Paul Brickhill Biography
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- Born Dec. 20, 1916
Paul Chester Jerome Brickhill (20 December 1916Β β 23 April 1991) was an Australian fighter pilot, prisoner of war, and author who wrote The Great Escape, The Dam Busters, and Reach for the Sky.
Brickhill was born in Melbourne, Victoria to journalist George Russell Brickhill (1879β1965) and Izitella Victoria (nΓ©e Bradshaw) Brickhill (1885-1966). He was the third son of the couple's five children, the others being Russell (1911β2002), Ayde Geoffrey (1914β ), Lloyd (1918β2011), and Clive (1923β2009). When Brickhill was 11 the family moved to Sydney, where he was educated at North Sydney Boys High School. A classmate, and friend, was actor Peter Finch.
Brickhill left school in 1931 as his father had been made redundant as a result of the Depression. While his other brothers continued with their education it was necessary for Brickhill, who was regarded as the least academic of the children, to get a job to assist his older brother Russell in bringing money into the family. He was sacked from his first two jobs due to his stutter. He then got a job as office boy and then lift boy at the Adelaide Steamship Company. That job did not last long, as Peter Finch, who was by now working as a copy boy, was able to convince a news editor at The Sun to interview Brickhill in 1932. Brickhill was hired as a copy boy, and within a year was promoted to cadet journalist. Within a few years he had worked his way up to journalist, and by 1940 was a sub-editor.
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