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Sex, fear and looting: survivors disclose untold stories of the Blitz

Salv

One Too Many
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1,247
Location
Just outside London
I've had a flick through To The Victor The Spoils, and while it doesn't, as I thought, have a full chapter on deserters, there are several references. Firstly it talks about the soldiers who deserted under fire and just wanted to get away from the front out of fear for their lives. No great surprise there.

The more interesting aspect of desertion is those soldies who deserted and turned to crime to survive. The book mentions rumours of a Deserters Transit Camp, based near the Normandy beaches and set up by two NCOs who sold fake passsports to men wanting to travel home. They supposedly drew rations using fake requisition forms and collected the food in stolen lorries. It was never established if this was true, and nobody ever admitted to having been there - it was always a 'friend of a friend'. While this may not have been true there were certainly gangs of deserters living out in the Normandy countryside, stealing army rations. They would go on to form criminal gangs that plagued the liberated areas.

All the deserters who went uncaught, and therefore ended up in military prisons, had to steal to survive, and the deserters who had a criminal past were the most succesful. The Navy and RAF both refused to take conscripts with criminal records, so they all ended up in the army. By the time France was liberated the gangs of deserters were well set up, and they had a lucrative business smuggling between France and Belgium. Champagne and cognac went one way, and cigarettes went the other way. Investigations by the authorities showed that Brussels was the epicentre of what became a crime wave. In December 1944 the Brussels garrison's Provost Company reported that "Some...are forming themselves into armed gangs and are living mostly in the small brothel cafes in the area east and west of the Gare du Nord."

Gang members were often arrested, but one gang started producing counterfeit passes which they validated with stolen stamps. In November 1944 322 deserters were arrested, 43 of them in a single raid on the Cafe Blighty.

In Ostend in December 1944 a gang posing as a Field Security Unit was arrested, all with forged ID papers that appeared legitimate, and all dressed as senior NCOs or officers.

Vehicles of all description were a constant target for the gangs, as was petrol to fuel them, and thousands of gallons of stolen petrol were retrived in various raids in Belgium and France.

The scale of the problem became so great that in February 1945 Operation Blanket was launced in an attempt to round up as many deserters as possible. In a single day 450 men were arrested, although only 5% were found to be long-term deserters, the rest having absconded only within the last few days.
 

Story

I'll Lock Up
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4,056
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Home
Fascinating topic

My High School French teacher proudly admitted to having gone AWOL 13 times, between landing at Omaha Beach and reaching Berlin. His rifle company was continually put out in front and since he had a native's command of French, he was frequently tasked to accompany recon patrols (which can be more even more draining).

Stephen Ambrose's writing on the topic -
http://www.worldwar2history.info/Army/deserters.html
 

Alan Eardley

One Too Many
Messages
1,500
Location
Midlands, UK
Story said:
The powers-that-be would probably have slapped a "SECRET" label on any and all reports related to the matter. Remember the torpedoing of the troopship practicing landings, just prior to D-Day?
QUOTE]

Yes, they would. That's what the military does in war time and the civil service does in peace time. It means the document is restricted, but it doesn't necessarly mean that the incident described in not known to ordinary people. The incident you describe (Operation Tiger) should have been relatively easy to cover up as parts of Lyme Bay were off-limits to civilians as Slapton was being used for invasion training with live ammunition but that didn't stop large numbers of local people knowing about it as it was witnessed by fishermen , some of whom took part in the rescue. And yet I have seen it described as 'the best kept secret of WW2'. A secret known to hundreds, possibly thousands of people...strange secret!

Another disaster which has been called 'best kept secret of WW2' (and which was probably known to even more people at the time) was the Fauld explosion of November 1944 when the bomb dump at RAF 21 MU blew up. This was the fourth largest non-nuclear blast in history (not counting volcanic explosions) at an estimated 3 kilotonne. The shock was heard and felt up to fifty miles away and debris was seen to fall between two and three miles from the site. An area of several square miles was covered with dust, giving the appearance of Winter snow, windows were shattered ten miles away and many buildings (including a whole village) were reduced to rubble. The resulting crater is about 100 feet deep and over 3 hundred yards across (see below). And yet it was officially classified as 'secret'! Hundreds of people were affected by it and tens of thousand of people knew about it and discussed it openly. Events in the area, such as dances and sporting events were cancelled out of respect. Another strange 'secret'!

fauld.jpg



BTW, the IWM project which is the subject of the first postings of this thread is a long running project to record and archive the voices and war time experiences of ordinary people, who are dying out. I don't think it would claim to have uncovered any 'hidden secrets' or 'shocking revelations'. The Guardian report quoted is journalistic sensationalism.

