Special Operations Executive
From Wikinfo
The Special Operations Executive (SOE) was a World War II organisation initiated by Winston Churchill in July of 1940 as a mechanism for conducting warfare by means other than direct military engagement. Originally designated as 'Section D' of MI6, the mission of the SOE was to encourage and facilitate espionage and sabotage behind enemy lines and to serve as a focal point for the formation of a vestigial resistance movement in Britain itself (the Auxiliary Units) in the possible event of an Axis invasion. Known also as Churchill's Secret Army and charged by him to "set Europe ablaze", the existence of the SOE was not made available to the public at large until many years after the cessation of hostilities.
Head of the SOE from September 1943 was Colonel Colin Gubbins. The head of the French section (south) of the SOE was Maurice Buckmaster. Vera Atkins (1908-2000), assistant to Buckmaster, was the soul of the SOE, so much so that many thought she actually ran the organisation.
The headquarters of SOE were at 64 Baker Street, London. Another important London base was Aston House, where weapons and tactics research was conducted. SOE's operations in France were directed by two London-based country sections. The "F" Section, under British control, was kept non-political, while the "RF" Section was linked to General de Gaulle's Free French operations. As well, there were two smaller sections: "EU/P" Section, which dealt with the Polish community in France and the "DF" Section which was responsible for escape routes and coordination. During the latter part of 1942 another section known as 'AMF' was established in Algiers.
The principal training centre of the SOE was at Wanborough Manor, Guildford. The SOE included a number of women, its F Section (France) alone placed 39 female agents in to the field, of these 13 did not return. The [[Valen�ay SOE Memorial]] was unveiled at [[Valen�ay]] in the Indre departement of France on May 6, 1991, marking the fiftieth anniversary of the despatch of F Section's first agent to France. The memorial's "Roll of Honour" lists the names of the 91 men and 13 women members of the SOE who gave their lives for France's freedom.
The SOE were highly dependent upon the security of coded transmissions, and Leo Marks, an SOE cryptographer, was responsible for the development of better codes to replace the insecure poem codes.
SOE were particularly active in the following countries: France, Italy, the Netherlands, Yugoslavia, Algeria, Greece, Poland, Czechoslovakia. Through cooperation with the Special Operations Executive and the British intelligence service, a group of Jewish volunteers from Palestine were sent on missions to several countries in Nazi-occupied Europe between 1943-1945.
On May 5, 1941, [[Georges B�gu�]] (1911-1993) became the first SOE agent dropped in France who then setup radio communications and met the next drop of agents. Between B�gu�'s first drop and August 1944, more than four hundred F Section agents were sent into occupied France to serve in a variety of functions such as arms and sabotage instructors, couriers, circuit organisers, liaison officers, and radio operators.
SOE was dissolved officially in 1946, and much of its sphere of influence reverted to the Secret Intelligence Service, SIS, better known as MI6.
See SOE F Section timeline for a list of significant events in the history of F Section. See also SOE F Section networks for details of the individual networks operated by F Section.
