Marguerite Knight - Biography - Military Activities

Military Activities

Owing to her mixed British-French parentage and upbringing in France, Knight was a nearly perfect speaker of the French language — so much so that one day early in the spring of 1944 leaders of the British intelligence organization Special Operations Executive (SOE) overheard her speaking French in a cafe and immediately moved to recruit her into to the organization.

On 11 April 1944, Knight began attendance at the Students' Assessment Board of the SOE at Wanborough. She was rushed through a cursory two week training course at Thame Park, Saltmarsh, during which she did only on practice parachute jump from a static balloon, rather than the customary three, before being sent behind enemy lines in Vichy France to establish herself as a secret British courier.

Under the code name "Nicole," Knight worked as a courier for the SOE's Donkeyman network. Following the Allied invasion of France at Normandy of June and July 1944, Knight crossed back and forth between battle lines several times, carrying intelligence messages and information. Knight also participated directly in an attack by the French resistance upon a German military convoy, firing her Sten submachine gun during the course of the operation.

Knight narrowly escaped capture and execution later in 1944 when she and a group of resistance fighters were betrayed by one of their number to the Nazis. Knight was one of about 30 fighters who managed to fight through a German encirclement. The man responsible for the betrayal, Roger Bardet, was later arrested, tried, and sentenced to death as a collaborator after the war. This sentence was commuted, however, and Bardet was ultimately released from prison in 1955.

Knight left the employment of the SOE in November 1944.

Read more about this topic:  Marguerite Knight, Biography

Famous quotes containing the words military and/or activities:

    I’m not a military man, Captain. War holds no romance for me. The side effects are repulsive.
    Richard Bluel, and Henry Hathaway. Major Hugh Tarkington (Clinton Greyn)

    If it is to be done well, child-rearing requires, more than most activities of life, a good deal of decentering from one’s own needs and perspectives. Such decentering is relatively easy when a society is stable and when there is an extended, supportive structure that the parent can depend upon.
    David Elkind (20th century)