Churchill's Italian Angels

Churchill's Italian Angels

The women engaged by the Special Operations Executive in Italy during the Second World War

ByBernard O'Connor

Usually printed in 3 - 5 business days
According to recently declassified documents in the British National Archives, at least twenty-five Italian women were engaged to provide assistance to officers of the Special Operations Executive (SOE) working clandestinely in Italy. The oldest was 64 and the youngest was 18. The average age was 32, older than might have been expected. Of those who provided details of their occupation, five were students, three had office jobs and two were housewives. Others were a shopkeeper, teacher, dressmaker, designer and a novelist. Four were married, two were widows, two were separated and the rest were single. Two of the older women had daughters living at home who were also engaged to help SOE as couriers and escorts. Fourteen described their work as a courier but most provided other services as well, for example, providing food and accommodation for the organiser and sometimes the wireless operator; hiding supplies like explosives and arms for the partisans and providing military intelligence. One prepared sabotage material. One took photographs of sabotaged targets and another was a propagandist for the BBC. Bernard O'Connor's documentary history tells their stories, most for the first time, using personnel files, mission reports, autobiographies, biographies, history books and websites.

Details

Publication Date
Oct 21, 2023
Language
English
ISBN
9781446701416
Category
History
Copyright
All Rights Reserved - Standard Copyright License
Contributors
By (author): Bernard O'Connor

Specifications

Pages
258
Binding Type
Paperback Perfect Bound
Interior Color
Color
Dimensions
A5 (5.83 x 8.27 in / 148 x 210 mm)

Ratings & Reviews