Myths & Legends of the Second World War

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Myths & Legends of the Second World War Page 32

by James Hayward


  ‘I am able …’ Brissaud (1973), p. 15

  ‘He [Colvin] plunged …’ Churchill (1948), p. 64

  ‘The matter was left …’ Brissaud (1973), p. 15

  ‘… free to fight’ Mure (1980), pp. 159–60

  ‘… served the Allies’ West (1981), pp. 238–9

  ‘In recent years …’ see Bennett (1994), p. 252; Mure (1980), pp. 159–68, pp. 186–93

  ‘I had not been …’ Mure (1980), p. 165

  ‘… long after others’ West (1983), p. 342; Mure (1980), p. 169

  ‘It never appeared …’ Mure (1980), p. 165

  ‘Another possible example …’ Jowitt (1954), pp. 18–31; West (1981), pp. 244–50

  ‘… champagne cider’ After the Battle, 11, p. 15

  ‘… Oreste Pinto’ After the Battle, 11, pp. 13–14

  ‘Pinto received a decoded …’ Pinto (1962), pp. 57–64

  ‘I clenched my …’ Pinto (1962), p. 64

  ‘In reality, Kieboom …’ Jowitt (1954), p. 23

  ‘… by means of’ Masterman (1972), p. 3

  ‘Innumerable precautions …’ Masterman (1972), p. 3

  ‘… Counterfeit Spies’ West (1998), pp. 236–54

  ‘… West himself’ Schellenberg (2000), pp. xxxiii–xxxiv

  ‘… George Armstrong’ West (1981), pp. 254–5

  ‘It is more …’ Masterman (1972), pp. 53–4

  ‘Although some accounts …’ After the Battle, 64, pp. 32–3

  ‘… MI5 only learned’ West (1981), pp. 273–4

  ‘… anecdotal evidence’ After the Battle, 64, p. 34

  CHAPTER ELEVEN

  ‘An instance …’ Eastern Daily Press, 19 September 1939

  ‘… an elite force’ The Times, 6 September 1939

  ‘… dismounted infantry’ Kaufmann (1993), p. 90

  ‘… the 18th Lancer’ Kaufmann (1993), p. 83

  ‘… Italian journalists’ Zaloga (1982), p. 8

  ‘… 674 German tanks’ Kaufmann (1993), p. 91

  ‘… the Polish air force’ Kaufmann (1993), p. 79

  ‘… are legion’ for example Longmate (1981), pp. 60–1

  ‘… near Newport’ Calder & Sheridan (1984), p. 82

  ‘We never found out …’ Armstrong (1941), p. 213

  ‘… Hawkinge airfield’ Collier (1979), p. 234

  ‘… in East Anglia’ Longmate (1971), p. 111

  ‘… never been confirmed’ Brown (1981), p. 120

  ‘Station Officer …’ Collier (1979), p. 234

  ‘In The Big Lie …’ White (1955), p. 22

  ‘It as about midnight …’ Collyer (1995), pp. 142–3

  ‘George Wright told …’ Johnson (1992), pp. 126–7

  ‘… is a nonsense’ Hayward (2001), p. 88

  ‘… elderly Home Guards’ Hayward (2001), pp. 105–6

  ‘Being a 1914–18 …’ Hayward (2001), p. 106

  ‘… unknown assassins’ Hayward (2002), pp. 4–5

  ‘… deadly motorcyclist’ Hayward (2002), p. 19

  ‘Between 1940 and 1944 …’ unpublished letter to Sunday Telegraph, 3 May 1992.