Contents |
Agents
Amongst SOE's agents can be numbered:
- Jack Agazarian (1916-1945)
- France Antelme (1900-1945)
- Guy D'Artois
- [[Lis� de Baissac]]
- Alcide Beauregard
- Yolande Beekman (1911-1944)
- [[Georges B�gu�]] (1911-1993)
- Robert Benoist (1895-1944)
- [[Gustave Bi�ler|Gustave "Guy" Bi�ler]] (1904-1944)
- Emanuel Bierer (1884-ukn)
- Helen Anna Agate Thormann-Bierer (1885-ukn)
- Pierre Brossolette (1903-1944)
- Denise Bloch (1915-1945)
- [[Andr�e Borrel]] (1919-1944)
- Tony Brooks
- Sonya Butt
- Robert Bennett Byerly
- Francis Cammaerts (1916- )
- William John Chalk (1899-ukn)
- Robert Arthur Chapman (1901-ukn)
- Peter Churchill (1909-1972)
- Adolphus Richard Cooper (1899-ukn)
- Yvonne Cormeau (1909-1998)
- Madeleine Damerment (1917-1944)
- Francois Adolphe Deniset
- Henri Dericourt (1909-1962)
- Gustave Duclos
- Emile Garry (1909-1944)
- Haim Gerson
- Christine Granville (1915-1952) (real name Krystyna Skarbek)
- Virginia Hall (1906-1982)
- Marcel Homet (1897-ukn)
- Desmond Hubble (1910-1944)
- Max Hymans (1900-1961)
- Noor Inyat Khan (1914-1944)
- Andrezej Kowerski
- James Larose
- Cecily Lefort (1900-1945)
- Vera Leigh (1903-1944)
- John Kenneth Macalister (1914-1944)
- Eileen Nearne
- Alfred Newton
- Henry Newton
- Gilbert Norman (1914-1944)
- Sonia Olschanezky (1923-1944)
- [[Harry Peulev�]] (1916-1963)
- Frank Pickersgill (1915-1944)
- Eliane Plewman (1917-1944)
- Edgard Potier (1903-1944)
- Alex Rabinovich
- [[Harry R�e]] (1914-1991)
- Chaviva Reik (1914-1944)
- Lilian Rolfe (1914-1945)
- Diana Rowden (1915-1944)
- Yvonne Rudelatt (1895-1945)
- [[Rom�o Sabourin]] (1923-1944)
- Odette Sansom-Hallowes (1912-1995)
- Krystyna Skarbek (aka Christine Granville) (1915-1952)
- Einar Skinnarland (1918-2002)
- Maurice Southgate
- Arthur Staggs (1912- )
- George Reginald Starr (1904-1980)
- John Renshaw Starr
- Brian Stonehouse (1918-1998)
- Francis Suttil (1910-1945)
- Violette Szabo (1921-1945)
- Hannah Szenes (1921-1944)
- Jacques Taschereau
- [[Paul-�mile Thibeault]]
- F. F. E. Yeo-Thomas (1902-1964)
- [[Pierre de Vom�court]]
- Nancy Wake (1912- )
- William Grover-Williams (1903-1945)
- Jean-Pierre Wimille (1908-1949)
- Pearl Witherington (1914- )
- John Young
See also
Bibliography and filmography
- The Secret History of SOE - Special Operations Executive 1940-1945, (BPR Publications, 2000), Professor William Mackenzie. ISBN 0953615189
- Secret Agent - The True Story of the Special Operations Executive, (BBC Worldwide Ltd, 2000), David Stafford, ISBN 0563537345
- R.J.Minney wrote the book "Carve her name with pride" in 1956, telling the story of Violette Szabo. A film of the same title was made in 1958 starring Paul Schofield and Virginia McKenna.
- William Stanley Moss wrote the book "Ill met by moonlight" in 1950, giving his first-hand account of an SOE operation in 1944 to kidnap Major General Heinrich Kreipe, the German divisional commander on Crete. The film "Night Ambush", based on the book, was made in 1957, starring Dirk Bogarde and Marius Goring.
- Jerrard Tickell wrote the book "Odette: The story of a British agent" in 1949, telling the story of Odette Sansom-Hallowes. The film "Odette", based on the book, was made in 1950, starring Anna Neagle and Trevor Howard.
- Jean Overton Fuller wrote the book "The Starr Affair", telling the story of John Renshaw Starr.
- "Nancy Wake Codename: The White Mouse" is a 1987 docudrama about Nancy Wake's work for SOE, partly narrated by herself.
Miscellany/trivia
- Author Ian Fleming, who knew both Maurice Buckmaster and Vera Atkins, is reputed to have used at least parts of them to create "M", and "Miss Moneypenny" in his James Bond books. In his first Bond novel, Fleming is said to have based the "Vesper Lynd" character on the beautiful SOE agent, Christine Granville.
External links
References
- Adapted from the Wikipedia article, "Special_Operations_Executive" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special_Operations_Executive, used under the GNU Free Documentation License

