On 23 May 1940, less than nine months after the Sharps' return to the United States, Unitarian President Frederick May Eliot summoned Sharp to his office and persuaded him to return to Europe. His wife, Martha, was reluctant to leave their children again but decided to go with him. The Unitarians gave the Sharps about 10,000 dollars to spend at their discretion. They arrived in
Lisbon, Portugal on 20 June and from there journeyed onward through Spain to France. France surrendered to Nazi Germany on 22 June, but southern France was allowed to have a semi-independent government, called
Vichy France. Portugal and Spain were neutral in the conflict, as was the United States at that time. Martha decided that her part of the project was to import dried milk into southern France to help with a problem of malnutrition in French children, but on their arrival in France about 19 July, they received a shock. Waitstill's old friend, Unitarian official Robert Dexter (who had persuaded the Sharps to go to Czechoslovakia) notified him and other relief organizations in France that he opposed the milk plan and all other relief expenditures in Vichy France. Because of German influence, Dexter believed that humanitarian aid to French children would help the Germans. The Sharps continued with their plan, but the estrangement between Waitstill and Dexter was permanent. Martha focused on the difficult task of importing 12 tons of condensed and dried milk into France while Waitstill worked with
Donald A. Lowrie,
Varian Fry and others helping vulnerable refugees escape Vichy France. Waitstill spent three days in
Marseille orienting the inexperienced Fry on the techniques of the semi-clandestine life. Fry was in France to rescue intellectuals and artists, many of them Jews, fleeing the Nazis. In mid-September 1940, the two of them organized the escape of several prominent intellectuals and their wives:
Heinrich and
Golo Mann,
Franz Werfel, and
Lion Feuchtwanger. The refugees walked across the
Pyrenees into Spain escorted by an American named Leon (Dick) Ball. (Ball later disappeared, fate unknown). Waitstill accompanied Feuchtwanger to the United States, arriving in New York City on 5 October. Martha did not make it back to the U.S. until 23 December 1940. She had collected 27 refugee children and 10 adults and brought them to the U.S. with her. Hearkening back to his Czechoslovak experience, Waitstill, during his time in France, had taken up the plight of about 1,000 Czech soldiers and their families stranded and interned at
Agde, a French seaport. His plan to get all of them out on a merchant ship failed because of tightening immigration controls by the Vichy government, but about 400 of the soldiers later escaped by boat to Spain. ==Personal life==