ferried agents back and forth to England. A
CLE Canister beneath the fuselage carried supplies. •
23 January. Henri Déricourt, code named
Gilbert, was dropped by parachute into France near
Orleans. He proceeded to Paris where he joined his wife and, unlike most SOE agents, lived under his own name as he was a well-known pilot. Déricourt was designated as the air movements officer for Prosper, finding landing fields for clandestine flights from Britain, sending off and receiving passengers on those flights, and receiving supplies and messages. He acted also as a postman, collecting uncoded messages from agents in France for SOE Headquarters in London. Déricourt is alleged to have been a pre-war friend of
Karl Bömelburg, the
Gestapo head in Paris. •
18 March. Déricourt accomplished his first air operation successfully. Two
Westland Lysander airplanes landed at night on a clandestine field near
Poitiers and dropped off four agents and boarded four more for return to Britain. Déricourt arranged successful landings in France for 11 Lysanders by the end of June. •
22 April. Sisters
Germaine and
Madeleine Tambour were captured in Paris by the Germans. Germaine had been the secretary for the now-defunct Carte network. Ten SOE agents had used the Tambour's house as a letter box and meeting place, violating SOE doctrine that agents should have limited contact with each other. Suttill attempted to free the sisters by bribing the Germans with one million francs, but the Germans deceived him by releasing two prostitutes instead. The Tambour sisters were later executed in
Ravensbrück concentration camp. •
15 May. Francis Suttill departed France by clandestine flight to London for consultations with SOE Headquarters, especially F Section Leader
Maurice Buckmaster. According to Buckmaster, SOE wanted to quell growing French expectations of an allied invasion of France in 1943. However, Buckmaster contradicted himself in another book by saying that he received a top-secret hint that the invasion would take place in 1943. Historians have speculated that he told Suttill to increase the activities of his network to support the anticipated 1943 invasion (which did not occur until June 1944). In either event, Suttill's mood was grim. He criticized SOE headquarters for its mistakes, cited problems within his network, and said the network may have been penetrated by the Germans. •
17 May. Two Dutch men, Richard Christmann and Karl Boden, posing as SOE agents but belonging to the German
Abwehr, arrived at a Paris cafe asking for "Gilbert" (Déricourt), and requesting evacuation to Britain. Without attempting to verify the bona fides of the bogus Dutch agents, several legitimate SOE agents met with them. The incident is significant because it illustrates the lack of attention to security by Prosper agents and the ease by which the network could be infiltrated. •
21 May. Francis Suttill arrived back in Paris after his visit to SOE Headquarters in London Some historians claim that Suttill had been told in London that an allied invasion of France was imminent and that he should accelerate arming the resistance to assist the invasion. Supporting this speculation was the fact that SOE greatly expanded the number of air drops of weapons to Prosper and other SOE networks in June. •
12 June. Suttill told friends "somebody who had enjoyed my trust must be a double agent." •
13 June. At an airdrop in the
Sologne region one or more canisters full of arms and ammunition exploded arousing German attention. Pierre Culioli requested Suttill to halt the near-nightly air activities in the Sologne as a result of the increased German presence. Suttill refused and the landings and airdrops continued. The Germans set up checkpoints around the area. •
16 June. Two Canadian agents,
Frank Pickersgill and
Ken Macalister, parachuted into the Sologne region near where the explosion had occurred on 13 June. They were met by Pierre Culioli and Yvonne Ruddelat. The Canadians brought with them several messages for other SOE agents and crystals for Gilbert Norman's radio. Their SOE-forged identification papers were out of date and they remained in hiding while Culioli had new documents made. •
17 June. Radio operator
Noor Inayat Khan, arrived in France by Lysander airplane. She was met by Henri Déricourt. On 20 June Gilbert Norman radioed SOE that Noor had arrived in
Versailles near Paris. Inayat Khan initially worked for
France Antelme and later
Êmile Garry. •
21 June. Culioli and Ruddelat intended to drive Pickersgill and Macalister to
Beaugency to catch a trail to Paris, but in
Dhuizon they were stopped by Germans and Macalister and Pickersgill were captured. Culioli and Ruddelat attempted to flee in the automobile, but, chased by Germans, Ruddelat was shot in the head and Culioli crashed into a wall. Both survived the crash and were captured. Culioli had a list of names and addresses of SOE agents and supporters in his briefcase. Ruddelat died of mistreatment and illness in
Belsen concentration camp about 23 April 1945, after the camp had been liberated by Allied forces. Culioli survived the war in
Buchenwald concentration camp. Pickersgill and Macalister were executed in Buchenwald on 14 September 1944. •
23 June. The arms and equipment air-dropped to SOE agents for the French Resistance in 1943 up until this date totaled more than 500
CLE Canisters, each containing up to of supplies. Related, possibly, to Suttill's belief that an allied invasion of France would occur in 1943, Prosper received a substantial increase in parachuted arms and supplies. For example, in Pierre Culioli's
Sologne region, nine drops occurred from January through May 1943; in the first three weeks of June, twelve drops were carried out. The delegations on the ground receiving the drops were exhausted. •
23 June. Radio operator Jack Agazarian, now in London, wrote a report in which he described Henri Déricourt's security as faulty. •
23 June. Gilbert Norman and Andrée Borrel, who had become lovers, were captured by the Germans about midnight at the home of a friend in Paris. They were taken to
84 Avenue Foch, headquarters of
Josef Kieffer, commander in Paris of the
Sicherheitsdienst (SD), the intelligence agency of the SS. 84 Avenue Foch was the usual place where captured SOE agents were interrogated and imprisoned for varying lengths of time. •
24 June. Francis Suttill was captured by German agents in a cheap hotel in Paris. Norman and Borrel were the only people who had known his location, although he may have been followed by the Germans. Suttill was taken to the SD headquarters at 84 Avenue Foch. Suttill's last message to SOE Headquarters also arrived in London on this date. He complained bitterly about SOE's mistake in giving Noor Inayat Khan the location of a 'blown" letterbox which nearly resulted in her capture by the Germans. He accused SOE headquarters of "breaking a cardinal rule by allowing one circuit to be contaminated by another." •
25 June. Noor Inayat Khan radioed SOE headquarters that Suttill, Norman, and Borrel "had disappeared, believed arrested." It would be almost two weeks before more details would reach SOE headquarters. •
Late June. Only fragmentary accounts exist of their first few days as prisoners of the Germans, but apparently the leadership trio—Suttill, Norman, and Borrel—were not tortured. In accordance with SOE doctrine, Suttill and Norman refused under questioning to give any information during the first 48 hours of their imprisonment to allow time for other Prosper agents who might be compromised to flee. Kieffer then demonstrated to them the breadth of his knowledge about the Prosper network. He gave them the impression that he had an agent in SOE headquarters, knew everything about Prosper, and that resistance to his questioning was futile. One or both of them is alleged to have made a pact with Kieffer to give him full information about the location of cached arms in return for their lives and the lives of other captured agents. Kieffer later said that Suttill "did not want to make any statement" but that Norman "who had not the integrity of Prosper [Suttill], made a very full statement." Borrel apparently gave information to the Germans. Culioli also gave information to the Germans. •
29 June. The German roundup of SOE agents and their French associates netted them a large quantity of arms and two working radios, that of Norman and of the Canadian Macalister. The Germans recalled their radio expert at SD Headquarters in Paris, Dr. Josef Goetz, from vacation to exploit the two radios in what the Germans called
Funkspiel, the "radio game." ==1943 (July to December)==