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Colditz Cock
Colditz Cock
from Wikipedia

The Colditz Cock was a glider built by British prisoners of war during World War II for an escape attempt from Oflag IV-C (Colditz Castle) prison camp in Germany.

Key Information

Background

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After the execution of 50 prisoners who had taken part in the "Great Escape" from Stalag Luft III, the Allied High Command had discouraged escape attempts, though the plan to build a glider was encouraged in order to divert the energies of the prisoners from descending into boredom and tedium.

The idea for the glider came from Lieutenant Tony Rolt. Rolt, who was not an airman, had noticed the chapel roof line was completely obscured from the German guards' view. He realised that the roof would make a perfect launching point from which the glider could fly across the River Mulde, which was about 60 metres below.

Construction

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The team was headed by Bill Goldfinch and Jack Best.[3] Goldfinch and Best were aided by their discovery in the prison library of Aircraft Design, a two-volume work by C.H. Latimer-Needham which explained the necessary physics and engineering and included a detailed diagram of a wing section. The glider was assembled by Goldfinch and Best and 12 assistants known as "apostles", in the lower attic above the chapel. Future RAF Air commodore Geoffrey D. Stephenson assisted in the project.[4] The 20-metre-long (60 ft) runway was to be constructed from tables and the glider was to be launched using a pulley system based on a falling metal bathtub full of concrete, using a gravity-assisted acceleration to 50 kilometres per hour (30 mph).[5]

The officers who took part in the project built a false wall to hide the secret space in the attic where they slowly built the glider from stolen pieces of wood. Since the Germans were accustomed to looking down for tunnels, not up for secret workshops, the officers felt quite safe from detection. Nevertheless, they placed many lookouts and created an electric alarm system to warn the builders of approaching guards.

Over thirty ribs had to be constructed (around a third being structural compression ribs), predominantly formed from bed slats, but also from every other piece of wood the POWs could surreptitiously obtain. The wing spars were constructed from floor boards. Control wires were made from electrical wiring in unused portions of the castle. A glider expert, Lorne Welch, was asked to review the stress diagrams and calculations made by Goldfinch.

The glider constructed was a lightweight, two-seater, high wing, monoplane design. It had a Luton Major-style rudder and square elevators. The wingspan, tip to tip, was 10 metres (32 ft), and it was 6 metres (19 ft 9 in) from nose to tail. Prison sleeping bags of blue and white checked cotton were used to skin the glider, and German ration millet was boiled and used as a form of dope to seal the cloth pores.[6] The completed glider weighed 110 kilograms (240 lb).

A list of tools used in constructing the glider
Side-framed saw
  • handle of beech bed board
  • frame of iron window bars
  • blade of gramophone spring with 8 teeth / in (3 mm teeth)
Minute saw for fine work
  • gramophone spring blade, 25 teeth / in (1 mm teeth)
5/8 in (16 mm) metal drill obtained by bribery
  • drill bits for making holes made from nails
A gauge
Large plane, 14½ in (368 mm) long
  • 2 inch blade obtained by bribing a German guard
  • wooden box (four pieces of beech screwed together)
Small plane, 8½ in (216 mm) long
  • blade made from a table knife
Plane, 5 in (127 mm) long
Square
  • made of beech with gramophone spring blade
Set of keys including:
  • universal door pick, forged from a bucket handle

The take-off was scheduled for the spring of 1945 during an air raid blackout but by then the Allied guns could be heard and the war's outcome was fairly certain. The British escape officer decided that the glider should be available for use in case the SS ordered the massacre of the prisoners as a way to get a message out to approaching American troops. The glider was approaching completion when the American Army liberated the prisoners on 16 April 1945. Assigned to the task force that liberated the castle, war correspondent Lee Carson entered Colditz on 15 April 1945 and took the only photograph of the glider completed in the attic.[7]

Although the Colditz Cock never flew in real life, the concept was fictionalised, depicting a successful flight and escape, in the 1971 TV film The Birdmen starring Doug McClure, Chuck Connors, René Auberjonois and Richard Basehart. One episode of the BBC TV series Colditz depicts the decision to build a glider as an escape attempt. It is also depicted in the final escape from Colditz Castle in the fictional story depicted in the 2002 video game Prisoner of War.

The fate of the glider is not known, but the castle was in the zone controlled by the Soviets, who did not co-operate with its reclamation. However, Goldfinch had kept his drawings, which enabled a one-third scale model to be constructed. This was eventually launched from the castle roof in 1993.

