Interwar Years served as the first Headquarters of the department during the Second World War. Following intelligence reports received of
Germany's rearmament, plans to reestablish the Department of Propaganda in Enemy Countries as a small section dedicated to studying
propaganda techniques were developed by the
Foreign Office under
Lord Halifax. Since reliable
intelligence on
Nazi operations could best be obtained from
refugees, one early source was
Dr. Klaus Spiecker, a former
Weimar civil servant who had fled to
France and operated the
anti-Nazi radio station Deutsche Freiheitsender near
Paris. After being brought to Britain by the
Secret Service, he resumed his broadcasts from
Woburn under the pseudonym “Mr. Turner.” Stuart had also been well versed in printing, production, and paper manufacture from his earlier career at
The Times. With the help of Admiral
Sir Roger Backhouse, the
First Sea Lord, Stuart secured the appointment of
Reginald Alexander Dallas Brooks as his chief staff officer. In the lead-up to the
Munich Agreement of 1938, a batch of leaflets was produced for an aerial distribution campaign over Germany. While the leaflets were never actually dropped, the planning stage highlighted a need for better coordination. This prompted Electra House to send a formal communication to the
Air Ministry, stressing the importance of establishing a properly organized system for delivering information to enemy nations. The official at the Air Ministry who received this note was
Sir Donald Banks, who would later be appointed as the head of the
Petroleum Warfare Department (PWD). The results of
Munich Agreement of 1938 led to the postponement of these preparations, a decision later seen as a major setback to internal German opposition against Hitler. Chamberlain at this point was under the assumption that peace had been declared, and there would be no need for any more subversive sections. The plans for this department were mainly shelved at this point, and Campbell anticipated that the department would shut down.
World War II , Room 207, was linked via underground telegraphy directly to Electra House Moorgate. From here, Electra House monitored the communications of all Foreign Embassies in London. Only several months later, following the
Occupation of Czechoslovakia in March 1989, war again appeared inevitable, and Stuart was instructed to revive his propaganda organisation. Officially titled the Department of Propaganda in Enemy Countries, it operated under the newly minted
Minister of Information,
Lord MacMillan, and was funded through the
Foreign Office's Secret Vote, though the department was required to operate entirely outside its premises. The office was re-located located to
Electra House Victoria, the 2nd headquarters of
Cable and Wireless, of which Campbell Stuart was also the chairman. The department operated out of Room 207 of this building, equipped with a
Reuters news tape and a
wireless set. In April 1939, Stuart established three guiding principles for British propaganda: it must be
truthful, consistent, and aligned with clear policy.
Anglo-French cooperation was pursued through the
Anglo-French Propaganda Council in Paris. Stuart, however, found his French counterparts “suspicious and superior,” and instead secured practical assistance through his
French-Canadian relatives, notably his cousins in the Beaulieu banking family of
Montreal, who maintained a
banking house in Paris. Campbell Stuart recruited the author
Valentine Williams, a former colleague from the
Daily Mail, who in turn secured the involvement of
Noël Coward for the department's Paris office. During the
Phoney War, Stuart, accompanied by his private secretary
Anthony Gishford and
Reginald Dallas Brooks, made several official visits to Paris. The
Foreign Office drafted six versions of leaflets, from which
Sir Alexander Cadogan selected one for
translation into
German and
mass printing, ten million copies at the cost of sixpence per hundred, by
H.M. Stationery Office. Despite mutual reservations, the British and French collaborated in the production and distribution of the leaflets to be carried by
balloon into enemy territory. The French were unimpressed by the British contributions, criticizing the leaflets for
grammatical errors and incorrect
word usage.
Country Headquarters at Woburn Abbey ,
Woburn Abbey became the Country Headquarters for Electra House in late 1938, while they maintained their City Headquarters at
Electra House. As the threat of war grew and London appeared a likely target, the department prepared to relocate its operations to safer quarters. On the suggestion of the Hon.
