Stalag Luft III: The Wooden Horse

Sketch by Alex Cassie.
Sketch of Stalag Lüft III by Alex Cassie. Imperial War Museum.

The site of The Wooden Horse and The Great Escape, Stalag Luft III was a bleak, inhospitable camp built inside the northern edge of a sandy pine forest that stretched for more than 20 miles. Located near Sagan in eastern Germany, it was over 600km from Switzerland and nearly 300km from the Baltic ports that led to neutral Sweden, making escape very difficult.

Stalag Luft III was supposedly the most secure purpose-built camp for Allied POWs incorporating dozens of new security methods to make it ‘escape proof.’ These measures included:

  • Barrack blocks built on pillars, with a three inch gap between each
  • A ten foot high double fence which was topped with razor wire, and a seven foot space between each fence which was also layered with huge
    coils of more razor wire and seismographs which detected underground noises.
  • Goon boxes (Guard Towers) situated at regular intervals along the perimeter fence permanently manned by guards with machine guns and spotlights.
  • A low trip wire 30 feet inside the compound that prisoners were forbidden to cross without permission.

Nevertheless the new camp did little to dampen the spirits of determined escapers. A highly organised Escape Committee known as the ‘X’ Organisation was set up to oversee escape attempts under the command of Squadron Leader Roger Bushell, or ‘Big X.’

The Wooden Horse
The huts in Stalag Luft III had been deliberately built between 50 and 100 metres from the camp’s perimeter wire. The challenge for prisoners was digging this long distance before a tunnel was discovered.

In the early summer of 1943, Flight Lieutenant Eric Williams came up with a plan to start a tunnel much closer to the wire. A wooden vaulting horse was carried out every day to the same spot only around 30 metres from the wire. While other prisoners exercised, he and two accomplices, Michael Codner and Oliver Philpot, would dig from a trap door hidden underneath it. After 114 days of work, the three men finally escaped on 29 October. All reached Sweden and were repatriated back to Britain. They were the only men to make successful home runs from the East Compound.

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Stalag Luft III: The Wooden Horse
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