
THE GREAT ESCAPE - THE ENTRANCE
By Ley Kenyon
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The night of 24 March 1944 has gone down in history as one of the bravest and most daring escape attempts of the entire war This was the night of ‘The Great Escape’. Over 200 inmates of the Prisoner of War camp Stalag Luft III in Zagan, Poland were ready and prepared with forged papers, maps, civilian clothes and an indomitable desire to be free. The build-up to this audacious feat was long and arduous, the digging of the 3 escape tunnels — ‘Tom’, ‘Dick’ and ‘Harry’— being just one of many features needed to bring the project into fruition. Another was forgery; the painstaking and minutely detailed work in creating the passes, train tickets, and identity papers that would enable travel following the escape. Needed for this were camera and film, both luxuries that could not be
squandered on posterity; thus the senior British officer asked fellow
prisoner and artist Ley Kenyon to make a visual record of ‘Harry’
— the tunnel that would ultimately be used for the escape. Kenyon
completed six drawings, all of which were sealed in a watertight container
fashioned from old milk tins, and stored in the abandoned tunnel ‘Dick’. All these historic drawings are now in the RAF Museum in Hendon, London. In conjunction with the museum the publishers are extremely proud to offer a very limited edition print of one of those six immortal images created by Ley Kenyon. ‘The Entrance’ shows the opening of tunnel ‘Harry’, hidden beneath the stove in Hut 104, one officer helping another into the 30-foot vertical shaft, as a ‘stooge’ keeps an eye out for patrolling German guards. What makes this release so special is its exceptional link to the past,
a drawing, made at the time by a POW right under the guards’ noses,
showing the epitome of determination, the desire to overcome oppression
and the relentless drive towards freedom. - LIMITED EDITION - each print is signed by Flt Lt Alan
Bryett, POW in Stalag Luft III, and involved in the escape as ‘stooge’
and ‘penguin’ – those that carried the ‘sausage
bags’ filled with tunnel-earth down their trousers and dispersed
it around the compound. ESCAPERS EDITION - just 76 copies of the ‘Escapers
Edition’ – representing the 76 men who managed to escape the
camp – are signed by Flt Lt Alan Bryett and Sqn Ldr Dick Churchill,
‘penguin’ and number 63 out of the tunnel. Each print is conservation
matted to include a button found in the area of Hut 104, issued with a
full certificate of authenticity from the Great Escape Museum in Zagan,
Poland.
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