Croix-Rouge (ICRC) Rapports de visites aux camps de prisonniers en Angleterre, France et Allemagne. Documents de la Guerre de 1914-1918. Genève-Paris, Mars 1915. pp.67-70. These were merchant seamen, including many British trawlermen taken prisoner after German raiders sank their ships in the North Sea, especially in the first days of the war. Many of the fishermen came from Boston or from Grimsby in Lincolnshire. Many were later transferred to Ruhleben internment camp near Berlin, where many remained for the duration of the war.
During the Third Reich the Wehrmacht used the village as a military loading station, and the village's railway station shows signs of this – there are facilities for loading military vehicles onto trains which are still regularly used by the British and German armies. The Catholic order of the Salvatorians, who were based in the still-standing Heilandsfrieden House, was disbanded and driven out of Sennelager by the Nazis in 1941; they were forbidden to settle anywhere in Westphalia or in the Rhineland.
At the end of World War II in 1945, the historic military base passed first briefly into the administration of the United States Army, before a more long-term handover to the British who use the Sennelager Training Area and as the base for their Westfalen Garrison. On May 26, 1965, Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip visited "The British Army of the Rhine" at Sennelager camp.
Sennelager train station is served by a regular train service operated by Veolia Transport-owned NordWestBahn that runs between the Paderborn main station and Bielefeld. The service operates on an hourly basis, although train times are different on Monday to Friday mornings to allow a higher number of services to run to allow for the considerable commuter traffic.
Two regular bus services, the number 1 and the number 420, connect Sennelager to Paderborn City Centre.
In a play on old Carlsberg beer advertisements from the 1980s, many British soldiers use the phrase "Sennelager: probably the worst lager in the world" to refer to the training area.
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