The Great Escape (book)
1950 book by Paul Brickhill From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1950 book by Paul Brickhill From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Great Escape is a 1950 book by Australian writer Paul Brickhill (1916-1991), that provides an insider's account of the March 1944 mass escape from the Nazi German Luftwaffe (Air Force) prisoner of war camp Stalag Luft III for British and Commonwealth enemy airmen. As a prisoner in the camp himself, he participated in the escape plan but was barred from the actual escape attempt 'along with three or four others on grounds of suffering from claustrophobia'.[1] The introduction to the book is written by George Harsh, an American P.O.W. at camp Stalag Luft III. This 1950 book along with other previously published material was made into the 1963 film The Great Escape.
Author | Paul Brickhill (1916-1991) |
---|---|
Language | English |
Publisher | Norton (US), Faber (UK) |
Publication date | 1950 (US), 1951 (UK) |
The book covers the planning, execution and aftermath of what became known as The Great Escape. Other escape attempts (such as the Wooden Horse) are also mentioned as well as the post-war hunt for the Nazi German Gestapo agents who murdered fifty of the Allied airmen escapees on Hitler's direct order. The book was published in 1950. Brickhill, an Australian journalist before and after the war, had previously written four different accounts of the story, first as a BBC media talk / interview, then as newspaper and Reader's Digest magazine articles, and in the 1946 book Escape to Danger which he co-wrote with Conrad Norton. By the time four years later of the 1950 book, Brickhill had eliminated some of the less heroic aspects of the story, including the fact that a large proportion of the compound's imprisoned population had no interest in escaping.[2]
Much of the book is focused on Royal Air Force Squadron Leader Roger Bushell, also known as the nicknamed "Big X", including his capture, early escape attempts, and planning of the escape. All the major participants and their exploits are described by Brickhill. Among these are Tim Walenn, the principal forger, who 'gave his factory the code name of "Dean and Dawson", after a well-known British travel agency';[3] Al Hake, the compass maker;[4] Des Plunkett, the ingenious chief map tracer, who somehow made a mimeograph duplicating machine for reproducing maps;[5] and Tommy Guest, who ran a team of tailors.[6] American-born Major John ("Johnnie") Dodge (1894-1960), who had enlisted in the British Army in 1939 at the beginning of the European war, was related by marriage to British prime minister Winston Churchill (1874-1965), was one of the escapees and nicknamed "the Artful Dodger". The German Luftwaffe officers and guards (called 'goons' by the prisoners) included teams of 'ferrets' who crawled about under the raised huts looking for signs of tunnels. They were carefully watched and surveilled by rotating teams of P.O.W. 'stooges', one of whom was future historian / author Paul Brickhill, 'boss of a gang of "stooges" guarding the forgers'.[7]
In the end, seventy-six men actually escaped. Seventy-three were recaptured and fifty of those were shot by the Gestapo notorious secret police in violation of the ratified 1929 Geneva Convention on Prisoners of War, which specified that P.O.W.'s could not be killed for trying to escape. Four of the remaining twenty-three survivors later tunnelled again out of Sachsenhausen (another concentration camp they were transferred to), but were recaptured and then chained to the floor of their cells.[8] One of them, Major John ("Johnnie") Dodge, was released to be taken to Berlin, then to neutral Switzerland to relay from the Germans to Allied officials in London to attempt to secure a cease-fire or partial surrender on the Western Front only to the Western Allies in April-May 1945, which was rejected.[9] Only three escaped airmen prisoners eventually made it home safely.
The book is dedicated "to The Fifty".
In the aftermath, according to historian author Brickhill, 5,000,000 million Germans searched for the escaped Allied Powers airmen prisoners, many of them full-time for subsequent weeks.[10] According to author Brickhill's later interviewer / biographer Stephen Dando-Collins (born 1950), while this may have been claimed by the escapees, it is merely an exaggeration which added to the story's heroic narrative.[11]
Three tunnels were dug for the escape. They were nicknamed Tom, Dick, and Harry. The operation was so secretive that everyone was to refer to each tunnel by its name. Bushell took this so seriously that he threatened to court-martial anyone who even uttered the word "tunnel" aloud.[12] Tom was dug in hut 123 and extended west into the forest. Its length eventually reached 140 feet beyond the perimeter and the escapees were about to start digging vertically to the surface when it was found by the Germans and dynamited.
Dick was dug in the shower room of hut 122 and had the most secure, well-hidden trap door beneath the usually water-filled drain. It was to go in the same westward direction as Tom and the prisoners decided that the hut would not be a suspected tunnel site as it was further from the perimeter fence than the others. Dick was abandoned for escape purposes because the area where it would have surfaced was shortly afterwards cleared for camp expansion. Dick was then used to store dirt, supplies, and as a workshop.
Harry, dug in hut 104, was the tunnel ultimately used for the escape. It was discovered as the escape was in progress with only seventy-six of the planned two hundred and twenty prisoners free. The Germans filled Harry with sewage and sand and sealed it off with cement. After the escape, the prisoners started digging another tunnel called George, but this was abandoned when the camp was evacuated in 1945.
Sixty-eight years later, on October 2, 2012, Penguin Books released Human Game: The True Story of the 'Great Escape' Murders and the Hunt for the Gestapo Gunmen by author and journalist Simon Read. The book details the 50 murders that took place following the escape and the three-year manhunt by the British Royal Air Force to bring the killers to justice.[13][14]
A year after the publication of Brickhill's history book, on January 27, 1951, the National Broadcasting Company (NBC-TV) network televised a live drama black & white adaptation of the World War II escape story as an episode of The Philco Television Playhouse, starring E.G. Marshall, Everett Sloane, Horace Braham, and Kurt Katch.[15] The live on-air broadcast was praised for engineering an ingenious set design for the live broadcast, including creating the illusion of tunnels.[16]
Twelve years later in 1963, the Mirisch Company brothers worked with United Artists studios in Hollywood (Los Angeles, California) to adapt the 1950 book to produce the film The Great Escape starring Steve McQueen, James Garner, Richard Attenborough, Donald Pleasence and James Coburn. The film was based on the real events but depicts a heavily fictionalised version of the escape with numerous compromises for its commercial appeal, such as including three Americans among the escapees (in real life John ("Johnnie") Dodge was the only one). The characters are based on real men, and in some cases are composites of several men.
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