The Sunday Post (Dundee)

An aircraft in the attic: Amazing story of the Colditz glider

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It may be a little in poor taste, but my wife and I have been comparing lockdown to being in a prisoner-ofwar camp, and joking about digging a tunnel to make our escape.

Explaining this to my dad in a Facetime call, he told me that some Pows had some even more ingenious ways of escaping – by plane, in fact.

He swears that is true, but I’m not so sure.

Can you elucidate, Queries Man? – A.

I can, and I can tell you that British prisoners in Colditz actually built a glider to try to flee to freedom.

Camp Oflag IV-C was situated in the 1,000-year-old Colditz Castle in Saxony and housed high-profile Allied prisoners, many of whom had made many escape attempts.

Its thick walls and the cliffside with a drop of 250ft (75m) down to the River Mulde made the castle practicall­y impenetrab­le.

In 1945, with Allied forces closing in on Germany and prisoners worried their guards would murder them before they could be freed, Lt Tony Rolt – who was not even an airman – had noticed the roof line of the castle’s chapel was completely obscured from German view.

As an engineer, Rolt realised that a glider could be launched from the roof and could fly across the River Mulde, which was about 60 metres below.

The prisoners set about constructi­ng the glider from bed slats, cotton sheets, electric cable, table knives, nails, wooden boxes, and they bribed a guard to supply some glue.

The finished glider, known as the Colditz Cock, was 20ft (6m) long, weighed 240lb (109kg) and had a wingspan of 32ft (10m).

Luckily, on April 16, 1945, Colditz was liberated before the prisoners had to use their incredible flying machine.

A recent Channel 4 documentar­y commission­ed a replica – which flew on its first attempt.

 ??  ?? A replica of the Colditz Cock glider makes a successful flight, above, and Anton Diffring and John Mills in The Colditz Story, 1953, main
A replica of the Colditz Cock glider makes a successful flight, above, and Anton Diffring and John Mills in The Colditz Story, 1953, main
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