RISE MAGAZINE Volume 2 | Page 66

Going Down

The climb to the jailhouse roof went fairly easily for Morris and the Angling brothers. After which, they had to make a heart pounding crossing of over 100 feet of rooftop before they could begin their descent. The three men climbed down 50 feet of pipes on the building’s side to reach the ground.

They came down next to the showers and quietly snuck past the guards stationed there. The three remaining team members used their wits and preparations to evade all the other guards on duty as they made their way to the shore. They had to stop there in order to inflate the raft and life vests.

Raising the Alarm

Following that day, Frank Lee Morris and John and Clarence Anglin were never seen again. They headed out to sea in their improvised raft at roughly 11:30 PM and fell off the face of the earth. The prison authorities didn’t even notice they were missing before the following morning.

Early the next morning, blaring sirens rocked the prison of Alcatraz and woke up all the inmates. There was great confusion, and nobody could believe that anyone had actually tried to escape “The Rock”. They all knew such a thing could not be done, but they would soon discover that three inmates had achieved the impossible and gotten away.

Last Man Out

Allen West was down but not out, and he had not given up on his plans for escape. Even though he was left behind, he continued working on enlarging the hole in his cell enough to squeeze through and he finally succeeded. West was ecstatic, he left his cell and started to follow the rest of the team.

After leaving his cell, West climbed to the rooftop but by the time he made it to the top the others were nowhere to be seen. He had no raft or help and had to decide whether to take a chance and swim for it, and most likely lose his life or return to his cell.