The Battle of Britain

white plans for Colditz glider

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Catalogue number
  • EPH 3117
Materials
  • paper
Alternative Names
  • FULL NAME: white plans for Colditz glider
  • SIMPLE NAME: POW
Object Type
escape equipment
Category
souvenirs and ephemera

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First plans drawn in pencil on artist's paper for the 'Colditz Cock' by Flight Lieutenant Bill Goldfinch. The plans were also later used for building the 'Spirit of Colditz', a replica for the Channel Four television series on Colditz. At the beginning of 1944, three prisoners, Flight-Lieutenant Bill Goldfinch, Lieutenant Tony Rolt and Flight-Lieutenant Jack Best, came up with an ingenious plane to build a glider. The idea of an aerial escape from Colditz Castle was thought up by Bill Goldfinch when in the winter of 1943 he noticed that the snowflakes were taking an upward course over the prison roof. The idea was to build a glider that could sit on the sloping roof and be launched in a strong wind. Bill Goldfinch became the designer of the project, which resulted in the manufacture of the 'Colditz Cock'. The full-size, two man glider was constructed secretly in an attic from pieces of wood (floor and bed boards) and mattress covers. Essential construction tools were improvised by Flight Lieutenant Jack Best. The finished glider had a wingspan of 32 feet and an all-up weight with two occupants of around 560lb. The design was original except for the rudder shape, which was based on the pre-war 'Luton Buzzard'. The craft was intended to be launched from the roof on a trolley attached to a bath full of concrete weights. When the bath was dropped, the resulting thrust was calculated as sufficient to propel the glider some 450 metres so as to land it in a small flat field across the River Mulde. The glider was completed by the end of 1944 but no escape was attempted in light of the War Office's warnings of Hitler's orders that all recaptured prisoners would now be shot. Although only four men at a time could fit into the attic, in all 52 prisoners helped in various ways either as look-outs ('stooges'), or assisting with the construction. When Colditz was liberated in April 1945, the assembled glider was revealed, to the astonishment of those who saw it. Sadly it was destroyed just after the war before it could be put to the test. Note that the replica is held at IWM Duxford.

History note

The designer Flight Lieutenant L J E Goldfinch gave these plans for 'The Colditz Cock' to the donor. See also C. H. Latimer-Needham, 'The Colditz Cock' in FLIGHT International, 26 September 1968. Marked

Physical description

glider plans drawn in pencil on artist's paper. The plans are complete but in two halves.

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