List of prisoner-of-war escapes

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

This list of prisoner-of-war escapes includes successful and unsuccessful attempts in chronological order, where possible.

Thirty Years' War

American Revolutionary War

American Civil War

Second Boer War

World War I

  • October 1914 – French officer Henri Giraud was captured by the Germans in August and escaped in October. He also escaped in World War II, this time as a general (see next section).
  • July 4, 1915 – Gunther Plüschow escaped from a POW camp at Donington Park, Leicestershire, England, and made his way back to Germany. This was the only successful escape from Britain in either world war.[6]
  • September 2 and 12, 1918 – John Owen Donaldson and another prisoner escaped, but were recaptured. The pair were joined by three others for a second try a few days later. Donaldson reached the Netherlands in October.[7]
  • February 1917 – October 1918 – E. H. Jones, a Welsh lieutenant in the Indian Army, and C. W. Hill, an Australian officer in the Royal Flying Corps, escaped from a Turkish prisoner-of-war camp at Yozgat. Having first pretended to be psychic, the pair spent over a year conning the camp's commandant. Eventually they persuaded their Turkish captors they were insane and, after being moved to a hospital for the mentally ill in the summer of 1918, the two men played their roles as lunatics so successfully they also fooled the doctors and were returned home.
  • February 14, 1918 – French fighter pilot Roland Garros escaped to rejoin the French army after several attempts.
  • July 23/24, 1918 – Holzminden officers' prisoner-of-war camp. Ten of 29 British officers made their way to freedom, making this "the most successful escape from a German prison camp during the First World War".[8]
  • 1918 – US Navy Lieutenant Edouard Izac was taken prisoner aboard the U-boat which sank his ship in May 1918. On the trip to Germany, he learned important information about enemy submarine movements. As a result, he made several attempts to escape, finally succeeding on the night of October 6–7, 1918, with several others. He made his way to Switzerland and then London to pass along the information, though by then the war was nearly over. For his actions, he was awarded the Medal of Honor.

Polish-Soviet War

  • Merian C. Cooper, better known as a Hollywood screenwriter, director and producer, formed the Kościuszko Squadron, composed of American volunteers fighting on the Polish side. A pilot in the fighter squadron, he was shot down on July 13, 1920, and taken prisoner. He escaped just before the war ended in 1921 (on his second attempt) and made his way to Latvia.

Spanish Civil War

World War II

Allied

Axis

Of the hundreds of thousands of POWs shipped to the U.S., only 2,222 tried to escape.

Medicine Hat, Alberta, before being apprehended by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. The two men had planned to travel to Vancouver, British Columbia, and leave Canada courtesy of the Japanese merchant marine. Only one person ever succeeded in returning to the Axis - Franz von Werra
- though a couple of others settled in the United States under false identities.

The Angler breakout was the single largest escape attempt orchestrated by German POWs (28) in North America during the war. The December 23, 1944, breakout of 25 Kriegsmarine and merchant seamen from Papago Park, Arizona, was the second largest. In both instances, all escapees were recaptured or killed.

Korean War

Vietnam War

Dieter Dengler
  • June 29, 1966 –
    Pisidhi Indradat, Duane W. Martin, Eugene DeBruin, Prasit Promsuwan (a Thai), Prasit Thanee (a Thai), and Y. C. To (a Nationalist Chinese) escaped from a Pathet Lao camp in Laos
    . U.S. Navy pilot Dengler was rescued on July 20. Martin was killed (according to Dengler) outside of a Laotian village. The others were recaptured. Indradat, a civilian, was freed by Laotian soldiers later; the remaining prisoners were never seen again.
  • April 10, 1967, and May 10, 1969 – U.S. Air Force Captain John A. Dramesi bailed out of his stricken aircraft over North Vietnam on April 2, 1967. Eight days later he eluded his North Vietnamese captors by dismantling the side of his cell. He was recaptured the following day. After a year of planning, Dramesi and another POW aviator escaped again, by slipping through a hole in the roof. After traveling 3 miles in 12 hours, Dramesi and his companion were recaptured. He was released in 1973. Dramesi had plans for a third escape. He wrote a memoir, Code of Honor, telling of his escapes and time held captive.
  • September 1967 – U.S. Air Force Major Bud Day was shot down and captured by the local North Vietnamese militia. After days of torture, he escaped, making his way back to South Vietnam. He was however recaptured within sight of an American base camp, and endured five years and seven months more of captivity. Day was awarded the Medal of Honor for his exploits.
  • December 25, 1967 – U.S Air Force Lieutenant Lance Sijan was shot down and evaded capture for 46 days with a fractured skull, a mangled right hand, and a compound fracture of the left leg, no food nor survival kit and little water. He was captured but quickly escaped from an North Vietnamese Army camp after incapacitating a guard. Sijan was captured several hours later and died in Hỏa Lò Prison from his injuries. He was posthumous awarded the Medal of Honor and promoted to captain after his death.
  • December 31, 1968 – James N. Rowe, a Special Forces second lieutenant, was captured on October 29, 1963. After five years of captivity and torture, he was about to be executed when he overpowered a guard and was picked up by a U.S. helicopter. Rowe was awarded the Silver Star.
  • 12 October 1967 – Lieutenant Colonel George G. McKnight, a prisoner of war in North Vietnam, "executed an escape from a solitary confinement cell by removing the door bolt brackets from his door. Colonel McKnight knew the outcome of his escape attempt could be severe reprisal or loss of his life. He succeeded in making it through a section of housing, then to the Red River and swam down river all night. The next morning he was recaptured, severely beaten, and put into solitary confinement for two and a half years".[27]

