Capt. Robert Campbell, a British officer captured during World War I, was granted leave to visit his dying mother on one condition - that he return to captivity. He kept his word and returned, only to try escaping as soon as he returned.
The WWI POW Who Returned to Prison—Then Dug a Tunnel Out
In 1916, a British prisoner of war did something that sounds impossible: he voluntarily walked back into a German prison camp after being granted temporary freedom. And then, just to make the story even stranger, he immediately started planning his escape.
Captain Robert Campbell of the 1st Battalion East Surrey Regiment was captured on August 24, 1914, just weeks into World War I. After treatment at a German military hospital in Cologne, he was sent to the prisoner-of-war camp in Magdeburg, where he would spend the next two years behind barbed wire.
A Desperate Request to the Kaiser
Two years into his captivity, Campbell received devastating news from home: his mother, Louise, was dying of terminal cancer. In what seemed like a futile gesture, Campbell wrote directly to Kaiser Wilhelm II himself, asking for permission to visit her one last time.
Surprisingly, the Kaiser agreed. But there was one non-negotiable condition: Campbell had to give his word as a British Army officer that he would return to the camp after his visit. No guards would escort him. No paperwork would bind him. Just his word.
The Promise Kept
On December 7, 1916, Campbell arrived at his family home in Gravesend. He spent one precious week with his dying mother, knowing he would never see her again. (Louise Campbell died in February 1917, just months after his visit.)
Then, true to his word, he boarded a train back to Germany and walked through the gates of Magdeburg POW camp. Historians later confirmed that if Campbell had broken his promise, the other prisoners would have faced no retribution—which makes his voluntary return even more remarkable.
The Escape
Here's where the story takes a wild turn. As soon as Campbell returned to the camp, he started digging.
For nine months, Campbell and a group of fellow prisoners worked on an escape tunnel. They made it all the way to the Dutch border—tantalizingly close to freedom—before German authorities recaptured them and sent them back to Magdeburg.
When asked why he would return to a prison he'd voluntarily re-entered, Campbell's answer was perfectly logical to him: "I gave my word as an officer and a gentleman that I would return. But it is also my duty as a British officer to escape."
In Campbell's mind, there was no contradiction. Honor required him to keep his promise to the Kaiser. Duty required him to escape once he was back. Both were simply part of the code he lived by.
A Life After War
Campbell survived the war and lived until 1966, passing away at the age of 81. His story remains one of the most extraordinary examples of military honor from World War I—not because he kept his word (though that's remarkable), but because of what he did immediately after keeping it.
Most people would have seen returning to a POW camp as the end of the story. Campbell saw it as the beginning of the next chapter.