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Roger Bushell


(30 August 1910 – 29 March 1944) was a South African-born squadron leader who masterminded the mass escape of Allied prisoners from , known as the .
Born in Springs, , to a father, Bushell was educated in and at Wellington College in England before studying law at , and being called to the bar.
He joined the Auxiliary Air Force's No. 601 Squadron in , transitioning to full-time RAF service, and flew Spitfires with No. 92 Squadron during the , where he damaged enemy aircraft before being shot down and captured on 23 May 1940.
As a , Bushell escaped twice from other camps before arriving at in 1942, where he assumed leadership of the escape organization as "," coordinating tunneling efforts involving hundreds of prisoners that culminated in 76 men breaking out on the night of 24–25 March 1944.
Recaptured soon after, Bushell was one of 50 escapers executed by the on direct orders from , with his body disposed of in a near .

Early Life

Birth and Family Background

Roger Joyce Bushell was born on 30 August 1910 in Springs, a mining town in the Transvaal province of South Africa. His parents, Benjamin Daniel Bushell and Dorothy Wingate Bushell (née White), were British emigrants who had settled in South Africa, with Benjamin working as a mining engineer and manager. The family later resided in Mossel River, Cape Province, reflecting the mobile lifestyle tied to mining operations in the region. As the son of affluent expatriates in a resource-driven , Bushell grew up in a privileged environment that afforded opportunities for overseas , though specific details on siblings or extended family remain sparsely documented in primary records.

Education in

Bushell arrived in at age 14 in 1924 and enrolled at Wellington College, a public in , . There, he demonstrated strong academic performance alongside athletic prowess, including playing for the school's first XV team and excelling in languages such as and , which later proved instrumental in his wartime intelligence work. In 1929, Bushell matriculated at Pembroke College, University of Cambridge, to read . His undergraduate studies spanned 1930 to 1932, during which he balanced legal training with extracurricular pursuits, notably captaining the Cambridge University skiing team in 1931 and competing successfully in alpine events across . Bushell's time at Cambridge honed his leadership skills and multilingual abilities, though his primary interests leaned toward adventure sports rather than pure scholarship; he ultimately qualified as a , being called to the bar at on 9 November 1934.

Skiing Accomplishments

Bushell developed a passion for during his time at Cambridge University, where he captained the university ski team and emerged as a prominent figure in skiing circles. He specialized in downhill and slalom disciplines, competing at a high level in the emerging sport of downhill ski racing. In 1931, Bushell won the slalom event in the annual Oxford-Cambridge ski race, demonstrating his technical prowess on challenging courses. By the early 1930s, he was recognized as the fastest Briton in the male downhill category, a title earned through consistent performances in competitive skiing across . This achievement led to a notoriously difficult black run at in being named after him, honoring his speed and daring on steep descents. Bushell's competitive edge extended to membership in the prestigious Kandahar Ski Club, an elite group of British skiers founded by Sir Arnold Lunn, which further solidified his status in pre-war alpine sports. He represented in international competitions, blending athletic excellence with the social scene of European ski resorts.

Pre-War Career

After graduating from , with a in 1932, Bushell pursued qualification as a . He was admitted to in and called to the bar on 9 November 1934. Bushell established a practice as a barrister-at-law specializing in criminal defence, where contemporaries noted his early proficiency in courtroom advocacy. He shared chambers with other legal professionals, including future RAF colleague J. H. Little, and handled cases involving , leveraging his skills to defend pilots charged with offences. In one notable pre-war case in , Bushell represented a prominent gangland figure accused of , securing an verdict that highlighted his effectiveness in high-stakes criminal trials. His legal career intersected with his auxiliary commitments, allowing part-time service without disrupting his professional development as a rising in the capital.

