Women Wartime Spies

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Women Wartime Spies Page 19

by Ann Kramer


  The realization that women agents had been sent into France captured the public imagination, and a raft of films and books appeared during the post-war years, some highly sensational, some well-researched. The best-known films included Odette (1950), which told the story of Odette Sansom and Carve Her Name with Pride (1958), based on the life of Violette Szabo. There were the books by Jean Overton Fuller and one agent, Anne-Marie Walters wrote her account Moondrop to Gascony immediately after the war.

  Even before the war was over Maurice Buckmaster was drafting recommendations for the women agents to be given official recognition of their bravery and contribution to the work of resistance in Nazi-occupied France. Three of the women – Odette Sansom, Violette Szabo and Noor Inayat Khan – were awarded the George Cross, the last two posthumously. Others received MBEs and George Medals. Madeleine Damerment, Andrée Borrel and others, as well as some of the British women agents were awarded the Croix de Guerre, Légion d’honneur and the Médaille de la Résistance. In May 1948, under the banner headline ‘Brave Women Honoured’, The Times announced the unveiling of a tablet at St Paul’s Church, Knightsbridge, London commemorating fifty-two members of the FANY who had lost their lives during the Second World War, among them were women of the SOE. Yvonne Basedon, Vera Atkins, Odette Sansom and Violette Szabo’s then five-year-old daughter Tania were present at the ceremony.

  Wider recognition of women’s role in SOE was a long time coming. It was not until 1976 that a memorial to the women who died at Dachau was unveiled. A small plaque had been placed in the Natzweiler crematorium the previous year, and in 1993 Odette Sansom (later Hallowes) unveiled a plaque at Ravensbrück in memory of Violette Szabo, Lilian Rolfe, Denise Bloch and Cecily Lefort. There are memorials and statues in France, and the Imperial War Museum in London contains a permanent exhibition on The Secret War, which displays information and memorabilia about the female agents, including Noor Inayat Khan’s pistol. The public today perhaps only knows a few ‘big names’; in 2010 author Shrabani Basu, who believes that Noor Inayat Khan has been seriously overlooked, founded the Noor Inayat Khan Memorial Trust to raise money for a statue of Noor to stand in Gordon Square, London. It will be the first statue to an Asian woman in London.

  Active or passive

  Today we probably know as much of the truth as there is to be known about how the women of SOE met their ends, although research never stops and new information may yet come to light. Immediately after the war there was something of an outcry about the fact that women had been sent to France as undercover agents, but that denigrates the choices that the women made. Female spies are often presented as sexual vamps or passive dupes; in 1915 Hamil Grant stated that women were incapable of being good spies because they could not be impersonal and were too inclined to be distracted by romantic involvements, but none of these views apply to the women of SOE. To a great extent their activities are in a continuing tradition of other women, in other times, who have also resisted occupation by an enemy and have done so covertly; there is a thread that connects the women of the SOE and the resistants of La Dame Blanche, who were patriots and brave women in the same way as the SOE agents.

  It could perhaps be argued that the women were exploited; that those who sent them out knew they were unlikely to come back – it has been also been suggested that Buckmaster deliberately kept Noor Inayat Khan in Paris in an attempt to convince the listening Germans that the SOE did not know that their agents had been captured – a sort of radio double bluff. It may or may not be true – and both Buckmaster and Vera Atkins were disgusted by the suggestion – but that view belittles the commitment of these brave women.

  Whether or not they were exploited; the women described in within the chapters of this book were volunteers. They made a conscious decision to undertake these dangerous missions, and had few illusions about what the outcome might be. Reading their official citations is very moving; the focus in all of them is on their courage and patriotism, as it should be. It could be argued that to some extent this emphasis reflects the imagery surrounding Edith Cavell and might suggest that the women martyred themselves, but nothing could be further from the truth. The women of SOE did not see themselves as martyrs nor were they passive victims any more than the women of La Dame Blanche; a direct contradiction of Hamil Grant’s jaded view. They were committed, idealistic, thoughtful, patriotic and brave, and they single-mindedly risked their lives to fight against oppression and Nazism. Madeleine Brooke, who is named after an aunt she never met, considers Madeleine Damerment to have been a very special and ‘absolutely remarkable’ person. The same could be said of all the women of the Special Operations Executive.

