Joseph Sherman Frelinghuysen Jr. (August 11, 1912 – January 8, 2005) was the author of Passages to Freedom, about his escape from a prison camp in Italy during World War II.
During World War II, he served as an artillery captain in the First Infantry Division in North Africa. Members of his family had served in the military since the Revolutionary War. On November 23, 1942, he was captured by German troops and taken to a prison camp in Italy. He and another American POW, Richard M. Rossbach, escaped on September 23, 1943, by crawling through the camp's wire fences. The British Eighth Army, which they had hoped to join, was stationed on the other side of the Apennines.[2] Though the Germans briefly recaptured Rossbach, they both succeeded in rejoining the Allied forces.[3]
After the war, Frelinghuysen worked in insurance and later managed the family dairy business in Somerville, New Jersey.[1][3]
Barbara Frelinghuysen, who married Thomas C. Israel, chairman of Ingleside Investors[7]
Joseph S. Frelinghuysen III, Princeton class of '63 and president of J. S. Frelinghuysen & Company, a financial advisory and private investment concern in Mendham, N.J.[8]
Margaret Lawrance Frelinghuysen, who married Paul Alfred Kurzman in 1964. Kurzman is a great-grandson of Ida and Isidor Straus, who died aboard the Titanic in 1912. Mr. Straus was a U.S. Congressman and a co-owner of Macy'sdepartment store.[9]
^Frelinghuysen, Joseph S. (1990). Passages to freedom : a story of capture and escape. Manhattan, Kan., USA: Sunflower University Press. ISBN0897451317.