  ‘… Great Circle’ Gardner (1954), p. 122

  ‘… a serious drain’ Howard (1989), pp. 138–9

  ‘I am not saying …’ Gardner (1954), p. 123

  ‘… Hampshire coven’ King (1970), pp. 178–9

  ‘Fire and wind …’ McCormick (1968), p. 151

  ‘A ‘Cape-coloured …’ Bonaparte (1947), p. 98

  ‘… by Paul Fussell’ Fussell (1989), p. 119

  ‘… bite off the nipples’ Bonaparte (1947), p. 98

  ‘… neatly packed suitcases’ Regan (2000), p. 136

  ‘… a lot of opera’ Fussell (1989), p. 124

  ‘… pomaded and scented’ Fussell (1989), p. 123

  ‘… The Tuscana’ Longmate (1971), p. 422

  ‘… cardboard boots’ Sullivan (1997), p. 181; Regan (2000), p. 134

  ‘… by Brian Sullivan’ Sullivan (1997), pp. 177–205

  ‘The problem was …’ Regan (2000), pp. 134–5

  ‘Throughout the war …’ Sullivan (1997), p. 205

  ‘… of the 4,963’ Ramsey (1974), p. 23

  ‘… lost more prisoners’ Thompson (1956), p. 197

  ‘… Louis Mountbatten’ PRO, CAB 98/22/3830

  ‘… the postal censor’ Robertson (1963), p. 387

  ‘Lord Beaverbrook …’ Villa (1994), p. 260

  ‘… prove to Stalin’ Villa (1994), p. 2

  ‘One fact emerged …’ Maguire (1963), p. 157

  ‘It is said …’ Hodgson (1976), p. 263

  ‘… Stanley Lovell’ West (1984), pp. 120–2

  ‘The message was …’ Lovell (1963), pp. 153–4

  ‘… John Masterman’ Masterman (1972), p. 108

  ‘A great question …’ Peis (1977), pp. 122–3

  ‘… a very reliable’ Peis (1977), pp. 123–4

  ‘… Unreliable Witness’ West (1984), pp. 124–8

  ‘… Counterfeit Spies’ West (1988), p. 245

  ‘It was quite …’ Mosley (1982), p. 116; p. 104

  ‘… Hitler had already’ Brown (1976), p. 84

  ‘… 302 Division’ Maguire (1963), p. 157

  ‘The information …’ Robertson (1963), p. 206

  ‘… fully clothed’ West (1984), p. 119

  ‘… John Campbell’ West (1984), p. 132

  ‘… signal traffic’ West (1984), p. 132

  ‘… a testing and rehearsing’ Austin (1943), p. 51

  ‘… Sir Leslie Hollis’ Villa (1994), p. 3

  ‘… John Hughes-Hallett’ Villa (1994), p. 4

  ‘… Eisenhower credited’ Villa (1994), p. 17

  ‘… mine of experience’ Churchill (1951), p. 459

  ‘… Reynolds’s book …’ Villa (1994), p. 24

  ‘… King of Holland’ Regan (2000), p. 112

  ‘… perhaps the most’ Pinto (1952), p. 111

  ‘… July 1946’ West (1984), p. 149

  ‘… warned Langley privately’ Langley (1974), p. 227

  ‘One man …’ Pinto (1952), p. 112

  ‘… all the secret facts’ Pinto (1952), p. 139

  ‘It is true …’ Pinto (1952), pp. 139–40

  ‘He knew that …’ Giskes (1953), p. 171

  ‘The traffic heard …’ Giskes (1953), p. 172

  ‘When I went …’ Pinto (1952), p. 142

  ‘… John Bulloch’ Bulloch (1966), p. 101

  ‘The Abwehr had …’ Laurens (1969), p. 119

  ‘Finally, the last …’ Laurens (1969), p. 119

  ‘They had only …’ Laurens (1969), p. 134

  ‘… countless amours’ Pinto (1952), p. 122

  ‘… gross appetites’ Pinto (1952), p. 149

  ‘… superb muscular’ Pinto (1952), p. 145

  ‘… famed for his’ Pinto (1952), p. 144

  ‘A curious moral …’ Laurens (1969), p. 169

  ‘… Kurt Student’ Ryan (1974), p. 117

  ‘… already in position’ Ryan (1974), p. 117

  ‘He asked to be …’ Langley (1974), pp. 226–7

  ‘Exhaustive enquiries …’ Langley (1974), p. 228–9

  ‘Months later …’ Langley (1974), p. 229

  CHAPTER TWELVE

  ‘The events leading …’ Way (1996), pp. 137–45

  ‘… save for one report’ Butcher (1986), p. 261

  ‘… on January 20th 1945’ Way (1996), pp. 143

  ‘… Paris brothel’ Butcher (1986), p. 257; Way (1996), p. 143

  ‘… black marketeer’ Fussell (1989), p. 41

  ‘… psychological wreck’ Butcher (1986), p. 257

  ‘… had been murdered’ Glenn Miller’s Last Flight, Channel 4 (UK) television programme, 2001