A set of plans for the glider are in the collection of the Imperial War Museum.[8]

Modern replica

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A replica of the Colditz Glider as seen at the Imperial War Museum in London

A flyable expanded polystyrene model of the glider was produced by the model kit manufacturer Airfix in its Skycraft range in the 1970s.[9]

In 1999, a full-sized replica of the Colditz glider was commissioned by Channel 4 and was built by Southdown Aviation Ltd at Lasham Airfield. The glider was test flown successfully in 2000 by John Lee on its first attempt at RAF Odiham with Best, Goldfinch and about a dozen of the veterans who had worked on the original more than 55 years earlier proudly looking on. Jack Best died later that year. The replica is now housed on loan at the Gliding Heritage Centre.

The programme was shown in 2000 by Channel 4 in the UK as part of a 3-part documentary series called "Escape from Colditz". The Channel 4 material was edited to 60 minutes and shown in the US in 2001 as "Nazi Prison Escape" on the Nova television series.

In March 2012, a radio-controlled, full-sized replica glider was built by Tony Hoskins' UK based glider maintenance/repair company South East Aircraft Services in the Chapel attic and was flown from Colditz for a Channel 4 documentary. It was launched (unmanned) from the same roof as had been planned for the original. The radio-controlled replica made it safely across the river and landed in a meadow 180 metres below.[10] The documentary aired in North America on PBS under the title "Escape from Nazi Alcatraz" on 14 May 2014.[11] The glider built for this 2012 documentary now forms part of a new museum display in the Chapel Attic in Colditz castle, and opened to the public on the 70th Anniversary of the Liberation of Colditz in April 2015.

The book Flight from Colditz by Tony Hoskins was published by Pen & Sword in the UK in April 2016. It tells not only the story of the original example built by the prisoners, but also details the other replicas built and on display.

Specifications

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Data from British Gliders and Sailplanes[12]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 2
  • Length: 20 ft 0 in (6.1 m)
  • Wingspan: 32 ft 0 in (9.75 m)
  • Aspect ratio: 6.4
  • Airfoil: Clark Y-H
  • Empty weight: 240 lb (108.86 kg)
  • Gross weight: 560 lb (254.02 kg)

Performance

  • Stall speed: 31 mph (50 km/h, 27 kn)
  • Lift-to-drag: 12:1
  • Wing loading: 3.45 lb/sq ft (16.84 kg/m2)

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Colditz Cock was a makeshift glider secretly constructed by British prisoners of war during World War II inside Oflag IV-C, the high-security Colditz Castle in Nazi Germany, as a daring plan to escape by air over the surrounding Mulde River valley. Designed to carry two occupants, the glider featured a 32-foot (9.7 m) wingspan, a wooden frame, and fabric skin, all assembled from scavenged materials like bedboards, floorboards, and mattress covers in a hidden attic workshop behind a false wall. Led by Royal Air Force officers Lieutenant Bill Goldfinch and Flight Lieutenant Jack Best, the project involved crafting over 6,000 components by hand, including spars from floorboards and ribs from bed slats, with the launch mechanism relying on pulleys, ropes, and a concrete-filled bathtub as a counterweight from the chapel roof. Colditz Castle, a medieval fortress converted into a Sonderlager for incorrigible Allied escapers in 1940, housed officers from Britain, , , and other nations who had repeatedly attempted breaks from other camps, making it a focal point of ingenuity amid harsh confinement. The glider's construction began in late 1943, approved by the escape committee under Major Dick Howe, and progressed despite risks of discovery by guards, with tools improvised from smuggled or bartered items like a table knife used as a plane. Detailed plans, drawn by Goldfinch on pink tissue paper at a scale of 1 cm to 1 foot, survive today and illustrate the front, plan, and side views, highlighting the high-wing monoplane design intended to exploit updrafts for a 300-foot glide to freedom. Ultimately, the Colditz Cock was never flown; a 1944 decree by ordering the execution of recaptured escapers heightened the risks, and the castle's liberation by U.S. forces in rendered the obsolete, leaving the nearly complete hidden in the until its discovery. This audacious symbolized the prisoners' unyielding resolve, contributing to Colditz's legacy of over 130 escape , with about 30 successful "home runs" back to Allied lines, though the glider remains one of the camp's most legendary unrealized efforts.

