death of a hero
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Let's pay our respects to a man who risked his life to save others during the second world war. RIP.
taken from http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/new...cle6191526.ece
more at http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/8023821.stm etc
taken from http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/new...cle6191526.ece
One of the few remaining war veterans who inspired the classic film The Great Escape has died at the age of 97.
Alex Lees was one of the prisoners who planned the celebrated breakout from the Nazi’s Stalag Luft III camp. As a gardener in the camp, he was able to help conceal the soil which was being dug from the escape tunnels.
The veteran spent his last years at a home for ex-service personnel in Erskine, Renfrewshire in his native Scotland. But 65 years ago, he was helping to construct three tunnels called Tom, Dick and Harry which would allow 76 men to escape the camp.
Mr Lees was selected to join the exodus. He would remove the dirt from the three tunnels, store it in a bag hidden under his trousers or a Red Cross box and then spread it on the camp’s vegetable patches. He also slept in the bed of an escaping officer to confuse the guards.
A total of 23 were recaptured and returned to the camp. 50 were executed and only three made it back to Britain after breaching the perimeter on March 24, 1944.
Mr Lees later explained to the Paisley Daily Express newspaper that the film-makers behind the epic war movie had produced an accurate version of events.
“It was just the way it was portrayed in the Great Escape movie. I had been given the job of looking after the garden and I would take the dirt out to the vegetable patch, rake away the top soil, dump the earth and then cover it back up.
“The German guards never suspected a thing. I would carry the sand in Red Cross boxes and then dispose of it by raking it through the top soil where I was growing tomatoes."
When Mr Lees died he was living opposite a fellow Stalag Luft III camp survivor in the care home – he still had his hand-drawn map of the camp’s layout including the tunnels, which were started in April 1943.
Before his capture on the Greek island of Crete in June 1941, Mr Lees had been a Royal Air Corps driver.
His funeral was due to take place today before a cremation ceremony in Paisley.
Alex Lees was one of the prisoners who planned the celebrated breakout from the Nazi’s Stalag Luft III camp. As a gardener in the camp, he was able to help conceal the soil which was being dug from the escape tunnels.
The veteran spent his last years at a home for ex-service personnel in Erskine, Renfrewshire in his native Scotland. But 65 years ago, he was helping to construct three tunnels called Tom, Dick and Harry which would allow 76 men to escape the camp.
Mr Lees was selected to join the exodus. He would remove the dirt from the three tunnels, store it in a bag hidden under his trousers or a Red Cross box and then spread it on the camp’s vegetable patches. He also slept in the bed of an escaping officer to confuse the guards.
A total of 23 were recaptured and returned to the camp. 50 were executed and only three made it back to Britain after breaching the perimeter on March 24, 1944.
Mr Lees later explained to the Paisley Daily Express newspaper that the film-makers behind the epic war movie had produced an accurate version of events.
“It was just the way it was portrayed in the Great Escape movie. I had been given the job of looking after the garden and I would take the dirt out to the vegetable patch, rake away the top soil, dump the earth and then cover it back up.
“The German guards never suspected a thing. I would carry the sand in Red Cross boxes and then dispose of it by raking it through the top soil where I was growing tomatoes."
When Mr Lees died he was living opposite a fellow Stalag Luft III camp survivor in the care home – he still had his hand-drawn map of the camp’s layout including the tunnels, which were started in April 1943.
Before his capture on the Greek island of Crete in June 1941, Mr Lees had been a Royal Air Corps driver.
His funeral was due to take place today before a cremation ceremony in Paisley.
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Let's pay our respects to a man who risked his life to save others during the second world war. RIP.
taken from http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/new...cle6191526.ece
more at http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/8023821.stm etc
taken from http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/new...cle6191526.ece
more at http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/8023821.stm etc
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