Leo Russell, advertising director of
Illustrated Newspapers and a kinsman of the
Duke of Bedford,
Woburn Abbey was chosen as the new operations base. The Duke readily agreed, preferring to accommodate the propaganda unit rather than wartime evacuees. Campbell Stuart had some prior familiarity with the Woburn area, having spent a summer there as a child in 1892. During that visit, a trip through
Woburn Park to see its collection of exotic animals was a memorable event for him. However, Electra House still maintained staffs at both of the
Electra Houses for the purposes of monitoring foreign governments through their telegraphy, and Electra House Moorgate was maintained as its headquarters. Parallel to these developments, the Foreign Office revived its
Political Intelligence Department, originally formed during the First World War. Under
Reginald “Rex” Leeper, PID recruited
Robert Bruce Lockhart to oversee Central Europe and the Balkans. Among those later associated with the propaganda and intelligence coordination was
Anthony Eden, who after resigning as Foreign Secretary in 1938 remained closely involved in wartime intelligence, including liaison with
Bletchley Park. By the outbreak of the Second World War, Bletchley Park was already active in decoding German communications. The propaganda staff of Electra House, by then based at Woburn Abbey, stood ready for mobilisation, while PID occupied nearby offices. Additional facilities had been prepared for foreign nationals involved in secret broadcasting, positioning the district as a key centre for Britain's early wartime intelligence and propaganda operations. Campbell Stuart, Anthony Gishford, and Dallas Brooks were in the department's offices in Paris on the day
Germany invaded Poland. Determined to return to England to oversee operations, Stuart arranged to conclude the department's affairs in France and reserved passage on the 4 p.m. train. When doubts arose that the train would run, he ordered his staff to find a car. They located a man in the
Place de la Concorde and, after confirming that the Woburn Abbey operation had been activated, set out for
Boulogne. A
punctured tire delayed their journey, and they arrived after the final boat had departed. A hurried telephone call to
Dieppe revealed that there would be a night sailing, and the party raced to the port in time to board, reaching England safely and continuing on to Woburn. As the head of the organization, Campbell Stuart lived with a few key associates in
Paris House on the Woburn estate. This visually striking building was a 19th-century reproduction of a 16th-century style, originally built for the
Paris Exhibition of 1878, from which it got its name. The house had been purchased by an earlier Duke of Bedford and transported in its entirety to Woburn. Despite its architectural interest, Stuart reportedly found the house inconvenient, poorly lit, and uncomfortably cold in the winter. The rest of the staff were housed in about a dozen other smaller dwellings in or near Woburn. was the creator and director of Electra House.The British headquarters, always called "CHQ" or "Country Headquarters," was established at the estate. Personnel were discreetly directed to a hotel in nearby
Dunstable, where they would receive a hand-drawn map or transport to the final, confidential location. Office spaces were created in the stable wing and a large riding school, where a long corridor was flanked by two dozen small partitioned cubicles. Living quarters were set up above the stables. Despite the functional accommodations, the presence of important works of art, left from the building's previous use as an overflow art gallery, lent an air of grandeur to the space. The Duke of Bedford visited early on to observe the new operations. The staff of sixty was initially catered by the firm
J. Lyons and Co., with the canteen bar reportedly accounting for nearly 10% of the department's salary expenditures. This catering contract was later taken over by
A.B.C. From the very first night of the war, British bombers dropped leaflets over Germany, including one titled "
A Warning to the German People." This aerial leafleting continued on subsequent nights. In addition to aircraft, balloons were also used as a delivery method, with launches beginning from the French countryside on September 30, 1939. The most notable was a two-page news sheet designed to mimic a Nazi newspaper, titled
Wolkiger Beobachter ("From the Clouds")—a deliberate pun on the authentic Nazi party newspaper,
Völkischer Beobachter. It was first dropped on German cities in November 1939. The production of these leaflets was housed in a small green-and-white hangar on the Woburn estate, previously used to store aircraft. This facility, complete with an adjacent
office and
workshop, was converted into a
composing room where
typesetters hired from the
Oxford University Press worked. The early leaflets were manually typeset using traditional German
Fraktur typeface/font and then sent to the government's
printing office for
mass production. Stuart desired that his department only publish
white propaganda at Woburn, and disliked greatly the printing of
black propaganda, which he thought was probably much more suited to other departments. That other department which printed black propaganda out of Woburn Abbey was
Section D of the SIS. Stuart eventually requested the members of Section D to transfer away, when they were stationed at a house in
Hertingfordbury, but some Section D members remained at Woburn Abbey to assist in the production of white propaganda.
