Thomas Ion Victor Ferguson known as Ion Ferguson Royal Army Medical Corps (1913–1990) was an Irish volunteer in the British army who escaped from Oflag IV-C, Colditz Castle, during the Second World War.
He was moved to Colditz Castle after protesting the German authorities' mistreatment of the POWs. According to Punch magazine magazine, "Dr. Ferguson is a typical Irish rebel who kicked against the authority of senior officers until becoming a POW, when he would not allow the Germans to ill-treat anyone without voluble protest. His intransigence landed him in Colditz ..." Punch, vol. 229, p. 309, 14 September 1955 edition (Number 6001)
At Colditz, Ferguson sought to attract the attention of the German authorities by writing a letter to an Irish friend, the son of Éamon de Valera, the Irish Taoiseach, calling for Ireland to join the Allies in the war. The German censors intercepted the letter and moved him to Stalag IV-D. There, he coached two RAF prisoners to convincingly simulate schizophrenia, resulting in their repatriation. He awaited his own repatriation to Britain in the same manner.
Ferguson died in 1990 at the age of 77. His funeral was held in Rochdale, Lancashire.
|
|