  Appendix

  SOE women agents with F section, France

  SOE sent thirty-nine women from England to France. One agent, Sonya Olschanezky, was recruited in France and did not go to Britain for training.

  NOOR INAYAT KHAN (‘Madeleine’ )

  Wireless operator, Cinema sub-circuit

  Flown to France night 16 June 1943

  Captured on or around 12 October 1943

  Executed Dachau 13 Sept 1944

  Posthumous George Cross, Croix de Guerre

  YOLANDE BEEKMAN (‘Mariette’)

  Wireless operator, Musician circuit

  Flown to France 18/19 September 1943

  Captured 12/13 January 1944

  Executed Dachau 13 September 1944

  Posthumous Croix de Guerre

  MADELEINE DAMERMENT (‘Martine’)

  Courier, Bricklayer circuit

  Parachuted into France 28/29 February 1944

  Captured on landing 29 February 1944

  Executed Dachau 13 September 1944

  Posthumous Légion d’honneur, Croix de Guerre, Médaille de la Résistance

  ELIANE PLEWMAN (‘Gaby’)

  Courier, Monk circuit

  Parachuted into France 13 August 1943

  Captured Marseilles on or about 23 March 1944

  Executed Dachau 13 September 1944

  ANDRÉE BORREL (‘Denise’)

  Courier, Prosper circuit

  Parachuted into France night 25 September 1942

  Captured 22/23 June 1943

  Executed Natzweiler July 1944

  Posthumous Croix de Guerre

  VERA LEIGH (‘Simone’)

  Courier/liaison officer, Inventor network

  Flown to France 14 May 1943

  Captured 30 October 1943

  Executed Nazweiller July 1944

  SONYA OLSCHANEZKY (‘Tania’)

  Courier, Juggler network

  Recruited in France, 1942

  Captured 22 January 1944

  Executed Nazweiler July 1944

  DIANA ROWDEN (‘Paulette’)

  Courier, Acrobat network

  Flown to France 16/17 June 1943

  Captured 18 November 1943

  Executed Nazweiller July 1944

  Poshumous MBE, Croix de Guerre

  DENISE BLOCH (‘Ambroise’)

  Courier & wireless operator, Clergyman network

  Flown to France 2/3 March 1944

  Captured 18 June 1944

  Executed Ravensbrück January 1945

  Posthumous Croix de Guerre, Légion d’honneur, Médaille de la Résistance

  LILIAN ROLFE (‘Nadine’)

  Wireless operator, Historian network

  Flown to France 6 April 1944

  Captured 31 July 1944

  Executed Ravensbrück 27 January 1945

  Posthumous Croix de Guerre

  VIOLETTE SZABO (‘Louise’, ‘Corinne’)

  Courier, Salesman network

  Parachuted into France 5 April 1944, 8 June 1943

  Captured 10 June 1943

  Executed Ravensbrück 27 January 1943

  Posthumous George Cross, Croix de Guerre, Médaille de la Résistanc e

  CECILY LEFORT (‘Alice’)

  Courier, Jockey network

  Parachuted into France 16/17 June 1943
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  Captured 15 September 1943

  Executed Ravensbrück February 1943

  Posthumous Croix de Guerre

  YVONNE RUDELLAT (‘Jacqueline’)

  Courier, Monkeypuzzle network

  Arrived France 30 July 1942

  Captured 21 June 1943

  Died of typhus Belsen 23 or 24 April 1945

  MBE, Croix de Guerre

  JULIENNE AISNER (‘Claire’)

  Courier, Farrier network

  Originally recruited in France, went to England

  Flown to France 18 May 1943

  Survived the war

  FRANCINE AGAZARIAN (‘Marguerite’)

  Courier, Prosper network [married to W/T operator Jack Agazarian]

  Flown into France 18 March 1943

  Returned England 17 June 1943

  YVONNE BASEDEN (‘Odette’)

  Wireless operator, Scholar network

  Parachuted into France 18/19 March 1943

  Captured 26 June 1944

  Liberated from Ravensbrück, April 1945

  Survived the war

  SONYA BUTT (‘Blanche’)