Auxiliary Air Force Service

In 1932, Roger Bushell joined No. 601 (County of London) Squadron of the Auxiliary Air Force as a pilot officer, embarking on his aviation career while maintaining his legal practice. The squadron, informally known as the "Millionaires' Squadron" or "Millionaires' Mob" due to the affluent backgrounds of many members who funded their own flying, operated from RAF Northolt and focused on weekend training and annual camps with aircraft such as Hawker Harts and later Demons. Bushell progressed through the ranks during his auxiliary service, receiving promotion to on 10 February 1934 and to two years later in 1936. By the outbreak of war in September 1939, he held the rank of in 601 Squadron, which was mobilized for full-time duty as part of the Royal Air Force's expansion. His pre-war involvement honed his piloting skills and leadership, preparing him for subsequent regular RAF commands.

World War II Military Service

Squadron Leadership in Fighter Command

Roger Bushell assumed command of on 10 October 1939, marking him as the first officer from the Auxiliary Air Force to lead a regular squadron. The unit, reformed at , operated Mk I fighters within , tasked with air defense duties during the early phases of . His substantive promotion to took effect on 1 1940, formalizing his leadership role amid the period. Under Bushell's command, No. 92 Squadron conducted patrols and readiness operations, preparing for anticipated German aerial threats, though significant combat engagements were limited until the spring of 1940. On 23 May 1940, during a patrol near in support of the , Bushell led 12 Spitfires into action against forces. Flying Spitfire N3194 (GR-Z), he damaged two destroyers before his aircraft was struck by a Bf 109, forcing a crash-landing; he became a . This mission resulted in three pilots shot down and seven aircraft damaged or unserviceable, highlighting the intense aerial fighting of the . Bushell's brief tenure demonstrated his transition from auxiliary service to frontline command in Fighter Command's critical early operations.

Combat Missions and Capture

Bushell took command of on 10 October 1939 as the first Auxiliary Air Force officer to lead a regular squadron, initially operating fighters from before re-equipping with twelve Supermarine Spitfires in March 1940 and relocating to for frontline operations over . The squadron participated in Fighter Command patrols supporting the Allied evacuation from , including engagements against fighters along the French coast in mid-May 1940. On 23 May 1940, Bushell led twelve Spitfires on a patrol departing at 17:20 hours, targeting areas near , Boulogne, and to contest German air superiority during the evacuation. The formation encountered a large group of twin-engine fighters, with 92 Squadron pilots claiming seventeen destroyed in the ensuing ; Bushell personally damaged two Bf 110s before his Spitfire I (serial N3194, code GR-Z) was hit by fire from a , leading to a crash-landing east of Boulogne in German-occupied territory after approximately 46.5 flying hours on the aircraft. The mission resulted in three Spitfires shot down, including losses of serials P9375 (Sgt. J. Klipsch killed) and N3290 (Flt. Lt. G. Gillies captured as a ), with seven of the remaining aircraft rendered unserviceable due to battle damage. Bushell was apprehended shortly after by a motorcycle patrol and interrogated at the Dulag Luft transit camp near Oberursel before formal POW processing.

Imprisonment as a POW

Transfer to Stalag Luft Camps

Following his capture on 23 May 1940 after his Spitfire was shot down during combat over German-occupied northern , Squadron Leader Roger Bushell was transported for interrogation to Dulag Luft, the primary transit camp for captured Allied air force personnel located near Oberursel outside . Dulag Luft functioned as a processing center where prisoners faced intensive questioning by intelligence officers, often under psychological pressure but adhering to the Geneva Convention's prohibitions on physical for officers. Upon completion of interrogation, Bushell was transferred to Stalag Luft I at Barth on the Baltic coast in northern Germany, a camp designated exclusively for non-commissioned and commissioned Allied air force prisoners. This move occurred in late May or early June 1940, aligning with standard German procedure to segregate aircrew POWs from army personnel in specialized Stalag Luft facilities to prevent cross-service escape coordination. At Stalag Luft I, Bushell, leveraging his fluency in German from pre-war legal studies and skiing circles, quickly assumed a leadership role among British officers, organizing initial escape planning amid the camp's expanding population of downed RAF pilots.