Historical Context

Colditz Castle During World War II

, a medieval fortress located in , , overlooking the Mulde , was converted into a high-security prisoner-of-war camp known as during . Established in 1939 initially for Polish officers, it was redesignated in 1940 as a Sonderlager—a special camp—for Allied officers who had repeatedly escaped from other camps and were recaptured, earning it the nickname "escape-proof" among the Germans. The camp's formidable structure and location on a steep hill enhanced its security, featuring multiple layers of fortifications including thick stone walls about 7 feet (2 m) thick, encircling barbed wire fences, watchtowers, and constant patrols by a substantial force of armed German guards that often nearly equaled the prisoner population in number. Typically accommodating 200 to 300 officers at a time, though reaching a peak of around 800, Oflag IV-C was overseen by hundreds of personnel to prevent breaches. The prisoners, primarily British and Commonwealth officers but also including Dutch, French, Polish, and later American captives, were held under a strict regime governed by the Geneva Conventions, which mandated basic provisions for food, medical care, and accommodation. Notable inmates included the British fighter ace Douglas Bader, whose prosthetic legs complicated security measures. Daily life in the camp was marked by confinement in cramped quarters within the castle's labyrinthine interiors, with limited opportunities for recreation that contributed to low morale and fueled determination to escape. Despite the austerity, prisoners had access to a library stocked with books that sometimes provided unexpected inspiration for evasion tactics, as well as workshops where they could engage in approved activities like woodworking or tailoring—opportunities that inadvertently facilitated covert construction of tools and disguises. By the war's end, there had been over 130 escape attempts from the castle, with around 30 successful escapes (breakouts from the castle), achieved mainly through tunneling under the foundations, forging disguises to impersonate guards or civilians, and crafting improvised devices to navigate the terrain.

Prisoner-of-War Escape Culture

During , Allied prisoners of war (POWs) were driven by a of to escapes, particularly among British officers who viewed it as an honorable to rejoin their units and continue fighting. This motivation extended beyond personal freedom to include boosting camp morale through acts of defiance, gathering intelligence on enemy operations during evasion, and enhancing survival chances by disrupting German resources. Even unsuccessful attempts served a strategic purpose by forcing the enemy to divert personnel to guard duties, thereby harassing the captors and tying down troops that could otherwise be deployed at the front. Common escape methods evolved from individual, opportunistic efforts to highly organized, collaborative operations as prisoners adapted to increasingly secure camps. Early attempts often involved tunneling under perimeter fences or walls using improvised tools like bed frames and table legs, while others relied on forging identity documents, travel permits, and civilian clothing fashioned from camp uniforms and Red Cross parcels. Disguises, such as impersonating guards or workers, and occasional bribery of sympathetic or corrupt personnel facilitated exits through gates or during work details. Over time, these methods became more systematic, with prisoners forming escape committees to coordinate diversions, construct hidden workshops for tools and maps, and share evasion routes through neutral countries. Officers played a pivotal leadership role in POW escapes, directing planning, allocating scarce resources like materials from parcels, and enforcing ethical guidelines that prohibited violence against guards to maintain Geneva Convention protections. As senior ranks, they organized labor divisions for tunneling or forgery, ensured equitable participation, and emphasized non-violent tactics to avoid reprisals that could endanger the entire camp population. This structure not only maximized efficiency but also upheld military discipline, with officers often volunteering for the riskiest roles to inspire subordinates. Escape efforts had profound psychological impacts, serving as a form of active resistance against the demoralizing effects of and fostering a among prisoners. Successful or even attempted breaks instilled , reduced feelings of helplessness, and built camaraderie through shared skills in crafts like lock-picking or compass-making, turning isolation into a collective endeavor. These activities promoted resilience, with prisoners reporting heightened purpose and interpersonal bonds that mitigated the mental strain of confinement. In the broader context of World War II, the 1929 Geneva Convention explicitly permitted escape attempts, stipulating that recaptured POWs faced only disciplinary punishments rather than criminal charges, which encouraged such actions without fear of severe retaliation. Nazi responses included heightened security measures and the transfer of persistent escapers—known as "incorrigibles"—to specialized high-security facilities like at , intended to contain the most determined individuals. This policy reflected the Germans' frustration with the ongoing disruptions caused by Allied escape networks.

