Rochdale Observer

Back from the point of no return

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And while they were very different, they had one thing in common – their hunger to escape. So they spent two years developing a meticulous plan.

The idea was for them to try to pass as German businessme­n once outside the camp and get to the Swiss border. So Antony began teaching Fred German... but there was a flaw in the plan.

“Day by day, week by week, the pieces of the jigsaw slotted into

So they eventually came up with a solution. “It was decided Fred would play the part of a Germanspea­king Hungarian,” the books says. “They would just have to pray any German person he spoke to had never gone on holiday to Budapest.”

For the next part of the plan, Fred became editor of the camp newspaper to access a typewriter with German characters and forge ID cards. Then they stole letterhead­ed paper and wrote letters claiming to be two marketing men.

The final pieces were two suits, made by members of the Polish resistance. With the group’s help, the pair walked out of a hole cut in the fence of Stalag XXA in August 1942 and dashed to the nearest train station.

They then zig-zagged across Poland and Germany towards the Swiss border, a journey full of close shaves. On the train, they gave Heil Hitler salutes to a carriage full of German soldiers on leave and only barely avoided detection in Berlin after a suspicious granny reported them to a Gestapo detective. Finally, they made it to the banks of Lake Constance.

But after Antony was waved through by the border guards, Fred was stopped, as his ID didn’t look quite right. Antony came back, hoping his fluent German could help but it was too late. Arrested at gunpoint, they were taken to Gestapo headquarte­rs, beaten and held for days without food before being separated.

“For my dad, it had been his soldier’s duty to escape but it was also about his deep love to get back to my mother,” says Steve, of Horton Heath, Hants. “I never knew the scale of what he and Antony attempted, and the cost it had.”

Fred was taken to Stalag 383 in Bavaria. He made another escape but didn’t get as close as in 1942. But he did survive the war and got home to Peggy.

Steve, a retired Navy commander, has since discovered Antony had tried in vain to escape again.

“He tried to escape a further eight times. One time he and another prisoner managed to board a ship due to leave Gdansk but they were betrayed by an Italian sailor.”

As the German army collapsed, camp guards began the Forced March in freezing temperatur­es, a brutal and needless crime that killed an estimated 100,000 PoWs.

Stricken with dysentery and weak from sharing his food with other prisoners, Antony died after being made to march into the icy waters of the Elbe, aged 27.

“My father didn’t share stories of the war,” says Steve. “I knew it was difficult for him, for all the men of that generation to talk about. I was always proud of my father but finding out the whole story has given me a huge admiration for what he did.”

THE Soldier Who Came Back by Steve Foster and Alan Clark is out now, priced £16.99. Order by calling 0845 143 0001 or visit mirrorbook­s.co.uk

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