Indo-Pakistani war of 1971

  • July 1971 - Pakistani office Ikram Sehgal escaped from the Panagarh POW camp in India.

See also

  • Kugel-erlass
    , a secret Nazi decree regarding the punishment of recaptured Allied POWs

References

  1. ^ Wilson 2011, pp. 534–535.
  2. ^ Landmann 1876, p. 575.
  3. ^ Wilson 2011, pp. 602–604.
  4. ^ "Joshua Barney". Naval History and Heritage Command. Retrieved August 16, 2017.
  5. ^ "Winston Churchill's Escape" (PDF). The New York Times. December 28, 1899.
  6. ^ de Bruxelles, Simon (February 11, 2011). "The only one that got away: PoW's great escape from Britain". The Times.
  7. ^ "Captain John Owen Donaldson, 1897 – 1930". South Carolina Technology & Aviation Center. Archived from the original on July 16, 2011. Retrieved January 22, 2011.
  8. ^ "Wartime 44 / Tunnelling to freedom". Australian War Memorial. Retrieved January 23, 2011.
  9. ^ ""Escapes". Episode 2. The great escape from KL Lublin - Majdanek".
  10. ^ "Prisoner mutinies". Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum.
  11. ^ "Mass escape of the Soviet prisoners of war on November 6th 1942".
  12. ^ "WWII veteran escaped prison camp using helmet". Stateline Tasmania. 2010. Retrieved January 24, 2011.
  13. ^ "Survivors of the revolt - Sobibor Interviews".
  14. ^ "Gordon Thomson Woodroofe". Auckland War Memorial Museum.
  15. ^ J. Malcolm Garcia (September 16, 2009). "German POWs on the American Homefront". Smithsonian.com (a supplement to the Smithsonian magazine). Retrieved January 24, 2011.
  16. ^ a b c "Homeland Stories: Enemies Within" (PDF). Reading and Remembrance Project 2010. Retrieved January 21, 2011.
  17. ^ Doug Mackey (February 15, 2002). "Prisoners of War: Lest we forget". Retrieved February 5, 2012.
  18. ^ "Posse Recaptures Fugitive Germans: Ranchers and Cattlemen Round Up Quartet from New Mexico Camp". Montreal Gazette. November 4, 1942.
  19. ^ "Mount Kenya: Simon Calder tackles Africa's other summit". The Independent. October 27, 2007.
  20. . Retrieved October 25, 2013.
  21. ^ "Operation Kiebitz". Naval Museum of Quebec. Retrieved January 23, 2011.[permanent dead link]
  22. ^ Magener, Rolf (1954). Prisoner's Bluff (1st ed.). London: Rupert Hart Davis.
  23. Newspapers.com. Open access icon
  24. ^ "Push Search For Prisoner". Lethbridge Herald. September 2, 1944. Police and soldiers are continuing their search today for a German prisoner of war who escaped from the Medalta Potteries at Medicine Hat, where he was working on Thursday afternoon. The man is believed to be Max Weidauer.
  25. ^ a b "PoWs: Murder in Medicine Hat on The National TV news show". CBC Digital Archives. November 10, 2003. Retrieved December 5, 2012.
  26. ^ Kim Sue-young (June 24, 2008). "POW Escapes From N. Korea After 55 Years". The Korea Times.
  27. ^ "George McKnight – Recipient –". valor.militarytimes.com. Retrieved 31 May 2020. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.

Sources