RAF evaders : the comprehensive story of thousands of escapers and their escape lines, Western Europe, 1940-1945
(2009)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : Grub Street Publishing, 2009
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9781908117717 MWT13961402, 1908117710 13961402
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

Stories of the British airmen shot down over Western Europe who evaded capture by the Germans and made their way to Allied territory during World War II. During the five years from May 1940 to May 1945 several thousand Allied airmen, forced to abandon their aircraft behind enemy lines, evaded capture and reached freedom, by land, sea and air. The territory held by the Germans was immense-from Norway and Denmark in the north, through Holland, Belgium, Luxembourg to the south of France-and initially there was no organization to help the men on the run. The first one to assist the evaders and escapers ("E & E" as the Americans called them) was the PAT line, along the Mediterranean coast to Perpignan and down the Spanish border; named after a naval officer Pat O'Leary, from 1942 it became the PAO line. Next was the Comet line, from Brussels to the Pyrenees. Thousands of brave people were to be involved for whom, if caught, the penalty was death. Theirs is a stirring and awe-inspiring story. Respected historian Oliver Clutton-Brock has researched in depth this secret world of evasion, uncovering some treachery and many hitherto unpublished details, operations and photos. It is a tremendous reference work, written in his own colorful style with numerous anecdotes, which fills a gap of knowledge formerly unavailable to historians, professional or amateur. Packed the information, key figure biographies and listings-2, 094 evaders identified-this is a valuable testimony to the courage of all those involved

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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