On 10th
July 1946 the British War Office wrote to Thomas Plewman, formerly of Athy
informing him of his wife’s death at the hand of the Germans almost two years
previously. His wife, Eliane, was just
26 years old when she was executed along with three other women, all of whom
were agents for Special Operations Executives engaged in helping the French
Resistance Movement in German occupied France.
Thomas Plewman was
the eldest son of Francis Victor Plewman and his wife, formerly Florence
Haylock of Leicester, England who were married in 1911. There were two other sons, Francis who died
young and Norman who in time inherited the family home at Woodstock, Athy. Thomas went to Leicester in England in 1933
where his maternal grandfather J.W. Haylock was a well known businessman. His future wife, Eliane Sophie
Browne-Bartroli, was born in Marseilles in 1917 to a French mother and an
English father. She was educated in
France and at Ashford, Kent. After
working for some time in Bermingham she took up employment as a translator in
March 1937 with George Odom Limited at their Leicester office. It was in Leicester that she first met Thomas
Plewman and the young couple married after Eliane returned to work in London in
1941. When the war broke Eliane Sophie
Plewman who was proficient in a number of continental languages joined the
British Embassy in Madrid and later worked in the Ministry of Information in
London.
The German
occupation of her homeland caused her great concern and like many others born
and reared in France she was anxious to work with the French Resistance
Movement. The Special Operations
Executive (S.O.E.) set up by the British authorities in July 1940 to organise
sabotage and create Resistance Movements in enemy controlled countries afforded
Eliane Sophie Plewman the ideal opportunity to do so. On joining the S.O.E. she was seconded for
training in Manchester and in the North West highlands of Scotland. In the meantime her husband Thomas had joined
the Royal Artillery.
On the night of 14th
August 1943 the now fully trained S.O.E. agent Eliane Sophie Plewman was
parachuted into France near the town of Lons le Saunier. From the start her mission was dogged by bad
luck. The satchel of money she brought
with her to help finance the resistance movement in the locality was stolen
after she had put it aside for later collection. Greater problems had to be surmounted when on
landing she discovered that those intended to be her first contacts within the
Resistance Movement had been arrested and removed from the area.
Undaunted she
displayed enormous courage and initiative in following through with her mission
and before long she had established contacts with a circle of resistance
fighters. From then onwards she kept in
contact with them, all the time couriering messages between her home town of
Marseilles and Roquebrune where radio operators were based. The S.O.E. files, now open to the public in
the Public Records Office in London show that she travelled constantly,
maintaining liaison between the various resistance groups, acting as guides to
newly arrived agents and transporting equipment and documents whenever
required. She was also personally
involved in various acts of sabotage and the area in which she worked code
named “the monk circuit” was
particularly active in hampering and restricting the movement of rail traffic
in and out of Marseilles.
In March 1944
Eliane was living in an apartment at Rue Merentie in Marseilles. Her involvement with the Resistance Movement
was betrayed to the Germans and on 23rd March 1944 she was arrested
by the Gestapo who had entered and occupied her apartment. Several members of the Resistance Movement
who called to the apartment were arrested and subsequently executed. Marcus Binney, author of the S.O.E. history “The Women who lived for Danger” gives
us some measure of the brutality associated with her captors when he wrote “the Gestapo in Marseilles was brutal, even
by Gestapo terms”.
Eliane Sophie was
detained by the Gestapo for at least fifteen days and she was subjected to
electric shock torture, physical beatings, as well as inhuman water torture
sessions. Despite savage treatment at
the hands of the Gestapo she did not divulge any information and was
subsequently incarcerated initially in the prison of Les Baumettes in
Marseilles and later in the notorious Parisian prison of Fresnes.
On 12th
May 1944 with seven other female prisoners, all of them S.O.E. agents, Eliane
Sophie Plewman was sent by train to the German town of Karlsruhe where she was
detained in the local prison for the next four months. The D Day landing which took place on 6th
June 1944 was the start of the Allied push for victory, but even as the allied
troops advanced through France the lives of some of the French female prisoners
held in Karlsruhe were about to come to an end.
On the night of 11th
September Eliane Sophie Plewman and three of her colleagues were handed over by
an elderly prison warden to two Gestapo officers who brought them by train to
Munich. From there they made the 20 mile
journey by local train to Dachau. On
arrival at Dachau station they walked to the infamous Dachau Concentration Camp
which they reached at about 12 midnight.
They did not know what fate awaited them but the statement of Christian
Ott, one of the Gestapo agents who brought the prisoners to Dachau, recounts
what happened. Ott who was captured by
allied soldiers at the end of the war confirmed that early in the morning of 12th
September 1944 Eliane Sophie Plewman and her three companions were taken out
into the yard at Dachau Concentration Camp.
Only then were they told that they were to be shot. Ordered to kneel on the ground the four brave
women held hands as each in turn was shot through the back of the neck.
Twenty-two months
later the letter advising Thomas Plewman of his wife’s death arrived at 8
Stoneygate Avenue, Leicester. He had
seen her for the last time just shortly before she was parachuted into France
in August 1943. Eliane Sophie Plewman
was 26 years old when she was executed.
She was subsequently posthumously awarded the Croix de Guerre with
Bronze Star and the King’s Commendation.
In a quiet street
in the Mediterranean port of Marseilles the city authorities erected a plaque
at the Rue Merentie house where Eliane was arrested. The tribute on the Memorial expresses
gratitude to the heroes of the French Resistance Movement. A memorial tablet in St. Paul’s Church,
Knightsbridge, London also commemorates this brave French woman who was married
to Athy man Thomas Plewman. Thomas
Plewman who himself served in the Royal Artillery throughout the Second World
War died four years ago.
e1Dear Frank,
ReplyDeleteYou mentiuon George Odom Ltd of Leicester - what business was that company involved in?
David Horry