kowalski
Practically Family
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so is a real school of lifeWhat impressed me the most was the sheer ingenuity in constructing all the tunneling equipment. Found items, bed boards and milk tins, very impressive improvisation.
Actually, there were Americans involved in digging of all three of the tunnels! Fortunately, or unfortunately, depending on your point of view, all the Americans were transferred to there own camp just before the escape, because there were getting to be way too many of them! Incidentally, right up to the time that the Germans marched the prisoners out of Stalag Luft III, they were digging George, a forth tunnel!Interesting event. I'm surprised the story had no mention of the American element of the film being fictional
Actually, there were Americans involved in digging of all three of the tunnels! Fortunately, or unfortunately, depending on your point of view, all the Americans were transferred to there own camp just before the escape, because there were getting to be way too many of them! Incidentally, right up to the time that the Germans marched the prisoners out of Stalag Luft III, they were digging George, a forth tunnel!
Slightly OT, but does anyone remember a late 80's early 90's documentary where they built a replica of the Colditz glider ? It flew, but not hugely well, but at least it flew.
A full-sized replica of the Colditz glider was commissioned by Channel 4 and was built by Southdown Aviation Ltd at Lasham Airfield. The glider was flown successfully by John Lee on its first attempt at RAF Odiham with Best, Goldfinch and about a dozen of the veterans who had worked on the original more than 55 years earlier proudly looking on. Jack Best died later that year. The replica is now housed at the Norfolk and Suffolk Aviation Museum at Flixton, Suffolk.
The programme was shown in 2000 by Channel 4 in the UK as part of a 3-part documentary series called "Escape from Colditz". The Channel 4 material was edited to 60 minutes and shown in the US in 2001 as "Nazi Prison Escape" on the NOVA television series.
In March 2012, a radio-controlled, full-sized replica glider was built by Tony Hoskins' UK based glider maintenance/repair company South East Aircraft Services in the Chapel attic and was flown from Colditz for a Channel 4 documentary.[5] The documentary aired in North America on PBS under the title "Escape from Nazi Alcatraz" on 14 May 2014.[6] The glider built for this 2012 documentary now forms part of a new museum display in the Chapel Attic in Colditz castle, and opened to the public on the 70th Anniversary of the Liberation of Colditz in April 2015.
There were at least two documentaries were they flew full size maned replicas of the glider. BBC 4 made one, and had it towed to altitude, as you can see, it flew beautifully. The second was, America PBS Escape From NAZI Alcatraz. That one actually flew of the roof at Colditz! It did do a crash landing, but again, proved the concept.Slightly OT, but does anyone remember a late 80's early 90's documentary where they built a replica of the Colditz glider ? It flew, but not hugely well, but at least it flew.
Sadly no! Most people are lucky to know December 7th. Mind you, they don't know the year.Yip, that one about "Nazi Alcatraz" is the one I saw. Had a different name here - Escape From Colditz, I think. Not sure why they changed it for the US; isn't Colditz equally infamous over there?