The night was black, cold, and silent—perfect for a desperate gamble. Three men, hardened by years behind bars, slipped out of the shadows of America’s most feared prison and into history. What followed would become the most notorious escape attempt the world has ever known. For decades, the fate of Frank Morris and the Anglin brothers was a riddle that haunted law enforcement, fascinated conspiracy theorists, and inspired countless Hollywood retellings.
Now, more than half a century later, evidence has finally surfaced that rewrites everything we thought we knew about that night. The legend of Alcatraz—the prison said to be unbreakable—may never be the same.
The Myth of the Rock That Couldn’t Be Broken
Alcatraz was built to crush hope. Sitting on a windswept island in the middle of San Francisco Bay, it was designed to cage the most dangerous and cunning criminals in America. Its walls once confined notorious figures like Al Capone and George “Machine Gun” Kelly. Guards and officials boasted it was escape-proof: surrounded by frigid water, punishing tides, and waves strong enough to drown even the most determined swimmer.
During its 29 years as a federal penitentiary, 36 men tried to escape. Nearly all failed. Some were shot dead in the attempt. Others drowned. But none captured the public imagination like the 1962 escape of Frank Morris and the Anglin brothers.
The Daring Plan That Shocked the FBI
Frank Morris, an exceptionally intelligent career criminal, joined forces with John and Clarence Anglin, seasoned bank robbers. With another inmate, Allen West, they devised an elaborate plan that would unfold over months.
Using spoons, stolen tools, and even a homemade drill crafted from a vacuum cleaner motor, they chipped away at the ventilation grates in their cells. At night, they covered their progress with cardboard and paint. To fool the guards during headcounts, they sculpted lifelike dummy heads from soap, toilet paper, and hair stolen from the prison barber shop.
Their most ingenious creation, however, was a raft and life vests stitched together from more than fifty raincoats, smuggled piece by piece into the prison workshop.