The 'lawless deserters' in Belgium and France is another example of something that was much discussed at the time by homecoming troops but is little known nowadays. And while we're at it ... how about the German resistance movement fighting occupation forces long after the surrender on Luneberg Heath? And the Russians firing on RAF planes dropping much-needed food supplies in Poland...
 

Harp

I'll Lock Up
Messages
8,508
Location
Chicago, IL US
The Glenn Miller Story

I remember a newspaper story from a dozen years ago that
accounted the disappearance of Glenn Miller's plane over the
English Channel. A RAF veteran claimed his bomber group; while enroute
back to England, jettisoned live ordinance over the Channel the day
Miller's plane disappeared. RAF Command concluded that Miller's low flying
DC3 had been accidentally struck, and decided to secret this least
Yank GIs would overreact against RAF crews. If true, Miller died from
"friendly fire."
 

Micawber

A-List Customer
Messages
395
Location
Great Britain.
Interesting thread. Being of an age where I grew up surrounded by people who were involved in both world wars both on the home front and in service I can very much relate to how the experiences of the individuals often differ to the accepted official line.

As an aside my paternal Grandfather had several retail premises in London from just after WWI to the mid 1960's. During WWII he went about his very respectable business, did his stints at fire-watching, put in a claim when bombs damaged his premises - all in all an average civilian going about his ostensibly unremarkable daily life.

However, once or twice after a large lunch where perhaps the drink had flowed, I remember him making vague references to incidents including what he called ‘shoot outs’ in the docks he was personally involved in that sounded very much out of character from the respectable elderly gentleman I knew. After he died in the late ‘60’s we obviously had to go through his private papers and in doing so discovered a mass of pocket notebooks and scraps of paper containing obviously hastily scribbled hand written notes. These were accompanied by more formally written and typed up accounts describing the movements of individuals, police officers, service personnel, dock workers, vehicles etc, there were also addresses, descriptions of police raids and other obscure goings on many centred around the East End. Also in this hoard were receipts for payments to my Grandfather from what turned out to be government sources and pistol hidden amongst the hollowed out pages of a large law book - all very intriguing. His funeral was not only attended by many of his friends and business acquaintances but also by a number of people who’s identity was unknown to the family.

To cut a long story short it turns out that the old boy was not only keeping tabs on black market gangs and their networks who were obtaining large quantities of goods and commodities directly from the ships in the docks and the warehouses. Not only this he was also carrying out surveillance on members of the police and others who were also involved and profiteering. Apparently my Grandfather was part of a small network of people engaged by a well-known barrister at the time who reported directly to government and paid by them to do so.

His reluctance to talk about much of this was perhaps understandable when one bears in mind that this was not too long after the end of the war and some of those involved back then were now rather large players in the criminal underworld.

All of his papers pertaining to this period are now lodged with the IWM.
 

carebear

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,220
Location
Anchorage, AK
Many journalists consider themselves generally knowledgeable, so when they find something they didn't know, they assume no one else must know it either and then present it as some amazing discovery or lost secret.

A little research would correct the problem, but that would force them to face their ignorance and reporting "secrets" is more notable than just reporting facts without the pizzazz.

The trend of reporting as if everyone is stupid or ill-read has gotten worse. Smoking is bad for you! Water is wet! Kids are posting pictures on the internet! News at eleven!

Every local hack wants to be Woodward and Bernstein.
 

Lord Jagged

New in Town
Messages
46
Location
England
I think we all like to focus on the good in people and its too easy to forget the bad things in our history. Lets hope that one day people are better and wars are a thing of a past that can be forgotten.
 

dr greg

One Too Many
all over the place

There were several full scale riots between Australians and US troops stationed here in WW2 such as the famous Battle of Brisbane
http://www.diggerhistory.info/pages-battles/ww2/battle-brisbane.htm
and lots of stories about white troops and MP's murdering negro troops with impunity, which upset the locals quite a lot. I have, as some of you might know, fictionalised such an incident in a book. The Negro troops were very popular in this country, and I personally would have loved to have seen the famous Dr Carver Club, a dance hall set up in Brisbane for the black GI's to avoid the trouble that was always brewing when white GI's saw white women talking to them.
Very few accounts of it survive, and there are few references online, but I have seen photos and it looked pretty natty.
 

Alan Eardley

One Too Many
Messages
1,500
Location
Midlands, UK
Riots in WW2

dr greg said:
There were several full scale riots between Australians and US troops stationed here in WW2 such as the famous Battle of Brisbane <snip>
and lots of stories about white troops and MP's murdering negro troops with impunity, which upset the locals quite a lot. The Negro troops were very popular in this country <snip>QUOTE]

Half a world away, but this almost exactly mirrors the experiences my father related to me as an Auxiliary PC in England in 1943-44. The black US QM troops in Burton-on-Trent were so popular with the local ladies that it became known as the 'brown baby capital of England'!

