Jack Harrison was, as far as is known, was the last survivor of those involved in the so-called 'Great Escape' of British servicemen from Stalag Luft III, the German prisoner-of-war camp at Sagan in what is today Poland, in 1944. The Daily Mail reports:
In the end, it was only time from which he could not escape. Jack Harrison, the last of those involved in the 'Great Escape', has passed away, peacefully and quietly, at the age of 97.
It has been 66 years since the dark night when he waited with bated breath, preparing to crawl through ‘Harry’ and under the wire of Stalag Luft III.
Throughout his long life, Mr Harrison played down his important role in the daring escape bid from Stammlager der Luftwaffe III - meaning a camp for airmen - which was established at Sagan, in what is now Poland.
He was being unduly modest. Mr Harrison played a key role in the plot.
He acted as a ‘runner’ for Squadron Leader Roger Bushell, who was played in the film by Richard Attenborough.
Bushell was the mastermind behind the digging of the three escape tunnels, which were started in April 1943 and codenamed Tom, Dick and Harry.
His plan was to dig down to a depth of 30ft and then tunnel on three fronts towards the perimeter of the camp and into the woods beyond.
Stalag Luft III, which lay 100 miles south-east of Berlin, was a massive facility.
At its height, 10,000 RAF officers and non-commissioned aircrew were held there.
Planning the Great Escape required daring and ingenuity.
The prisoners would disguise themselves as civilians and split into three groups.
One group would trek out of the region, while others would use the railway network to effect an escape.
In an interview with the Scottish Daily Mail in 2008, Mr Harrison said: ‘The Germans knew about tunnels at other camps, so we had to be very careful - or you could be shot.’
Tragically, that would be the fate of many of his comrades.
The Gestapo captured and executed 50 of them within days of the escape.
. . .
Mr Harrison was Prisoner Number 96 and waited in Hut 104 to take his turn.
He was dressed as a civilian engineer, with fake papers to prove it, when he heard gunfire from outside.
Mr Harrison said: ‘The 77th prisoner was escaping when I heard the shots.
‘I was 96th in line and I was ready to go into the tunnel. I had my kit, false ID, railway passes and German money.
‘But unfortunately, “Harry” had fallen 30ft short of the wire surrounding the camp.’
Only 76 men had emerged before a guard, who had gone to the woods to relieve himself, raised the alarm.
‘We heard a rifle shot and it was all over,’ said Mr Harrison, who added: ‘I quickly burned the forged documentation in the stove and changed out of the civilian clothing.
Of the 76 who made it out of the tunnel, only three – two Norwegians and a Dutchman - eventually made it home.
The others were recaptured.
In an attempt to put off other prisoners seeking to escape, Hitler, Goering and Himmler ordered that those who were recaptured should be executed.
Mr Harrison said: ‘I knew quite a few of the men who were shot. For a while, we thought we would be next.
‘It was an anxious time. I was a long way from home and a very long way from my real life.’
There's more at the link.
Another one of the 'Greatest Generation' gone to his reward. There are very few left now . . . and I wonder whether we'll ever see their like again.
Peter
It is well that such men lived, and that they are remembered.
ReplyDeleteJim
One of my hunting / fishing partners served on convoy duty in a RCN destroyer in the North Atlantic.
ReplyDeleteAt 89, he can still outwalk and outshoot me.
"See their like again?"
I hardly think so.