First Escape from Stalag Luft I

In June 1941, Squadron Leader Roger Bushell executed his first from , a located near Barth on the coast in , where he had been held since early that year following prior transfers and a previous unsuccessful from Dulag Luft. Concurrently, 17 other prisoners attempted a mass breakout via a dug from a barracks hut, but Bushell opted for an independent method to avoid detection in the group effort. During the evening , he concealed himself in a goat shed situated within the camp grounds, exploiting the momentary lapse in guard oversight as prisoners were accounted for. Once darkness fell and the guards had completed their checks, Bushell emerged from hiding, used wire cutters to breach the perimeter fence, and fled into the surrounding woods, evading initial patrols. Disguised in civilian clothing and relying on forged documents prepared by fellow prisoners, he navigated approximately 200 miles westward by foot and train, reaching Stettin (now , ) before boarding a train toward the French border with intentions of crossing into neutral territory or linking with resistance networks. This solo evasion demonstrated Bushell's resourcefulness and familiarity with German geography, honed from pre-war travels and language skills, though the tunnel-based escape by the 17 others resulted in their rapid recapture within days due to the operation's scale alerting authorities. Bushell's freedom lasted about ten days before his recapture near the Swiss border, prompted by a suspicious who identified inconsistencies in his papers during a routine check. Interrogated harshly, he was returned to captivity and transferred to more secure facilities, including a brief stint in custody, underscoring the escalating German countermeasures against serial escapers like himself. This incident, while unsuccessful in achieving lasting liberty, reinforced Bushell's reputation among POWs for audacious planning and bolstered his determination for future attempts, influencing his later role in organizing larger-scale operations.

Subsequent Escape Efforts

Second Escape and Recapture

Following his recapture after the first escape, Bushell was transferred to X-C near in late 1941, a camp holding several previous escapers among its RAF officers. On October 8, 1941, during a rail transfer of and officers to Oflag VI-B at Dössel, Bushell and Czech pilot Jaroslav Zafouk pried open a railway car door and jumped from the moving train near . The pair evaded immediate detection and traveled southward by foot, train, and hitchhiking, crossing into the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia to reach by late October. There, they received assistance from the Czech resistance, who provided forged identity papers, civilian clothing, and safe houses under assumed names—Bushell as "Jiri Stransky," a Norwegian businessman. Over the ensuing eight months, until mid-1942, Bushell lived undercover in , reportedly gathering intelligence on German operations and aiding further evasion networks while blending into local society through his fluent German and knowledge of Europe. Their freedom ended in April 1942 when the , acting on tips from informants amid heightened security sweeps, raided their hideout in and recaptured both men. Interrogated harshly but without revealing resistance contacts, Bushell was designated a "Sicherheitsgefangener" (security prisoner) due to his repeated escapes and transferred to in Sagan by October 1942, where stricter measures were imposed on persistent escapers. This episode underscored Bushell's resourcefulness but also intensified German scrutiny, contributing to his later role in orchestrating larger-scale breakout plans.

Arrival at Stalag Luft III

Following his recapture in in mid-1942 after an eight-month evasion with contacts following the October 1941 escape from VI-B, Bushell faced intense interrogation where he was threatened with execution for further attempts but denied knowledge of underground networks. He was subsequently transferred to , a purpose-built camp for Allied aircrew officers near Sagan (now , ), arriving in October 1942. The camp, operational since May 1942 and designed with escape-resistant features like raised foundations and loose sandy soil, housed primarily British and Commonwealth officers in its early compounds; Bushell entered the East Compound, segregated for persistent escapers. Bushell's prior escapes—two successful breakouts from previous camps, including one reaching nearly to —had earned him notoriety among authorities, prompting his placement in this high-security facility to curb organized evasion efforts. Upon arrival, camp leadership, including Senior British Officer , recognized his expertise; within weeks, Bushell assumed the role of "," coordinating tunneling, forging, and intelligence operations under the X-Organization, channeling disparate escape activities into a structured system. This transition marked a shift from individual efforts to mass planning, leveraging his multilingual skills (fluent in and ) for document forgery and guard intelligence. Initial conditions at Stalag Luft III included barracks of 20-30 men each, with Red Cross parcels supplementing sparse rations, but Bushell prioritized diversion of resources toward escape tools, establishing workshops for civilian attire and fake papers despite vigilant goon-box watchtowers and ferrets (security patrols). His leadership quelled rival factions, fostering international collaboration among over 600 prisoners, though early months focused on probing camp vulnerabilities amid ongoing arrivals of new captures from RAF Bomber Command raids.

