The team was headed by Bill Goldfinch and Jack Best. 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. The
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 . 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 , and it was 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. The completed glider weighed . 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. 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. ==Modern replica==