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Flying Officer Kyte
10-14-2012, 12:36
It's a story that will forever change the way you think of the phrase, "Get Out of Jail Free."
During World war two , as the number of British airmen held hostage behind enemy lines escalated, the country's secret service enlisted an unlikely partner in the ongoing war effort: The board game Monopoly.
It was the perfect accomplice.
Included in the items the German army allowed humanitarian groups to distribute in care packages to imprisoned soldiers, the game was too innocent to raise suspicion. But it was the ideal size for a top-secret escape kit that could help spring British POWs from German war camps.
The British secret service conspired with the U.K. manufacturer to stuff a compass, small metal tools, such as files, and, most importantly, a map, into cut-out compartments in the Monopoly board itself.
"It was ingenious," said Philip Orbanes, author of several books on Monopoly (http://abcnews.go.com/video/playerIndex?id=8518588), including "The World's Most Famous Game and How it Got That Way." "The Monopoly box was big enough to not only hold the game but hide everything else they needed to get to POWs."
British historians say it could have helped thousands of captured soldiers escape.
file:///C:\Users\Admin\AppData\Local\Temp\msohtmlclip1\01\clip_image001.jpghttp://www.wingsofwar.org/forums/attachment.php?attachmentid=62877&d=1350243088
Courtesy Philip Orbanes
So how did a simple board game (http://abcnews.go.com/GMA/story?id=6845230&page=1) end up in a position to help out one of the most powerful military forces on the planet? Silk and serendipity.
Silk Maps Were Key Escape Kit Elements
Of all the tools in a military-grade escape kit, the most critical item was the map. But paper maps proved too fragile and cumbersome, said Debbie Hall, a cataloguer in the map room at the Bodleian Library at the University of Oxford in Oxford, England.
For hundreds of years, even before World War II, silk was the material of choice for military maps, Hall said, because it wouldn't tear or dissolve in water as easily as paper and was light enough to stuff into a boot or cigarette packet. Unlike maps printed on paper, silk maps also wouldn't rustle and attract the attention of enemy guards, she said.
"Initially, they had some problems printing on silk," Hall said. "It's quite technically challenging."
But then MI9, the British secret service unit responsible for escape and evasion, found the one British company that had mastered printing on silk: John Waddington Ltd., a printer and board game manufacturer that also happened to be the U.K. licensee for the Parker Bros. game Monopoly.

Rob.

Baldrick62
10-14-2012, 12:46
Every day's a school day!:thumbsup:

Obviously Cluedo would have been far too dangerous a game to give to POWs!

csadn
10-14-2012, 17:32
One wonders what sorts of items could be slipped into a board game using modern technology....

wargamer
10-14-2012, 19:03
Why worry about it. None of the recent wars have civilized adversaries. They are non signatories of the Geneva Conventions. The conditions of ww2 (europe anyways) are extremely unlikely to happen again. Being a prisoner of modern adversaries is not something to be envied.

Doug
10-14-2012, 19:27
Good point Al.

csadn
10-15-2012, 15:19
Why worry about it. None of the recent wars have civilized adversaries. They are non signatories of the Geneva Conventions. The conditions of ww2 (europe anyways) are extremely unlikely to happen again. Being a prisoner of modern adversaries is not something to be envied.

True -- this was more of a gedanken than anything else; think in terms of "getting past prison security".

wargamer
10-15-2012, 19:25
LOL again no biggie. American catch and release judiciary just provides a time out and free training in addition crime patterns and techniques.

Oberst Hajj
10-15-2012, 22:05
Very interesting Rob. I'm a fan of the game (have a small collection, oldest going back to the early 50s) and never knew this about it.