The Heroines of SOE: F Section, Britain's Secret Women in France

The Heroines of SOE: F Section, Britain's Secret Women in France

by Beryl E Escott
The Heroines of SOE: F Section, Britain's Secret Women in France

The Heroines of SOE: F Section, Britain's Secret Women in France

by Beryl E Escott

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Overview

Britain's war in the shadows of male spies and subterfuge in the heart of occupied France is a story well known, but what of the women who also risked their lives for Britain and the liberation of France? In 1942 a desperate need for new recruits, saw SOE turn to a previously overlooked group – women.

These extraordinary women came from different backgrounds, but were joined in their idealistic love of France and a desire to play a part in its liberation. They formed SOE's F Section. From the famous White Mouse, Nancy Wake, to the courageous, Noor Inayat Khan, they all risked their lives for King, Country and the Resistance. Many of them died bravely and painfully, and often those who survived, like Eileen Nearne, never told their stories, yet their secret missions of intelligence-gathering and sabotage undoubtedly helped the Resistance to drive out their occupiers and free France.

Here, for the first time is the extraordinary account of all forty SOE F women agents. It is a story that deserves to be read by everyone.

'They were the war's bravest women, devoted to defeating the Nazis yet reluctant ever to reveal their heroic pasts. Now a new book tells their intrepid tales.' Daily Express

Squadron Leader BERYL E. ESCOTT served in the RAF and is one of the foremost experts on the women of SOE.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780752462455
Publisher: The History Press
Publication date: 12/26/2010
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 240
Sales rank: 455,727
File size: 1 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Squadron Leader BERYL E. ESCOTT served in the RAF and is one of the foremost experts on the women of SOE.

Read an Excerpt

The Heroines of SOE

F Section Britain's secret Women in France


By Beryl E. Escott

The History Press

Copyright © 2010 Squadron Leader Beryl E. Escott,
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-7524-6245-5



CHAPTER 1

BEGINNINGS


It is notable that the first two women helping SOE in 1941 were not British. They went openly into France as civilians, under their own names.

They went there early in the war, but worked mainly in the less risky unoccupied zone, at a time when the Germans were trying to employ a charm offensive to win over the uncertain, confused and despairing citizens.

The first, Gillian Gerson – an innocent, who enjoyed playing a part – was moved to do so mainly out of love for her husband and to help France, but she did not stay too long.

The second, Virginia Hall, might be described loosely as one of the intelligentsia. She was moved by indignation at the German invasion, which she followed shortly with clandestine opposition, and she stayed in France much longer.

Both were protected by their nationality.

Whereas the first had definite objectives which she completed fast before leaving, the other came with a number of objectives, which changed and expanded during a stay of over a year.

They were the groundbreakers, preparing the way for others, and both proved very successful.


GILLIAN GERSON

Gillian Gerson was the first woman sent to France on behalf of SOE. She travelled there in May 1941, her role being that of a sightseer.

She was a young actress from South America, born in Chile in 1913, to a wealthy Balmaceda family, and because she married only a short time before the war, she still held a valid Chilean passport in the name of Gigliana Balmaceda Provasoli Gerson, with a visa for Vichy, France.

Her husband, Victor Gerson, born in 1898, the son of a wealthy Lancashire textile manufacturing family, had settled in Paris after fighting in the First World War, and opened a shop there to sell fine rugs and carpets. In the early 1930s his first wife and son died, and later in that decade he married Gillian as his second wife.

Gillian, just over twenty, newly married and settled in Paris in the Rue de Lisbon, fell in love with the city and its people. This brief but exciting new life ended abruptly when the Germans attacked France. On the signing of the Armistice in June 1940, Victor, who had already transferred most of his stock to Britain, where he had a house in Grove End Gardens, London, fled there with his wife. In London, he shortly discovered that the infant SOE organisation was interested not only in him but also in his wife, and particularly in her valid travel documents. When approached, she proved as enthusiastic in helping SOE as he was.

The result was that on 23 May 1941, Gillian left Britain on her own and travelled to Vichy and the city of Lyon, in the unoccupied zone of France, SOE making all the arrangements for her. Her journey went smoothly: no one questioned her travel papers. On arrival, acting the part of a visitor, she found that when she was at times a little lost and asked so many innocent questions, everyone forgave her for her brilliant smile. With her sharp eyes and the retentive memory of an actress, she wandered unrebuked into forbidden areas. She learned about the passes and papers citizens had to keep on their persons at all times. She watched for the extent of railway and bus controls and collected timetables and information on all kinds of transport. She discovered the legal and illegal ways of crossing between the occupied and unoccupied zones, the checks on hotels and lodging houses, the times of curfew and penalties for breaking it. She copied ration cards and noted prices of food and shortages of all kinds. In the cafés she tested the reactions of the French to the German occupation and cultivated useful contacts for the future.

