The Dodger The Extraordinary Story of Churchill's American Cousin, Two World Wars, and The Great Escape

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Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2013-05-07
Publisher(s): Lyons Press
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Summary

The Dodger is the story of John Bigelow "Johnny" Dodge, a wartime hero and a pivotal figure in the escapade immortalised in the legendary Hollywood film The Great Escape. The American-born and well-connected Dodge was a cousin by marriage of Winston Churchill and friends with the rich and famous of both countries, including Kermit Roosevelt, President Theodore Roosevelt's son. When the Second World War broke out, he volunteered for the Army but was quickly captured after the debacle of Dunkirk. He became a prisoner of war and an inveterate escapologist and troublemaker - eventually becoming one of the ringleaders of the "Great Escape." Surviving the murderous Gestapo, he was thrown into a VIP compound of Sachsenhausen concentration camp on the orders of Heinrich Himmler - but escaped once more. After recapture, Johnny was spirited away by the SS to a meeting in Berlin with Hitler's interpreter, who sent him on a clandestine mission to his cousin in Downing Street. His odyssey through the dying embers of the Third Reich to Switzerland and freedom in the company of a louche apparatchik is the last curious escapade in the story of Johnny's adventurous life.

Author Biography

Tim Carroll is a newspaper journalist and television producer. He is the author of The Great Escapers: The Full Story of the Second World War's Most Remarkable Mass Escape and was co-author of In Hitler's Bunker: A Boy Soldier's Eyewitness Account of the F\u00fchrer's Last Days. He is married with two children and lives in London.

Table of Contents

Table of Contents 1 Wookyi-Tipi 17 2 Age Quod Agis 24 3 Esprit de Corps 32 4 Debacle 36 5 The Soldier 42 6 Mediterranean Adventure 46 7 A Corner of a Foreign Field 52 8 Gallipoli 57 9 The Western Front 60 10 Death Revisited 65 11 To the Ends of the Earth 70 12 A Great Game 77 13 Of Bandits and Brigands 84 14 Trading with the Enemy 93 15 Prisoner of the Cheka 98 16 Appointment with Death 104 17 From Far East to East End 109 18 Minerva 115 19 A Final Note 126 20 Prisoner of War 133 21 Oh, What a Lovely War! 142 22 With Major Rumpel\u2019s Compliments . . . 148 23 Baltic Interlude 153 24 G\u00f6ring\u2019s \u2018Escape Proof\u2019 Camp 163 25 Polish Interlude 174 26 Tom, Dick and Harry 184 27 Last Letters Home 194 28 Per Ardua ad Astra 201 THE DODGER FCP PROOF.indd 11 29/02/2012 15:08 29 Death Postponed 210 30 The Sachsenhausen Tunnel 216 31 Escape from the SS 222 32 Mission to Downing Street 231 33 Berlin Days 237 34 Travels with Dr Thost 245 35 Home 252 36 Shadows and Fog 260 37 In Memoriam

Excerpts

The escapers were going to make their way across Germany in a variety of disguises ranging from smart lawyers, accountants and doctors in petite bourgeoisie business suits, to foreign laborers and seamen in worn rags.

As March 23 approached, each rehearsed his cover story, studied maps and brushed up on their foreign languages. (Johnny had attempted to learn German intermittently during the years of his captivity, but could barely master more than a few incoherent phrases.) Some, perhaps, revised their plans. “There was a fever of excitement about the place,” recalls Jimmy James in his memoir Moonless Night. “None of the escapers seriously gave any thought to the consequences of recapture after a mass escape on this scale. In the same way that a pilot doesnt think about whether he’s going to be shot down before he climbs into his cockpit.”

Perhaps that was a credible state of mind for an English officer, but some of the other nationalities flying with the RAF had had many sleepless nights wondering what their fates might be if the Gestapo got its hands on them.

The escapers had been given dozens of talks about the various escape routes out of the camp, details of which were provided by those who had been out on parole, or by tame ferrets, or prisoners who had escaped. They knew that there was some sort of heavily guarded lighted compound near the camp that it would be preferable to avoid. There were several large and small towns near Sagan that would be best steered clear of: urban areas were far more extensively patrolled by the ever-vigilant Hitler Youth and the elderly Home Guard, and it was difficult to evade the unpredictable security checks at street corners.

The escapers knew that the Oder River was to the north of Sagan, and might provide a valuable means of escape; the Berlin-to-Breslau autobahn was to the south. Anyone planning to go to Switzerland was given a pep talk by Roger Bushell, drawing upon the unhappy experiences of his ill-fated escape bid in 1941. As the date of the break-out approached, a palpable sense of excitement filled the air and spread to the surrounding compounds.

The Senior American Officer, Albert “Bub” Clark, remembered there was a “buzz” about the camp for several days before the actual escape. This, surely, could not have escaped the notice of the German security staff, who were intimately familiar with every aspect of camp life.

Unfortunately, when the morning of March 23 dawned, a thick blanket of snow covered the compound. One of the prisoners, Leonard Hall, a member of the RAF meteorological branch, advised the escape committee to postpone the break-out for another day. He said that the next few days would be very cold but cloud cover would make the evenings very dark. That night, there was a heavy snowfall during a rehearsal of Pygmalion in the theatre. Roger Bushell was playing Professor Henry Higgins. The following morning the escape committee met and the decision to go was made. The forging department promptly began stamping the correct dates on scores of bogus papers.

 

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