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Escape From Colditz

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$150.00

 Product Description

Limited Edition of 100...$125.00
Image size: 15 ½” wide x 10 ½” high
Overall print size: 19” wide x 15” high
S\N by Artist 

 

Housing the Allies’ most determined prisoners of war, the forbidding Colditz Castle with its thick walls, sophisticated defences, barred windows and hidden microphones was meant to be escape proof. The fortress had a thousand-year history designed to keep people out, but during the Second World War the Germans had repurposed it as Oflag IVC, the prison camp intended to keep people in, for only the most hardened, serial escapers and the highest security risk prisoners were sent there.

However, despite a reputation for detail and precision planning, the Germans had overlooked something; within the castle’s mighty walls they’d assembled the best ‘escaping brains’ in the business. If anyone could escape from the fortress prison, those now held were best placed to try. And they did.

Some used guile and impersonation, others tunnelled, some found their way through obscure cavities or used sheets as makeshift ropes to descend the unforgiving walls. Some hid under manhole covers, feigned illness or simply ‘slipped away’ from the exercise yard. A glider was built in the attic though too late to be used. Most attempts ultimately failed but over 30 men did break out of Colditz and 15 of them are known to have made successful ‘home runs’.

One of the most audacious escapes involved four British officers in the daring break-out chosen by award-wining artist Keith Burns for his atmospheric painting Escape from Colditz. On the night of 14 October 1942 Captain Pat Reid – the officer in charge of escapes – and three companions broke into the prison kitchens, forced their way out of a broken window and onto a roof. Unobserved by a patrolling sentry they traversed a floodlit courtyard to gain entry to a store, only to find the door leading to the garden beyond was locked and impenetrable. They discovered, however, a tiny vertical air vent, a shaft so narrow that the men were forced to strip off their clothes to squeeze through. One by one, pushing and pulling, all four inched their way out to find themselves on a path through the castle’s old dry moat. Reid later described the event as like ‘being squeezed through a hole in the wall like toothpaste out of a tube’. Quickly making their exit from the castle grounds the four men split up into pairs and by using forged papers and disguised as Flemish workers, they travelled south by train. Within a week all four had safely crossed the Swiss border.

Keith’s memorable painting has now been faithfully reproduced as a Limited Edition print to immortalize the story of Colditz, the men held within its walls and its status as a unique place in the history of World War Two.

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