The Scotsman

Frank Stone

POW who gave up his place in the Great Escape then became a civil servant after VE Day

- ALISON SHAW

n Frank stone, Great escape veteran and civil servant. born: 14 May, 1922, in Quarndon, derbyshire. died: 15 October, 2013, in Hathersage, derbyshire aged 91.

When Frank Stone was captured as a prisoner of war he was a youth of just 5ft 4ins who had not yet started shaving. By the time he tasted freedom again he was a man of 6ft and part of the team who had engineered the Great escape.

The mass breakout, under the noses of the Luftwaffe in Stalag Luft III, was immortalis­ed in an iconic Second World War film detailing the ingenious tunneling operation that led to the escape of 76 Allied aircrew.

The 77th was spotted and shot. Only three escapees made the home run.

The recapture and execution of 50 of the young airman’s companions subsequent­ly sparked a quest to honour their memory and ensure they were never forgotten. Well into his 80s the former gunner continued to share his experience­s of life in one of the most famous prisoner of war camps and how its inmates daily outfoxed their German guards.

he returned twice to the scene of the camp, where he had been number 215 on the escape list, and recalled the electric atmosphere of the night in March 1944 as they awaited the operation, followed by the bitter disappoint­ment of its fatal conclusion.

Born and brought up in the Derbyshire village of Quarndon, he had first tried to join the RAF at 16 but his mother objected, informing him rather prophetica­lly that flying was “dangerous”.

A clever youngster, who had won a scholarshi­p to herbert Strutt Grammar School in Belper, he had hoped to enrol at the RAF training college at Cranwell. Folowing his mother’s refusal to sign the applicatio­n form he then considered architectu­re as a career. That too was scuppered as his parents could not afford to pay for him to become articled.

As a result he began an apprentice­ship as a diesel engineer with the Trent Motor Traction Company in Derby.

however, as soon as he turned 18 he volunteere­d to become an airman and was expecting to become a navigator, and was due to be trained in Canada that September. Before that, as the blitz raged in July 1940, he was sent to 83 Squadron at RAF Scampton where he did minimum training as an air gunner.

his flight commander was Guy Gibson, later to lead the Dambusters raid, who invited him to volunteer for operations over Germany which he said would “look good” on his logbook when he went to Canada.

his first mission went well but the second, five days later on 8 August, 1940, ended when his handley Page hampden bomber was shot down over Mannheim in the Black Forest.

The plane caught fire but the crew survived and he was pulled to safety, from the rear gunner’s compartmen­t, by a fellow airman who he always credited with saving his life. Rounded up by local farmers, he was handed over to the enemy and after initial interrogat­ion was sent to Stalag Luft I, near Barth in Germany, by the Baltic Sea.

eventually he was transferre­d to a new camp at Sagan housing RAF officers. This was Stalag Luft III, built over loose sandy subsoil to deter tunneling.

Young Stone worked as an orderly for the officers, initially living in centre compound before moving to north compound where hut 104, the setting for the escape, was located.

Three tunnels – Tom, Dick and harry – were dug roughly 30ft down on the instructio­ns of Squadron Leader Roger Bushell, who commanded the escape committee. The conspicuou­s sand had to be disposed of surreptiti­ously and ingenious ways were devised to offload it – some was sprinkled on the ground from pouches hidden in the prisoners’ trousers; some went into the garden; more was disposed of deep below a seat in the camp theatre. Inevitably some was spilled and Stone’s role was to keep the corridors sand-free. he fashioned a special brush out of Red Cross string for the job.

he was also involved in soldering radios they built and in entertaini­ng the senior security officer responsibl­e for preventing escapes, Sergeant Major hermann Glemnitz. Stone was based at the opposite end of the building from harry’s entrance and would be given extra rations to provide coffee for Glemnitz, effectivel­y distractin­g him from what was going on in the tunnel.

Throughout the operation the team of PoWs pilfered an incredible array of equipment to support the scheme, including thousands of bed boards, hundreds of mattresses and countless pieces of cutlery. Stone helped to deliver a large amount of vital cabling. he had been fetching potatoes with another orderly when inmate Joe “Red” noble, just released from the “cooler”, spotted unattended flex the Germans had been using to re-wire a tannoy system. Seeing Stone and his companion, he swiped the wire and deposited it on the potatoes before throwing his coat on top and marching the pair back to the hut. The cable then provided lighting for tunnel.

On the night of 24 March, 1944, with the tunnel just completed, the plan was for 200 men to escape. The first batch was selected for their linguistic skills and ability to survive, the rest drew lots and Stone got number 215. he knew he would not be heading for freedom that night and gave up his place in hut 104 to one of those on the escape list. “everybody was on tenterhook­s waiting for it to happen,” he recalled. “Very few of us actually had a full night’s rest.”

But just before 5am a shot rang out and they knew it was over. The guards rushed in and those, including Stone, discovered in the wrong block were paraded outside in the snow until midday. Word later filtered in about the fate of those who escaped until they learned a total of 50 had been killed.

It was not the only tragedy he experience­d in the camp. he learned of the death of his brother and also witnessed the machine-gunning of a friend, driven to suicide by trying to scale the perimeter fence under the watch of an armed guard – a scene that featured in the 1963 film The Great Escape.

Before being liberated, Stone also endured what became known as the Long March, a forced trek through horrendous conditions of ice and snow as the Russians advanced and the Germans retreated west.

When he returned to the area in 2009 for the 65th anniversar­y of the breakout he was able to identify the place where he had rested after the first 16 hours of marching.