Intensified printing operations at Marylands estate was built for the
Duchess of Bedford in 1903. In the 1940s, it was absorbed into the operations of Electra House and the PID. Following the
German occupation of Western Europe and
Italy's entry into the war, the demand for British propaganda surged. To meet this need, the Woburn printing unit was moved to a larger facility nearby at
Marylands. There, with new typesetting equipment installed, the expanded staff worked around the clock, primarily on overt
white propaganda. The recruitment of skilled typographers and graphic artists led to a major improvement in the quality of the propaganda materials. Printing was handled by specialist firms, including the
Sun Engraving Co. in
Watford and
Waterlows in
Dunstable, the latter being experts in photogravure. This partnership allowed for the effective use of color and the high-quality reproduction of photographs. Another key contributor from the start of the war was
Home Counties Newspapers, a
Luton-based printing group that used its presses in Luton and
Leagrave to produce a substantial volume of material. Production was a continuous process, and
print blocks were collected daily by car from Woburn Abbey. The demanding schedule yielded impressive results and soon led to a new project: a weekly "white" propaganda publication for distribution over France called the ''Courrier de L'Air
(sharing the name of an earlier World War I newspaper printed by Crewe House). This French-language publication was printed elsewhere using gravure, while the Luton News'', part of the Home Counties Group, was awarded the typesetting contract. The text was set at four times the normal size in the evenings, and the proofs were then photographically reduced. Eventually, the operation expanded to typesetting papers in five different languages, requiring two evening shifts to manage the workload. The printing unit also handled specialized, one-off projects. The defection of
Rudolf Hess in May 1941 presented such an opportunity. Under conditions of extreme secrecy, the team at Luton News produced forged copies of the German newspaper
Völkischer Beobachter with altered pages, which were then deliberately planted for Hess to read. Alongside printed propaganda, the British effort expanded into "black" radio propaganda, which was distinct from the official "white" broadcasts of the BBC. To lead this initiative, they enlisted the services of 48-year-old Colonel (later Brigadier) Richard Gambier-Parry. His mission was to establish and enhance radio communications for the Secret Intelligence Service (SIS), which included providing the necessary transmitters for these clandestine broadcasts.
Whaddon Hall and radio broadcasting was used for communications and radio broadcasting. The War Office requisitioned
Whaddon Hall for its operations, and by the end of 1939,
Gambier Parry had established his headquarters at there. He was soon joined by
Harold Robin, who would be responsible for the technical side of all the department's secret
broadcasting operations throughout the war. Both men had previously worked for the
Philco company before the war. The estate's previous residents, the
Selby Lowndes family, relocated to a nearby town. In early 1940, Robin was tasked with building a shortwave transmitter to broadcast propaganda. After surveying the area near Whaddon, he chose a site in a large field at
Gawcott, where two American-made 7.5KW
transmitters were installed. The broadcasts were first recorded in a specially adapted room at Whaddon Hall, with sound-dampening material on the walls to ensure quality. These recordings, made on 16-inch glass-based discs that held about twenty minutes of material, were then sent via
Post Office lines to the Gawcott transmitter for broadcast. Gambier Parry's personal secretary,
Lisa Towse, who was fluent in French, wrote scripts for a clandestine station known as
Radio Beaux Arts. To support the administrative needs of the Woburn operation, many typists were recruited, primarily from organizations like the
Imperial Communications Advisory Board and
Thomas Cook and Son.
Telephone operators were supplied by various London establishments. All personnel were bound by strict secrecy; they were forbidden from discussing their work or their location, and all personal mail had to be sent to London for posting to maintain operational security. The military wing of the department remained in London, requiring its head, Campbell Stuart, to regularly travel between the two centers in his
Rolls Royce, accompanied by his assistants and even a
filing cabinet. This physical separation reduced the department's direct influence over the
BBC German service, a situation exacerbated by the fact that liaison was handled by two officers provided by the
BBC itself. To compensate for a general lack of firsthand knowledge of Nazi Germany among the staff,
Ivone Kirkpatrick of the Foreign Office provided expert advice. His background was uniquely suited to the task; after being wounded in the First World War, he had joined a secret organization to develop propaganda methods, including successful early trials for dropping leaflets by
balloon, making him a valuable advisor in the new conflict. The creation of effective propaganda required a deep understanding of the enemy's morale and mindset. To this end, they secured a steady supply of German daily newspapers through contacts in neutral countries. By the spring, their London facility was receiving a vast amount of material shortly after publication, including ninety different German
newspapers,
trade journals, and
periodicals, over a hundred Allied and neutral papers from sixteen countries, and numerous publications from refugee groups in Britain. A team of five
linguists from the intelligence division would then analyze this content to identify useful information. British missions in European capitals telegraphed important news, and the BBC provided transcripts of its monitoring of significant enemy broadcasts. When the German advance cut off these conventional sources, the British Legation in
Stockholm was instructed to purchase every available newspaper and have the
RAF fly them to Britain on a weekly basis. == Merger into the Special Operations Executive ==