Development and Construction

Planning and Design

The planning of the Colditz Cock glider was led by Flight Lieutenant Bill Goldfinch, a pre-war aeronautical engineer, and Flight Lieutenant Jack Best, an experienced RAF pilot, who began conceptualizing the project in late 1943 following unsuccessful attempts at man-powered flight escapes from the castle. Goldfinch, inspired by observing snowflakes rising on updrafts outside his window, proposed using the castle's chapel roof as a launch point, leveraging natural winds for a silent, unpowered getaway that would evade detection by guards. The chapel roof launch site was identified by Lieutenant Tony Rolt. The duo's idea gained approval from the prison's Escape Committee, headed by Captain Dick Howe, marking a shift from ground-based evasions to aerial ingenuity amid the high-security confines of Oflag IV-C. A pivotal discovery in the prison library—a copy of Aircraft Design by C.H. Latimer-Needham—provided the technical foundation, enabling Goldfinch and Best to calculate structural and aerodynamic parameters for a two-seater glider capable of carrying a pilot and passenger in tandem seating. The design emphasized lightweight, silent construction to facilitate unpowered flight, with an estimated glide distance of approximately 300-400 meters required to clear the outer walls, traverse the town of Colditz, and reach the surrounding woods beyond the River Mulde. Available materials were prioritized from the outset, including bed frames and floorboards for the frame, and powdered milk tins processed into casein glue for assembly, ensuring feasibility within the resource-scarce environment. Aerodynamically, the glider adopted a simple monoplane configuration with high aspect ratio wings to maximize lift-to-drag efficiency, drawing on principles from the library textbook to achieve stable, controlled descent from the chapel roof's 30-meter height. Hand-drawn sketches and scale models were developed secretly during the planning phase, which intensified in early 1944, allowing the team to test basic stability and refine the tandem layout for balanced weight distribution. These preparations laid the groundwork for a project that embodied the prisoners' resourceful adaptation of engineering knowledge to the exigencies of captivity.

Building Process and Challenges

The construction of the Colditz Cock occurred in a concealed attic space above the chapel at Colditz Castle, accessed via a hidden hatch to maintain secrecy from German guards. Work commenced in spring 1944 and continued over approximately a year, nearly completing by early 1945, divided into discrete phases to allow for progressive assembly and storage of components without arousing suspicion. Initial parts were fabricated in various prisoner rooms before being transported to the attic for final integration, with the entire project involving compartmentalized tasks to limit knowledge among participants. The core construction team consisted of Goldfinch, Best, and 12 assistants known as the "Apostles," with additional prisoners providing temporary help. Materials were ingeniously scavenged from camp resources, including over 200 metal tubes from dismantled bedsteads to form the primary frame, floorboards and tabletops sawn into spars and ribs for the wings, and cotton fabric from sleeping bags or bed sheets, obtained from Red Cross aid parcels, to cover the structure. Piano wire, pilfered from the camp's musical instruments, served as rigging for the control surfaces, while electrical wiring from unused fixtures provided cabling for the ailerons and elevator. Tools were largely improvised, such as files smuggled in aid packages and handmade saws crafted from gramophone springs and hardened steel scraps, supplemented by bribed supplies like glue acquired through dealings with sympathetic guards. Assembly proceeded in modular sections to enable easy disassembly and concealment: the fuselage frame was built first in subsections, followed by the wings, which demanded coordinated efforts from the core . These "apostles" steamed and bent wooden into shape using makeshift forms, glued joints with casein , and sewed the cotton taut over the framework. The launch mechanism was a pulley using a concrete-filled metal as a counterweight, intended to be dropped from the chapel roof to propel the glider. Significant challenges arose from the need for absolute noise discipline during construction, as hammering and sawing were restricted to muffled night shifts to evade patrols, often limited to 30-minute bursts. The cramped attic confines behind a false wall of painted shutters and mud complicated maneuvering large components, while chronic material shortages prompted substitutions like boiling porridge (millet paste) to dope and waterproof the fabric covering in lieu of proper aircraft varnish. Frequent guard searches heightened security risks, necessitating an electric alarm system wired to lookouts and rapid disassembly protocols; team dynamics emphasized strict compartmentalization, with only lead engineers privy to the full design under the code name "Colditz Cock," reducing betrayal potential.

