Jump to content

Australian survivor of WWII 'Great Escape' dies aged 101


Recommended Posts

Posted

Australian survivor of WWII 'Great Escape' dies aged 101
ROD McGUIRK, Associated Press

CANBERRA, Australia (AP) — Paul Royle, an Australian pilot who took part in a mass breakout from a German prisoner of war camp during World War II that is remembered as The Great Escape, has died in his hometown of Perth, his son said Friday. He was 101.

The escape was the subject of a 1963 Hollywood movie, "The Great Escape," starring Steve McQueen, a work of artistic license that Royle loathed.

Royle died Sunday at a Perth hospital following surgery on a hip fracture that he suffered in a fall in a nursing home three weeks ago, his son Gordon Royle said.

Royle's death leaves only one survivor of the 76 men who escaped from Stalag Luft III, near Sagan 100 miles (160 kilometers) southeast of Berlin: 94-year-old British man Dick Churchill, a former squadron leader, the son said.

The survivors had formed a sort of club and had kept in contract through a newsletter called the "Sagan Select Subway Society" which listed the passing of each member. The latest newsletter among Paul Royle's belongings showed that he and Churchill, of Devon, were the last survivors.

"I called Dick Churchill yesterday and said 'I'm bringing you the news that you're the last one,'" Gordon Royle said. "He was sad but stoic."

Paul Royle revealed last year on the 70th anniversary of the tunnel escape in March 1944 that he was no fan of the Hollywood interpretation of the story.

"The movie I disliked intensely because there were no motorbikes ... and the Americans weren't there," he told Australian Broadcasting Corp., referring to McQueen's dramatic bid to outrun the Germans on a motorbike.

Gordon Royle said his father was angry that Hollywood would create an adventure out of soldiers doing their often tedious and dangerous duty of attempting to escape.

"He felt the movie was a glamorization of the tedium and the drabness of the actuality," Gordon Royle said.

"The idea that they got on a motorbike and soared over a barbed wire fence is far from the reality which was darkness and cold and terror," he said.

Only three of the escapees — two Norwegians and a Dane — made it home. Fifty others, from 12 nations, were shot dead when caught. A further 23 were sent back to the Stalag or to other camps but survived the war.

Royle said his contribution to the escape operation was to distribute dirt excavated from the 110-meter (360 foot) tunnel around the camp grounds. This was done by surreptitiously releasing the soil down his trouser legs in areas where the ground color vaguely matched. He spent two days hiding in a snow covered forest before he was recaptured.

Flight Lt. Royle was a pilot in the Royal Air Force when he was shot down over France on May 17, 1940, and was captured. His two days in the freezing forest in 1944 were his only taste of freedom until he was liberated by British troops from the Marlag und Milag Nord prison camp in Germany on May 2, 1945.

Born in Perth, Western Australia state, on Jan. 17, 1914, after he left school at 14 he worked with his engineer father surveying airfields in Australia's sparsely populated and remote northwest Outback, and in 1936 enrolled in the Western Australian School of Mines to become a mine surveyor.

He was recruited by the Royal Air Force and relocated to England in February 1939 to train as a pilot officer.

Gordon Royle said he had no idea his father had been involved in The Great Escape until he read his name in a book about the famous breakout in the mid-1970s.

"He was always looking forward. He never looked back. He wanted to focus on what was coming, not what had been," Gordon Royle said.

The son said he found newspaper clipping and obituaries related to the escape among his father's belongings.

"He maintained an interest but hadn't let it define him as a person," Gordon Royle said.

After the war he worked in mining and engineering until he retired to Perth in 1980.

He is survived by his second wife, their two children and a sister. All four live in Perth.

He is also survived by three British children from his first marriage. He had eight grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.

aplogo.jpg
-- (c) Associated Press 2015-08-28

Posted

'"The movie I disliked intensely because there were no motorbikes ... and the Americans weren't there,"' There have been many Hollywood representations of fact-based events or incidents that have seen Americans involved, when they had been neither anywhere near the original occurrence nor involved in the aftermath. But that's the American film business for you.

Posted

'"The movie I disliked intensely because there were no motorbikes ... and the Americans weren't there,"' There have been many Hollywood representations of fact-based events or incidents that have seen Americans involved, when they had been neither anywhere near the original occurrence nor involved in the aftermath. But that's the American film business for you.

Another was Bridge on the River Kwai - even the river name wasn't accurate, along with many other things about the movie.

Posted

A great story about a normal 'knockabout' aussie bloke.

I totally agree with him about the farcical Great Escape film with Steve McQueen.

That scene where the yanks are playing the flute on July 4th and marching through the camp- like they owned it- was laughable.

As the Australian said....'the Americans werent even there!'

Typical holywood.

Posted (edited)

The Great Escape, great feat of ingenuity... 76 escapes..

But 73 were recaptured of which 50 were executed... sad.png

They were executed in the film, too.

But not as depicted in the film...

Also no motor bike, no yanks...

Capt. Virgil Hilts (Steve McQueen) was just Hollywood proper gander...

Edited by Basil B

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.



×
×
  • Create New...