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Last survivor of The Great Escape concentration camp dies at 92 | A man believed to be the last survivor of The Great Escape concentration camp has died after suffering
a massive heart attack in the UK . He was 92. RAF serviceman Richard Birtle was
captured during the trial run for the D-Day landings in Dieppe , France , in August
1942 before being locked up in the notorious Stalag III camp. He later teamed
up with other prisoners who plotted a daring escape by digging tunnels underneath
the camp and worked as a ‘penguin’ - the men who dispersed soil through their
trousers. More than 600 prisoners were involved in the construction of three tunnels
- codenamed Tom, Dick and Harry, at the camp in the German Province of Lower Silesia
near the town of Sagan , now Zagan in Poland , 100 miles southeast of Berlin .
The tunnels Tom and Dick had to be abandoned with Harry becoming the focus of
their escape route. Out of those, only 200 of the higher-ranking captives, those
who could speak German and had put a lot of work into digging the tunnels, would
have time to escape in the plan. But due to a series of problems on the night
of the escape on March 24 1944, including the Harry tunnel coming up short and
in close proximity to a guard tower meant that in actuality only 76 prisoners
escaped. The 77th man to exit the tunnel was spotted by a guard alerting the rest
of the camp and 73 of the escaped prisoners were captured. Fifty of those were
executed. The plot became the inspiration behind the classic war film’ The Great
Escape’ starring Hollywood legend Steve McQueen. The grandfather-of-two only narrowly
escaped an SS death squad himself before being liberated by American troops on
April 29 1945 after being held captive for three years in the camp. Shockingly
a line of fellow prisoners were shot in front of him and their skin was horrifically
‘used to make lamp shades’. Birtle suffered a heart attack on March 29 and was
rushed to the Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother Hospital, in Margate , Kent , where
he suffered another fatal heart attack on April 5. His daughter Veronica Lithgow
paid tribute to her ‘brave’ and ‘loving’ father. “He was a wonderful man who was
very kind and extremely generous,” the Daily Mail quoted her as saying. “He had
to endure some real hardship throughout the war and I suppose it is a bit of a
miracle that he managed to make it to such a ripe old age.He was in the camp for
three years - the Luftwaffe actually got on with the POWs and treated them well.
“But at some point the SS took over and they brought with them a much more brutal
regime.My dad was pretty terrified and they divided the men into two lines before
sending them off in different directions. One group were shot dead but my dad
was in the other line and thankfully allowed to live. “It was a brutal place -
he said the skin of the dead soldiers was made into lampshades,” she said. The
64-year-old also said that since her father was not an officer he was not allowed
to escape but he helped as much as he could. “He was one of the penguins and had
to disperse soil from his trouser pockets - someone also said he helped dig the
tunnels but he did not like to talk about it,” she said. “I think he must be the
last survivor from the camp as all the others I know are sadly dead,” she added.
Following the war Richard returned to his hometown of Herne Bay , Kent , and married
his childhood sweetheart Audrey, 85, in 1945. The couple opened a fishmongers
before they had their only daughter Veronica, in 1947. Richard went on to become
a postman before he retired in 1985. He was a chairman of the Herne Bay RAF association
and a keen bowls player. An RAF flag was poignantly draped across his coffin during
his funeral, which was attended by dozens of loved ones last week.
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