Laura L. Becker of Clemson University wrote an article focusing  on a single town, Reading, Pennsylvania, and its housing of British and Hessian prisoners of war. As early as February  1776, Reading was receiving prisoners, and her leading  citizens petitioned the Pennsylvania Assembly to erect barracks "capable  of containing four or five hundred men."   
Reading was a market town of roughly 300 families, mostly German, about 60 miles northeast of Philadelphia. In the beginning most prisoners were officers, but after Cornwallis' surrender "in October of  1781, no fewer than 1050 prisoners arrived, most of whom were  privates." 
Newly arrived prisoners were disarmed and released subject to a requirement to remain in Reading and an 8:00  PM curfew. Becker writes, "This curfew was not strictly enforced  because at least some of the officers participated in the town's social  activities... And a substantial number of the officers held in  Reading were permitted to go to Philadelphia, New York, or elsewhere.  Still others were exchanged." 
The mostly German citizens of Reading were perhaps harsher in their  treatment of their own countrymen than English, Scottish or Canadian  prisoners. One German officer wrote that the German-Americans of Reading  "could hardly hide their anger and hostile thoughts." 
Many  former Hessian captives did stay in the county after the war. They were  referred to as "Brunswickers and Hanauers" in local church records. The  expression "Du bist ein Hesse" was an insult in Reading well into the  nineteenth century. 
from http://www.earlyamerica.com/review/2002_summer_fall/pows.htm
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