Escape and Evasion
Maps, also called silk maps or cloth maps, are maps made for
servicemen to be used in case of capture or being caught behind enemy
lines. Developed during World War II, these maps were used by many
American and British servicemen to escape from behind enemy lines.
These maps could be used without a rustle or crackling. They could
also be hidden inside cloth uniforms, such as in a seam or inside a
collar, that wouldn't betray their existence during a frisking or
inspection. The silk maps could also be used to patch clothes, filter
water, make a sling for an injured arm or to make a bandage. They
could also be used to blow the nose. "The Allies needed to be
able to print their clandestine maps on a material that would be
hardier than paper -- material that wouldn't tear or dissolve in
water and that would be light enough for the user to pack into a boot
or cigarette packet at a moment's notice. (Silk maps, which have long
been in use among militaries, have the added advantage that they
don't make noise as they're being held or stored -- an important
attribute, when you're a prisoner in search of escape.)”
The British were the
first to use cloth maps during World War II. They produced a rather
odd series of burlap maps for the Royal Air Force on canvas backing.
Teams of women used colored burlap thread, and created realistic
landscapes of the areas of interest. These maps helped familiarize
the pilots and navigators with terrain feature when on bombing runs
over the continent. A good team could complete a ten foot square of
canvas and burlap in about three days.
Most of the American
maps supplied by the Army Map Service from World War II were actually
printed on rayon acetate materials, and not silk. However, because of
the silky texture of the materials, they were referred to by the more
familiar textile name.
"When you look
at these maps the unusual materials are perhaps the first thing you
notice. During WWII hundreds of thousands of maps were produced by
the British on thin cloth and tissue paper. The idea was that a
serviceman captured or shot down behind enemy lines should have a map
to help him find his way to safety if he escaped or, better still,
evade capture in the first place. A map like this could be concealed
in a small place (a cigarette packet or the hollow heel of a flying
boot), did not rustle suspiciously if the captive was searched and,
in the case of maps on cloth or mulberry leaf paper, could survive
wear and tear and even immersion in water. The scheme was soon
extended to cover those who had already been captured, although a
certain amount of ingenuity was required to get the maps into the POW
camps."
Many of these maps
were also used in clandestine wartime activities. Several of these
maps, for example, were issued to Oliver Churchill, a member of the
Special Operations Executive or SOE, for his activities in Italy.
"After
Christopher Hutton got the cartographic source, he needed a medium on
to which he could printed the maps, such that they were quiet to
unfold, would not disintegrate when wet, and maintained their
integrity when folded at the crease line and could be concealed in
very small places. After many attempts to print on silk squares, he
was about to give up. Then he thought of adding Pectin, a form of
wax, to the ink such that it does not run or wash out when put in
water, or even sea water. Clayton Hutton printed escape maps on silk,
man-made fiber and tissue paper. The tissue paper was very special,
in that it was not made from wood pulp like conventional paper, but
from Mulberry leaves. This hybrid paper had the texture of onionskin
and extreme durability. You could ball of this tissue paper, put it
in water and soak it, and then flatten it out without creases. All
the integrity of a new map was there, no data faded or disintegrated
and you could fold it up in such a fashion that it would occupy a
very small space, such as inside a chess piece or inside a record."
There were many
difficulties in printing maps on cloth that are not present with
printing on paper. Also, the inks used had to be permanent to sun,
water, chemicals, etc., so they wouldn't fade and make the map
useless. The finished products were able to withstand immersion in
salt water for extended periods as well, and were mildew resistant.
Printing on paper
was well known, but printing on cloth had special problems. The ink
would run on the cloth, or the cloth would crease during the
preparation or printing process, or the ink would smear. However,
many board game companies were used to printing on linen and other
cloth materials, which would then be glued to cardboard portfolios
for their game sets. So the government turned to them for help.
The cloth maps were
sometimes hidden in special editions of the Monopoly board game sets
sent to the prisoners of war camps. The marked game sets also
included foreign currency (French and German, for example), compasses
and other items needed for escaping Allied prisoners of war. "To
develop that kit, MI9, the British secret service unit responsible
for escape and evasion, conspired with John Waddington Limited, the
U.K. manufacturer of Monopoly. "It was ingenious," Philip
Orbanes, author of several books on Monopoly, told Heussner. "The
Monopoly box was big enough to not only hold the game but hide
everything else they needed to get to POWs."
Hutton was also
responsible for the delivery of escape kits to POWs. The Geneva
Convention allowed prisoners to receive parcels from families and
relief organisations. These were dispatched through a number of
fictitious charitable organisations, created to send parcels of
games, warm clothing and other small comforts to the prisoners. One
of the major problems of captivity was boredom, and games and
entertainments were permitted, as the guards recognised that if the
prisoners were allowed some diversions, they would be less
troublesome. Games manufacturer Waddingtons helped by supplying
editions of its Monopoly board game, and other games. Although to
date, no examples of any such monopoly boards have surfaced, it is
therefore doubtful if the operation to use monopoly as part of
escaping tool for POW escapees ever took place. No samples were kept
for record purposes in either Waddington or the War office archives
and the pictures of such boards currently available are all modern
reproductions. Snakes and ladders, table tennis, chess sets and
playing cards were used to smuggle in escape kits with hidden maps
and other equipment.
Escape maps were
also printed on playing cards distributed to Prisoners of War. Only
two decks are known to survive from this period. "During World
War II, the United States Playing Card Company joined forces with
American and British intelligence agencies to create a very special
deck of cards. This deck was specifically created to help Allied
prisoners of war escape from German POW camps. This deck of cards
became known as the “map deck.” It was made by hiding maps of
top-secret escape routes between the two paper layers that make up
all modern playing cards. These decks, when soaked in water, could be
peeled apart to reveal hidden maps that allowed escaping prisoners to
find their way to safety. Due to the nature of the war and the
prosecution of war crimes thereafter, the map decks remained a
closely guarded secret for many years after the war ended. The
secrecy surrounding them was so high, that no one really knows how
many were produced or how many have survived."
Red Cross parcels
were not used because of concerns the Germans would stop these
reaching the prisoners if they discovered items hidden in them. The
escape kits are credited with helping 316 escape attempts from
Colditz Castle, which saw 32 men make it back home.
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