The Great Escape

Organization and Planning

Roger Bushell, upon arriving at Stalag Luft III's North Compound in October 1942, assumed leadership of the camp's Escape Committee and adopted the codename "." In late March 1943, he proposed a mass aiming to free over 200 prisoners of war to overburden German recapture efforts, a strategy approved by Senior British Officer Herbert Massey. This initiative formalized under the X Organization, which Bushell directed to coordinate specialized efforts across tunneling, forgery, intelligence, and security. The X Organization structured operations into dedicated sections: tunneling teams led by figures like ; the Y Organization for forging approximately 400 sets of documents and crafting civilian with input from tailors and artists; intelligence gathering on train schedules, , and national details; and security "Stooges" to monitor German guards and "ferrets." A parallel Z Organization handled clandestine radio communications with the RAF. Over 600 prisoners contributed to these preparations, including manufacturing tools from bed slats for supports and repurposing Klim milk tins for in tunnels dug 30 feet deep to evade seismic detection. Planning commenced in spring 1943 with initial probing of camp weaknesses, followed by tunneling starting in summer 1943 on three parallel shafts——to mitigate discovery risks. Bushell's decisions included temporarily halting Dick and Harry to prioritize for aiding transferred prisoners, then refocusing on Harry after 's exposure in ; implementing rope systems for safe traversal; and maintaining operational secrecy through diversions like theater productions. By February 1944, Harry's 350-foot length reached beyond the wire, with escapers assigned sequential numbers and dispersal plans based on forged identities matching their linguistic skills. The operation, spanning 15 months, culminated in the breakout on the night of 24 March 1944 from Hut 104's entrance.

Tunnel Construction and Breakout

Under Squadron Leader Roger Bushell's leadership as "Big X," over 600 prisoners at Stalag Luft III's North Compound initiated the construction of three parallel tunnels codenamed Tom, Dick, and Harry in the spring of 1943, aiming to facilitate a mass escape of up to 200 men. The tunnels, each roughly 2 feet square, were excavated using improvised tools like table knives, spoons, and sharpened picks fashioned from metal scraps, with progress hampered by the camp's loose, sandy soil prone to collapse. To reinforce the walls and ceiling, prisoners dismantled over 4,000 wooden bed boards from bunks, nailing them into place for shoring; ventilation was maintained via 50-foot shafts connected to modified stove pipes and hand-operated bellows made from concertinas. Tunnel Tom, begun beneath a darkened corner of Hut 107, advanced about 70 meters before German guards detected it via a microphone probe and filled it in September 1943. , started under 122, was partially dug but repurposed as a storage site for equipment after Tom's failure, allowing undetected continuation of under 104. extended approximately 110 yards (100 meters), sinking 30 feet deep with two ventilation shafts; spoil dirt, totaling thousands of tons, was removed via wooden trolleys on narrow-gauge rails and dispersed around the compound by ""—prisoners who released sand grains from trousers seams during exercise under guard watch. The breakout commenced on the moonless night of 24–25 March 1944 through , which emerged just inside the outer wire but was obscured by snow. Although planned for 200 escapers equipped with forged documents and disguises, only 76 succeeded before the tunnel collapsed and freezing temperatures halted further attempts; the 77th man was spotted by a guard, triggering alarms. Bushell, as the second to exit, led the group dressed as a worker, but the escape's scale overwhelmed preparations amid sub-zero conditions and logistical delays.