Alan
 

Alan Eardley

One Too Many
Messages
1,500
Location
Midlands, UK
Poor research

carebear said:
Many journalists consider themselves generally knowledgeable, so when they find something they didn't know, they assume no one else must know it either and then present it as some amazing discovery or lost secret.

A little research would correct the problem, but that would force them to face their ignorance and reporting "secrets" is more notable than just reporting facts without the pizzazz.
<snip>
Every local hack wants to be Woodward and Bernstein.

Well put. You can't blame them too much - they often suffer from being young...
The so-called Glenn Miller mystery referred to in the posting above is a classic example of this. Some of the theories in this case make even alien abduction cases look plausible, and some of the facts of the 'RAF bombing cover up' (e.g. the relative timing) are just plain wrong! However, nobody seems to care. People who think some of the things in the Da Vinci Code are the truth (which many people do) will believe anything.

Alan
 

carebear

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,220
Location
Anchorage, AK
Alan Eardley said:
You can't blame them too much - they often suffer from being young...
The so-called Glenn Miller mystery referred to in the posting above is a classic example of this. Some of the theories in this case make even alien abduction cases look plausible, and some of the facts of the 'RAF bombing cover up' (e.g. the relative timing) are just plain wrong! However, nobody seems to care. People who thing many things in the Da Vinci Code are the truth (which many people do) will believe anything.

Alan

It's not so much that they are foolish enough to believe they're true, what bothers me is they are credulous enough to believe they're new.

The Gnostic stuff contained in the DaVinci Code and the "Gospel of Judas" was old hat (and addressed by the Apostles) in 35 AD.

That things like WWII race riots, Miller's death or the explosion of an Allied munitions ship containing mustard gas in an Italian harbor during the war get reported as "newly discovered secrets" gives these "old hat" facts, and the conspiracies that resulted, new credibility.
 

Tourbillion

Practically Family
Messages
667
Location
Los Angeles
I am currently reading "Life of the Party" a biography of Pamela Digby. During WWII she was married to Randolph Churchhill, the son of the PM. It is an interesting story.

As for the sex going on during the Blitz, it appears that most of it was with Mrs. Pamela Churchhill, while her husband was out fighting (they didn't get along anyway). She is described as being the single most informed civillian in the UK during the war in her biography. I am still reading it, but it seems her sources were her American "friends" and of course her father in law.

It is simply astonishing.

My father only told funny war stories for the most part, he didn't like to discuss the loss of many of his closest friends during the war. He did discuss the liberation of Paris though, wild times.
 

Hat and Rehat

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,444
Location
Denver
I have to add: The area where most of the killings, looting was mostly occupied by the Russians or Russian sector, as Berlin divided into three sectors, the Americans and British really couldn’t do anything unless they wanted to continue the war with the Russians. Having Russia as an allied was almost like a pack made with the devil, in this case Stalin.

They called him "Uncle Joe". It's very hard to justify how much was given to Russia after the war. Death By Government is a book worth reading to sift through the official story.
 

p51

One Too Many
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1,119
Location
Well behind the front lines!
This reminds me of how the histories of the US Civil War changed overnight once the final vet had passed away.
Now that WW2 vets are everywhere you look, the truth of the horror of the war is finally coming out. Looters, deserters, cowards and profiteers. You could never mention them a few years ago as we'd placed the vets on an impossible pedestal.
Sure, that generation saved the world, but some did a lot more saving than others.
 

Hat and Rehat

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,444
Location
Denver
I've always taken the "Greatest Generation" rhetoric with a large dose of salt. People like to believe there was a golden age of some kind in the past, but human nature doesn't change. All times are a mixed bag of good and evil, a line which, as Solzhenitsyn said, " ...passes not through states, nor between classes, nor between political parties either — but right through every human heart."
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
33,755
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
It's important to remember that "The Greatest Generation" never, ever called itself that. Tom Brokaw invented the term to sell a book in the 1990s. Before that, those Americans born between 1910 and 1925 were called the "GI Generation" or the "Swing Generation." They would have been the last people to aggrandize themselves as some kind of holy icons, and it's ill serving them, now that most of them are dead, to treat them as such today. Civic worship of the military is in every way incompatible with the principles for which, supposedly, WWII was fought. (Although those who actually saw combat would probably tell you the only principle they had in mind was "don't get killed.")
 

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