  Courier, Headmaster circuit

  Parachuted into France 28 May 1944

  Returned to England October 1944

  MBE

  MURIEL BYCK (‘Violette’)

  Wireless operator, Ventriloquist network

  Parachuted into France 9 April 1944

  Died of meningitis in France 23 May 1944

  MARIE-THERESE LE CHENE (‘Adele’)

  Courier, propaganda distribution, Plane circuit

  [needs more dates]

  Survived the war

  BLANCHE CHARLET (‘Christianne’)

  Courier, Ventriloquist circuit

  Arrived France by felucca 1 September 1942

  Arrested October 1942. Escaped from Castres prison 16 September 1943

  Brought back to England April 1944

  MBE

  YVONNE CORMEAU (‘Annette’)

  Wireless operator, Wheelwright circuit

  Parachuted into France 28 August 1943

  Returned to England 23 September 1944

  MBE, Légion d’honneur, Croix de Guerre, Médaille de la Résistance

  LISE DE BAISSAC (‘Odile’, ‘Marguerite’)

  Courier and organizer, Artist & Scientist networks

  Parachuted into France 25 September 1942

  Flown into France 9/10 April 1944

  Survived the war

  MBE, Légion d’honneur

  YVONNE FONTAINE (‘Mimi’)

  Courier, Tinker network Resistant, worked with SOE in France, sent to England for training March 1943

  Returned France March 1944

  Returned England 16 September 1944

  Not commissioned into FANY so not considered by Vera Atkins to be an official SOE agent

  CHRISTINE GRANVILLE (‘Pauline’)

  Courier, Jockey circuit

  SOE missions in Hungary and Egypt

  Parachuted into France 7 July 1944

  Demobilised Cairo, May 1945

  OBE

  VIRGINIA HALL (‘Marie’, ‘Diane’)

  Courier and organizer, Heckler network, also worked for OSS (Office of Strategic Services, US equivalent to SOE)

  Sent to Vichy France August 1941

  Joined US Office of Strategic Services (OSS) March 1944 and sent to France again

  Distinguished Service Cross

  MARY HERBERT (‘Claudine’)

  Courier, Scientist circuit

  Arrived France by felucca 31 October 1942

  Arrested 18 February 1944; imprisoned but released after some months

  GINETTE JULLIAN (‘Adèle’)

  Wireless operator, Permit network

  Parachuted into France 7 June 1944

  Returned to Britain 22 September 1944

  MARGUERITE KNIGHT (‘Nicole’)

  Courier, Donkeyman circuit

  Parachuted into France 6 May 1944

  Returned to Britain around 12 September 1944

  PHYLLIS LATOUR (‘Geneviève’)

  Wireless operator, Scientist circuit

  Parachuted into France 1 May 1944

  Returned to Britain August 1944

  MADELEINE LAVIGNE (‘Mariette’)

  Courier, Silversmith circuit

  Worked with SOE in France, trained in England, parachuted into France 23 May 1944

  Died suddenly of embolism, Paris 24 February 1945

  King’s Medal for Courage in the Cause of Freedom

  EILEEN NEARNE (‘Rose’)

  Wireless operator, Wizard network

  Flown to France 3 March 1944

  Captured 25 July 1944

  Survived Ravensbrück, transferred to labour camp Silesia

  Escaped labour camp 13 April 1945

  Returned to Britain June 1945

  Croix de Guerre, MBE

  JACQUELINE NEARNE (aka Josette Norville)

  Courier, Stationer network

  Parachuted into France 25 January 1943

  Returned Britain April 1944

  MBE

  PATRICIA (PADDY) O’SULLIVAN (‘Josette’)

  Wireless operator, Fireman network

  Parachuted into France 23 March 1944

  Returned to England 5 October 1944

  MBE

  ELISABETH REYNOLDS (aka Devereux-Rochester) (‘Elizabeth’)

  Courier, Marksman circuit

  Flown into France 18 October 1943

  Arrested 20 March 1944

  Interned Vittel but released during Allied advance

  ODETTE SANSOM (‘Lise’)