Recapture and Execution

Bushell emerged from tunnel "Harry" during the on the night of 24–25 March 1944, as the second of the 76 prisoners to exit, accompanied by Bernard Scheidhauer of the Royal Norwegian Air Force, who had drawn lots for the privilege. The pair, dressed in civilian clothes and armed with forged papers identifying them as Norwegian workers, traveled by train toward but aroused suspicion when a suspicious railway official alerted authorities in ; they were arrested on 27 March after attempting to flee. Handed over to the in , Bushell and Scheidhauer were interrogated but provided no information on the escape organization. On 29 March 1944, agents transported them to a wooded area near , where they were executed by gunshot as part of Hitler's directive—issued in response to the mass breakout—to liquidate recaptured officers involved in escapes, resulting in the murder of 50 Allied prisoners overall. Bushell was first shot in the back of the neck, which failed to kill him immediately and left him in convulsions; officer Emil Schulz then fired a second shot into his left temple to finish him. Scheidhauer was killed similarly, and their bodies were cremated at a facility in to conceal the crimes, with ashes later interred in a at Poznan Old Garrison Cemetery. These executions violated Article 30 of the 1929 Geneva Convention, which prohibited the killing of prisoners of war except by formal sentence of a tribunal, constituting a war crime that prompted post-war investigations and trials of personnel. The systematic nature of the killings, coordinated across offices, underscored the regime's policy of reprisal against escaping officers, though Bushell's prior escapes had already marked him for special retribution by his captors.

Personal Life and Character

Multilingual Abilities and Personality Traits


Bushell demonstrated notable multilingual proficiency, having become fluent in and during his education and pre-war skiing pursuits in , accents and diction that aided his evasion efforts post-escape. While confined at , he acquired additional languages including , , and Danish to support forged documents and intelligence operations.
In terms of personality, Bushell exhibited marked by a warm, friendly demeanor and broad smile, traits evident from his youth as a sociable and "ladies' man." He could shift to an intimidating presence, leveraging a deep voice and piercing eyes to command respect or deter inquiries during high-stakes activities, as illustrated by his directive to subordinates: "If you see me walking around with a tree trunk sticking out of my , don’t ask any questions, because it’ll be for a damned good reason." As a leader, Bushell displayed bold organizational acumen and decisiveness, rapidly formulating complex plans like the mass breakout from and motivating disparate prisoners through passionate oratory that instilled resolve. His character combined boisterous risk-taking—initially treating escapes as competitive sport—with a cool-headed antagonism toward German captors, intensified by witnessing brutality, driving sustained defiance rather than mere adventure.

Relationships and Family Ties

Bushell was born on 30 August 1910 in Springs, , , to Benjamin Daniel Bushell (1878–1967), a of English descent, and Dorothy Wingate Bushell (née White). He had two younger sisters, Rosemary Dorothy Bushell and Elizabeth Sylvia Constance Bushell. Bushell never married and had no children. In the mid-1930s, he sought to marry Lady Georgiana Mary Curzon, daughter of the late Curzon of Kedleston; however, her father blocked the union, citing Bushell's insufficient social standing as a middle-class and aviator. Lady Georgiana instead wed racing driver in 1934; the marriage produced one son but ended with Kidston's death in a 1931 flying accident prior to their union, leaving her widowed young. By the outbreak of war, Bushell had formed a distant engagement to Peggy , to whom he remained emotionally attached during captivity, though no occurred. While imprisoned at , Bushell commenced an affair with Blazena "Blaža" Zeithammelova, a woman from a nearby village, beginning shortly before 1941; her family's involvement in aiding escapers, including providing shelter and documents, stemmed partly from this relationship but led to their execution by the following the .

Legacy and Recognition

Post-War Investigations and Honors

Following the conclusion of , British authorities launched investigations into the -orchestrated murders of the 50 recaptured participants in the , including Bushell, classifying them as war crimes under the Geneva Convention. These probes, initiated by the Royal Air Force and escalated through military intelligence, traced the execution orders to high-level Nazi directives and identified specific perpetrators through survivor testimonies, records, and forensic evidence from mass graves. A military convened at Curio Haus in from 1 July to 3 September 1947 to prosecute 18 and Kripo (criminal police) officers for conspiracy to murder and direct killings. Principal defendant Max Wielen, who coordinated the recaptures, received but was released after approximately five years in 1952. Bushell, recaptured with French escapee Bernard Scheidhauer, was executed by shooting on 29 March 1944 near Homburg (then Homburg-Kaiserslautern); agents Emil Schulz and Walter Breithaupt were convicted for this murder and sentenced to . Several other defendants, including those guilty of multiple executions, were convicted of murder and hanged at in February 1948. For his organizational leadership among Allied prisoners at , Bushell received a posthumous Mention in Despatches, announced on 8 June 1944 and formally recorded in on 13 June 1946. In late 1945, officers nominated him for the , citing his role in planning the mass breakout as an act of exceptional valor equivalent to combat heroism; however, the recommendation was rejected at senior levels, with objections centered on the escape's facilitation of the subsequent 50 murders as a direct causal outcome.