After returning home following Ve Day he took a job as a clerk in the Ministry of Labour and worked his way up in the civil service, where he spent the rest of his career, becoming a higher executive officer. he worked in London and Sheffield and specialise­d as a resettleme­nt officer for those with disabiliti­es.

A man who could never throw anything away – a legacy from his PoW days – he was heavily involved in amateur dramatics, firstly as an actor and then in set designing and stage management – latterly with his local group the hathersage Players, near Derby. he also took up bell ringing and golfing in retirement.

he gave numerous talks on his PoW experience­s, raising large sums of money for charity through them and the sale of a DVD of his talk, proceeds of which went towards the Bomber Command Memorial in London. he returned to the campsite again in 2011 when he was filmed for the television documentar­y Digging the Great Escape.

Widowed by his first wife in 1967, he was predecease­d by his son Robin and is survived by his second wife Jane and daughter Amanda. 1721: Peter the Great took title of Czar of All Russia. 1797: First parachute descent made by André-Jacques Garnerin from a balloon over Paris. 1877: Firedamp explosion at Blantyre Colliery, Lanarkshir­e, killed 207 miners. 1910: Dr Hawley Harvey Crippen convicted at Old Bailey of poisoning his wife Cora, and was subsequent­ly hanged (23 November) in London. 1921: German government resigned over economic crisis. 1924: Ministry of Health banned use of preservati­ves in dairy products and many other foods. 1937: Duke and Duchess of Windsor arrived in Berlin to meet Hitler, study poor housing conditions and hear a concert by the Nazi District Orchestra. 1952: SA Velcro patented the non-metallic fastener that was later developed for space suits. 1962: Cuban missile crisis began as president John F Kennedy announced blockade of Cuba in protest at installati­on of Russian missiles there. 1962: Nelson Mandela’s treason trial opened in South Africa. 1964: Jean-Paul Sartre turned down the Nobel Prize for literature. His publisher said he would never accept gifts. The only other authors to turn down the award had been George Bernard Shaw and Boris Pasternak (who was made to by his government). 1968: Arab guerrilla bombs killed 13 people in Jerusalem market. 1987: First volume of Gutenberg Bible sold in New York for £3.26m, making it the most expensive printed book ever. 1992: Demonstrat­ors threw eggs at the Queen when she arrived at a church in Dresden, Germany, for a service of reconcilia­tion. 1995: Scotland won the Alfred Dunhill Cup at St Andrews for the first time, beating Zimbabwe in the final. 1999: Maurice Papon, an official in the Vichy France government

Scotsman archive

SOCIALISTS TO CONTEST EVERY SCOTS CONSTITUEN­CY 22 October, 1949 SIGnS of what might have been election “nerves” were apparent yesterday when the annual conference of the Scottish Council of the Labour Party opened in the Cowdray hall, Aberdeen. On two occasions the delegates agreed to a suggestion from the body of the hall that certain discussion­s should be held in private. On both occasions the suggestion was put forward by during the Second World War, was jailed for crimes against humanity. 2005: Tropical Storm Alpha formed in the Atlantic Basin, making the 2005 Atlantic Hurricane Season the most active Atlantic hurricane season on record with 22 named storms. 2008: India launched its first unmanned lunar mission Chandrayaa­n-1. 2009: The first nationwide postal strike in two years began after talks between Royal Mail and the Communicat­ion Workers Union broke down. Catherine Deneuve, actress, 70; Colonel John BlashfordS­nell OBE, explorer and author, 77; Jeff Goldblum, actor, 61; Sir Derek Jacobi CBE, actor, 75; Leila Josefowicz, violinist, 36; Doris Lessing OBE, novelist and Nobel laureate, 94; Craig Levein, Scottish footballer and manager, 49; Christophe­r Lloyd, actor, 75; Shelby Lynne, singer, 45; Sir Donald McIntyre CBE, opera singer, 79; Kelvin MacKenzie, newspaper executive, 67; Paul McStay, footballer, 49; Sir Michael Stoute, racehorse trainer, 68. Births: 1811 Franz Liszt, composer and pianist; 1844 Sarah Bernhardt, actress; 1870 Lord Alfred Douglas, poet; 1879 Sir Matthew Smith, artist. Deaths: 1707 Sir Cloudesley Shovell, admiral; 1802 Samuel Arnold, composer; 1906 Paul Cézanne, painter; 1917 Bob Fitzsimmon­s, first British boxer to win the world heavyweigh­t championsh­ip; 1993 Innes Ireland, racing driver; 1995 Sir Kingsley Amis, author; 1998 Eric Ambler, novelist; 1999 Martin Donnelly, Test cricketer and rugby player; 1999 Sharman Weir, musician, general manager, Citizen’s Theatre, Glasgow. Mr Alexander Whipp, Glasgow, a delegate from the General and Municipal Workers Union. In the first instance he asked for a private session to discuss membership of the party in Scotland and propaganda by MPS. In the second case he objected to public discussion of a statement by Mr James Boyle, West Lothian, a member of the executive Committee who had said that most constituen­cy Labour parties had heaved a sigh of relief when Mr Altlee announced there would be no general election this year. l archive.scotsman.com

 ??  ?? Former prisoners, from left to right, andrew Wiseman, alfie Fripp, Frank stone and regie cleaver, stand at the inner fence and either side of tunnel ‘Harry’ marked by a gravel path, at stalag Luft III in Poland
Former prisoners, from left to right, andrew Wiseman, alfie Fripp, Frank stone and regie cleaver, stand at the inner fence and either side of tunnel ‘Harry’ marked by a gravel path, at stalag Luft III in Poland
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