Finally, loaded with information, she returned through Spain and arrived safely back in Britain around 24–25 August 1941, where she remained. As their dates may have overlapped, it might have been possible for Virginia Hall, the second of SOE's initial agents, to meet her briefly on her way into France.

In September 1941, Victor Gerson, armed with Gillian's intelligence, and now a trained SOE agent, parachuted with another man into occupied France. A resourceful businessman, he was on a mission to examine the creation of resistance networks to form safe and secure escape routes out of France. This DF Section route was to become known as the 'Vic' escape line, which under his firm leadership and strict security, continued with only a few hitches until the liberation of France.

CHAPTER 2

VIRGINIA HALL

This brave and gifted American was both an authentic SOE and OSS hero of World War II.

Gerald K. Haines (American academic)

One of the greatest women agents of the war.

Denis Rake (agent)


Virginia was born in Baltimore, USA, on 5 April 1906, the youngest child in a well-to-do family of English-Dutch background. Her father, Edwin Lee Hall, owned a cinema there. She knew her French and English history before that of her own country. A talented linguist, she graduated from the best schools and colleges in North America and Europe. By then she was a tall, athletic woman with soft shining almost red hair and a strong mind, together with a burning desire to belong to the American Foreign Service.

However, from the time of her father's death in 1931, everything seemed to go wrong for her. Despite working in the American Embassy in Poland and then a Consulate in Turkey, her attempts to join her country's Foreign Service, except as a lowly clerk, were constantly frustrated by ill luck and inflexible rules. In addition, through a snipe shooting accident in Izmir, Turkey, in December 1933, the lower half of her left leg had to be amputated. She returned home for a year, where with an artificial limb and characteristic determination she learned to walk almost smoothly by lengthening her stride. At the end of 1934, undeterred, she was again in Europe as a clerk in a US Consulate in Italy, but in the following May, on hearing that she was due to start a further posting to Estonia, she resigned, and was caught in Paris when war broke out.

Shortly afterwards she joined the French Ambulance Service, but soon discovered that hopping in and out of ambulances did not suit 'Cuthbert', as she had named her new leg. Disgusted by the June 1940 Franco-German Armistice, she left her ambulance and made for Britain by way of Spain, ending up in the London US Embassy.

The start of the next year saw her proposing herself as suitable for employment in SOE – anything to return to her beloved France. In addition to fluency in European languages, she had another advantage to offer. Since America had not yet entered the war, her nationality would allow her reasonably free movement in France. These gifts, allied to an imposing figure, a quick and adaptable mind, a talent for making friends, fearsome drive and an unquenchable spirit, marked her out as ideal for a special agent. Maurice Buckmaster, shortly to be head of the F service, recognising this, took her under his wing. Thus in May 1941, at the same time as permission was granted for her to become a card-carrying Foreign Correspondent of the New York Post, she began a crash course at Bournemouth on SOE 'weapons, communications, resistance activities and security measures,' with a little extra coaching from Buckmaster himself.

Accordingly on 23 August 1941, in keeping with her apparent status as a journalist of a neutral country, she left Britain before being slipped quietly by air into Lisbon, where she joined a Lufthansa flight to Barcelona in her own name, completing her journey by train. Her first stop was Vichy, a town of which she had a poor opinion, though it purported to be the home of the French government of the area nominally unoccupied by the Germans. When she went to register at the Police Station on her arrival, she won the confidence of the gendarmes there. Nevertheless, the city of Lyon was to become the central base for her HECKLER network, and here she operated her own 'safe house'. Her cover name was Marie Monin, but she became Marie of Lyon to the resistance and later Philoménè, while the Free French knew her as Germaine.

However, her perceptive and informative accounts to the New York Post became fewer, while her work as SOE organiser and courier for the HECKLER network expanded and engulfed her. A bar in Lyon was known as her contact address and her activities were multifarious. Under an unflappable exterior, she was a whirlwind of activity, which ranged from advising, lodging and despatching newly arrived or lost agents, to passing others onto an escape line, once even arranging a sick organiser's escape from hospital. She recruited new resisters and holders of safe houses and stores, telling London of landing places, but not taking part in the reception parties for RAF drops of arms, sabotage materials and much needed money for forged papers and bribes. She also had to keep in touch with the Paris underground resisters. As Ben Cowburn, another successful agent whom she helped, observed, 'If you sit in her kitchen long enough, you will see most people pass through with one sort of trouble or other, which she promptly deals with.' She also became a regular visitor to the American Consulate and cultivated relationships with a motley variety of people from a gynaecologist, a factory owner, nuns and prostitutes, a brothel keeper, to an Abbé, as well as important individuals of all persuasions including Police chiefs, who turned a blind and sometimes benevolent eye on her many activities.