Fate and Immediate Aftermath

Concealment and Liberation

By early 1945, the Colditz Cock glider was nearly complete, with its wings designed to be detachable to facilitate storage in the confined attic space. The project was nearing completion by early 1945, though progress varied due to material shortages and security concerns during construction. To conceal the glider from German guards, the prisoners disassembled it and stowed the components in the rafters of the attic above the chapel, covering them with debris and rubbish to mimic an unused storage area. They also constructed a false wall using shutters and mud mixed from attic dust, sealing off the workshop and hiding the assembly area behind what appeared to be solid masonry. The planned launch site was the chapel roof, which offered a concealed runway shielded from guard view, equipped with ropes, pulleys, and a concrete-filled bathtub as a counterweight for takeoff. As Allied forces advanced rapidly in spring 1945, the escape project was abandoned, with no launch attempt made since liberation appeared imminent and the risk of outweighed potential benefits. On April 16, 1945, the castle commandant surrendered to elements of the U.S. 1st Army's 273rd , 69th Division, marking the end of operations at the camp. American troops entered the facility that day, and British prisoners promptly revealed the hidden glider to the liberators, who assembled it in a lower attic for inspection. The discovery elicited immediate astonishment from Allied officers, who marveled at the glider's ingenious craftsmanship and the audacity of its construction under such constraints. U.S. war correspondent Lee Carson captured the only known photograph of the original Colditz Cock on April 15, 1945, shortly before the formal surrender, documenting the glider in its attic setting for posterity.

Initial Post-War Examination

Upon the liberation of Oflag IV-C by U.S. troops on April 16, 1945, the Colditz Cock was discovered intact but unassembled in its concealed workshop behind a false wall in the chapel attic, where British prisoners had constructed it from scavenged materials over several months. The glider's frame consisted of wooden components ready for final assembly, but it lacked the doped fabric covering and basic flight instruments, as construction had halted amid fears of German reprisals following the Great Escape. The only known photograph of the original glider was taken on April 15, 1945, by U.S. war correspondent Lee Carson, capturing its high-wing monoplane design with a planned 32-foot wingspan. Early post-war assessments by the freed prisoners, including designer Bill Goldfinch and co-designer Jack Best, emphasized the glider's sound structural integrity and estimated glide capability of approximately 450 meters (492 yards) based on aerodynamic principles from a prison library textbook. Interviews with Goldfinch and Best in the immediate aftermath confirmed the design's viability for carrying two men across the Mulde River, praising the use of improvised tools like a makeshift fret-saw from stolen razor blades and a German guard's bribe for additional materials. These evaluations highlighted the prisoners' engineering ingenuity despite resource constraints, though no formal flight testing occurred due to the war's end. Documentation efforts included archiving Goldfinch's original hand-drawn plans and sketches by MI9, the British Military Intelligence section responsible for escapes, with parts of the glider briefly preserved for study before local civilians dismantled it postwar, reportedly for firewood. Only the rudder survives today, now preserved in a local museum in Colditz. Challenges in examination arose from the glider's exposure in the damp attic, leading to potential material degradation of the untreated wooden frame and undoped fabric elements, further complicated by the rushed liberation preventing systematic disassembly or transport. The Colditz Cock featured prominently in 1946 MI9 debriefing reports on POW escape attempts, celebrated as a pinnacle of Allied prisoner ingenuity and contributing to postwar narratives of resilience in aviation history.

