There were other Irish living or working in Germany at the time—these were people entirely unconnected to the regime, its activities, or involved in military/intelligence matters. For one reason or another they found themselves in the country during World War II either through marriage to German citizens or soldiers, were just drifting, or were internees from civilian ships caught in Germany at the outbreak of war. Some, however, did become involved in various activities through sheer circumstance.
Irish Intelligence (G2) attempted to keep track of these individuals, who numbered around eighty-five in total. Of particular interest to G2 were: • Maura Lydon, from
Gortmore,
County Mayo, after she mentioned in a letter home that she was broadcasting "for Germany calling Ireland". This information appeared to confirm an unknown voice heard on the
Irland-Redaktion transmissions. • Peggy Kearny, who had been living on
Jersey. • Ella Kavanagh and Maureen Petrie, who were both put on the "suspect list" when those names were put on German radio broadcasts to Ireland, although it was later assumed that the names used had been pseudonyms for other broadcasters. • Edward Bowlby, who was broadcasting propaganda to Britain. • John McCarthy from
County Cork, who was reported to be working for the Hansa Line ("
DDG Hansa"), assigned to the merchant ship
SS Treuenfels. • Another John McCarthy from
Bandon, County Cork.
Suspected/known civilian sympathisers in Germany •
Francis Stuart, who conducted radio broadcasts for various propaganda arms of the Reich. • William Joseph Murphy from
Bessbrook,
County Armagh, who worked for the
Berlitz language school (travelling on a British passport), had met
William Joyce and was given a list of information that the
Abwehr wanted from Northern Ireland including factories supplying the British war effort, but who never conducted any missions and made his way to American lines in Luxembourg in September 1944. • John and Henry Freeman (the Freeman brothers), who appear to have been freelance recruitment agents for the
Abwehr, specialising in the recruitment of English speakers. • Owen Corr, from
Rush, County Dublin, whose merchant ship, the MV
Silverfix, was sunk by German
E-boats. On his capture he was interned in
Marlag und Milag Nord (the internment camp for "enemy" merchant sailors) near
Bremen. On 27 January 1943 he was released for civilian work at the Bremen Labour Office. His name was given to the
Abwehr agent Joseph Andrews, the would-be successor to
Hermann Görtz, as a character reference. He is thought by G2 to have died during the war. • British Intelligence also had an interest in another attendee at
Milag Nord, Patrick Joseph Dillon, who was said to be working for the
Sicherheitsdienst (SS intelligence agency). • Thomas Gunning, former secretary to
Blueshirt leader
Eoin O'Duffy, was also a "suspect", having remained in Spain after the rest of the
Irish Brigade fighting for
Francisco Franco departed under a cloud of recrimination in 1937. Gunning worked as a newspaper correspondent in Spain for a short time, then made his way to Berlin where he worked for the
Ministry of Propaganda until his death in 1940. ==Notable Abwehr operations involving Ireland==