  ‘… disfigured in a fire’ TV (2001)

  ‘… by the SS’ TV (2001)

  ‘… Down Beat’ Down Beat, 27 July 1951

  ‘The follow
ing facts …’ quoted in Butcher (1986), p. 267

  ‘… a ferry pilot’ Way (1996), p. 140; Butcher (1986), p. 260

  ‘… lacked sufficient range’ Butcher (1986), p. 258

  ‘… Chiltern Hills’ Butcher (1986), p. 262

  ‘… wreckage recovered’ Butcher (1986), p. 262

  ‘… Fred Shaw’ Sunday Mirror, 16 November 1984

  ‘… incident was discussed’ Glenn Miller’s Last Flight, Channel 4 (UK) television programme, 2001

  ‘… only eight degrees’ Glenn Miller’s Last Flight (2001)

  ‘… auctioned by Sotheby’s’ Brighton & Hove Argus, 14 April 1999

  ‘The first prisoner …’ Johnson (1992), pp. 112–4

  ‘… over the English Channel’ eg Whalen (1965), pp. 370–1

  ‘… the Katyn Forest’ West (1981), p. 306

  ‘… fled to Manchuria’ Piekalkiewicz (1974), p. 320

  ‘On April 26th …’ Irving (1967), p. 36

  ‘… British Secret Service’ Irving (1967), p. 83

  ‘… last victim of Katyn’ Irving (1967), p. 175

  ‘… future Honours List’ Irving (1967), p. 91

  ‘… Erwin Lahousen’ Wighton & Peis (1958), p. 35; Hinchley (1963), pp. 203–11

  ‘… diaries make no mention’ Irving (1967), p. 178ff

  ‘In March 1942 …’ Irving (1967), pp. 149–52

  ‘… De Gaulle’ Irving (1967), pp. 163–5

  ‘… Stalin was apparently’ Djilas (1962), pp. 70–1

  ‘… Pinder and Lock’ West (1981), p. 305

  ‘… Irving ‘failed to obtain’ Irving (1969), p. 194

  ‘… English colonel’ West (1981), p. 307

  ‘… Swiss bank vault’ Thompson (1969), p. 5; Irving (1967), p. 177

  ‘… a large amount of money’ Thompson (1969), p. 13

  ‘… in a bar brawl’ Thompson (1969), p. 8

  ‘… sued for libel’ McCormick (1993), p. 150

  ‘… W.S. Herring’ Irving (1967), pp. 107–8

  ‘… later Prchal denied’ Thompson (1969), p. 251–2

  ‘… furs and oranges’ Thompson (1969), p. 249

  ‘… Sikorski himself selected’ Irving (1967), p. 55

  ‘There was one …’ Thompson (1969), Appendix C, p. 4

  ‘… ordered by Churchill’ Piekalkiewicz (1974), p. 336

  ‘… Lionel ‘Buster’ Crabb’ Piekalkiewicz (1974), p. 332

  ‘… Christine Granville’ McCormick (1993), p. 149

  ‘… Teresa Lubienska’ McCormick (1993), p. 149; Hinchley (1963), pp. 59–64

  ‘… tram or lorry’ Thompson (1969), p. 4; Irving (1967), p. 157

  ‘… succumbed to pneumonia’ Thompson (1969), p. 329

  ‘… House of Commons’ Hansard (Commons), oral answers 10 June 1943 (‘Lost Air Liner’)

