Great escapes exhibit explores how World War II captives coped with tedium and torment

A member of ºÃÉ«tv Archives staff looks at artefacts including the passport of then art student and German refugee Margarete Klopfleisch, amongst other documentation pertaining to her internement on the Isle of Man in 1940, on display as part of the Great Escapes: Remarkable Second World War Captives exhibition at the ºÃÉ«tv Archives, in Kew, Richmond, England, Tuesday, Jan. 30, 2024. A new exhibit that opened Friday Feb. 2, 2024 at The ºÃÉ«tv Archives in London uses the 80th anniversary of the so-called Great Escape by allied airmen from a German prisoner of war camp to explore escapes by captives of all kinds during World War II. (Jonathan Brady/PA via AP)

LONDON (AP) — Eighty years ago in one of the most ingenious and audacious acts of defiance of World War II, 76 prisoners of war tunneled out of a German POW camp into a snowy forest.

For most of the escapees, it ended tragically. Three made it to safety, but the others were recaptured and 50 of them were executed.

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