In the spring of 1915, the builders of one of the largest prison camps of the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy, the Ostffyasszonyfa camp, were housed in a temporary camp near Kissitke. There were about a thousand Russian and Serbian prisoners of war on June 17, 1915 – in order to prevent the epidemic outbreaks and to provide clean water – the authorities ordered a decontamination of the nearby Kurcon Spring to provide water for the camp. A cupola-shape protective structure was erected over the spring, based on the designs and under the direction of the painter Béla Zombory Moldován, who served as an officer in the camp. The well (POW memorial) was renovated in 2015, and can be visited.