  ‘… his own double’ Thompson (1969), p. 82

  ‘The regular commercial …’ Churchill (1951), p. 742

  ‘The ‘thickset man‘… ’ Howard (1981), pp. 234–5

  ‘… a British agent’ Howard (1981), p.2 29

  ‘… inestimable value’ Jackson (2000), p. 93

  ‘Wilfrid Israel’ Howard (1981), p. 233

  ‘… important documents’ Howard (1981), p. 226

  ‘… reluctant to discuss’ Howard (1981), p. 219

  ‘… remained unequalled’ Kinsey (1992), p. 98

  ‘The Air Officer …’ Kinsey (1992), p. 99

  ‘… daily newspapers’ eg Daily Telegraph, 31 May 1940

  ‘… several diarists’ Panter-Downes (1971), p. 65

  ‘Thirty-five Junkers …’ Kinsey (1992), p. 99

  ‘… grounded in January’ Brew (1993), pp. 247–8

  ‘… very next day’ Brew (1993), p. 249

  ‘… over four days’ Brew (1993), p. 253

  ‘… 141, lost six’ Brew (1993), p. 250

  ‘… 15 Bf 109’ Brew (1993), pp. 249–50

  ‘… just 14 machines’ Brew (1993), p. 250

  ‘… two of these Bf 109s’ Brew (1993), p. 249

  ‘… 1,062 examples’ Brew (1993), p. 235

  ‘… John Cunningham’ Golley (1999), pp. 41–2

  ‘… detested the nickname’ Rawnsley and Wright (1957), p. 67

  ‘… Going to Brighton’ Wegmann and Widfelt (1997), foreword

  ‘… RAF or USAAF personnel’ Wegmann and Widfelt (1997), p. 287

  ‘The story concerned …’ Johnson (1992), p. 108

  ‘… 861st Engineer’ Burgess and Rance (1988), p. 49

  ‘A certain stone …’ Burgess and Rance (1988), p. 49

  ‘… local workers’ Johnson (1992), p. 108

  ‘… a Thunderbolt’ Burgess and Rance (1988), p. 51

  ‘… a heart attack’ Johnston (1992), p.109

  ‘… in East Dereham’ Dereham & Fakenham Times, 11 January 1941; News Chronicle, 6 January 1941

  ‘… phantom Los Angeles’ Good (1987), pp. 15–18

  ‘Residents from Santa …’ New York Times, 26 February 1942

  ‘During the blackout …’ New York Times, 26 February 1942

  ‘Most of the [30] arrests …’ New York Times, 26 February 1942

  ‘… on Oahu’ Fussell (1989), p. 40

  ‘… as 27 aircraft’ New York Times, 26 February 1942

  ‘They seemed to be …’ Collins (1968), quoted by Good (1987), p. 16

  ‘Taking into account …’ Collins (1968), quoted by Good (1987), p. 16

  ‘… between Santa Monica’ Good (1987), p. 15

  ‘As many as 15 …’ quoted by Good (1987), p. 17

  ‘… Long Beach Independent’ quoted by Good (1987), p. 16

  ‘Admiral Knox …’ Good (1987), p. 16

  ‘… ignition systems’ Good (1987), p. 19

  ‘… official reports’ Harbinson (1995), p. 46

  ‘A new German …’ New York Times, 14 December 1944

  ‘According to Reuters …’ New Orleans Item, 13 December 1944;