Replicas and Modern Interpretations

1999 Channel 4 Replica

In 1999, Channel 4 commissioned a full-scale replica of the Colditz Cock for its three-part documentary series Escape from Colditz, to demonstrate the feasibility of the original design conceived by British prisoners of war. The replica was constructed over six weeks at Lasham Airfield in Hampshire, UK, by Southdown Aero Services, led by team members including Mike Fripp, Mark Fripp, and Ken Fripp, with John Lee responsible for building the wings. Working from the original plans provided by the glider's designers, Bill Goldfinch and Jack Best—who served as consultants and advisors—the builders replicated the 1944 aerodynamic specifications, including the Clark Y airfoil wing profiles and a two-seater configuration with a 32-foot (9.75 m) wingspan. The project cost an additional £3,000 to insure, using materials such as Baltic pine for the fuselage and patterned cotton fabric for covering, selected for authenticity while incorporating minor modern enhancements for structural integrity. The replica underwent initial ground testing and inspections in late 1999 and early 2000, with Goldfinch and Best personally approving the design before flights. Its first successful flights occurred in February 2000 at RAF Odiham, hosted by the Kestrel Gliding Club, where it was launched via winch to a height of around 650–700 feet (200–210 m) in order to simulate the conditions of a rooftop launch from Colditz Castle. Piloted initially by gliding expert Derek Piggott for test flights and then by John Lee for the documentary filming, the glider completed multiple 3-minute flights, cruising at 30–35 knots (56–65 km/h) and stalling at 20–22 knots (37–41 km/h), while demonstrating the ability to soar in light thermals before floating to a gentle landing. Compared to the original's estimated empty weight of 110 kg (240 lb), the replica weighed about 150 kg (330 lb), reflecting added safety features. The 1999 replica is currently housed on loan at the Gliding Heritage Centre at Lasham Airfield. Several modifications were made to the original design for operational safety and documentation purposes, including the addition of an airspeed indicator, altimeter, and pitot tube for instrumentation; a landing skid fitted with tennis balls for shock absorption; and components such as K-13 rudder pedals, a Slingsby Cadet tailplane, and Nord 2000 control cables. A center-section fairing was also incorporated to improve aerodynamics, which was absent in the 1944 plans. These changes did not compromise the core design's performance, as evidenced by the glider's stable handling and lack of structural issues during trials. The replica's flights were featured prominently in the Escape from Colditz series, broadcast by Channel 4 in 2000, validating the ingenuity of the POW engineers and confirming that the original glider could have achieved a viable escape glide of over 300 meters from the castle roof. The event drew emotional responses from surviving team members, including Goldfinch and Best, along with about a dozen other Colditz veterans who attended the Odiham demonstrations, marking a poignant tribute to their unrealized 1944 effort.

Subsequent Replicas and Models

Following the inspirational 1999 Channel 4 recreation, several subsequent replicas and models of the Colditz Cock have been constructed to highlight the ingenuity of prisoner-of-war engineering. A full-scale static replica is on display at the Norfolk and Suffolk Aviation Museum in Flixton, UK, where it serves as a key exhibit in the museum's collection of historic aircraft. Another full-scale replica has been housed in the attic of Colditz Castle since the early 2000s, recreating the original hidden workshop environment and covered in period-appropriate checked bedding for authenticity. In 2012, a team of UK-based aeronautical engineers and carpenters, led by Dr. Hugh Hunt, constructed a full-scale radio-controlled replica using original plans and improvised tools to test the design's viability. This non-manned version was launched from the castle roof for a Channel 4 documentary, demonstrating the glider's potential flight path before a controlled landing, though it experienced minor structural issues upon touchdown. Scale models have also proliferated among hobbyists, including printable paper and card kits such as the one offered by Fiddlers Green, which replicates the glider at a 1:24 scale for assembly from downloadable templates. Radio-controlled versions, often built at larger scales like 1:4, allow enthusiasts to simulate flights using balsa wood and modern electronics, with examples documented in aviation hobby videos from the late 2010s. These models, along with digital 3D simulations integrated into augmented reality tours at Colditz Castle, emphasize the glider's role in WWII aviation history and POW resilience without requiring physical flight risks. The primary purposes of these replicas and models remain educational, showcasing prisoner ingenuity in exhibits on wartime escapes and early glider design principles, while serving as demonstrations in aviation museums. No further manned flights have occurred since 2000, prioritizing safety amid the glider's fragile construction. As of 2025, most full-scale replicas remain in static museum displays, with periodic restorations to preserve wood and fabric elements, and digital scans enabling virtual reality explorations of the original attic workshop via interactive apps at the castle site.

Technical Specifications

The Colditz Cock was designed as a lightweight, high-wing monoplane glider capable of carrying two occupants. Key specifications, based on the original plans and construction details, include:
SpecificationValueNotes
Crew2 (pilot and passenger)Intended to carry two prisoners.
Length20 ft (6.1 m)Fuselage length.
Wingspan32 ft (9.75 m)Primary lift surface.
Empty weight240 lb (109 kg)Approximate, constructed from scavenged wood and fabric.
Gross weight560 lb (254 kg)Including two occupants.
Wing areaApproximately 160 sq ft (14.9 m²)Estimated based on design for sufficient lift over 300 ft drop.
AirfoilClark YConventional airfoil for gliders of the era.
ConstructionWooden frame with fabric coveringFrame from bedboards and floorboards; covering from mattress material stiffened with starch.
These specifications enabled a planned glide across the Mulde River valley, exploiting thermal updrafts, though the glider was never flown.

References

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