Although another task was the distribution of the rare and invaluable wireless sets to nominated agents, her handicap was having no wireless operator of her own to enable her to contact London with her requests and information, causing her to use others – and placing herself in real danger of compromising her security. She was indeed a grossly overworked spider in the midst of a gradually growing web, with, unfortunately, an undiscovered Abwehr spy in her network. Yet her work was key to getting numerous early F section networks started in France.

When Germany finally declared war on the United States in mid-December 1941, she had to be 'a little more careful'. She was already aware of the mounting problems of another agent, Pierre de Vomécourt and his AUTOGYRO network. His arrest in April 1942, through the capture of one of his couriers to her, was the death knell of his network and others around him. Untouched herself, but with her sharp nose for danger, she must have foreseen future disasters.

September 1942 seemed to presage the arrival of another agent to help or possibly replace her, as she had been requesting London. Alas, circumstances turned against her when the courier arrived, only to be lost to another network. However, the Allied landings in north-west Africa on 8 November 1942, precipitated the German occupation of her slightly freer Vichy Zone. Tipped off that same night that the Germans were making for Lyon, she hurriedly decamped, much to the frustration of the Gestapo, hot on the heels of 'that Canadian bitch' (their geography was a bit hazy), also known as the 'Limping Lady' to the resistance. With three other escapees, whom she picked up on her way, she successfully surmounted the Pyrénées on foot in the depths of winter, in about 48 hours. This was no small achievement for anyone, let alone someone with an artificial leg – she had been told to eliminate 'Cuthbert' if troublesome by London. Bad luck saw the party arrested on the border of neutral Spain, and imprisoned in the notorious camp Miranda de Ibro, from where she was extricated by the American Consul in Barcelona.

Again in London by January 1943, it was not until May before SOE decided to use her again and sent her to Madrid, Spain, seemingly as correspondent for the Chicago Times, but really to gather information useful for the DF service on the escape routes. Bored with such inactive, mundane work, she was back in Britain by November, and eager to return to France.

Now she had two aims. One was to become her own wireless operator, the other was to be transferred to the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) of the United States, now that America had joined the Allies. SOE had felt that she was too well known to be safely employed in France, but seemingly OSS had no such fears. She achieved both her aims. She was accepted by OSS and had her wireless training at the SOE school at Thame Park.

On 21 March 1944, she was landed from a British torpedo boat onto the coast of Brittany near Brest, under the codename Diane, and the cover name of Mademoiselle Marcelle Montegrie, a social worker. Her messages were still sent through SOE, as OSS and SOE worked closely together in London, but this time she was to establish an OSS network called SAINT. Alongside Virginia was another OSS officer, whose discretion and reliability Virginia came to distrust, so she tried to shake him off as soon as she could. She then made her way slowly to the rural department of Cher, Nièvre and Creuse in central France.

Here as her own wireless operator and organiser, living in relative squalor posing as a peasant milkmaid, and still helping others, she held a roving commission, sometimes visiting Paris, organising drop zones, storage sites, safe houses and keeping in regular wireless contact with London from constantly changing haylofts. The Gestapo knew of her and tried to capture her, but she always managed to elude them.

After D-Day she was directed to move to the Haute Loire in the Massif Central, for similar work. Nevertheless it proved very different and difficult. The mountainous terrain put maximum strain both on cycling and walking, and she was again continuously on the move. Worse still, she found her new Maquis hostile to her leadership, asking 'who the hell was she to give orders?' Often it fell to her to single-handedly organise drops and the distribution of money and weapons. Even so, in such unpromising conditions, trains were derailed, bridges destroyed, rails cut, convoys disrupted, Milice captured and several hundred Germans killed or captured.

In mid-August came the invasion of Southern France, and a three-man Jedburgh team arrived to help her. Their aim was to assist in creating three battalions out of the Maquis for the Forces Françaises d'Interieur (FFI). These were intended to hinder the Germans and help the advancing Allies. Virginia now reported on German troop movements, such as the relocation of the German General Staff from Lyon to Le Puy. But with the scent of victory in their nostrils, the Maquis became even more rebellious and disruptive, ignoring instructions from any but the French political parties they favoured – and there were many – their leaders even ignoring orders from SHAEF (Supreme Headquarters of Allied Expeditionary Force).