Memorials and Cultural Depictions

A memorial stone in Bushell's name was dedicated by the Royal Auxiliary Air Force Foundation at the in , , , on 27 September 2013, as part of the Royal Auxiliary Air Force Memorial. In , , near the former site of , the Memorial—erected in 1970 and featuring a of Hut 104 from which the escape tunnels originated—commemorates the 1944 breakout organized by Bushell, with interpretive elements highlighting his leadership role. Bushell is buried in the Old Garrison Cemetery in , , where his grave marks his execution by agents on 29 March 1944 following recapture. A joint memorial to Bushell and French escapee Bernard Scheidhauer was unveiled on 8 July 2017 at , , by the , recognizing their roles in the and subsequent murders by German forces. In , —where Bushell spent part of his youth—his name is inscribed on the Second World War memorial near the Old Harbour, alongside other local casualties, despite his body never returning home. Bushell's role as "," the escape committee leader, inspired the fictionalized character Squadron Leader Roger Bartlett in the 1963 film The Great Escape, directed by and based on Paul Brickhill's 1950 book of the same name; the character was portrayed by , emphasizing Bushell's organizational genius amid dramatized elements like the motorcycle chase absent from historical accounts. The event's cultural legacy, tied to Bushell's planning, extends to documentaries such as the 2001 television production Great Escape: The Untold Story, which recounts the Stalag Luft III breakout and names Bushell as its architect.

Historical Assessments and Debates

Historians have generally assessed Roger Bushell as an exceptionally capable leader and organizer within the prisoner-of-war escape network at Stalag Luft III, crediting his legal training, fluency in German, and prior escape experience for enabling the coordination of over 600 personnel in forging documents, crafting civilian disguises, and constructing tunnels for the March 24, 1944, breakout. His role as "Big X," head of the escape committee, is praised for transforming individual efforts into a systematic operation aimed at harassing the German war machine by forcing resource diversion, with Bushell arguing that even mass recaptures would compel the Gestapo to expend significant manpower on pursuits. Contemporary accounts from fellow prisoners and post-war RAF evaluations describe him as charismatic and resolute, embodying the duty of POWs to attempt escape as a form of resistance, though some camp seniors expressed reservations about the scale of operations due to potential reprisals. Debates persist over the prudence of Bushell's ambitious plan to free up to 200 men simultaneously, with critics labeling it reckless given the low success rate—only three escapers (two Norwegians and one Dutchman) evaded permanent recapture—and the ensuing execution of 50 by order on Adolf Hitler's directive, a clear of the Geneva Convention's protections for recaptured POWs. Biographer Simon Pearson notes that while supporters highlight the escape's morale-boosting effect and the estimated hundreds of thousands of German man-hours wasted in the manhunt, detractors among historians and affected families have condemned it as a tragic waste of life, arguing the winter conditions and forged papers' unreliability amplified risks without proportional strategic gain. This view contrasts with defenses emphasizing Bushell's calculation that large-scale disruption outweighed individual perils, as articulated in escape committee rationales, though no evidence suggests he anticipated the full extent of Hitler's vengeful response. Further contention surrounds Bushell's covert intelligence-gathering for , including relaying camp security details that aided Allied bombing targets; some assessments question whether such activities, if discovered, partially rationalized Nazi reprisals under a strained of POW conduct rules, though international tribunals post-war universally deemed the executions criminal. Bushell's lack of major posthumous honors, despite MI9 nominations for the in 1949, fuels debate on whether his espionage ties overshadowed recognition of his leadership, with official records indicating reticence to publicize such operations. Overall, while the operation is framed as a "heroic " in military histories, balancing ingenuity against human cost remains unresolved, informed by survivor testimonies and declassified files rather than hagiographic narratives.

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