  South Wales Argus, 13 December 1944

  ‘Phoo fighters are …’ Daily Telegraph, 1 January 1945

  ‘It was in …’ Wilkins (1954), p. 21

  ‘… through a hatch’ Creighton (1962), p. 12

  ‘… Rudolph Schriever’ Harbinson (1995), p. 71; p. 259

  ‘During the war …’ Lusar (1959), p. 165

  ‘… General Massey’ Good (1987), pp. 18–19; pp. 25–6

  ‘… myth of Scrarecrows’ Hastings (1979), p. 167

  Bibliography

  Abshagen, Karl Heinz, Canaris, Hutchinson, 1956

  Addison, Paul and Calder, Angus, A Time to Kill, Random House, 1997

  Aitken, Leslie, Massacre on the Road to Dunkirk, William Kimber, 1977

  Allingham, Margery, The Oaken Heart, Hutchinson, 1941

  Anderson, Ken, Hitler and the Occult, Prometheus (New York), 1995

  Ansel, Walter, Hitler Confronts England, Duke University Press, 1960

  Armstrong, Anthony, Village at War, Collins, 1941

  Aston, George, Secret Service, Faber & Faber, 1930

  Atkin, Ronald, Pillar of Fire – Dunkirk 1940, Sidgwick and Jackson, 1990

  Bacque, James, Other Losses, Macdonald & Co, 1989

  ——, Crimes and Mercies, Little Brown, 1997

  Barber, Noel, The Week France Fell, Stein & Day, 1976

  Barlone, D., A French Officer’s Diary, Cambridge University Press, 1942

  Bennett, Ralph, Ultra and Mediterranean Strategy, Hamish Hamilton, 1989

  ——, Behind the Battle, Sinclair-Stevenson, 1994

  Bezymenski, Lev, The Death of Adolf Hitler, Michael Joseph, 1968

  Biddle, A.J. Drexel, Poland and the Coming of the Second World War, Ohio State University Press, 1976

  Blaxland, Gregory, Destination Dunkirk, William Kimber, 1973

  Bloom, Ursula, The Log of No Lady, Chapman and Hall, 1940

  Blundell, Nigel, A Pictorial History of Adolf Hitler, Sunburst Books, 1995

 
; Bonaparte, Marie, Myths of War, Imago, 1947

  Brew, Alec, and Boulton Paul, Aircraft Since 1915, Putnam, 1993

  Brissaud, André, Canaris, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1973

  Brittain, Vera, England’s Hour, Macmillan, 1941

  Brown, R. Douglas, East Anglia 1940, Terence Dalton, 1981

  Brown, Richard, Mr Brown’s Diary, Sutton, 1998

  Bulloch, John, MI5, Arthur Barker, 1963

  Burgess, Eleanor, Rance, Mary, Boreham, BHPG, 1988

  Butcher, Geoffrey, Next to a Letter From Home, Mainstream, 1986

  Butler, Ewan and Bradford, Selby, The Story of Dunkirk, Hutchinson, 1950

  Byford-Jones, Wilfred, Berlin Twilight, Hutchinson, 1947

  Calder, Angus, The People’s War, Jonathan Cape, 1969

  —— and Sheridan, Dorothy (eds.), Speak for Yourself, Jonathan Cape, 1984

  Calder, Angus, The Myth of the Blitz, Jonathan Cape, 1991

  Cave Brown, Anthony, Bodyguard of Lies, W.H. Allen, 1976

  ——, The Secret Servant, Michael Joseph, 1988

  Chatterton, E. Keble, The Epic of Dunkirk, Hurst & Blackett, 1940

  Churchill, Winston, The Second World War Vol 2 – Their Finest Hour, Cassell, 1949

  ——, The Second World War Vol 4 – The Hinge of Fate, Cassell, 1951

  Cole, J.A., Lord Haw Haw, Faber, 1964

  Collier, Richard, The Sands of Dunkirk, Collins, 1961

  ——, 1940 – the World in Flames, Hamish Hamilton, 1979

  Collyer, David, Deal and District at War, Sutton, 1995

  Colville, John, The Fringes of Power, Hodder & Stoughton, 1985

  Colvin, Ian, Chief of Intelligence, Victor Gollancz, 1951

  ——, The Unknown Courier, William Kimber, 1953

  ——, Hitler’s Secret Enemy, Pan, 1957

  Cookridge, E.H., Secrets of the British Secret Service, Sampson Low, Marston & Co, 1948

  ——, The Third Man, Arthur Barker, 1968

  Cooksey, Jon, Calais, Leo Cooper, 2000

  Cooper, Duff, Operation Heartbreak, Hart-Davis, 1950

  Cousins, Geoffrey, The Story of Scapa Flow, Frederick Muller, 1965

  Curry, John, The Security Service 1908–1945: The Official History, PRO, 1999

  David, Saul, Churchill’s Sacrifice of the Highland Division, Brassey’s, 1994

  De Wilde, John, Handbook of the War, Constable, 1940

  Deacon, Richard, The Silent War, David and Charles, 1978

  ——, British Secret Service (rev. edn.), Grafton, 1991

  Deighton, Len, Fighter, Jonathan Cape, 1977

  ——, Blitzkrieg, Jonathan Cape, 1979

  ——, Battle of Britain, Jonathan Cape, 1980

  Delmer, Sefton, Black Boomerang, Secker & Warburg, 1962

 

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