  Courier, Spindle network

  Arrived France by felucca 31 October 1942

  Captured 16 April 1943

  Survived Ravensbrück; returned to Britain April 1945

  George Cross, MBE, Légion d’honneur

  NANCY WAKE (‘Helene’)

  Courier, Freelance, also leader Maquis

  Resistant in France until 1943, escaped to Britain

  Parachuted into France 29/30 April 1944

  Returned to Britain 16 October 1944

  Croix de Guerre, George Medal, US Presidential Medal of Freedom, Médaille de la Résistance

  ANNE-MARIE WALTERS (‘Colette’)

  Courier, Wheelwright network

  Parachuted into France 3/4 January 1944

  Returned Britain August 1944

  ODETTE WILEN (‘Sophie’)

  Wireless operator, Stationer & Labourer circuits

  Parachuted into France 11 April 1944

  Returned to Britain August 1944

  PEARL WITHERINGTON (‘Marie’, ‘Pauline’)

  Leader and courier, Stationer circuit

  Parachuted into France 23 September 1943

  Returned to Britain September 1944

  Légion d’honneur, CBE, rejected civilian MBE

  Archive References

  Chapter 5: Special Operations Executive

  Vera Atkins: IWM Sound Archive 9551

  Gwendoline Lees: IWM Sound Archive 11087

  Odette Brown: IWM Sound Archive 26370

  Vera Atkins: IWM Sound Archive 9551

  Capt. Selwyn Jepson: IWM Sound Archive 9331

  Yvonne Cormeau IWM Sound Archive 7369

  SOE training: The National Archives KV4/172

  ff Christine Granville: The National Archives HS/9/612

  Chapter 6: Behind Enemy Lines

  Yvonne Cormeau: IWM Sound Archive 7369

  Pearl Witherington: IWM Sound Archive 10447; Guardian obituary, 1 April 2008

  Yvonne Rudellat: The National Archives HS 9/1289/7

  Yolande Beekman: The National Archives HS 9/114/2

  Yvonne Cormeau: IWM Sound Archive 7369

  Noor Inayat Khan: The National Archives HS 9/836/5

  Chapter 7: Missing

  Madeleine Damerment: The National Archives HS 9/1654

  Yolande Beekman: The National Archives HS 9/1142

  Yvo
nne Rudellat: The National Archives HS 9/1289/7

  Vera Atkins: IWM Sound Archive 9551, 18594

  Berg deposition: Vera Leigh personal file, The National Archives HS 9/910/3

  Brian Stonehouse: IWM Sound Archive 9852

  Madeleine Damerment: The National Archives HS 9/1654

  Chapter 8: Setting The Record Straight

  Noor Inayat Khan: The National Archives HS 9/836/5

  Bibliography

  Bailey, Roderick in association with the Imperial War Museum, Forgotten Voices of the Secret War: An Inside Story of Special Operations During the Second World War, Ebury Press, 2008

  Binney, Marcus, The Women Who Lived for Danger: The Women Agents of the SOE in the Second World War, Hodden & Stoughton, 2002

  Crowdy, Terry, The Enemy Within: A History of Espionage, Osprey Publishing, 2006

  Escott, Beryl E., The Heroines of SOE F Section, The History Press, 2010

  Everitt, Nicholas, British Secret Service During the Great War, London Hutchinson, 1920 (eBook)

  Foot, M.R.D, SOE The Special Operations Executive 1940-1946, Pimlico, 1999

  Grant, Hamil, Spies and Secret Service: The Story of Espionage, its Main Systems and Chief Exponents, Frederick Stokes, 1915 (eBook)

  Grayzel, Susan R., Women and the First World War, Pearson Education Ltd, 2002

  Harris, Carol, Women at War: In Uniform 1939-1945, Sutton Publishing, 2003

  Helm, Sarah, A Life in Secrets: The Story of Vera Atkins and the Lost Agents of SOE, Abacus, 2006

  Hollis, Patricia, Women in Public; The Women’s Movement 1850-1900, George Allen & Unwin, 1979

  Knightly, Phillip, The Second Oldest Profession: Spies and Spying in the Twentieth Century, W.W. Norton & Co., 1987

 

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