In September 1944, a small still loyal group was absorbed by the French First Army. At this point Virginia was able to hand everything over and leave for liberated Paris, undoubtedly relieved to wash her hands of the seething cauldron of political bickering.

This was not the end for her, however. She and another OSS agent, Paul Goillot, (whom she married in 1957) were to head a new team to foment resistance in Austria. The rapid collapse of Germany saw the mission aborted, and instead they returned to Paris in April 1945 to make reports on those who had helped them. They also collected abandoned equipment. Task finally completed, Virginia resigned from the OSS.

Thus ended the war career of a fearsomely capable and quite extraordinary woman.

CHAPTER 3

YVONNE RUDELLAT

She was amazing. So small and slight, controlling hefty middle-aged men… When she said 'Jump', they all jumped.

Frank Cocker (agent)


At the beginning, as in so many cases, Yvonne seemed a most unlikely choice of agent, but in reality she proved very much the opposite.

Yvonne Claire Cerneau was born on 11 January 1897 at Maisons Laffitte near Paris. Her father was a horse dealer for the French Army, and until his death the family was fairly well-off. She was in her teens when she left for England and tried a variety of jobs until 1920, when she married an Italian waiter, while working as a salesgirl at the Galeries Lafayette in Regent Street.

She was a vivacious, dainty charmer with dark hair and hazel eyes, whose air of fragility was deceptive, but being an incurable romantic, erratic and completely irresponsible, the marriage inevitably failed, though she did have a daughter, became a grandmother and was on good terms with her ex-husband.

In 1941, bombed out of her husband's lodging house, she became a receptionist at Ebury Court Hotel, where her gift of unobtrusiveness, together with her often repeated wish to do something to help France, was noted by one of the French agents using it.

In May 1942, having been selected for SOE, her first training officer derided her, but soon this 'little old lady' as he described her, with her chameleon personality, outshone the others. At forty-five, she was one of a strange mixture of women on the first women's course, which included Blanche Charlet (forty-four), Marie-Thérèse le Chêne (fifty-two) and Andrée Borrel (twenty-two).

She was flown to Gibraltar by daylight in a Whitley bomber, followed by a rough sea crossing in a specially adapted felucca called Seadog. One of her fellow passengers was Nicholas Bodington, Deputy Head of F section, who had come to investigate the CARTE network, about which SOE had its doubts. He, two other men and Yvonne, landed secretly in the moonlight of 30 July 1942, on the Riviera coast between Bijou-sur-mer and Pointe-Fourcade. Later that morning, Yvonne, on her own, took a train from Cannes to Lyon in the unoccupied zone, where she had to stop for a forged paper to be obtained from Virginia Hall, who was still resident there. Then she smuggled herself across the demarcation line into occupied France in the coal bunker of a steam engine, and thus, she arrived in Paris. There she had to report to London, and saw her mother in the distance without drawing attention to herself, before continuing by train to Tours.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from The Heroines of SOE by Beryl E. Escott. Copyright © 2010 Squadron Leader Beryl E. Escott,. Excerpted by permission of The History Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

Title Page,
Acknowledgements,
Introduction,
1 Beginnings/Gillian Gerson,
2 Virginia Hall,
3 Yvonne Rudellat,
4 Blanche Charlet,
5 Andrée Borrel,
6 Lise de Baissac,
7 Mary Herbert,
8 Odette Sansom,
9 Marie-Thérèse Le Chêne,
10 Sonia Olschanezky,
11 Jacqueline Nearne,
12 Francine Agazarian,
13 Julienne Aisner,
14 Vera Leigh,
15 Noor-un-Nisa Inayat Khan,
16 Cecily Lefort,
17 Diana Rowden,
18 Elaine Plewman,
19 Yvonne Cormeau,
20 Yolande Beekman,
21 Pearl Witherington,
22 Elizabeth Reynolds,
23 Anne-Marie Walters,
24 Madeleine Damerment,
25 Denise Bloch,
26 Eileen Nearne,
27 Yvonne Baseden,
28 Patricia O'Sullivan,
29 Yvonne Fontaine,
30 Lilian Rolfe,
31 Violette Szabo,
32 Muriel Byck,
33 Odette Wilen,
34 Nancy Wake,
35 Phyllis Latour,
36 Marguerite Knight,
37 Madeleine Lavigne,
38 Sonya Butt,
39 Ginette Jullian,
40 Christine Granville,
41 Imprisonment,
42 Epilogue,
Glossary,
Bibliography,
Copyright,

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